Lorissa McComas
Lorissa McComas | |
---|---|
![]() Lorissa McComas in the 1990s | |
Born | Lorissa Deanna McComas[1] November 26, 1970 |
Died | November 3, 2009[2] | (aged 38)
Height | 5 ft 4 in (1.63 m) |
Spouse | Doug Taylor |
Children | 1 |
Lorissa Deanna McComas (November 26, 1970 – November 3, 2009)[1] was an American actress, film producer and glamour model.[1]
Biography
[edit]McComas studied ballet as a child and graduated from Princeton High School in Sharonville, Ohio in 1988. She became an Education major at Miami University before she started stripping and modeling.[3][4]
McComas built a successful strip-O-gram service in Cincinnati (Ohio) after college. In 1990 she was arrested along with another stripper on charges of prostitution, by Hamilton County police: she had allowed a guest at a bachelor party to tuck a dollar bill into a garter just above her knee; this was treated as a form of prostitution under the very strict Cincinnati ordinances of that time.[3]
She was featured in literally hundreds of magazines and calendars since her first Playboy magazine modeling job, starting in 1991. By 1994, she was the owner of Extasy Entertainment, a company that provided strippers to clients in the Cincinnati area.[1] Cincinnati had no strip bars during this time period.[3]
The majority of her work consisted both in nude modeling and co-starring in a variety of softcore erotic films,[4] in addition to supporting roles in B-movies and TV programs.[4]
In 2005 she relocated to Melbourne, Florida,[4] allegedly so she could provide assistance caring for her ill mother. In 2006 she disclosed she was suffering from Reflex Sympathetic Dystrophy,[5] a rare and severe form of neuroinflammatory and dysautonomic disorder causing chronic pain, neurovascular, and neuropathic symptoms.
Death and controversy
[edit]McComas died on November 3, 2009, in Waverly, Virginia.[2] Although some reports claim she died by a self-inflicted gunshot wound, there are some friends or acquaintances who have claimed there was foul play involved in her death;[6] suspicion lies with McComas' husband, Doug Taylor, from whom Lorissa had filed for divorce in 2006, relocating from Melbourne, FL to Waverly, VA, after allegedly accusing Taylor of being an abusive and alcoholic husband.[6]
During this time she was in the process of winning back custody of her son,[6] who was taken from her by the Florida CPS due to unfit living conditions,[6] these conditions supposedly being Taylor's drunken and gun-slinging behavior, including shooting a gun through a door despite knowing their son was on the other side.[6] Apparently, Doug Taylor came to Waverly and began a near three-year cycle of abuse until McComas's alleged suicide in 2009.[6] Although McComas's death was ruled a suicide by the Waverly Police Department, there were massive irregularities in Doug Taylor's alibis (he changed his story no fewer than three times in the first four hours after her death),[6] as well as several pieces of evidence that, according to some of McComas's friends — and the website Lorissa McComas Truth — strongly suggest that Taylor's actions were the real cause of her death: several residents of Waverly have stated that Taylor was abusive and irrational during the period leading up to McComas's death,[6] most importantly the night prior to and the morning of her death;[6] apparently Lorissa McComas did not know how to use a pump shotgun (the suicide weapon), and her fingerprints were not on the gun.[6] Also, neither powder burns or gunshot residue were found on her hands.[6]
Despite some of the suspicious details regarding McComas's death investigation,[6] and although an online petition for Virginia State Police to reopen the investigation in the death of Lorissa McComas was created in Change.org in October 2013 ("Virginia State Police: Re open the investigation in the death of Lorissa McComas"), it has since been closed, and the Virginia Police has refused to revise or reopen the investigation.
Filmography
[edit]- Project Viper (2003)
- Raptor (2001) - Lola Tanner, Sheriff Jim Tanner's daughter
- The Bare Wench Project (2000) - Lori
- Hot Boyz (1999) - Roxanne
- Piranha (1995) remake of the 1978 film
- Virtual Desire (1995) - Julie
- Red Lips (1995) - girl in hotel in white hot-pants
- Stormswept (1995) - Kelly
- Lap Dancing (1995) - Angie Parker[7]
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d Lorissa McComas TV Time
- ^ a b c "Lorissa McComas". LM Productions. November 3, 2009. Archived from the original on November 29, 2009. Retrieved November 29, 2009.
- ^ a b c Vaccariello, Linda (February 1994). "Say Goodbye, Gypsy Rose Lee". Cincinnati Magazine. 27 (5): 84–87.
- ^ a b c d Lorissa McComas Goldposter.com
- ^ "Lorissa McComas: My Final Thoughts". Posted on July 19, 2011 on Infosack.blogspot.com
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l "Justice For Lorissa". Posted October 30, 2013 on Lorissamccomastruth.blogspot.com
- ^ Lap Dancing
External links
[edit]- Lorissa McComas at IMDb
- Lorissa McComas at the Internet Adult Film Database
- Lorissa McComas at the Adult Film Database