She grew up in Kentucky, spent her working years mostly in Texas rather than Los Angeles, and described herself in retirement as genuinely ordinary: pool days, prime-time television, books. The one detail she offered to complicate that picture was a bedroom dedicated entirely to sex toys, which she mentioned without embarrassment. She married her co-performer Otto Bauer, co-directed a film with him, and built much of her public identity around that partnership. The marriage ended before she publicly retired, and afterward she moved back to Kentucky to be close to family — a quiet, deliberate retreat from the industry that she described as total. When told she had accumulated thirty AVN nominations she said she hadn't known, and that she probably would have guessed less than half. That gap between how seriously the industry took her and how lightly she seemed to hold that recognition is the most revealing thing she has said publicly. The Hall of Fame induction came long after she had stopped paying attention.
The Ten
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