Ovidie

Ovidie
Born (1980-08-25) 25 August 1980[1][2]
France[1]
Nationality French[1]
Height 5 ft 9.25 in (1.76 m)
Website http://www.metronews.fr/blog/ovidie/
No. of adult films 26 as a performer & 15 as a director (per IAFD)

Ovidie is a French director,[1] producer, journalist and writer.[2] She used to be a feminist pornographic actress from 1999 to 2003.[2]

Overview

Ovidie refused to give her real name to the press.[3] Her parents are liberals from "a good family background" who were teachers in 2003.[3] She was married; her husband left a teaching position at the University of Paris to edit a pornographic magazine.[3] They later divorced, but her job was not a factor in the divorce.[4]

Ovidie has denied entering the pornography industry for either sex or money, describing herself as middle class.[5] Her involvement in dance and choreography, and her interest in expression of the human body, played a part in attracting her to the industry.[5]

At the time that Ovidie became an pornographic actor, she described herself as a "very active militant feminist".[5] She first viewed pornography to get a sense of the injustice that was being perpetrated on female industry workers. She found herself surprised when female porn stars, who she once felt sorry for, impressed her with their powerful sexual images. Wanting to attain this same kind of sexual strength, which seemed compatible with feminist ideals, she began acting in pornographic films.[5] She told The Times Magazine "I am interested in these sort of experiences not just because I am perverse, which as you have seen I can be when I want to be. No, it's because not everyone can achieve them."[3]

Holding a degree in philosophy, Ovidie has been nicknamed L'intello du porno ("the porn-star intellectual"). She said that she only studied philosophy so that she could understand porn.[3] In 2012, she wrote Sexe Philo,[6] in collaboration with philosophy PHD Francis Métivier.

Ovidie was an active porn performer until 2003, when she was featured in the porn/mainstream crossover film All About Anna.[2] She has also been active as a porn director, both during her years as a performer and afterward. After only one year of performing, her first film as a director, Orgie en Noir (2000), was produced by Marc Dorcel. Since then, she has directed a number of women-friendly videos for Marc Dorcel, Blue One, VCommunications, and Canal +. She is considered as a specialist of porn made by women, for women.[7] In May 2008, she started directing videos for the sex education channel FrenchLover TV.[2][8] As of 12 March 2011, she was FrenchLover TV's Program Director.[2][9] She also used to host a weekly talk show on the channel.[10] She left the company in October 2015 to focus on her career as a journalist.[11] She has worked for Radio France, Council of The European Union Metronews, France 2, and Canal +.

During her active career as pornographic performer, she rarely did anal sex scenes, and she required her partners to use a condom in every role except her first.[4]

In 2002, she published her first book, Porno Manifesto,[2] which she said she wrote because she was angry about the ignorance about pornography.[4] Until 2005, she used to own a sex shop that catered to women only.[4] She wrote 11 books, most of them about female sexuality (Osez découvrir le point G, La sexualité féminine de A à Z[12]...), but also about pregnancy (Osez l'amour durant la grossesse), philosophy (Sexe Philo),[6] and Punk Rock (Metal Urbain : a good hippie is a dead one).

In 2006, she started writing and directing political documentaries. In November 2011, her movie Rhabillage,[13] produced by French director Jean Jacques Beineix,[2] has been aired on French national television France 2 with 6 millions of viewers.[14] In 2015 she directed À quoi rêvent les jeunes filles ?,[15] a documentary about the sexuality of millennials aired on France 2.

She's columnist for French newspaper Metronews since December 2012.

Ovidie is a devout vegan and a campaigner for animal rights.[3]

Filmography

Ovidie has appeared in mainstream movies, such as Mortel Transfer by Jean-Jacques Beineix[2] and Le Pornographe (The Pornographer) by Bertrand Bonello.[3][4] In the latter film, she performs an unsimulated sex scene.

She also appears in the Danish film All About Anna, produced by Lars von Trier's[2] Zentropa, where she performed explicit and unsimulated oral sex on mainstream actress/singer Gry Bay; in a twist typical of Zentropa films, she is the only porn star in the film's cast, yet stands out as she does not appear nude in the film (only Gry Bay is undressed during their sex scene).

She also starred fully clothed in the 2007 Jean Rollin film La nuit des horloges, and in 2016 she appears in Saint-Amour, directed by Benoît Delépine and Gustave Kervern, with Benoit Poelvoorde and Gérard Depardieu.

Music

Ovidie has also been active in musical circles, organizing underground concerts within France for martial musicians such as Dernière Volonté, Position Parallèle, and others. In 2006, she directed 8 music videos for French electro punk band Metal Urbain. In 2009, Ovidie directed and performed in a music video by the German electronic rock/glam rock band The World Domination.

In 2012, she wrote, with French punk rocker Eric Debris, Metal Urbain: a good hippie is a dead one which has a preface by American punk rocker Jello Biafra.

Titles and awards

During five years in the porn business, Ovidie appeared in more than 60 movies and received seven awards:

Bibliography

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 "Ovidie". Retrieved 8 May 2014.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 "Ovidie Officiel - Histoire d'Ovidie". Ovidie.net. Retrieved 2013-03-30.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Hussey, Andrew (2003-01-18). "The Story of O". The Times Magazine: 34–38. Retrieved 2011-03-19.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 Ovidie (January 2005). "Beyond the Porno-Manifesto". Ikonen (Interview). Interview with Martin Kreischer. Retrieved 2011-03-19.
  5. 1 2 3 4 "My Porn Manifesto". The Guardian. Guardian News and Media. 2002-04-12. p. 11. Retrieved 2011-03-19.
  6. 1 2 "Sexe & philo- livrePhilosophie". Editions-breal.fr. Retrieved 2013-03-30.
  7. "Interview Ovidie, - Femme et porno, film pornographique, films pornographiques". aufeminin. 2010-09-26. Retrieved 2013-03-30.
  8. "French Lovers TV Provides Adult Entertainment Fun, Minus The Taboo". Celebrity News Service/All Headline News. 2009-01-09. Retrieved 2009-08-28.
  9. "Info Sante" [Health Info]. EditoWeb MagaZine (in French). Editoweb Marketing. 2011-03-12. Retrieved 2011-03-19.
  10. "French lover TV: le coup d'envoi" [French lover TV: kickoff]. TéléObs.com (in French). Le Nouvel Observateur. 2009-10-13. Retrieved 2011-03-19.
  11. https://fr.linkedin.com/pub/ovidie-r/31/863/371
  12. "Livre - LA SEXUALITE DE A A Z | Ovidie". La Musardine. Retrieved 2013-03-30.
  13. "Envoyé spécial: tout sur l'émission, news et vidéos en replay - France2" (in French). Envoye-special.france2.fr. Retrieved 2013-03-30.
  14. Toutelatele.com. "Ovidie, ex-star du porno, fait grimper l'audience d'Envoyé spécial - News TV". Toutelatele.com. Retrieved 2013-03-30.
  15. Marie Turcan. ""À quoi rêvent les jeunes filles ?" le documentaire d'Ovidie sur les femmes qui ont grandi avec Internet et leur rapport au sexe - Les Inrocks". Les Inrocks.
  16. 1 2 "Hot d'Or archives presse x, articles sur les Hot d'or". Hot-dor.fr. Retrieved 2014-05-09.
  17. "FICEB 2002 Awards". Archived from the original on 9 June 2007.
  18. "Festival De L'Erotisme und European-X-Awards 2004". German-Adult-News.com. 2004-03-10. Archived from the original on 10 March 2010. Retrieved 2010-02-17.
  19. Paul Fishbein (2009-10-21). "Pirates II, Evil Angel Big Winners at 2009 Hot d'Or Awards". AVN. Retrieved 2009-10-21.

External links

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