Tristan Taormino

Author

Birthday May 9, 1971

Birth Sign Taurus

Birthplace Syosset, New York

Age 52 years old

Nationality United States

#51444 Most Popular

1971

Tristan Taormino (born May 9, 1971) is an American feminist author, columnist, sex educator, activist, editor, speaker, radio host, and pornographic film director.

She is most recently known for her book Opening Up: A Guide to Creating and Sustaining Open Relationships, which is often recommended as a starter guide to polyamory and non-monogamy.

Taormino is the only child of Judith Bennett Pynchon and William J. Taormino.

On her mother's side of the family, Taormino is a descendant of William Pynchon, an early English-American settler.

She is also the niece of author Thomas Pynchon.

Her parents divorced before she turned two years old, when her father came out as gay.

She was raised primarily by her mother on Long Island.

1993

She graduated Phi Beta Kappa with a bachelor's degree in American Studies from Wesleyan University in 1993.

Taormino is the author of seven books, including the Firecracker Book Award-winning The Ultimate Guide to Anal Sex for Women.

1995

She maintained a close relationship with her father Bill Taormino, who died of AIDS in 1995.

Taormino attended Sayville High School on Long Island and was salutatorian of her graduating class.

She popularized and re-defined the term "queer heterosexual," in her 1995 column "The Queer Heterosexual."

She wrote: "In some cases, it's based on either one or both partners having non-traditional gender expressions...or they actively work against their assigned gender roles. Some queer heterosexuals are strongly aligned with queer community, culture, politics, and activism but happen to love and lust after people of a different gender. I also consider folks who embrace alternative models of sexuality and relationships (polyamory, non-monogamy, BDSM, cross-dressing) to be queer, since labeling them "straight," considering their lifestyle choices, seems inappropriate."

1996

She has edited anthologies including the Lambda Literary Award-winning annual anthology series she created and edited from 1996 to 2009, Best Lesbian Erotica, published by Cleis Press.

1999

She was a regular columnist for The Village Voice from 1999 to 2008, where she wrote the bi-weekly sex column "Pucker Up."

In print, her column appeared opposite Dan Savage's column Savage Love.

She has written "The Anal Advisor" column for Hustler's Taboo magazine since 1999, and she is a former columnist for Velvetpark.

She is the former editor of On Our Backs, the US's oldest lesbian-produced lesbian sex magazine.

Taormino has lectured at many colleges and universities, where she speaks on gay and lesbian issues, sexuality and gender, and feminism.

The first (1999) was co-directed by Buttman (John Stagliano) and Ernest Greene.

2001

Taormino hosted the television show Sexology 101 on The Burly Bear Network in 2001, a college cable network owned by Lorne Michaels' Broadway Video.

The second (2001) was directed by Tristan herself.

In both videos, she takes part in the on-screen sexual activities.

Subsequently, she directed Tristan Taormino's House of Ass for Adam & Eve, which shows a number of "porn stars" (from famous to unknown) interacting without a script.

2002

She was a regular expert and panelist on Ricki Lake for two seasons in 2002 and 2003.

2003

In 2003, she signed a development deal with MTV Networks.

She served as host and executive producer on the pilot for The Naughty Show, but the series was never picked up.

She has appeared as an expert on sex, relationships, feminism, pornography, non-monogamy, and LGBT issues on Melissa Harris-Perry, Joy Behar: Say Anything, HBO's Real Sex, The Howard Stern Show, Ricki Lake, MTV, and other television shows.

(Her presence is confirmed by the director on the DVD commentary.) She also appeared in Becky Goldberg's 2003 documentary Hot and Bothered: Feminist Pornography and in Mr. Angel, the documentary about Buck Angel (2013).

In addition to writing, speaking and sex education, she considers herself a feminist pornographer.

She made two videos based on her book The Ultimate Guide to Anal Sex for Women.

2004

Some of her college appearances have stirred controversy, as at University of North Carolina at Greensboro in 2004, Princeton, and, most famously, Oregon State University in 2011, where administrators un-invited her as keynote speaker at the Modern Sex Conference.

There was a huge uproar on the internet, and many accused OSU of anti-sex bias.

The incident received national media attention.

Eventually, students raised the funds and re-invited her themselves.

Taormino worked with Spike Lee as a script consultant and with the cast on the set of his 2004 movie She Hate Me.

2006

In 2006, she appeared as a so-called "sextra" in John Cameron Mitchell's film, Shortbus, participating in an unsimulated orgy that was filmed for the movie.

In 2006, she directed Tristan Taormino's Chemistry, which is the first in a series of full-length "behind the scenes" movies for Vivid Entertainment where the performers choose who they have sex with, what they do, where and when.

She directed four volumes of the Chemistry series as well as sex education films for Vivid Ed, Vivid Entertainment's sex education line that she was instrumental in creating.

2008

She was laid off from The Village Voice in 2008.