Russ Meyer
Promoting media: pictures, videos, wallpapers, quotes, bio, filmography.
| Nickname: |
The Fellini of the sex-industry / King Leer |
| Known for: |
Beyond the Valley of the Dolls, Faster, Pussycat! Kill! Kill!, Supervixens |
| Birth name: |
Russell Albion Meyer |
| Birthday: |
21 March 1922,
Oakland, California, USA |
Trivia

In 1977,
Malcolm McLaren hired Meyer to direct a film starring
The Sex Pistols. Meyer handed the scriptwriting duties over to
Roger Ebert, who, in collaboration with McLaren, produced a screenplay entitled "Who Killed Bambi?" According to Ebert, filming ended after a day and a half when the electricians walked off the set after McLaren was unable to pay them (McLaren has claimed that the project actually died at the behest of main financier 20th Century-Fox, under the pretext that "We are in the business of making family entertainment").

Famously near-reclusive, he rarely grants interviews in person but most of his 24 movies have been released on either video or DVD through his company RM Films.

Told NY Times that the first time he visited a whorehouse, as a soldier in France during WWII, he was taken there by
Ernest Hemingway.

In the 1980s, directed a video for a rock band who took their name from one of his films, Faster Pussycat. The band names Vixen and Mudhoney also came from Meyer film titles, even though Meyer had no connection to them.

His films have influenced both
John Waters and
John Landis.

Although he briefly attended junior college, he admitted that he was pretty much self taught as a photographer and filmmaker.

His films are often studied in film schools and shown on the film festival circuit.
John Waters has often cited him as inspiration for his female characters.

His works were considered pornographic at the time of their release, but contain very little graphic sexual content by today's standards.

During WW2, he served with the US Army Signal Corps' 166th Photographic Unit. He landed in Normandy with the 29th Infantry Division. Some of the footage he shot can be seen in
Patton.

While serving in the U.S. Army Signal Corps as a cameraman during World War II, Meyer filmed a group of prisoners being trained in Britain for a suicide mission behind enemy lines prior to D-Day. This outfit was the genesis of the storyline behind the movie
The Dirty Dozen. Meyer also filmed General
George S. Patton's Third Army in its penetration into Germany in 1945.

A first-rate cameraman, Meyer fine-tuned his craft in the Army Signal Corps during World War II. After the War, he moved to Hollywood to try to catch on as a studio cameraman, but despite his expertise and the excellent footage he had shot during the war, he was refused a job due to the guild system. The Hollywood guilds typically were closed to outsiders unless they had gone through the apprentice system by starting at the very bottom.

Considered his marriage to second wife
Edy Williams a huge mistake. After divorcing Williams, he never married again.

Told
John Lydon ("Johnny Rotten" of the punk band The Sex Pistols) during the pre-production of the ultimately aborted Sex Pistols film "Who Killed Bambi" that the U.S. had saved Britain during World War II after Rotten had expressed his distaste for Americans. Meyer had been stationed in Britian during the War; Rotten was unimpressed.
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