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Candida Royalle and the Sexual Revolution

A History from Below

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Finalist for the 2024 National Book Critics Circle Award for Biography

"Assiduously researched, elegantly written." —Margaret Talbot, The New Yorker

Acclaimed historian Jane Kamensky chronicles an indelible twentieth-century American life—and offers an entirely new understanding of the so-called sexual revolution.

Whether in front of the camera or behind it, Candice Vadala understood herself as both an artist and an entrepreneur. As Candida Royalle (1950–2015)—underground actress, porn star, producer of adult movies, and staunch feminist—she made a business of pleasure. She helped crystalize the broader hedonistic turn in American life in the second half of the twentieth century: a period when the rules of sex were rewritten; when the white-hot "sex wars" cleaved feminism and realigned American politics; when Big Freud, Big Drugs, and Big Porn all came into looming focus; when the sex industry of the 1970s and '80s radically upended conventional understandings of law, technology, culture, love, and human desire.

The sexual revolution was Royalle's war—even when other avowed feminists exited the field or became her opponents—and pornography emerged as the arena in which she would wage it. With the founding of her adult film company, Femme Productions, in 1984, Royalle became an owner of the means of pornographic production, infusing her sets with the ideals of labor feminism. On-screen and off-, she was, by turns, exuberant and thoughtful, self-possessed and gleefully shameless. A trailblazer who lived along the cultural fault lines of her generation, she danced at Woodstock, marched for women's liberation, survived the AIDS crisis, and became a talk show regular, interviewed by Phil Donahue, Dr. Ruth Westheimer, Morton Downey Jr., Jane Pauley, and many others. As a performer, director, producer, and writer, she moved the needle of her industry. But she never transcended the politics of pleasure.

With full access to Royalle's remarkable archive, historian Jane Kamensky has spent years examining the intersection of Royalle's life with the clashes that have defined her era—and ours. Deeply informed by these never-before-studied materials, Kamensky explodes the conventions of biography, with its assumptions about who makes history and how. Written with cinematic verve, Candida Royalle and the Sexual Revolution evokes Royalle's times in their broadest contours as Kamensky traces the rise of an improbable heroine who broke the mold and was herself broken in turn.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      January 22, 2024
      Harvard historian Kamensky (A Revolution in Color) delivers a powerful portrait of the “profoundly uniquely 20th century life” of erotic film star Candida Royalle (1950–2015), née Candice Vadala. Raised in Riverdale, an upscale Bronx neighborhood, by her father (a sex offender) and stepmother (after her mother abandoned the family), Royalle came of age in the era of the pill, women’s liberation, psychedelics, psychoanalysis, and “the world that made Deep Throat, and that Deep Throat made in turn.” After dropping out of college, she joined a boyfriend in San Francisco, where she “felt herself blossoming into a performer.” She took odd jobs until she discovered nude modeling (and heroin), which led to adult films and a brush with Hollywood as an extra in the orgy scene of Blake Edwards’s feature film 10. In 1980, she married a fellow porn star as the adult film industry took off thanks to the introduction of the VCR and cable TV. Soon after, Royalle’s byline “began appearing in the sex press” and she cofounded Femme Productions, a feminist and sex-positive porn production company. Drawing from Royalle’s private archives at the Harvard Radcliffe Institute, Kamensky utilizes her subject’s long career in the sex industry, including pioneering work producing erotic safe-sex education videos, as a window into the AIDS epidemic and the feminist movement. It’s a captivating biography of a major figure of the sexual revolution.

    • Booklist

      February 15, 2024
      Candice Vadala, better known as Candida Royalle, was a feminist. She was also a "porn queen," a writer, founder of porn production company Femme (which specialized in female pleasure), and much more. In this biography of Vadala, as well as the postwar American culture that bore her and the late twentieth-century culture wars that she helped shape, Harvard historian Kamensky (A Revolution in Color, 2016) traces the full arc of her subject's life, from a childhood rife with tumult and abuse to her 2015 death from cancer. Vadala's journals and notes towards an unfinished memoir supply insight into how she lived and understood various experiences, including her first time dropping acid and how she rationalized her "self-prostitution" in skin flicks. Following Vadala's lead, Kamensky's biography refuses the binary between a pleasure-driven feminism and a victim-driven one to show how sex work and its cultures can be both liberating and oppressive. As Vadala said shortly before she died, "the so-called sexual revolution" gave women "the right to say yes, but kind of took away our right to say no."

      COPYRIGHT(2024) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Library Journal

      March 1, 2024

      Behind the pornography nom de plume Candida Royalle was Candice Vadala (1950-2015). Working extensively with Vadala's diaries, historian Kamensky (A Revolution in Color: The World of John Singleton Copley) sets the porn actress and producer's life and career in parallel with the wider events of '60s and '70s counterculture, second-wave feminism, the anti-pornography crusade, and the changing landscape of pornography itself. Born in post-World War II New York, Vadala survived familial abuse and substance-use disorder. In the 1970s, social and political upheavals spurred a young Vadala to head for California, where she began working as an pornography performer--and eventually as Candida. By the 1980s, she had moved from acting to creating pornographic films and established Femme Productions, which she launched to make erotic movies that would appeal to women and align with her feminist ideals; she always tried to reconcile her values with her career, Kamensky argues. This in-depth biography makes a good argument that Vadala is an unsung history maker. VERDICT For readers interested in works about feminism and sex in the late 20th century or in biographies of historically overlooked women.--Kathleen McCallister

      Copyright 2024 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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