Moana Pozzi
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Anna Moana Rosa Pozzi (Italian pronunciation: [ˈanna moˈaːna ˈrɔːza ˈpottsi]; 27 April 1961 – 15 September 1994), also known mononymously as Moana, was an Italian pornographic actress, television personality, and politician.
Early life
Pozzi was born in Genoa, Liguria, Italy, the daughter of Alfredo Pozzi, a nuclear engineer, and Rosanna, a housewife. Her name, Moana, is a Hawaiian name meaning "ocean".[1] In her youth, Pozzi lived for periods of time in Canada and Brazil, due to the nature of her father's work requiring him to travel. By the time she was thirteen years old, the family had returned to their native Italy, where she finished school. In 1979, a few weeks before her 18th birthday, she gave birth to her only child, a son named Simone, who was raised by her parents and told that his mother was his older sister. The family moved to France in 1980 and Pozzi, then 19 years old, decided to stay in Rome.
In Rome, Pozzi started working as a model and studied acting. Sometimes she performed in television advertisements or as a walk-on in comedy movies.[2] In 1981, she performed in her first hardcore movie, Valentina, ragazza in calore (Valentina, Girl in Heat), credited as Linda Heveret. A minor scandal ensued since, at the same time the movie was in theatres, she was still working on a children's television programme, Tip Tap Club, on Rete 2. She denied being the same person, but was suspended from television anyway. [citation needed] This gave Pozzi her first popularity in newspapers and magazines. [citation needed] In 1985, Federico Fellini wanted her to perform in his movie Ginger and Fred. [citation needed]
Career
In 1986, Pozzi met Riccardo Schicchi, manager of Diva Futura. Her first A-movie in hard core was Fantastica Moana, where she used her real name for the first time. She also starred in Curve Deliziose (Delicious Curves) next to Cicciolina and others, the first live show in Italy where naked models would masturbate onstage. [citation needed] This caused scandal and accusations of outrageous obscenity. She became huge in the hardcore business and soon eclipsed the popularity of Cicciolina in Italy. [citation needed] (At the same time Cicciolina stopped doing porn to pursue a political career in Italian Parliament.) Pozzi's appearances on television also caused scandal. In the show Matrjoska by Antonio Ricci, she used to appear on stage completely naked or just wrapped in a transparent plastic veil. [citation needed] Magazines and newspapers were more and more interested in her and she was often featured on covers. She was also appreciated for her distinctive intelligence, defying the cliché of the brainless pinup. [citation needed] She cultivated intellectuals, writers, and artists such as Mario Schifano or Dario Bellezza. [citation needed]
Early 1990s
Pozzi was conscious of her role in show business.[citation needed] In interviews she always spoke of what she wanted to be for public opinion: sexy, sophisticated, intelligent, open-minded, worldly.[citation needed]
In 1991, Pozzi published her first book Moana's Philosophy where she listed, with marks from 4 to 9.5, twenty famous celebrities who had been her lovers. The list included actors such as Robert De Niro, Harvey Keitel, Roberto Benigni and Massimo Troisi, soccer players like Paulo Roberto Falcão and Marco Tardelli, writers including Luciano De Crescenzo. [citation needed] The name of the most famous one, the prime minister Bettino Craxi, who was her lover in 1981, was hidden as "the politician". [citation needed]
In 1992, Pozzi co-founded, with Hungarian Ilona Staller "Cicciolina", the Love Party of Italy, whose political program included legalization of brothels, better sex education and the creation of "love parks".[3] She ran for the mayor of Rome and received about 1 per cent of votes.[4] No one was elected, but her popularity reached its pinnacle and the various Italian TV anchors wanted to interview her. [citation needed] Stylist Karl Lagerfeld wanted her on the catwalk in 1993. Pozzi became so popular that she was a protagonist for an animated cartoon created by the Italian cartoonist Mario Verger, with herself co-directing. [citation needed] This film, entitled Moanaland (1994), aired frequently on Italian television in Blob , and in broadcasts dedicated to the actress. [citation needed] Again Verger, by himself, dedicated to Pozzi another cartoon, I Remember Moana, 1995, that gained praise by film critics Marco Giusti and Enrico Ghezzi, and was transmitted in Fuori Orario. [citation needed] It also won a Special Mention at the Erotic Film Festival in the USA. [citation needed]
Her sister Maria Tamiko "Mima" Pozzi also became a porn actress with the stage name Baby Pozzi.
Pozzi performed in about 100 porn movies, mostly in Italy, but also some in Los Angeles with Gerard Damiano as director. She sold about 1 million videotapes. She was on the covers of 50 major magazines, not including pictorials in porn magazines. She was reportedly worth more than 50 billion 1990 Italian liras, about 26 million Euros.[5]
Death and aftermath
In 1994, Pozzi fell ill, unable to eat without vomiting and losing weight. She took time off from work to travel with her husband Antonio Di Ciesco to India and then to France. She died in Lyon, France on 15 September 1994, at the age of 33, reportedly of liver cancer.[6] The cause of her death has been a subject of debate, with numerous suggestions being made, ranging from Pozzi being a spy for the KGB, killed by exposure to radioactive polonium, to dying from the result of assisted suicide orchestrated by her husband.[7][8] Some people have questioned whether or not Pozzi died, and believe she may have faked her death in order to escape fame.[9] In 2006, over a decade after her death, the Italian crime show Chi l'ha visto? aired her death certificate which showed she had indeed died of liver cancer, along with her cremation certificate, showing her ashes had been given to family members.[10] Despite the release of paperwork and interviews with family members, the public and media has continued to speculate on how or if Pozzi died.[11]
In 2006, Simone Pozzi revealed to the public that he was her son, not her brother as he had been raised to believe.[12] As told by him, he was born in 1979, just a few weeks before his mother's 18th birthday, and was told growing up that his grandparents were his parents and that his mother was his older sister, in order to avoid the scandal of an out-of-wedlock birth in the family. Pozzi's mother confirmed the claims. Later that year, he, along with investigative journalist Francesca Parravicini, published a book about Pozzi's personality, career and relationships titled Moana, tutta la verità (English: Moana, the Whole Truth).[13]
Legacy
Pozzi was a popular and beloved figure in Italy and made a name for herself outside of the pornography industry. Following her death, The New Yorker remarked on the country being in mourning as the result of her passing and the Archbishop of Naples gave a homily in her honor.[14] During her lifetime, Pozzi supported LGBT rights, denounced the mafia, and campaigned for legalization of sex work.[15] Upon her death, she left much of her fortune to cancer research.[5] Since she is still a well-known figure in modern day, the Walt Disney Company made the decision to release the animated film Moana as Oceania in Italy and changed the title character's name to Vaiana.[16]
Pozzi inspired the main character of the 1999 film Guardami (Look at Me).
In 2009 a miniseries based on her life was directed by Alfredo Peyretti and starred Violante Placido in the title role.
In 2010 her former manager Riccardo Schicchi produced and directed I Segreti di Moana (The Secrets of Moana), in which the title role was played by Vittoria Risi.[17]
In 2016, the animated film Moana was retitled Vaiana or Oceania in several countries to avoid association with the pornstar.[18][19]
References
Inline citations
- ^ "Hawaiian Dictionaries". wehewehe.org. Retrieved 18 July 2018.
- ^ Povoledo, Elisabetta. "The beatification of a porn star". nytimes.com. The New York Times Company. Retrieved 29 July 2014.
- ^ Moana Si Butta In Politica E S'Allea Al ' Potere Grigio', La Repubblica, 28 December 1991
- ^ " After Elections, Italy Is Still a Muddle", The New York Times, 23 November 1993
- ^ a b Marco Giusti, Moana, cit.
- ^ Editorial Blitz. "Moana Pozzi, 20 anni fa moriva la pornostar del mistero: la fotostoria". Blitz Quotidiano. Società Editrice Srl Multimedia. Retrieved 12 June 2016.
- ^ "Italian Actress and Porn Star Was a KGB Agent, New Documentary Claims". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 18 July 2018.
- ^ "Di Ciesco: "Così ho aiutato Moana a morire"". Corriere della Sera (in Italian). 3 April 2007. Retrieved 18 July 2018.
- ^ "Death of a porn star to be investigated by Italian prosecutor". The Independent. Retrieved 18 July 2018.
- ^ "Chi l'ha Visto - Misteri - Moana Pozzi - La scheda". www.chilhavisto.rai.it (in Italian). Retrieved 18 July 2018.
- ^ ITALY (13 April 2007). "Porn icon Pozzi helped to die". ITALY Magazine. Retrieved 18 July 2018.
- ^ Imberti, Nicola. "Mystery Moana". iltempo.it. Daily IL Time srl. Retrieved 2 June 2015.
- ^ Pozzi, Simone (2006). Moana, tutta la verità. ISBN 88-7424-134-8.
- ^ "The Life and Death of Moana, A Diva of Porn". The New Yorker. Retrieved 18 July 2018.
- ^ Povoledo, Elisabetta. "MEDIA : The beatification of a porn star". Retrieved 18 July 2018.
- ^ "Disney changes 'Moana' title in Italy, because porn star". 18 November 2016. Retrieved 2 January 2017.
- ^ "Vittoria Risi: "Io e Moana Pozzi"". TGCOM. 11 March 2010. Retrieved 17 June 2013.
- ^ "Vaiana and Moana: a story of two Disney heroines". Novagraaf.
- ^ Saunders, Tristram Fane (16 November 2016). "Disney renamed its new film Moana 'to avoid confusion with porn star'" – via www.telegraph.co.uk.
General references
- Moana Pozzi, La filosofia di Moana, Moana's Club Edizioni, Roma, 1991 (self-produced).
- Moana Pozzi, Il sesso secondo Moana, Edizioni Moana's Club Edizioni, Roma, 1992 (self-produced).
- Noa Bonetti, Un'amica di nome Moana. Confidenze a cuore aperto di un'indimenticabile star a luci rosse, Sperling & Kupfer Editori, Milano, 1994, ISBN 88-200-2061-0.
- Brunetto Fantauzzi, La pornoViva, il terribile segreto di Moana, Flash Edizioni, Roma 1995.
- Patrizia D'Agostino – Antoni Tentori – Alda Teodorani, Pornodive, Castelvecchi Editore, Roma, 1995, ISBN 88-8210-019-7.
- Andrea Di Quarto – Michele Giordano, Moana e le altre. Vent'anni di cinema porno in Italia, Gremese Editore, 1997, ISBN 88-7742-067-7.
- Tommaso Trini, Moana. Ultimo mito, Prearo Editore, Roma, 2003, ISBN 88-7348-032-2.
- Ermanno Krumm, Mimmo Rotella – Moana ultimo mito, Prearo Editore, Roma, 2003.
- Marco Giusti, Moana, Mondadori Editore, Milano, 2004, ISBN 88-04-53306-4.
- Brunetto Fantauzzi, E... viva Moana, giallo politico! Chi ha ucciso la pornodiva del potere, 2005.
- Francesca Parravicini, Moana, tutta la verità, Aliberti Editore, Reggio Emilia, 2006, ISBN 88-7424-134-8.
- Brunetto Fantauzzi, Moana. La spia nel letto del potere, Edizioni Nuove Srl, 2006.
- Brunetto Fantauzzi, Moana. Mistero per sempre, Edizioni Nuove Srl, 2007.
External links
- Official website of Moana Pozzi Association (in Italian)
- The original death register shown in a TV programme (in Italian)
- Moana Pozzi Online
- Moana Pozzi at IMDb
- Moana Pozzi at the Internet Adult Film Database
- Moana Pozzi at the Adult Film Database
- Moana Pozzi at the European Girls Adult Film Database