Jeff Stryker

Jeff Stryker

Jeff Stryker in 2007
Born Charles Casper Peyton[1]
(1962-08-21) August 21, 1962
Carmi, Illinois, USA
Height 5 ft 9 in (1.75 m)

Jeff Stryker (born Charles Casper Peyton,[1] August 21, 1962 in Carmi, Illinois, U.S.) is an American porn star who has starred in bisexual, gay, and straight adult films. He lives in California.

Early life

Jeff Stryker grew up in Springfield. His father was a car salesman and his mother was a nurse.[2] Springfield was struggling economically, and there was a crime wave. Consequently, Jeff was often involved in fights. At age 13, he was sent to military school by his parents, who got a divorce while he was away.

Pre-film career

Jeff Stryker worked as a male stripper and delivered balloon-o-grams before a local photographer sent shots of him to gay adult film director John Travis in California.[3]

Film career and sexuality

Stryker is primarily known as a performer in gay pornography films, although Jamie Loves Jeff was one of the biggest selling heterosexual adult movies of all time for its producer, Vivid Entertainment.[4] He describes himself (in a somewhat joking fashion) as sexually "universal".[5] He has also said, "I don’t define myself as anything."[6]

He also tried his hand at acting, starring in a 1989 Italian-produced horror movie called After Death (Revenge of the Zombies), in which he was credited as Chuck Peyton but later in the USA DVD release the name Jeff Stryker was used as well a trailer interview was added with Jeff current at the time describing the experience he had while shooting this movie in Manila. Jeff also starred in the short film by German cult director Rosa Von Praunheim Can I Be Your Bratwurst Please?.[7] Under character Jeff Stryker, Charles also co starred in "The Judge who loved death" starring James Brolin,[8] as well as in a feature titled "Dirty Love".[9]

Awards and tributes

Merchandising

The “Jeff Stryker Cock and Balls,” a dildo fashioned from a cast of his penis, is widely sold in sex stores. The dildo was academically analyzed in a paper presented at the 1995 Bowling Green State University Conference in Cultural Studies: Lesbian Pornography and Transformation: Foucault, Bourdieu, and de Certeau Make Sense of the Jeff Stryker Dildo, by Mary T. Conway, then a graduate student at Temple University. The sex toy is notable not only for being popular, but also as Stryker and the manufacturer of the item litigated for the rights to its likeness as part of Stryker's "intellectual property". (The case eventually reached a mutually acceptable resolution - see Legal Battles.)[16] In a 1999 salon.com article written by Jeff Stryker, a New York journalist and the porn actor's namesake, the dildo is even described as an object of higher culture.[17] It was mentioned in Allan Gurganus' 1997 novel Plays Well with Others, where the novel's narrator cleans up a closet filled with dildos, the premium find being "a Jeff Stryker, a monster, but somehow Roman in its genial fluted civic beauty."[18]

Stryker has released a compact disc (Wild Buck) of country music that he performed, and in his pornographic video, Bigger Than Life, he performed a rock song of the same name.

Reaction from other celebrities

Stryker later sued Health Devices Inc. and California Publishers Liquidating Corp. for over $1 million for breach of contract and piracy when they sold a bootleg dildo of his genitals without paying him sufficiently. The case was heard before a judge in Los Angeles, who eventually brokered a deal whereby the case was dismissed upon payment of $25,000 to Stryker and the return and right to reproduce all items which Stryker endorsed.[17]

Stryker has also had arguments with Kulak's Woodshed, a folk-music nightclub, that is next door to his office. He claims that the club causes disturbance normally associated with large late-night urban venues: noise, drugs, unruly patrons, vandalism, graffiti, public urination and parking headaches. James Britton, who operates a floor covering business on the other side of the club, also complains that the club has damaged his business. In January 2009, the L.A. Weekly reported that Stryker blamed the nightclub for preventing him from completing his autobiography, as the noise and crowds disturbed his concentration. “(My writing has) been put on perpetual hold until I can get myself back together,” he told the newspaper. “I got a $25,000 advance on (the book) but could never complete it.”

But Paul Kulak counter claims (according to the L.A. Weekly) that Stryker has made threats to him and the club's customers: “He constantly reminds me he’s a firearms expert and will hide behind his back door when I dump the trash. Once, he started making mechanical gun clicks. I could see he had a pistol in his hand as he was dry-firing it... I’m willing to risk my life to keep this [club] going.” Stryker responded to Kulak's claim and was quoted as saying, "That guy is so out there!"[21]

Stage shows

Stryker appeared in "A Sophisticated Evening with Jeff Stryker" in Los Angeles, Summer 2006, and also in Provincetown, Massachusetts, Summer 2007.[22] The show was produced by comedy writer Bruce Vilanch. In that show, Stryker performed a comic monologue about his life and adventures in adult films, conducted a "porn acting demo" comedy skit with an audience member, and danced in a nude finale where he greeted the audience.

In 2001, he did a stage show called Hard Time. The play was a comedy set inside a prison and was homosexual in nature. In the finale Stryker danced nude. After the play Styker met with the audience at the door. It appeared in several cities including Los Angeles, California; Chicago, Illinois; and Houston, Texas.[23][24][25]

Selected videography

Gay

Heterosexual and bisexual

Other

Awards
Preceded by
Derek Cameron & Kurt Young
for Tradewinds
AVN Awards for Best Sex Scene-Gay Video (with Derek Cameron)
for Jeff Stryker's Underground

1998
Succeeded by
Mike Branson & Tom Chase
for California Kings

References

  1. 1 2 Javors, Steve (2006-12-21). "Gay Porn Icon Wants Folk Club Shut Down". XBIZ. Retrieved 2010-02-27.
  2. "Jeff Stryker: Porn's Enigmatic Star Podcast 26". The Rialto Report. Retrieved 4 April 2015.
  3. "Jeff Stryker: Porn's Enigmatic Star", The Rialto Report, December 1, 2013
  4. "AVN - Vivid Releases DVD Version Of Straight Jeff Stryker Videos". Business.avn.com. 2003-09-23. Retrieved 2010-02-27.
  5. Simpson, Mark (1994), Male impersonators: men performing masculinity, Routledge, p. 131, ISBN 978-0-415-90991-4
  6. Archived November 27, 2006, at the Wayback Machine.
  7. "Outfest Spotlights Gay Porn". Business.avn.com. 1999-10-01. Retrieved 2010-02-27.
  8. "Der schwarze Fluch - Tödliche Leidenschaften (TV Movie 1995)". IMDb. Retrieved 4 April 2015.
  9. "Dirty Love: Valentine Demy, Cully Holland, Lisa Lowenstein, Jeff Stryker, Jannet Lori, Reggie Crump, Louis Vivian, Rick Anthony Munroe, Melody Kirschner, Bill Fay, Joe D'Amato, Dirty Love (11 Days 11 Nights: Part 5)". amazon.com. Retrieved 4 April 2015.
  10. "25th Annual AVN Awards Show". Retrieved 9 September 2014.
  11. "GayVN Hall of Fame listing". Retrieved 5 November 2016.
  12. "2000 Grabby Award winners". Retrieved 5 November 2016.
  13. "Sharon Mitchell and Jeff Stryker Inducted into Hustler Hollywood Porn Walk of Fame". Retrieved 5 November 2016.
  14. "XRCO Gay Award winners". Retrieved 5 November 2016.
  15. Helfand, Glen. "Pierre et Gilles". salon.com. Retrieved 5 November 2016.
  16. Janis Cooke Newman. "Original sin". salon.com. Retrieved 4 April 2015.
  17. 1 2 Stryker, Jeff (namesake of the porn actor) (18 March 1999). "Will The Real Jeff Stryker Please Rise". Salon.com. Retrieved 2007-12-17.
  18. Gurganus, Allan (2 February 1999) [1997]. "Prologue : The Comedy of Friends". Plays Well with Others. Vintage. p. 9. ISBN 978-0-375-70203-7.
  19. "Beyond the Valley of the Pulsating Colostomy Bags: An interview with John Waters!". dreamlandnews.com. Retrieved 4 April 2015.
  20. Margaret Cho's blog: Jeff Stryker
  21. Mikulan, Steven. "The Porn Star's Revenge: Formerly Known as Jeff Stryker, Charles Peyton Has Turned His Toxic Feud Over the Folk-Music Club Kulak's Woodshed Into a Real-Life Online Obsession," L.A. Weekly. Retrieved 2009-1-12.
  22. Michael Persson, "From the Editor", Provincetown Magazine Vol. 30, issue 19, August 16, 2007.
  23. "Jeff Stryker Does Hard Time". Chicago Reader. Retrieved 4 April 2015.
  24. "Porn God Takes To the Stage / Jeff Stryker's `Hard Time' in S.F.". SFGate. Retrieved 4 April 2015.
  25. Lee Williams (23 October 2006). "Fun with Dick". houstonpress.com. Retrieved 4 April 2015.
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