Monique Alexander attending the AVN Expo, Las Vegas, Nevada, on 7 January 2011 |
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Born | May 26, 1982 [1] Northern California[2] |
Other names | Monique, Briana Burke, Alexandra when dancing |
Ethnicity | White, American |
Height | 5 ft 3 in (1.60 m)[1] |
Weight | 105 lbs[1] |
Website | |
http://www.moniquealexander.com/ |
Monique Alexander (born May 26, 1982) is an American pornographic actress and nude model.
Alexander began working in the adult industry as a stripper in Sacramento when she was 18, to supplement her daytime earnings as a receptionist.[2][3] She appeared in several adult magazines with her first photo shoot being with Earl Miller.[3] She started performing in adult films in 2001 beginning with a girl-girl scene in Hot Showers Number 2[3] and becoming a contract girl for Sin City in that year.[4] In addition to a catalog of solely girl-girl hardcore work, she appeared in a handful of softcore erotic films produced by HBO and Cinemax such as Hotel Erotica, The Sex Spa, Sex House,[5] and Voyeur: Inside Out.[6] She also became a solo and girl-girl internet nude model. Alexander appeared in a mainstream film titled Spider's Web with Stephen Baldwin and Kari Wührer in 2002.[6] Alexander has also done foot-fetish videos for FM Concepts.
Alexander was a contract girl for Vivid Entertainment from 2004 to 2009.[7] After years of appearing only in girl-girl scenes, she began appearing in boy-girl scenes in 2005, including an interactive DVD and a feature role with Rocco Siffredi in Vivid's Lexie and Monique Love Rocco.
Monique makes a cameo appearance in the Season 3 finale of the HBO series Entourage.[6] In 2007 she became a sports reporter on National Lampoon Comedy Radio's The Phil Show.[8]
She was invited to Fox News show, Red Eye w/ Greg Gutfeld, to discuss a recent nonpartisan study that finds abstinence-only programs for teens do not work, whereas safe sex education programming is highly successful. Alexander discusses what being a Vivid Girl means to her as well as her preference for hands-on sex education, which aired on November 10, 2007.[9] On February 15, 2008, she and Ron Jeremy represented the industry in a debate at Yale University against pornography opponents Craig Gross and Donnie Pauling.[10]