Billi Gordon
Billi Gordon, born Wilbert Anthony Gordon Jr.[1] on September 2, 1954 in Dowagiac, Michigan, is an author, television writer, neuroscientist and formerly an actor, model,[2] and prostitute.[3]
Life and career
After high school, in 1972, Gordon entered the Roman Catholic Crosier Seminary in Onamia, Minnesota, but left during his freshman year to attend the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor. In his junior year, he withdrew from the university, and moved to Los Angeles.
In L.A. he worked as an escort, a male prostitute and then a female prostitute, until 1982[3] when he became an alternative model and appeared on more greeting cards than any other model in the world,[2] At the height of his career, he was paid $12,000 an hour; after which he began writing and performing as a woman.[2][3] Gordon is the author of three works of non-fiction: Billi Gordon's You've Had Worse Things in Your Mouth Cookbook,[4] which the Saturday Review described as "the humor classic of 1985";[5] Eat This Book: The Last Diet Book, and Your Moon Is in Aquarius but Your Head Is in Uranus, published by West Graphics.
Gordon was a television and film actor who portrayed male and female characters, including a role in the film Coming to America. He portrayed Belle on Married With Children and Chu Lin on Women in Prison. As a writer, he wrote an episode of the sitcom 227.[3] Gordon also wrote and starred in the television pilot Next of Kin for Westway/Odessa.[6]
In the mid-1990s Gordon returned to the University of Michigan and finished his degree in 1997. He went on to receive a Ph.D. in neuroscience and did his post-doctoral training in functional neuroimaging and brain research at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA. Currently Gordon investigates the pathophysiology of stress as antecedent to obesity-related diseases at the UCLA Gail and Gerald Oppenheimer Family Center for the Neurobiology of Stress for the "Ingestive Behaviors and Obesity Program"'s Minority Obesity Rescue Effort.
In 2009, Gordon was profiled on the front page of the Los Angeles Times, in a piece which focused on his dramatic weight changes and how it related to his career and lifestyle. Over the years, his weight has fluctuated between 300 and close to 1,000 pounds. At the time of the story, he had been admitted to the hospital at a weight of 701 pounds.[3] A follow-up story reported that he had lost 175 pounds over the intervening five months, which allowed him to be able to fit into an MRI machine at 526 pounds, allowing doctors to further diagnose a large mass growing on his upper thigh.[7]
References
- ↑ Staff (10 May 2006). "Billi Gordon, 500 pounds lighter, writing autobiography". The Dowagiac Daily News. Retrieved 25 December 2011.
- 1 2 3 Seaver, Linda. The Secret of Her Excess Oakland Tribune (8-13-87)
- 1 2 3 4 5 Hall, Carla (14 October 2009). "A Body Larger than Life". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 24 December 2011.
- ↑ ISBN 0961497904 / 0-9614979-0-4
- ↑ Heymont, George. "Briefings" Saturday Review (November/December 1985)
- ↑ Styles, Anna. "Film & TV Casting News" Variety (October 31, 1983)
- ↑ Hall, Carla (9 February 2010). "Billi Gordon couldn't fit into an MRI machine -- until now". The Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 25 December 2011.