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"It became obvious that sexuality is something that you can make work for yourself, so I made it work for me," he says, shrugging. "It was not like paying for sex. It was just sharing." Berlin still lives on money left him by Labriola, supplemented balboa by sales of his photographs and films. The pair traveled across Europe and eventually arrived in the United States. After a period of hobnobbing with Mapplethorpe in New York, they moved balboa to San Francisco in the early '70s, where in 1972 Berlin collaborated with a friend on his first porn film, "Nights balboa in Black Leather." The ads for the film made it and its star cult hits. By the time he changed his name and made his second hard-core movie, 1974's "That Boy," Berlin was a cult celebrity known for skintight ensembles he created using everything from bedsheets to women's tights. "From the moment I saw him, he became an indelible image," says author Armistead Maupin, who appears in "That Man."
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