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Doris Wishman

 
Director: Doris Wishman
  • Born: 1912 in Forest Hills, New York
  • Died: Aug 10, 2002 in Miami, Florida
  • Occupation: Director, Writer
  • Active: '60s-'70s
  • Major Genres: Adult, Crime
  • Career Highlights: Satan Was a Lady, My Brother's Wife, Gentlemen Prefer Nature Girls
  • First Major Screen Credit: Nude on the Moon (1960)

Biography

Nudist camps, transsexuals, penis transplants, exploding breasts...these are the plot devices that distinguish the work of the woman who ranks as one of the most prolific female directors in film history. Doris Wishman worked solely in the realm of adults-only pictures, stuffing more than two dozen films with nudity, simulated sex, and other exploitable elements. A fiercely independent director, Wishman wrote, produced, and distributed most of her films herself (often using pseudonyms to conceal her one-woman show). Her idiosyncratic style, lurid subjects, and low budgets have kept her movies under the radar of mainstream tastes, but a devoted cult has grown that appreciates her bizarre tales of sexual tension.

Originally trained as an actress (a classmate was Shelley Winters), Wishman first found work in film distribution. After the death of her first husband, she decided she needed to take her mind off the loss and embarked upon production of her premiere film, Hideout in the Sun (1960). Financed by a loan from her sister, it was the first of several nudist colony films that Wishman would make over the next four years. While not the only filmmaker exploiting the legality of nudity set within such camps, Wishman often supplied more imaginative plots than her peers, such as Nude on the Moon (1961), which concerned a pair of amateur astronauts who discover an idyllic paradise of naked beauties on the lunar surface.

When the innocent aura of the nudist film began to lose favor at the box office, Wishman followed pervading trends and moved to a darker, more violent style. In films like Bad Girls Go to Hell (1965), Another Day, Another Man (1966), and Indecent Desires (1967), stark black-and-white photography and hand-held camerawork added unsettling touches to stories of sexual obsession, rape, degradation, and murder. While supplying the brief moments of nudity that her grindhouse audiences demanded, Wishman was also serving up a paranoid vision of womanhood that revolved around frustration and repression. Wishman's sole intent was to titillate her viewers and turn a profit, but these films had a different flavor than the "roughies" made by her male counterparts and they remain her most interesting work.

As the next decade dawned, Wishman changed again with the times and allowed her pictures to become more sexually explicit and thematically wild. The Amazing Transplant (1970) followed the sexual and criminal exploits of a man who goes insane after having his dead friend's penis grafted onto him. Two of Wishman's best-known films from this period star the massively endowed Chesty Morgan, a Polish stripper with a 73" bust. Deadly Weapons (1973) found her avenging a lover's death by smothering those responsible with her tremendous chest. Double Agent 73 (1974) cast Morgan as a spy with a secret camera concealed in one breast that will self-destruct if her mission isn't completed on time. Let Me Die a Woman (1978) was a unique (if factually suspect) documentary about sex change operations, complete with graphic surgery footage, simulated sex scenes, and actual nude transsexuals displaying their refashioned genitalia. Wishman avoided pornographic detail in these films, instead opting to please her viewers with outrageous scenarios and copious nudity. Despite her distaste for hardcore, Wishman reportedly helmed a few full-on porn titles in the mid-'70s, though the director has disowned these productions.

With adult cinema focused squarely on gynecological close-ups, Wishman decided to follow a new exploitation angle. She began work on A Night to Dismember (1983), a gory slasher film that might have provided a new career path. Unfortunately, the movie took several years to complete, thanks to budgetary concerns and a bizarre incident in which a disgruntled photo lab employee destroyed a large portion of the negative. Wishman finished the film against all odds, refashioning the story with outtakes and overdubbed narration. The result is an incomprehensible, yet uniquely surreal take on the splatter genre. The film was barely released, and Wishman retired in its wake.

Wishman's films have gained a new audience in recent years amongst cult film fanatics who are drawn to the director's unique visual and narrative style. Each film is filled with non sequitur close-ups of lamps, ashtrays, and other mundane household items. Plots move sluggishly (or not at all), jumping suddenly to violent, dreamlike twists in logic. There is a strange focus on her characters' feet and jittery hand-held cinematography. While initially disorienting to viewers accustomed to mainstream films, Wishman's bizarre non-techniques are so recognizable in all of her work that they become endearing. Her career resurrected by retrospective screenings of her productions at film festivals, Wishman returned to directing, releasing Satan Was a Lady (1999, not to be confused with her 1975 porn feature of the same title) and Dildo Heaven (2001). ~ Fred Beldin, All Movie Guide
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Wikipedia: Doris Wishman
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Doris Wishman (June 1, 1912, New York CityAugust 10, 2002, Miami, Florida) was an American film director, screenwriter and independent film producer.

Self-taught as a filmmaker, Wishman is noteworthy for her paracinematic, camp aesthetic and is often referred to as "the female Ed Wood." The majority of her work was designed to be released in the American sexploitation film market of the 1960s and '70s. Wishman is also one of the most prolific women film directors in the history of the cinema and in recent years has become the object of a cult following.

Contents

1960-1964 Nudist period

Wishman completed eight nudist features between 1960 and 1964. Blaze Starr Goes Nudist (1962) featured legendary burlesque queen Blaze Starr. Other titles include Hideout in the Sun (1960), Diary of a Nudist (1961), Gentlemen Prefer Nature Girls (1962), Playgirls International (1963), Behind the Nudist Curtain (1963), and The Prince and the Nature Girl (1964).

The most bizarre of Wishman's nudist features was 1961 Nude on the Moon, an attempt to combine traditional nudist material with a science fiction plot-line. Wishman abandoned the nudist genre once it had lost its commercial viability.

1965-1970 Sexploitation

During the mid-1960s, Wishman began working within the sexploitation genre. Several of Wishman's films of this period were directed under the pseudonym "Louis Silverman", the name of her second husband (otherwise uninvolved in the films' production).

Bad Girls Go to Hell (1965) is one of Wishman's best-known films and includes many elements found commonly in sexploitation movies of the period. The main character is a young woman who runs away to the big city (in this case, after accidentally killing a man who tries to rape her). She soon stumbles into a variety of sexually compromising and abusive situations. Though archetypal in its use of genre situations, Wishman's empathy for her female protagonist in Bad Girls Go to Hell has been interpreted by some observers as proto-feminist. Bad Girls Go to Hell was also one of the earliest collaborations between Wishman and cinematographer C. Davis Smith, who worked closely with Wishman on much of her output during the 1960s and '70s, and who would subsequently serve as director of photography on Wishman's final, posthumously completed feature, Each Time I Kill.

Other films from Wishman's sexploitation period include The Sex Perils of Paulette (1965), Another Day, Another Man (1966), My Brother's Wife (1966), A Taste of Her Flesh (1967), Indecent Desires (1967), and Too Much Too Often! (1968). All are shot in black and white. Two subsequent features, Love Toy (1968) and The Amazing Transplant (1970), are shot in color and are closer in substance to the burgeoning soft-core genre.

Wishman is also credited with having dubbed two imported Greek-produced features, The Hot Month of August and Passion Fever, during the late 1960s and is credited with the direction of their American release versions.

1971-1983

During the 1970s, Wishman experimented with a variety of genres and genre mixes. Keyholes Are for Peeping (1972) is a sex comedy featuring comedian Sammy Petrillo. Deadly Weapons (1973) and Double Agent 73 (1974) are thrillers featuring strip-tease performer Chesty Morgan, renowned for her 73-inch bust. Wishman's Chesty Morgan films are among her best known and most popular titles and are celebrated for their camp aesthetic. During the mid-1970s, Wishman also directed at least two explicit hardcore pornographic films. Satan Was a Lady (1975) [remade in 2003; see below] and Come with Me, My Love (1976), both featuring performance artist and porn star Annie Sprinkle.

Although initiated in 1971, Wishman's 1978 feature, Let Me Die a Woman (1978) is a semi-documentary about transsexuality. In addition to examining the condition of numerous, actual transgender individuals, the film also features a considerable number of dramatized scenes, including a cameo by future porn legend Harry Reems (as "Tim Long").

Noticing the trend toward slasher movies in the late 1970s, Wishman ventured into the horror genre with a feature entitled A Night to Dismember, completed circa 1983. Noteworthy for its crazy-quilt construction, the film failed commercially, effectively forcing Wishman into retirement.

Rediscovery/Death

Due in large part to her increasing cult status during the 1990s, Wishman managed to complete three additional features late in life: a sex comedy entitled Dildo Heaven (2002), a neo-sexploitation feature entitled Satan Was a Lady (not to be confused with her 1975 hardcore film of the same title), and Each Time I Kill, a teen horror thriller shot in the Miami area. Wishman completed principal photography on the previous film only six weeks before succumbing to lymphoma in August 2002, aged 90. The film was later completed by the project's executive producer and has screened at various film festivals.

In 2000, Wishman was featured alongside exploitation icons Roger Corman and David F. Friedman in the documentary SCHLOCK! The Secret History of American Movies, a film about the rise and fall of the American exploitation cinema. Excerpts from her interview for this film also appear on the 2007 DVD issue of Wishman's first film Hideout in the Sun. During her later years, Wishman was also interviewed on National Public Radio's Fresh Air program, was twice a guest on Late Night with Conan O'Brien, and was the subject of retrospectives at the Harvard Film Archive and the New York Underground Film Festival.

Biographer

Her biographer, Michael Bowen, has been working for several years to gather information about her career.

It should be noted that there are numerous errors of a factual nature in Andrew Leavold's biographical sketch on Wishman at Sensesofcinema.com, which is based entirely on secondary sources available at the time of its publication.

References

External links


 
 
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Satan Was a Lady (2001 Comedy Film)
Edge (Actor, Comedy/Drama)
Blaze Starr Goes Nudist (1960 Comedy Film)

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