Nina Hartley

Nina Hartley
Hartley at the AVN Awards, 2013
Born
Marie Louise Hartman

March 1959 (age 66)
Other names
  • Nina Hartman
  • Nina Hartwell
EducationBerkeley High School
San Francisco State University (BSN)
Spouses
unnamed
(m. 1986; div. 2003)
Ira Levine
(m. 2003)
MotherBlanche Hartman
RelativesMarge Frantz (aunt)
Joseph Gelders (grandfather)
Emma Gelders Sterne (great aunt)
Websitenina.com

Marie Louise Hartman (born 1959), known professionally as Nina Hartley,[1] is an American pornographic film actress and sex educator.[2] By 2017 she had appeared in more than one thousand adult films.[3] She has been described by Las Vegas Weekly as an "outspoken feminist" and "advocate for sexual freedom",[4] and by CNBC as "a legend in the adult world".[5]

Early life and education

Hartley was born in Berkeley, California in March 1959,[6] the youngest of four children[7] of a Lutheran father, Louis Hartman, and a Jewish mother, Blanche Hartman (née Gelders).[8] Her grandfather, Joseph Gelders, was a University of Alabama physics professor, a prominent labor and civil rights activist, and a Communist Party USA (CPUSA) member in the 1930s.[9][8]

Hartley's parents converted to Buddhism when she was young.[10] Her mother supported the family as a biochemist[9] after her father, San Francisco radio announcer Louis Hartman, was blacklisted in 1957 for his communist beliefs.[11]

As a teenager, Hartley self-identified as a feminist, influenced by the slogan "my body, my rules".[6][12][13] After graduating from Berkeley High School in 1977, she attended San Francisco State University's undergraduate nursing school and graduated magna cum laude in 1985,[9][14][15] receiving a Bachelor of Science in Nursing.[16] She was a registered nurse[17][10] until her license expired in 1986.[18]

Adult film career

Hartley has stated that pornography is one of the few places where women are allowed to initiate and take pleasure in sex in a society that restricts women's sexuality with expectations of virginity, monogamy, and childbearing.[19] She deliberately sought a career in pornography as a way to make a living by having sex,[20] later telling Las Vegas Weekly, "Porn gave me easy access to women without having to date them or have a relationship."[13] She writes that part of her reason for choosing sex work was to be able to indulge her exhibitionistic and voyeuristic streak.[7] She has said she chose her life's work when she saw the 1976 erotic film The Autobiography of a Flea alone at a theater in San Francisco.[21][8]

In 1982, during her sophomore year of nursing school, Hartley started working as a stripper at the Sutter Cinema and then the Mitchell Brothers O'Farrell Theatre.[22][23] She told an interviewer that she chose the name "Nina" because it was easy for Japanese tourists to say during the time she was a dancer in San Francisco, and "Hartley" because it was close to her own last name, and she "wanted a name that sounded like that of a real person."[23]

Her pornographic film debut was in Educating Nina (1984),[24] where she was cast and directed by fellow performer Juliet Anderson.[22][25][26] For many years, she toured the United States and Canada as a stripper and made personal appearances at sex shops.[27][28] Hartley describes her father's reaction to her choice of occupation:

He asked, 'Why sex? Why not the violin?' I know now that I'm sexual the way that Mozart was musical [...] a life of public sexuality has, from my very first time on stage, been as natural to me as breathing."[12]

In the 1980s and early 1990s, Hartley starred in several of the Debbie Does Dallas film series spin-offs such as Debbie Duz Dishes (1986) and Debbie Does Wall Street (1991).[27] In 1992, she directed her first movie, Nina Hartley's Book of Love.[29] She also produced and starred in a series of sex education videos for Adam & Eve.[30] In 1994, she began her line of instructional videos marketed under the Nina Hartley's Guide brand.[28]

She played the part of Hillary Clinton in the 2008 satirical pornographic film Who's Nailin' Paylin?,[31] with Lisa Ann in the role of Sarah Palin.[32] As of 2015, she was still actively performing,[22] and by 2017 had appeared in more than one thousand pornographic films.[3] She has been described by the San Francisco Chronicle as "one of the best-known actresses in the industry"[25] and by CNBC as "a legend in the adult world".[5]

Mainstream media appearances

Hartley acted in the 1996 Canadian film Bubbles Galore[33] and has appeared on The Oprah Winfrey Show[16][5] and The Phil Donahue Show to defend the pornographic film industry.[16] In the 1997 film Boogie Nights, she played William H. Macy's character's serially unfaithful wife who is murdered.[14][28] She later remarked, "The only movie I ever died in for having sex was a mainstream movie."[14]

Hartley appeared in the 1998 documentary Traci Lords: The E! True Hollywood Story[16] and was interviewed in The Naked Feminist (2003).[34][35] Hartley was featured in After Porn Ends (2012), and appears in Sticky: A (Self) Love Story (2016),[36] in which she discusses masturbation with regards to education, the forced resignation of Joycelyn Elders, and her opinions on the blackballing of comedian Paul Reubens after his arrest for masturbating in a public theater.

Activism

Las Vegas Weekly has described Hartley as an "outspoken feminist, sex educator and advocate for sexual freedom" and "a guiding force for a generation of feminist porn stars".[4] She has described herself both as a "classical liberal feminist"[37][38] and a democratic socialist.[31] Hartley began engaging in feminist activism in the 1980s.[39] She has said:

Based on my experience as a woman and a sexual being, and my understanding that I had the right to decide for myself what to do with my life – that's what I understood to be feminist, to give everybody choices – I didn't choose to be a mother but I chose this [porn] because it suits me.[40]

Hartley has also been involved in socialist activism[41] and has also been affiliated with the Adult Performer Advocacy Committee (APAC), a labor union founded in 2014 for pornographic film actors.[31]

Hartley was elected to the board of the Free Speech Coalition in 1995,[42] and is a long-time board member of the Woodhull Freedom Foundation (founded in 2003).[43] She has made frequent appearances at academic conferences, workshops, and in the media to promote sex positivity.[44] She has given lectures at Dartmouth College, Harvard University, and the University of California.[45][43]

Writing

In 2006, Hartley co-authored Nina Hartley's Guide to Total Sex with her husband Ira Levine. The book includes sections on sex toys, swinging, threesomes, dominance and submission, and erotic spanking.[14] Library Journal called the book a "well-written guide" that is "strong on both safe sex and a permissive approach", saying Hartley "handles the material frankly, accurately, and with sensitivity".[14]

Personal life

Hartley is a self-described bisexual, swinger, and exhibitionist.[13][9][46] She married her first husband, a former Students for a Democratic Society leader,[9] in a three-way marriage with a second woman in 1986.[22] She describes the relationship as a "very unhappy marriage" to "someone who was not a good candidate for mating with a sex worker".[47]

Following her divorce in 2003,[22] Hartley married Ira Levine, known professionally as Ernest Greene,[47] a director of bondage films and editor of Hustler's Taboo magazine,[9][48] with whom she had had a secret relationship in the 1980s.[48] They are openly polyamorous.[47][48] As of 2014, the couple lives in Los Angeles.[48]

Publications

  • Hartley, Nina (1993). "Reflections of a Feminist Porn Star". Porn in the USA. Gauntlet: Exploring the Limits of Free Expression. Vol. 5. Springfield, Penn.: Gauntlet Inc. pp. 62–68. ISBN 978-0-9629-6594-4.
  • —————— (1994). "Confessions of a Feminist Porno Star". In Jaggar, Alison M. (ed.). Living With Contradictions: Controversies In Feminist Social Ethics. Boulder, Colo.: Westview Press. pp. 176–178. ISBN 978-0-8133-1775-5.
  • —————— (1997). "In the Flesh: A Porn Star's Journey". In Nagle, Jill (ed.). Whores and Other Feminists. New York: Routledge. pp. 57–65. ISBN 978-0-4159-1822-0.
  • With Levine, I. S. (2006). Nina Hartley's Guide to Total Sex. New York: Penguin Publishing Group. ISBN 978-1-58333-263-4.
  • With Morpheous (2012). How to Be Kinkier: More Adventures in Adult Playtime. San Francisco, Calif.: Green Candy Press. ISBN 978-1-9311-6094-0.
  • Hartley, Nina (2013). "Porn: An Effective Vehicle for Sexual Role Modeling and Education". In Taormino, Tristan; et al. (eds.). The Feminist Porn Book: The Politics of Producing Pleasure. New York: The Feminist Press. pp. 228–236. ISBN 978-1-5586-1818-3.
  • —————— (2015). "Culture Clash". In Lee, Jiz (ed.). Coming Out Like a Porn Star: Essays on Pornography, Protection, and Privacy. Berkeley, Calif.: ThreeL Media. pp. 255–256. ISBN 978-0-9905571-6-6.

Awards

AVN Awards

Hartley has received a number of AVN Awards,[49] including:

AVN
Category Video/Film
1986 Best Couples Sex Scene - Film Ten Little Maidens
1987 Best Actress - Video Debbie Duz Dishes[50]
1989 Best Supporting Actress - Film Portrait of an Affair[51]
1989 Best Couples Sex Scene - Film Amanda By Night II[50]
1989 Best Couples Sex Scene - Video Sensual Escape[51]
1991 Best Supporting Actress - Video The Last X-Rated Movie[52]
2000 Best Group Sex Scene - Video Ultimate Guide to Anal Sex for Women[53]
2005 Best Specialty Tape - BDSM Nina Hartley's Private Sessions 13[54]
2005 Best Specialty Tape Spanking for Nina Hartley's Guide to Spanking[54]
2009 Best Non-Sex Performance Not Bewitched XXX[55]
2013 Game Changer[56]
AVN Hall of Fame[57]

XRCO Awards

Hartley has won a number of XRCO Awards:

XRCO Awards
Year Category Video/Film
1986 Best Couple Sex Scene Ball Busters[58]
1987 Best Couple Sex Scene Peeping Tom[58]
1987 Torrid Triad Scene Every Woman Has a Fantasy 2[58]
1989 Female Performer of the Year[58]
1990 Best Supporting Actress My Bare Lady[58]
1990 Best Girl-Girl Scene Sorority Pink[58]
1996 Hall of Fame[59]
2000 Best Group Scene Ultimate Guide to Anal Sex for Women[60]

Other awards

Misc. Awards
Year Organization Category
1988 Free Speech Coalition Lifetime Achievement Award[61]
1990 FOXE Female Fan Favorite[62]
1991 FOXE Female Fan Favorite[62]
1992 FOXE Female Fan Favorite[62]
1994 Legends of Erotica Hall of Fame[63]
1996 Hot d'Or Lifetime Achievement Award[64]
2005 AEBN VOD Award Lifetime Achievement Award[65]
2005 Hustler Porn Block of Fame[66]
2006 Ninfa Public Lifetime Career Award[67]
2014 Exxxotica Fan Choice Awards Fanny Lifetime Achievement Award[68]
2014 Free Speech Coalition Leadership Award[69]
2017 XBIZ Award Specialty Release of the Year[70]
2019 XBIZ Award Best Non-Sex Acting Performance (Future Darkly: Artifamily)[71]
2020 XBIZ Award Best Non-Sex Acting Performance (Girls of Wrestling)[72]

See also

References

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    • Roach, Catherine M. (2007). Stripping, Sex, and Popular Culture. Oxford, UK: Berg Publishers. p. 152. ISBN 978-0-85785-094-2. Nina Hartley, a well-known porn star and sex educator
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  6. ^ a b Hartley, Nina (1997). "In the Flesh: A Porn Star's Journey". In Nagle, Jill (ed.). Whores and Other Feminists. New York: Routledge. p. 57. ISBN 978-0-4159-1822-0.
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Further reading