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However, decades later, witnesses to the shoot emerged to challenge this version of events. In , cinematographer Larry Revene gave his first public interview regarding the film. He asserted that no coercion occurred on the set. He described Boreman as a "willing participant" who did not appear frightened or forced. Similarly, actor Eric Edwards , who was present, stated that there was no "obvious coercion" and that Lovelace "appeared to be a cooperative performer".
Biographical and legal timelines indicate that while Linda Boreman met Chuck Traynor around this period, the bulk of her forced participation in explicit underground loops occurred between 1970 and 1971, leading directly up to the production of Deep Throat in the winter of 1971–1972. The year 1969 in the search query functions more as a cultural placeholder for the "pre-fame underground era" than a precise production date. The Dark Legacy and Legal Repercussions Linda Lovelace Dogarama- 1969
In her 1980 autobiography, Ordeal , Linda Lovelace (born Linda Boreman) addressed these rumors directly. She detailed the horrific abuse she suffered at the hands of her husband, Chuck Traynor. However, decades later, witnesses to the shoot emerged
The year 1969 was a watershed moment for American culture and the "New Hollywood" era. For Linda Lovelace, it was the year her public persona began to be constructed, often against her will. He described Boreman as a "willing participant" who
Whether Dogarama was a real piece of celluloid or a product of the 1970s rumor mill, it represents the darkest chapter of the Linda Lovelace story. It serves as a reminder of the "Pre-Golden Age" of adult film—a time when the industry lacked the regulations, safety standards, and legal protections that exist today.
When the 2013 biopic (starring Amanda Seyfried) was produced, the filmmakers notably left out explicit references to Dogarama . The 2013 film glossed over the dog scene entirely, focusing instead on the violence and the making of Deep Throat . Critics noted that the absence of this chapter in Lovelace's life softened the film's impact. One review noted that the film "reduced" her experience, failing to show the "controversial Dogarama films" that led to her trauma.