Flower Tucci (/ˈtʊʃi/TUUSH-ee; ); born January 2, 1977 is an American nude model and pornographic actress.
Tucci was working as a cake decorator in a bakery when she answered an ad in the LA Weekly. Her first scene was with Lexington Steele in Balls Deep 6. She started working under the alias "Flower" due to the tattoos of flowers and vines along her spine, but later added "Tucci" as a means to differentiate herself from an earlier Asian actress.
In addition to performing in pornographic films, Flower formerly hosted two radio shows on the now defunct adult radio station KSEX radio, called The Porn Hunnies Smut Top 20 and Tushy Talk. She is a spokesperson and model for the Los Angeles based clothing company Mofowear and has a recurring role on the Showtime series Family Business.
Tucci has the ability to female ejaculate, and does so in series such as Flower's Squirt Shower. In 2005 she was nominated for the X-Rated Critics Organization's Female Performer of the Year, and in 2006 Flower's Squirt Shower 2 won the AVN Award for Best Specialty Release – Squirting.
There is conflicting information about Tucci's birth date. Her listings at the IAFD and AFDB say she was born on January 2, 1977. However, a MySpace page (presumably made by Tucci) states she was born on January 2, 1981 and she has said that is her birthdate as well in an interview with Porn Valley News.
As of 2009 she was represented by the adult talent agency Spiegler Girls. In 2009 Tucci filed a lawsuit against RK Netmedia, the parent company of Reality Kings, to regain the right to the domain flowertucci.com, after her exclusive performance contract with LLL Advertising was terminated.
Read more about Flower Tucci: Awards
Famous quotes containing the word flower:
“and men strive with each other not for power or the accumulation of paper
but in joy create for others the house, the poem, the game of
athletic beauty.
Then washed in the brightness of the vision,
I saw how in its radiance would grow and be nourished and suddenly
burst into terrible and splendid bloom
the blood-red flower of revolution.”
—Dudley Randall (b. 1914)