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Lights! Camera! Viagra!

COLUMN ONE

When the show must go on, sometimes a little chemistry helps.

July 06, 2001|P.J. HUFFSTUTTER and RALPH FRAMMOLINO | TIMES STAFF WRITERS

"You may not think that the delays are a big deal, but they are," said Marci Hirsch, head of film production for Vivid Video Inc. in Van Nuys, one of the largest adult film companies. "Hollywood studios shoot for months. We have a budget that lets us shoot for three days."

Small budgets mean small paychecks, particularly for male actors who typically rank at the bottom of the payroll food chain. The industry has long been dominated by women, whose bodies and faces are what sell an ocean of sex tapes to a predominantly male audience. They can often choose the male actors they will work with--and blackball the ones they will not.

Men who do make the cut are paid significantly less than their female counterparts, earning as little as $500 per movie. For many of them, Viagra has made the difference between steady work and a silent phone.

"If a guy gets there and he doesn't do his job and he refuses to use Viagra, the director won't force him to use it," Bune said. "He just won't hire him again."

Bune, once a struggling mainstream Hollywood actor, now produces a line of adult films titled "Beach Bunnies With Big Brown Eyes." He was drawn into the industry several years ago by McCormick of Metro Productions, who was seeking someone with real theatrical experience.

"We needed someone who could actually read both a script and their own name, and he could do that," McCormick said.

Bune's first shoot was a disaster, McCormick said. A blond surfer sporting a tattoo of the Energizer Bunny on his shoulder, Bune could not complete his scenes under the spotlight of the cameras. "That first scene had to have gone for three hours," Bune said. "I was new. I wasn't used to that."

The actor turned to his doctor for help with his professional problem but was told that he could get a Viagra prescription only if he was having trouble in his private life. Bune said he "read between the lines" and told his physician that he also needed a boost in his bedroom.

A few months later, Bune returned to the porn world a new man. "Now he's a stud," McCormick said.

The new flood of chemically enabled competition has created a catty rift in the traditionally tightknit group of male actors. The reason is simple: There are now too many men fighting for the same jobs. The top sex-film studios, which churn out more than 30 films a month and pay the best, typically rely on a core group of 25 to 35 male actors. Yet hundreds of men now vie for these jobs, overwhelming studios with glossy portraits and telephone pleas for work.

Viagra is popular within this new group of "pretty boys," said former actor and current director Bud Lee, who often takes some extra Viagra to the set, just in case. "They are making it tougher for the older guys to get work."

For Nonusers, It Can Be a Matter of Pride

In the pre-Viagra days of the 1970s and 1980s, when X-rated movies had far larger budgets and took a couple weeks to shoot, the demands on an actor were more reasonable.

"Back then, you could only do one, maybe two [sex] scenes a day," said Collins, who has been an actor since 1998. "Now, we're doing five."

Male actors broke into the business through a process of natural selection that weeded out the vast majority of wannabes who failed the difficult test of becoming aroused on command.

One result of this harsh Darwinism was that actors who could perform like Superman were often a far cry from looking like Christopher Reeve.

The classic star is Ron Jeremy, a pudgy actor fondly dubbed "the Hedgehog" by the industry because of his excessively hairy body and less-than-elegant features.

For stalwarts such as Jeremy, who has appeared in 1,700 movies in 23 years, Viagra is for amateurs. Jeremy said he refuses to use Viagra even if it takes him a little longer to get into character. It's an issue of pride. No "real" star uses Viagra, Jeremy said.

"If you want me--you want Ron Jeremy--you wait two or three minutes. You still get a good scene," Jeremy said, scoffing at the thought of using the drug.

Even directors grumble about what the drug has done to the "art" of hard-core films, such that it is. Instead of being "physically honest," Viagra has helped turn actors into sex robots, said director Chi Chi LaRue.

"I hate it, and I try to deter my actors from using it," he said. "This business is all about the fantasy, where the one bit of reality was that the actors were turned on. Now, they don't have to be."

Actors are well aware of the professional stigma that accompanies Viagra use--a perception that it is a pharmaceutical crutch for the impotent. Many make a point of saying that they are "V-free"--even if they're not.

Though few actors admit using the drug, directors are practical about the matter. They have taken to issuing a discreet warning to actors about a half-hour before curtain call so the men can slip away and fortify themselves.

At a recent shoot inside an Agoura Hills home, a trio of actors clad in surfer T-shirts and slouchy shorts lounged on black leather couches, escaping the summer heat and preparing for the director's cue.

One man, a tall brown-haired 28-year-old with the chiseled physique of a GQ model, walked over to his backpack, nestled against a wall covered with Norman Rockwell prints.

As he rummaged through his gear, he realized he had left his Viagra tablets at home.

Trying not to panic, he whispered to a co-worker, who nodded and handed over a tiny blue pill.

The nervous performer, who requested that his name not be used "because it's really not that cool to say you use Viagra," slipped outside with a can of soda.

An hour later, the director called to start filming.

The actor, now confident and smiling, was ready.

*

Previous stories are posted on The Times Web site. Go to: http://www.latimes.com/porn.

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