Judith Carr ( – January 10, 2010) known professionally as Juliet Anderson, was an American pornographic film actress and adult movie producer, relationship counselor and author. In 1987, she started a new career as a relationship counselor and massage therapist, before returning to adult entertainment in the mid-1990s.

Early life

Anderson was born in Los Angeles, the daughter of a jazz trumpet player and an aspiring nurse. She was afflicted with both childhood arthritis and Crohn's disease and spent a sizable portion of her youth in the hospital or on bedrest.

Adult film career

After living in Finland from 1971 to 1977, working as a radio journalist and teaching English to Finnish schoolchildren, she returned to the United States in 1977, and became involved in the pornography business in 1978 while trying to get into documentary film making. She was working in advertising when she answered an ad by hardcore pornography producer Alex de Renzy, who was looking for an actress. Author Charles Taylor wrote she "brought a persona of classic movie-broad to porn", referring to her as "the Joan Blondell of porn." Another critic, Howard Hampton, opined that "her tough, no-nonsense older woman routine would be at home in the margins of any Howard Hawks movie." Numerous awards followed: Induction into the Erotic Legends Hall of Fame in 1996, an X-rated Critics Organization Hall of Fame Award in 1999, and a "Lifetime Achievement Actress Award" from the Free Speech Coalition in 2001. In 2007, Anderson received an honorary Doctor of the Arts from The Institute for Advanced Study of Human Sexuality.

Death

Anderson died at home of a heart attack on January 10, 2010. Later that month, it was revealed Anderson had died of a heart attack.

  • XRCO Hall of Fame (inducted 1999)

References

Further reading

  • Marvin, Louis (1987). The New Goddesses. Malibu, Calif.: AF Press. . Features a chapter on Anderson.
  • Sex is no Act: A Tribute to Juliet Anderson, by Graham Hill, Cinema Retro, July 9, 2009. Retrieved on 2009-11-10.