Jeanna Fine: The Lost Interview – Podcast 157

Jeanna Fine: The Lost Interview – Podcast 157
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Jeanna Fine passed away last month.

If you’re a regular listener to The Rialto Report, you’ll know that we like to interview a person from a different angle. It’s a more intimate and personal exploration, rather than just revisiting someone’s fleeting moments on camera. And it can be a challenge to convince someone to open up in that way.

Sometimes it’s quick and easy to persuade a person to talk, but many others are more difficult: some interviews have simply ended up being off the record, or subjects changed their minds after finishing the conversation. A few decided that their interview shouldn’t be released until after they pass, while others just weren’t very interesting.

And then there was my interview with Jeanna Fine.

We’d originally contacted her for all the usual Rialto Report reasons: Jeanna had been one of the adult industry’s biggest, and longest lasting, A-list stars, and I was keen to hear her personal story. She’d first appeared in X-rated films in the mid 1980s – getting her name supposedly when Barbara Dare told her that Jeanna looked so fine. It was the tail period of the so-called ‘golden age’, just as the business was changing into a more corporate, studio-driven, rinse-and-repeat video industry.

But there was nothing standard about Jeanna. She stood out from pack, fiercely individual, different from many other identikit, girl-next door performers, with her short platinum-blond spiky punk hair, or later, long dark hair that turned her into a scowling femme fatale. She was androgenous, full of confrontational attitude – and her scenes bristled with a bad-ass aggression. And Jeanna’s rebellious streak didn’t seem confined to her appearance, and the word was that she would turn up to shoots when and where she felt like it, and sometimes not at all. Sometimes she made scores of films in a matter of weeks, and then disappeared for months, even years. She had a long-term, and volatile, relationship with fellow actress Savannah. Jeanna eventually walked away from it – just before Savannah killed herself. On one of her breaks from the world of X, she got married and had a son, only to return to making films a few years later. Her on/off career continued into the 2000s.

But, and there’s always a but, I wanted to know more about the woman behind the strong, confident, and forthright exterior, this character so full of piss and vinegar. I sensed a vulnerability, that her glamorous life in front of the camera perhaps masked secrets that were a world away from adult films. In short, who was the woman that created Jeanna Fine?

So I reached out to her, and over the next 10 years, we became friends and confidants through a series of conversations, phone calls, emails, and texts.

When we first spoke, she’d been living a rural life in upstate New York for over a decade, and was experiencing something of an existential crisis. She was at a crossroads in her life: she’d experienced recent tragedies – the suicides of both her husband and brother, she was empty-nester, and she was trying to figure out what she should do next.

Intriguingly, she decided to emerge from anonymity and return to the X-rated industry. She turned up at an adult fan convention, she’d set up a Twitter account (as it was back then), and had a friend show her how she could earn money with a web-cam.

But the return to the sex industry was problematic, and I could see that she hadn’t expected the extent of the emotions, the old secrets and lies, that this new direction was bringing back to the surface. What was being stirred in her past, I wondered? Jeanna insisted that she was keen to do the interview – she announced it on Twitter – but I was worried that she was feeling fragile. This podcast is the result of that conversation.

With big thanks to Patrick Kindlon and Self Defense Family – for the wonderful monologue, and to Steven Morowitz and Melusine – for the Video-X-Pix photographs.

This podcast is 52 minutes long.

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Jeanna Fine – Video-X-Pix photos

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Jeanna Fine portfolio

Adult Video News

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  • Posted On: 7th December 2025
  • By: Ashley West
  • Under: Podcasts

7 Comments

  1. Karl James · December 7, 2025 Reply

    One of the most moving podcasts I have ever heard.
    Incredibly sad, but at the same time tremendously human and beautiful.

  2. Samantha Eccles · December 7, 2025 Reply

    Wow. I didn’t expect this………. on so many levels – but it didn’t disappoint. This is truly a unique collection of people’s intimate and genuine human stories.
    Thank you to all involved, and I’ll miss Jeanna even though I never knew her.
    x

  3. Eva · December 7, 2025 Reply

    I only discovered your podcast yesterday, but thank you for your work and letting these women tell their own stories. This was a hard listen to be honest, but it’s important to tell these complicated stories. May she rest in peace <3

  4. L. A. Gothro · December 7, 2025 Reply

    Hi April,

    It’s always good to hear your voice, and it was nice to hear Jeanna’s (I enjoy reading about the folks behind the scenes of the porn flicks than the action on the screen). Her story hit home for me, as I just turned 61 in the middle of last month; I remember hiding being queer from everyone because I knew what would happen. And forget running away from home, I’d wanted to but also didn’t want to fall prey to others. Her story moved me. I can’t put it any other way. I wished I could’ve known her some way/somehow.

    Jeanna, wherever you are, know that you are much appreciated for you, all of what you were/are.

  5. Jeff Robertson · December 7, 2025 Reply

    Awesome Article And Podcast Keep Up Good Work

  6. The Real Tony Chung · December 7, 2025 Reply

    I’m always happy to see a new episode of The Rialto Report and listen, and I love each and every one I’ve heard. Both Ashley and April seem to be people who are able to forge friendships with the people they interview and those relationships really give their interviews a depth that make each one special.

    Listening in to the conversations between April and Jeanna really touched me in unexpected ways. I’m sure I will go back and listen again.

  7. BDR · December 7, 2025 Reply

    I first discovered Jeanna as a teen in the movie cover girl and was immediately taken with her. I loved her attitude, her look, her aggression, and a true sense of individuality in a world of peroxide blondes. She was a tour de force as a performer and seemed like a genuinely cool person that would be easy to be friends with. I wish her story was a happier one and I wish things ended better for her. Rip Angelique, you’ll be missed.

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