Linda Boreman's allegations In her first two biographies, Linda Boreman characterized having made the film as a liberating experience; in her third and fourth biographies, both of which were written after she had come out with her stories of
sexual abuse,
rape, and forced prostitution in the porn business, she charged that she had not consented to many of the depicted sexual acts and that she had been coerced to perform by her
abusive then-husband
Chuck Traynor, who received $1,250 (equivalent to $ today) for her acting. She also claimed that Traynor threatened to kill her, brandishing handguns and rifles to control her. In 1986, she testified before the
Meese Commission, "Virtually every time someone watches that movie, they're watching me being raped." In the
Toronto Sun on March 20, 1981, she said, "It is a crime that movie is still showing; there was a gun to my head the entire time." While the other people present on the set did not support the gun charge, both Traynor and Damiano confirmed in interviews that Traynor was extremely controlling towards Boreman and also hit her on occasion. In the documentary
Inside Deep Throat, it is claimed that bruises are visible on Boreman's body in the movie. These allegations were cited in the UK Government's Rapid Evidence Assessment on "the evidence of harm to adults relating to exposure to extreme pornographic material" as part of its plans to criminalize possession of what it termed "
extreme pornography".
Obscenity litigation In various United States communities, the movie was shown to juries to determine whether it was
obscene; the outcomes varied widely and the movie was banned in numerous locations. In August 1972, after a jury in New York City had found the movie not to be obscene, prosecutors decided to charge Mature Enterprises, the company that owned the World Theater, for promotion of obscene material, taking them to trial in December. During the trial, a psychiatrist testified that the film portrayed acts that were "well within the bounds of normal behavior". that determines what constitutes obscenity) was applied in his case. The
Federal Bureau of Investigation case known as "Miporn" convicted and sentenced, on April 30, 1977, Michael Cherubino to five months' imprisonment and a fine of $4,000, Anthony Novello to six months' imprisonment, Joseph Peraino to one year's imprisonment and a fine of $10,000 (including a $10,000 fine to his company, Plymouth Distributors Inc.), Louis Peraino to one year's imprisonment and a fine of $10,000 (including a $10,000 fine to each of his two companies, Bryanston Distributors Inc. and Gerard Damiano Productions Inc.), Anthony Battista to four months' imprisonment and a fine of $4,000, Carl Carter to six months' imprisonment and a fine of $6,500, Mel Friedman to nine months' imprisonment and a fine of $7,500, and Mario Desalvo to three months' imprisonment and a fine of $3,500. In 1975, a
Sioux Falls, South Dakota jury found the film not obscene. In San Antonio, police seized the movie and its movie projector from a theater several times in the space of two weeks. Herman Hausman, manager of Franklin Art Theater on South Avenue, Syracuse, New York, was charged with second degree obscenity. In the UK, the movie was banned upon release, and the ban was upheld by the courts 10 years later. The uncut DVD and VHS Video of the movie was finally given an
R18 rating in 2000, which allowed it to be sold in licensed
sex shops in the UK.
Copyright Deep Throat was released without a
copyright notice. Because Peraino had used
four wall distribution for all of
Deep Throats releases, that left the potential for the film to be classified as an unpublished work, preventing it from falling into the
public domain. Peraino sold the rights to the film to Arrow Productions for home video release (including a copyright notice) at some point prior to 2009. Despite Arrow holding the rights, rival pornography distributor VCX began distributing
Deep Throat as retaliation for Arrow's distribution of
Debbie Does Dallas and
The Devil in Miss Jones, two films VCX asserted were under their copyright. (In the former case,
Debbie Does Dallas was determined to be public domain in a 1987 court ruling.) In order to prevent VCX from challenging the copyright on
Deep Throat, Arrow Productions agreed in 2011 to voluntarily stop distributing
Debbie Does Dallas and
The Devil in Miss Jones, thus leaving their copyright status unresolved.
Broadcasting In April 1978, pirate station
Lucky 7 in
Syracuse, New York illegally aired
Deep Throat (and also
Behind the Green Door, as well as non-pornographic fare such as episodes of
Star Trek). The pirates have never been identified. On February 23, 2008, the
Netherlands Public Broadcasting corporations
VPRO and
BNN screened
Deep Throat on national television as part of a themed night on the history of pornographic films, and the influence of pornography in youth culture in the
Netherlands. Although the film aired after 10 p.m., following a guideline for adult television, and was embedded in a discussion program, several political parties (especially Dutch cabinet member party
Christian Union) were clamoring for steps to be taken to prevent airing. The Minister of Education and Media,
Ronald Plasterk, declared that he could not and did not want to forbid the airing of the film. The movie was seen by 907,000 viewers.
Identity of "Dolly Sharp" In December 2014,
The Rialto Report, a web site devoted to the history of the so-called
Golden Age of Porn, made the surprise announcement that the supporting actress billed as Dolly Sharp, who had vanished into obscurity shortly after the release of
Deep Throat, was in fact Helen Wood (1935–1998), a former Broadway performer who, as a teenager, had a major role in the 1953 Hollywood musical
Give a Girl a Break. ==Soundtrack==