Doris Wishman

Doris Wishman
Born (1912-06-01)June 1, 1912
New York City, New York, US
Died August 10, 2002(2002-08-10) (aged 90)
Coral Gables, Florida, U.S.
Occupation Director, producer, writer
Years active 1959–2002

Doris Wishman (June 1, 1912 – August 10, 2002) was an American film director, screenwriter and film producer.

Early life

Doris Wishman was born on June 1, 1912, in New York City. Her father was a hay and grain salesman in Manhattan; her mother died when she was still a child.[1] After graduating from high school, she claimed to take acting lessons at the Alviene School of Dramatics in New York in the early 1930s. She worked as a secretary and a film booker for her cousin Max Rosenberg, an independent film distributor, in the late 1940s and early 1950s. She was married during this same time to a man named Jack Abrams. Wishman began her production career after Abrams died in 1958.

Early film career

In 1957, a New York Appeals court ruling allowed films depicting nudism to be exhibited in movie theaters in New York State. Inspired by this development, Wishman claimed in several interviews to have borrowed $10,000 from her sister to produce her first film, Hideout in the Sun, a nudist film, shot in late 1958 and released in early 1960. Her next film Nude on the Moon released in 1961, was a science fiction nudie. The film was banned in New York State, as the censor board stated that films featuring nudity in a nudist colony was fine, but showing nudity in a science fiction-themed film about a nudist colony on the moon was not. Her fourth nudist film, Blaze Starr Goes Nudist (1962), starred legendary burlesque performer Blaze Starr.[1] Wishman produced eight nudist films in total between 1958 and 1964. After the popularity of the genre began to wane, she decided to abandon nudist exploitation films and expand into the sex-exploitation genre.

Rise in the Sexploitation genre

When beginning her work in the sexploitation genre, she decided to use a pseudonym, "Louis Silverman". One of her first films for the genre Bad Girls Go to Hell (1965), would be considered one of her earliest successes of the genre. This film was her first collaboration with her long-time cinematographer C. Davis Smith, who would work with Wishman until her death. Most of these films were shot in black and white. In 1968 with her film Love Toy she began shooting in color as she went on to do soft-core films. Her biggest claims to fame were two films featuring the sexploitation starlet Chesty Morgan, Deadly Weapons and Double Agent 73. Shot in the vein of sexploitation works by fellow filmmakers like Russ Meyer, the Chesty Morgan films had a high camp factor, with scenes that featured Morgan taking off her top as exaggerated sound effects accentuated the size of her 73-inch bust.

Pornographic and other exploitation work

Later on in her career after her long period of sexploitation work, Wishman went on to direct two hardcore pornographic features titled Satan Was a Lady (1975) and Come With Me, My Love (1976) both of which featured porn star Annie Sprinkle. Wishman was not fond of working on these films and later in her life denied having directed them. She claimed to have left the set during explicit sex scenes, leaving them to the discretion of her camera operator. As her biographer and long time admirer Michael Bowen stated in her New York Times obituary, "She was actually rather sexually naive." He also stated that "She personally thought that someone's hand caressing your face was more erotic than sex itself."

In 1971 she began working on Let Me Die a Woman, a semi-documentary film about sex reassignment surgery that was not released until 1978. It featured many interviews with trans subjects, as well as dramatized scenes about the daily struggles of trans people. One such dramatization featured Deep Throat star Harry Reems.

She later became interested in the slasher film craze that began with films like Halloween (1978), Friday the 13th (1980), and Prom Night (1980). Wishman made her own film in this genre titled A Night to Dismember. Initially filmed in 1979, much of the footage was lost by the processing lab and had to be reshot. The movie was finally released in 1983.[1]

Later life and death

After the failure of A Night to Dismember, Wishman moved to Florida in the mid-80s where she worked at a lingerie store. Interest in her work began to slowly increase due to the home video release of many of her films. Cult followings started to form and Wishman was honored at the New York Underground Film Festival. Filmmaker John Waters featured her Chesty Morgan work in his film Serial Mom. Film critic Joe Bob Briggs described Wishman as, "The greatest female exploitation film director in history."[1] Wishman died on August 10, 2002 at Jackson Memorial Hospital in Miami, Florida shortly after being treated for lymphoma.[1]

Filmography

Hideout in the Sun (1960)

Nude on the Moon (1961)

Diary of a Nudist (1961)

Blaze Starr Goes Nudist (1962)

Gentlemen Prefer Nature Girls (1963)

Playgirls International (1963)

Behind the Nudist Curtain (1964)

The Prince and the Nature Girl (1964)

Bad Girls Go to Hell (1965)

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)

Too Much Too Often! (1968)

Love Toy (1968)

The Amazing Transplant (1970)

Keyholes Are for Peeping (1972)

Deadly Weapons (1973)

Double Agent 73 (1974)

The Immoral Three (1975)

Satan Was a Lady (1975)

Come with Me, My Love (1976)

Let Me Die a Woman (1978)

A Night to Dismember (1983)

Dildo Heaven (2002)

Each Time I Kill (2007)

See also

References

External links

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