Age: 69
Bambi Woods
Age: 69
Bambi Woods was the stage name of a now-retired pornographic actress and exotic dancer best known for her appearance as the title character in the 1978 film Debbie Does Dallas. Her meteoric success in the so-called Golden Age of Porn, and disappearance intrigued adult industry writers and caused interest in her whereabouts, and a myth about her having met a sordid fate several years after her heyday began to be accepted as fact. According to the director of Debbie Does Dallas there was no sensational truth or mystery, as he had 'Woods' traced decades later, and found she simply did not wish to disrupt her life with publicity.
Biography
Woods was known for her first role as the eponymous character of "Debbie" in the 1978 feature adult film Debbie does Dallas. She received top billing, and a photo of her in a bogus uniform was prominently advertised on theater marquees where she was falsely described as a former Dallas Cowboys Cheerleader. Her partners in the non-simulated sexual intercourse she engaged in for the film included Robert Kerman, and others drawn from the small group of veteran performers who appeared in most US hard-core pornography made in the US during that era. Woods said her involvement in adult films was arranged by a female friend to whom she owed money. The producer/director, Jim Clark, said he created the stage name 'Bambi Woods' in an allusion to the Disney character: "I named her Bambi Woods. There wasn't any real reason behind it. Bambi ... a deer. In the woods. Do you want to get deeper?". One reviewer in a TV documentary about the film expressed the opinion that Woods's demeanor during sex scenes was in keeping with her pseudonym, being reminiscent of a deer caught in car headlights.
Woods’s pornographic film career occurred towards the end of the so-called Golden Age of Porn when the filmmakers operated in a legal grey area, making them vulnerable to extortion by organised criminals who controlled distribution. Unlike current pornography in the US, there was no mandatory verification and record keeping of participants’ true identities, and the real names of even the most prolific remained unknown outside their profession until decades later when the identities of almost all famous performers were circulated on the internet. Despite the huge profits being made, female performers’ fees rarely exceeded the low hundreds of dollars. Although Woods ostensibly performed in Debbie Does Dallas as a one-off to clear a debt, she spent all her earnings, so the still-owed friend arranged for her to become an exotic dancer. An interviewer, told about the background to Woods’s career, remarked of the creditor that she had ‘a heart of gold’.
The film became a huge success. According to one account, and interviews she gave, Woods was feted in New York clubs including Plato's Retreat and mixed with celebrities. However she was distraught when a level of publicity she had not anticipated led to her family finding out she had performed in hard core pornography. She also became increasingly disillusioned with approbation as a porn star, and disconcerted by being sought by those bringing a civil suit.
Two years after her pornographic debut she had not made another film. The fee Woods eventually accepted to reprise her role as Debbie in a sequel may have been unprecedentedly lucrative by the modest standards of adult performer remuneration. She did not have sex on camera for any production she is credited with subsequent to 1981; these may be for clips used years after they were filmed. Woods disappeared completely by the mid 1980s.
A 2005 article in The Age stated that Woods died of a 1986 drug overdose in lurid circumstances, apparently this information originated in a complete fabrication of obscure origins that through lack of challenge had become accepted as truth by the time of the article. In a 2005 Channel 4 documentary, Debbie Does Dallas Uncovered, Clark said the real name of Woods (which he declined to specify on camera) was used to trace her family in the mid 1990s, and a private investigator had been informed through indirect communications that she was living a regular life and wished no involvement or publicity concerning her former career. Subsequently a blogger was e-mailed by someone claiming to be Woods and apparently privy to details that served as partial verification, the e-mailer said suggestions as to what Woods’s real name is, including the one Clark allegedly used to trace her, are incorrect.