Gail Palmer

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Gail Palmer
BornApril 4, 1955
St. Clair, Michigan
OccupationActress, producer, film director, writer

Gail Palmer (also Gail Palmer-Slater[1]) is an American former writer, producer and director of pornographic movies in the U.S. during the late 1970s and early 1980s.

Among her well-known movies are Hot Summer in the City (1976) starring Lisa Baker as a white girl who is abducted and abused by a group of black men, and the comedies The Erotic Adventures of Candy (1978) starring John Holmes and Carol Connors and (1979) starring Carol Connors and the late punk singer Wendy O. Williams.

She was featured in Playboy September 1977 as a Michigan State girl, mentioned in Playboy February 1979 in "The Year in Sex", and in an article in Swank in June 1980. Also in the late 70s she had a rock band called Foreplay.[2] Her autobiography, Candy Goes to Hollywood: the Gail Palmer Story, appeared in 1994.

After splitting up with her longtime companion Harry Mohney, entertainment work was harder to come by, and Gail would return to Michigan, where she met and dated Dr. Charles Slater, the then-ophthalmologist to the Detroit Red Wings. The couple married in 1988.[3]

After a visit to Hunter S. Thompson's home in 1990 she accused the writer of sexual assault; the charges were later dropped.[4]

In the 2007 book , author Peter Sagal states that he was hired as a ghost writer for Gail Palmer, researched and interviewed her, and found that she did not actually direct the movies attributed to her but was a front for her boyfriend. He did ghost-write her book but it was never published.[5] Her boyfriend at the time was porn distributor Harry Mohney. She sued him in 1984 for excluding her from the profits of their movies.[6]

In the 2006 book When Elvis Meets the Dalai Lama, author Murray Silver claims to have ghostwritten Palmer's autobiography.

References[]

  1. ^ Hunter Thompson Told to Stand Trial On Felony Charges, The New York Times, May 24, 1990
  2. ^ [1]
  3. ^ [2]
  4. ^ Victory for Hunter Thompson, The New York Times, May 31, 1990
  5. ^ NPR quiz-show host delves into a world of blackjack and wifeswapping, Nerve
  6. ^ Jay Allen Sanford (October 23, 2008), "Battle of the Peeps – An Insider History of San Diego Porn Shops", San Diego Reader

External links[]

Retrieved from ""