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In a demimonde as duplicitous as the porn world, it shouldnt be too surprising to find that some of its players lead double lives. The fantasy of the princess-whore is a common one in the culture (think Belle de Jour), and the Internet abounds with websites by lap dancers and porn stars who are also artists or academics. In the latter category falls Annabel Chong, pioneer of the 251-man gangbang, who is really Grace Quek, a USC graduate who spends as much time ruminating on questions of gender and sexuality as she does getting laid en masse on camera. Quek/Chong is the subject of her boyfriend Gough Lewiss intense, disturbing documentary, Sex: The Annabel Chong Story. As in many such split identities, the lines between the two get blurry indeed. At one point she says and we believe "I dont even know who Annabel Chong is." In limning her story, Lewis takes the viewer into all the worlds that have touched her, for better or worse. These include the porn industry; her native Singapore with its rigid conservative culture; academia; and, in a distorted mirror-image of the event that would establish her as a porn superstar, a London subway where she was gang-raped at age 21.
Cracks in this scenario emerge quickly. Its hard, for example, to reconcile her forced smiles and screams of passion after the 50th, 100th, or 250th slobbering guy with body language that says shes pretty much a psychological wreck. Queks vaunted search for sexual liberation seems to be covering a search for community and family. Scenes of her sidling up to Jeremy, Bowen, and others in the porn industry as if they cared about her are undercut by interviews in which its clear that shes been totally commodified in their minds Bowen doesnt even pay her for the gangbang video that he himself calls the best-selling video in porn history. Once her record of 251 guys is eclipsed, shes dismissed as "all washed up," and she ends up haggling with second-rate pornmeisters over a few hundred bucks. "Im willing to take the consequences of what I do," she says, referring to risks psychic and physical involved in getting laid by hundreds of men in the ten-hour shooting of The Worlds Biggest Gang Bang. What she doesnt know that the film reveals is that many of the men werent even given an HIV test, in spite of assurances to the contrary. Queks trusting nature is constantly pummeled, and her fantasy of the porn world as a loving community rather than a cutthroat business is also dashed, though she resists admitting it. Outside the line of fat, aging geeks with ponytails who make up her gang-bang lovers and directors, shes reviled. More uptown porn stars who make "erotica" write her off as "sleazy" and "bad for the industry." Some of the pain she feels is internalized, and in a creepy scene she cuts bloody stripes in her arm "to let the pain inside out." (Reports from the set say that director Lewis joined her in this ritual.)
The film is not entirely grim. There are sweet moments between Quek and her best friend, a drag queen named Alan. Shes playful and seemingly at peace when they dress up in drag together and she describes how he helped her kick drugs. The simplicity of lunch in a Singapore food stall with her mother is another quiet moment of pleasure, far from the troublesome world of play for pay. Driving through London, she says, "Like every big city, its got an undercurrent of sadness and loneliness and desperation to it" an equally apt description of Annabel Chong. July 2000 | Issue 29 ACCESS: Chongs work is available at finer porn shops. Watch for Sex: The Annabel Chong Story on video and (perhaps) on some of the more daring cable stations later this year (2000). MORE PORN STARS: An interview with Annie Sprinkle and a review of Wadd: The Life and Times of John C. Holmes ALSO: More documentaries |