![]() Not for part of the lunch, for the whole lunch. Traci, and what happened 25 years ago, was the topic of conversation between these two. ![]() (This is obviously way before I was a contributing editor at Vanity Fair.) One afternoon in 2012, I went to lunch in the Valley at a Hamburger Hamlet with adult veteran Bill Margold, who’d codirected Traci, and adult agent Jim South, who’d represented Traci. I broke into print by writing about Al Goldstein, founder of Screw magazine and a major figure in the adult industry in the ’70s and ’80s. This was a huge scandal, and one I was totally unaware of, because at the time it broke I was seven years old.Ĭonfession: I have my own porn past. Then, in July of ’86, it was revealed in dramatic fashion-the FBI busting down Traci’s door-that she’d been underage for virtually her entire adult career. I’m getting ahead of myself, though, because I should explain the story first: Traci Lords was the biggest porn star in the world in the mid 1980s. In her conversations with porn industry insiders that inspired the podcast, Anolik learned that the Lords saga was “the wound that refused to heal for the adult industry”-and also a mystery that remained, tantalizingly, unsolved. Lords was the biggest star in the porn industry for several years in the mid ’80s, until a dramatic FBI raid revealed that she had gotten her start when she was just 15, and nearly all of her films were thereby illegal. “It’s the movie industry without the pretense. “The porn industry is overtly about what the movie industry is covertly about: sex and fantasy, objectification and exploitation,” Anolik said. But for Anolik, host of the new podcast Once Upon a Time in the Valley, Hollywood and the porn industry that Lords dominated in the mid 1980s are far more closely related than either might admit. The story of Traci Lords, though, doesn’t seem like the most obvious Hollywood saga-after all, it takes place over the hills in the San Fernando Valley. Simpson, and Eve Babitz for this magazine. ![]() “Hollywood isn’t only my beat, it’s my obsession,” said Lili Anolik, the contributing editor to Vanity Fair who has written about, among many other things, Scarlett Johansson, O.J.
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