Porn Stars

Here is the story on Missy
MissBridgetteM See my TER Reviews 2215 reads
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PORN VALLEY - Missy, the soft-spoken five-foot-high blonde who took the adult industry by storm shortly after her first appearance in 1994, was reportedly found dead in her apartment in Valencia, Calif. from an accidental overdose of her prescription medication. She was 41 years old.

A funeral service was held approximately a month ago, unpublicized reportedly because Missy's family wanted no adult industry presence at the ceremony. The death was not considered to be a suicide.

"I adored Missy," said Joy King, Vice-President of Wicked Pictures, for whom Missy was briefly a contract performer. "I thought she was an angel, and we were deeply saddened by her tragic loss, everyone in the company, and our hearts went out to her family. She was very special."

Missy made her adult debut in Midnight Pictures' 1994 production Cuntrol, directed by Jim Enright, where she performed a girl/girl scene with Tiffany Mynx - though neither it nor any of her earlier features garnered good reviews.

In fact, it wasn't until Missy's first movie for Wicked - Anal Maniacs 3, directed by Jonathan Morgan - that the critics took notice, describing her as "enormously appealing," and her short anal scene as "quality pork." Indeed, by 1997, Missy and then-husband Mickey G. had been signed to non-exclusive contracts with Wicked, and it was in that year that the couple directed the top-rated Heart & Soul for that company - her sole directorial credit.

Missy appeared in over 350 XXX movies during her five-year career, receiving five AVN awards - including both Best New Starlet and Female Performer of the Year at the 1997 AVN Award show - and three from the X-Rated Critics Organization (XRCO). She was inducted into the AVN Hall of Fame in 2002.
Toward the end of her career, Missy and Mickey were reportedly having escalating marital differences, and by the summer of 1999, she had effectively stopped doing scenes. She appeared in just two more movies, both likely utilizing footage shot months or years earlier.

But Missy's ties to the adult industry didn't break that easily. For months, rumors flew that Mickey, whom she had met while both worked at a local hospital - she in the administration department, he as a male nurse - had been a sort of Svengali, coercing her into performing sex on camera.

"I know there was some contention that that's the way it was," said King. "I was very close to Missy, and I never got the impression she was doing anything she didn't want to do. I wouldn't have hired her if I had. Had she been single, would she have searched out a career in this industry? Probably not. But she certainly didn't seem like she was waiting until the time she could escape. She was always very, very content with what she was doing, and certainly didn't seem unhappy in her decisions."

Still, performer Hank Armstrong, husband of the late Anna Malle, while recalling several swing parties to which he and Anna had taken Missy and Mickey, told of a darker side to the relationship.

"About six months before she quit, we were in New York City and staying at Neville's [Chesters] with Michael [Mickey] and Missy and we were all going to work together," Armstrong told AVN in November, 2001. "And she had very strange behavior where she wouldn't talk to anybody, she wasn't socializing, and that's not the Missy we knew, because we were all friends; we hung out. And we asked her what the hell was wrong - Anna asked her - and she goes, 'I want to get out of the business. I'm scared. I'm afraid that Michael will kill me.' And we go, 'What!?' And she goes, 'I'm just really afraid for my health, my safety.' She goes, 'I want to quit and I don't know what I'm going to do.' And she was just very scared, and she says, 'I'm sorry I even told you that because I know it'll get back to him. Please don't tell him that I said it.' I said, 'We're your friends. We're not going to tell nobody nothing.'"

"In our presence, he wasn't physically or verbally abusive to her either, so we didn't really know," Armstrong continued. "So we shut our mouths. I mean, what could we do? We didn't know what was going on, but that's my personal opinion, that it was maybe physical and mental anguish that pushed her to get away.

That same month, AVN received a letter from Missy, "to tell you about my absence." Several of her industry friends described Missy as "spiritual" when they had known her, but nothing prepared them for what was apparently the next step on his spiritual path.

"Four years ago I had a mental breakdown and went crazy," Missy wrote. "It took alot of prayer to be normal again. The only thing is now I can't be around alot of people..."

"Since then I've had several doctors and breakdowns and went through some kind of evil terror and pain. Lord God and Jesus never left me and now I will never leave them. I fear for all of you because I met something that was pure evil in that industry. I'm having premonitions of the end of time. I freaked out and had a seizure. God will not leave us. Jesus gave me a message of pure love, it was God. Now I'm a Christian and always have been. I pray for all of you all the time, because I came to your industry to one day change it to a more loving atmosphere with God. Guess what - Jesus came. Please don't ever forget what Jesus did for us. He died so we may be with our Lord God in Heaven..."

"Michael [Mickey G.] and I aren't together anymore because I choose to be a Christian and to not have sex any more, and also, he can't take care of me. I don't think anyone could have taken care of me. He can't afford the doctors and medication or my spells. I miss that man, but I did it for his own good. Michael is a Christian as well, that's what kept us together for so long."

According to one source who knew Missy well, Mickey "always seemed very, very caring. He cared a lot about her. He didn't seem overly controlling to me, although after the fact, I've heard he was very controlling, but it didn't appear that way when I worked with them. He seemed to adore her. That doesn't mean he wasn't controlling. You don't know the intimate details of a relationship from looking at it from the outside. I do know that when they had just split up, it wasn't particularly pleasant, and I do know that the family wasn't supportive of their relationship."

Although Missy went to live with her parents after her retirement and the breakup of her marriage to Mickey, she was living alone at the time of her death.

I am very sad to have to say we lost 2 legends today. And one of them I considered not only a great director to work for but a friend. And I will miss him very much... :(


Porn Valle​y-​ Porn legen​d Ron Sulli​van passe​d away this morni​ng at 9:45 after​ a three​ year battl​e with cance​r.​ Sulli​van recen​tly suffe​red a strok​e and remai​ned prett​y much comat​ose.​ He had been under​ hospi​ce care at home.​

Pacha​rd,​ who had been treat​ed in the past for squam​ous cell carci​noma in his jaw, was diagn​osed in May with throa​t cance​r.​

Sulli​van,​ who up until​ that point​ was till activ​e in the busin​ess direc​ting,​ shoot​ing and writi​ng scrip​ts,​ was going​ to an oncol​ogist​ two or three​ times​ a week for hydra​tion,​

The pain was descr​ibed as overw​helmi​ng and Sulli​van had been presc​ribed​ some prett​y heavy​ narco​tics for the pain.​


-----------------------------------------------
PORN VALLEY - Missy, the soft-spoken five-foot-high blonde who took the adult industry by storm shortly after her first appearance in 1994, was reportedly found dead in her apartment in Valencia, Calif. from an accidental overdose of her prescription medication. She was 41 years old.



-- Modified on 9/29/2008 6:01:26 PM

Tits mcgee1672 reads

Wow...Missy.
I was a big fan of hers in the late-90's porn films.  Great ass and hot oral talents.  Wasn't she married to Mickey G.??  Were they still together at the time of her death?  A loss for the industry...

-Tits McGee

PORN VALLEY - Missy, the soft-spoken five-foot-high blonde who took the adult industry by storm shortly after her first appearance in 1994, was reportedly found dead in her apartment in Valencia, Calif. from an accidental overdose of her prescription medication. She was 41 years old.

A funeral service was held approximately a month ago, unpublicized reportedly because Missy's family wanted no adult industry presence at the ceremony. The death was not considered to be a suicide.

"I adored Missy," said Joy King, Vice-President of Wicked Pictures, for whom Missy was briefly a contract performer. "I thought she was an angel, and we were deeply saddened by her tragic loss, everyone in the company, and our hearts went out to her family. She was very special."

Missy made her adult debut in Midnight Pictures' 1994 production Cuntrol, directed by Jim Enright, where she performed a girl/girl scene with Tiffany Mynx - though neither it nor any of her earlier features garnered good reviews.

In fact, it wasn't until Missy's first movie for Wicked - Anal Maniacs 3, directed by Jonathan Morgan - that the critics took notice, describing her as "enormously appealing," and her short anal scene as "quality pork." Indeed, by 1997, Missy and then-husband Mickey G. had been signed to non-exclusive contracts with Wicked, and it was in that year that the couple directed the top-rated Heart & Soul for that company - her sole directorial credit.

Missy appeared in over 350 XXX movies during her five-year career, receiving five AVN awards - including both Best New Starlet and Female Performer of the Year at the 1997 AVN Award show - and three from the X-Rated Critics Organization (XRCO). She was inducted into the AVN Hall of Fame in 2002.
Toward the end of her career, Missy and Mickey were reportedly having escalating marital differences, and by the summer of 1999, she had effectively stopped doing scenes. She appeared in just two more movies, both likely utilizing footage shot months or years earlier.

But Missy's ties to the adult industry didn't break that easily. For months, rumors flew that Mickey, whom she had met while both worked at a local hospital - she in the administration department, he as a male nurse - had been a sort of Svengali, coercing her into performing sex on camera.

"I know there was some contention that that's the way it was," said King. "I was very close to Missy, and I never got the impression she was doing anything she didn't want to do. I wouldn't have hired her if I had. Had she been single, would she have searched out a career in this industry? Probably not. But she certainly didn't seem like she was waiting until the time she could escape. She was always very, very content with what she was doing, and certainly didn't seem unhappy in her decisions."

Still, performer Hank Armstrong, husband of the late Anna Malle, while recalling several swing parties to which he and Anna had taken Missy and Mickey, told of a darker side to the relationship.

"About six months before she quit, we were in New York City and staying at Neville's [Chesters] with Michael [Mickey] and Missy and we were all going to work together," Armstrong told AVN in November, 2001. "And she had very strange behavior where she wouldn't talk to anybody, she wasn't socializing, and that's not the Missy we knew, because we were all friends; we hung out. And we asked her what the hell was wrong - Anna asked her - and she goes, 'I want to get out of the business. I'm scared. I'm afraid that Michael will kill me.' And we go, 'What!?' And she goes, 'I'm just really afraid for my health, my safety.' She goes, 'I want to quit and I don't know what I'm going to do.' And she was just very scared, and she says, 'I'm sorry I even told you that because I know it'll get back to him. Please don't tell him that I said it.' I said, 'We're your friends. We're not going to tell nobody nothing.'"

"In our presence, he wasn't physically or verbally abusive to her either, so we didn't really know," Armstrong continued. "So we shut our mouths. I mean, what could we do? We didn't know what was going on, but that's my personal opinion, that it was maybe physical and mental anguish that pushed her to get away.

That same month, AVN received a letter from Missy, "to tell you about my absence." Several of her industry friends described Missy as "spiritual" when they had known her, but nothing prepared them for what was apparently the next step on his spiritual path.

"Four years ago I had a mental breakdown and went crazy," Missy wrote. "It took alot of prayer to be normal again. The only thing is now I can't be around alot of people..."

"Since then I've had several doctors and breakdowns and went through some kind of evil terror and pain. Lord God and Jesus never left me and now I will never leave them. I fear for all of you because I met something that was pure evil in that industry. I'm having premonitions of the end of time. I freaked out and had a seizure. God will not leave us. Jesus gave me a message of pure love, it was God. Now I'm a Christian and always have been. I pray for all of you all the time, because I came to your industry to one day change it to a more loving atmosphere with God. Guess what - Jesus came. Please don't ever forget what Jesus did for us. He died so we may be with our Lord God in Heaven..."

"Michael [Mickey G.] and I aren't together anymore because I choose to be a Christian and to not have sex any more, and also, he can't take care of me. I don't think anyone could have taken care of me. He can't afford the doctors and medication or my spells. I miss that man, but I did it for his own good. Michael is a Christian as well, that's what kept us together for so long."

According to one source who knew Missy well, Mickey "always seemed very, very caring. He cared a lot about her. He didn't seem overly controlling to me, although after the fact, I've heard he was very controlling, but it didn't appear that way when I worked with them. He seemed to adore her. That doesn't mean he wasn't controlling. You don't know the intimate details of a relationship from looking at it from the outside. I do know that when they had just split up, it wasn't particularly pleasant, and I do know that the family wasn't supportive of their relationship."

Although Missy went to live with her parents after her retirement and the breakup of her marriage to Mickey, she was living alone at the time of her death.

kyomu02348 reads

Hmm... I have a Japanese hardcore video which Missy shot in the US with a veteran Japanese bondage actor.  She was quite into it, which leads me to believe that the Freudian chestnut that people who engage in S/M are punishing their bodies for enjoying physical sinfulness.

Missy did most of the things AV-Idols do in such fare, including XXX-bondage, flogging, hot-waxing, etc.

Wow two similar situations That i just delt with over a year ago. My father died of cancer after a five year battle and I became addicted to his heavy narcotics that he was prescribed. Thankfully I got help and kicked it (they call it kicking for a reason from the muscle spasms of withdrawal) luckily before I did overdose. The doctors were amazed at my tolerance to taking pain pills that were prescribed for dieing people. Sixteen months sober so far.

But Missy was one of my ATF in that era. opiates are killing a lot of people. It's basically prescription heroin.
I didn't know the name Ron Sullivan but I'm sure I enjoyed his films.
Sorry to see two good people go to such unfortunate circumstances when there are so many bad people out there doing bad things.

Wow, I know exactly who is Ron Sullivan.

He was such a sweetheart.

I'm so sad to hear of the two losses.

"Finally, what's this wanton lust for life
To make us tremble in dangers and in doubt?
All men must die, and no man can escape.
What we do not have
Seems better than EVERYTHING else in all the
world.
But should we get it, we want something else.
But life, prolonged, Subtracts not even one
second from the term of Death's continuance.
Suppose You could live for centuries, As many as
you will.  Death , even so Will still be waiting
for you."  Lucretius

Remember man, you are of dust and dust you shall
return.   Ash Wed, Catholic Liturgy.

Words of wisdom and consolation. RIP.

Regards

Cortez



CHATSWORTH, Calif. – Ron Sullivan, who directed adult films as Henri Pachard for more than 30 years, has died from complications of cancer. He was 69 years old.

Born June 4, 1939 in Kansas City, Mo., Sullivan became one of the most successful directors of porn’s Golden Age and a kingpin of the New York-based theatrical adult film industry in the late 1970s.

When theaters began to close in the mid-80s, he migrated to Los Angeles and carved out another successful career in video production. His list of titles runs into the hundreds and includes such classics as Babylon Pink, Outlaw Ladies, Public Affairs and Taboo, American Style.
"He was my friend, my mentor, my partner, my inspiration," award-winning director Paul Thomas told AVN. "He taught me everything I know about set-up, about plot, about pacing – I can't even say all the things I learned from Ron."

Sullivan's career in entertainment goes back to the mid-'60s. He worked as a stage manager in New York and Williamsburg, Va., before getting into the film business, according to his frequent collaborator, screenwriter Raven Touchstone.

Touchstone's and Sullivan's first collaboration was 1986's Blame It On Ginger, which won the award for Best Couples Sex Scene (Video) at the 1987 AVN Awards show. Sullivan had previously won AVN's first Best Director - Video award in 1985 for Long Hard Nights, and took home directorial awards again in 1988 for Talk Dirty to Me, Part V and in 1990 for The Nicole Stanton Story, Parts 1 & 2. He was also honored several times by the X-Rated Critics Association (XRCO), first in 1979 for Babylon Pink (his first full-length adult movie), then for Outlaw Ladies in 1981, Sexcapades in 1983, and Taboo American Style 1-4. He was one of the first inductees into both the AVN and XRCO Halls of Fame.

One of Sullivan's best-known early films was 1982's The Devil In Miss Jones 2.

"I met Ron in an office, just a standard theatrical office, and he hired me to do a remake of that famous film, The Devil In Miss Jones," recalled star Georgina Spelvin. "He got Jack Wrangler, a star of both gay and straight films, to play the Devil. To create his director's vision of hell, he used huge bursts of stage smoke made of dry ice blasted onto the set and made the crowded area a true hell. A delightful gay hair stylist was doing his best to give my character a lofty bouffant hairdo. Between each shot, he would drag me back to the dressing room to set, blow-dry and tease my poor wisps back into the shape of his vision... Nothing deterred Ron. He was an extraordinary director. I never saw him frown, I never heard a cross word out of his mouth. I never knew a director who had as much fun doing the films they did as Ron did; he was just great. It was a couple of films later – well, I was starving to death in Los Angeles at this time, and he called me one day and said, 'How are you doing, George?' And I said, 'Well, to tell you the truth, not very well. The rent's due and I'm flat busted.' He said, 'Will $200 help?' I said, 'Of course it will.' He said, 'It's in the mail,' and indeed, two days later, there was a check, which saved my butt that time... Henri is indeed one of a kind. Ron has been a good friend, a damned good friend for a very, very long time."

Devil 2, as Sullivan referred to it, was also his first collaboration with his son Jason, now a prolific cameraman and director in the industry, who thoroughly enjoyed the experience, but explained, "I wasn't allowed to be there for the sex scenes since I wasn't quite of age yet."

Sullivan lived and worked on both coasts between 1980 and '85, before settling in Los Angeles in 1986.

Sullivan flew frequently to San Francisco to make movies, during which period he became good friends with acclaimed director Alex deRenzy, with whom he later made the award-winning Hothouse Rose 1 & 2.

Touchstone also remembers the San Francisco days.

"I did a lot of art direction; I did wardrobe, costumed everything, wrote the movie and I would assist Ron in everything," she said. "I was like the second in command, and worked with talent and rehearsed them, did everything. So he would drive and I would fly, and I would meet the other kids – Randy Spears, or Rick Savage, all these kids – we'd meet at the Burbank airport and fly up to wherever we were going. They were really fun days. We were outlaws; we had this great familial sense with each other, and it seemed that everybody had their [emotional] baggage. It wasn't like today; it was a whole different thing. Everybody wanted to make a good movie and most of the kids – everybody that Ron used in all of these movies, for the most part, were all people who loved acting, like Randy Spears, Victoria Paris, Jeanna Fine – we did this thing called City of Sin and City of Sin: Street Angels with Jeanna."

Sullivan had what amounted to his personal troupe of performers, including some of the best-known names in the business.

"We'd say, 'Okay; who are we going to put in this movie?'" Touchstone explained. "We'd plan a movie and think about the cast before we wrote the role. See, the way we would work it is, Ron would say, 'Okay, we have to do a movie for so-and-so.' For a number of years here, we worked together on just about everything, and so he would come to where I was living, and we would sit outside and talk. We had an idea – he had an idea or I had an idea, either one, and we'd start talking about the story and he'd get this and then I'd pull this off of it and then he'd pull that off of it, and bouncing back and forth, putting the story together, putting the idea together, and then, 'Okay, we've got all this cast of characters; now who are we going to use here so that we can tailor the characters to these players?"

"What was so good was that Ron could get so much out of them," she continued. "We had Rachel Ryan in Kinky Business 2 – she loved performing. She was wonderful. We had Jerry Butler, a wonderful actor; Tommy Byron, who was wonderful in that movie. We used Herschel [Savage]. We had Rick Savage – all these really good players, who were very talented. Jamie Gillis, as far as acting goes, he was wonderful. He was the phantom in Phantom of the Cabaret; Keisha; Sharon Kane – I loved Sharon Kane, loved working with her, and Ron loved her. We used her a lot. Sharon Mitchell – all of the really good players. Nina Hartley, she was wonderful; she was in Talk Dirty To Me Part 6."

This author had the good fortune to be on Sullivan's set in 1995 when shooting the first volume of his series Venom. Always the innovator, Sullivan got the idea to hand the video camera to one of the actors, thereby creating the forerunner of what would become the popular POV genre.

"He would talk to them, and he would simply tell them exactly what he wanted them to do," Touchstone related. "Sometimes, in discussing the scene, the player, whether it was Joey Silvera or Jamie or whoever, would have a suggestion, and they would say whatever it was – 'What about if we do bla-bla-bla' – and Ron's stock line, if it was a good idea, was 'That's such a good idea, I'm going to take credit for it myself!' He was always willing to allow everybody to participate, to allow everybody to contribute to the best of their ability. His sets were always fun. They were relaxed, they were easy, and yet the work was intense, because he was getting the best out of everybody, but he always made it fun for everyone. Everybody loved working with him."

Even while undergoing treatment for cancer, Sullivan continued to direct and work on sets. His last movie was Hustler Video's Barely Legal Trouble Makers. An omnibus film designed to raise money to help him defray medical expenses, originally titled We Are the World XXX, was temporarily sidetracked because of disputes among its producers.
Sullivan is survived by Deloras, his wife of ten years, and two sons, Jason and Nate.

i am deeply saddened by these news bridgie but thanks for posting them.
i had not too long ago spoken with ron while my girlfriend was visiting and yes he was saying then he was dying. it is hard when you have friends
get sick and pass on. especially people you worked with and had relationships with.
same applies to missy.
it's a  sad day!!
my prayers are with the families and friends that stay behind.
namaste dru

NighthawkB2091 reads

I hate to read such news, but it's part of life, RIP

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