(Check out "Inside Deep Throat" if you haven't seen it...)

Gerard Damiano, 80, Dies; Directed ‘Deep Throat’

By MARGALIT FOX, NY Times
Gerard Damiano, a hairdresser turned filmmaker whose best-known work,
“Deep Throat,” created sensation in every possible meaning of the term
when it was released in 1972, died on Saturday in Fort Myers, Fla. He
was 80 and had lived in Fort Myers in recent years.

The cause was complications of a stroke he had last month, his son,
Gerard Jr., said.

Written and directed by Mr. Damiano under the name Jerry Gerard, “Deep
Throat” was “pornography’s ‘Gone With the Wind’ in terms of grosses,”
The New York Times wrote in 1973. It attained emblematic status as one
of the first hard-core films to reach a wide general audience, from
self-conscious Middle Americans to self-congratulatory celebrities.
“Porno chic,” the news media often called it.

Over three and a half decades, “Deep Throat” has been damned by
religious groups, decried by feminists, defended by First Amendment
advocates, derided by critics and debated by social scientists. It
dragged for years through local and federal courts around the country
in a welter of obscenity trials in which it was variously banned,
unbanned and rebanned. All this had the effect, observers agreed, of
sustaining acute public interest in the film.

In what was perhaps the movie’s most enduring legacy, its title became
the pseudonym of The Washington Post’s clandestine source in its
coverage of the Watergate scandal. In 2005, W. Mark Felt, a former
second-in-command at the Federal Bureau of Investigation, identified
himself as Deep Throat.

“Deep Throat” was shot in six days for not much more than $25,000 —
money put up, as has been widely reported, by associates of the
Colombo crime family. By 2005 it had grossed more than $600 million,
Entertainment Weekly reported.

The film’s premise was medical in nature. Its attractive young heroine
suffered from a condition previously unrecorded in the annals of
science, which The Times Magazine in 1973 described as “an
eccentricity of her anatomy” that caused her to find oral sex “more
gratifying than conventional intercourse.”

With the film, Mr. Damiano gave its star, née Linda Boreman, what is
generally believed to have been her first speaking role. He also
bestowed upon her the screen name Linda Lovelace. In later years, Ms.
Boreman denounced the film as depicting her “rape.” She died in 2002,
of injuries suffered in an auto accident.

“Deep Throat” had a small renaissance in 2005, with the release of
“Inside Deep Throat,” a documentary history of the film. In the
documentary, a spate of luminaries, among them Dick Cavett, Susan
Brownmiller and Helen Gurley Brown, hold forth on “Deep Throat’s” s
enduring cultural significance.

Mr. Damiano’s other well-known films as a director include “The Devil
in Miss Jones” (1973), “Memories Within Miss Aggie” (1974) and “The
Story of Joanna” (1975). His many other credits, only some of which
can be rendered in a family periodical, include “Teenie Tulip” (1970),
“Future Sodom” (1987) and “Young Girls in Tight Jeans” (1989).

Gerardo Rocco Damiano was born in New York City on Aug. 4, 1928. As a
youth, he worked as a shoeshine boy in Times Square and as a busboy in
a Manhattan Automat. At 17, he joined the Navy, serving four years.

After leaving the Navy, Mr. Damiano spent 12 years as an X-ray
technician at Jamaica Hospital in Queens. He later became a
hairdresser, with three successful beauty shops in Queens.

An avid amateur photographer who shot weddings and baby pictures, Mr.
Damiano began his film career in the late 1960s at the suggestion of
his accountant.

Mr. Damiano’s three marriages ended in divorce. His second marriage,
to Barbara Walton, produced two children: Gerard Jr., of Fort Myers
and Queens, and a daughter, Christar, of Fort Myers. They are his only
immediate survivors.

In interviews over the years, Mr. Damiano credited his work as a
hairdresser with having given him a keen understanding of women. This
helped him greatly, he made clear, in his later career.

“I was just a nice guy, which is why I think I did pretty well,” he
told The News-Press of Fort Myers in 2005. “I mean, I’d meet an
actress and have to say, ‘Sit down, take your clothes off — I’m going
to ask you to do some nasty things.’ You have to be pretty nice.”


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