Lorissa McComas — Biography
Lorissa Deanna McComas was born on November 26, 1970, and died on November 3, 2009. The American model gained recognition throughout the 1990s for her work in lingerie photography and adult entertainment, with frequent appearances in Playboy. She completed her secondary education at Princeton High School in 1988 and initially pursued higher education as an education student at Miami University before transitioning into the adult entertainment industry.
In 1990, McComas faced legal troubles when she was arrested alongside a fellow dancer on prostitution charges brought by Hamilton County authorities. By 1994, she had established herself as a business owner, founding Extasy Entertainment, an enterprise that supplied dancers to venues and private clients across the Cincinnati region. During this period, Cincinnati lacked traditional strip clubs, making her service-based business model particularly significant in the local market.
McComas spent the majority of her career engaged in nude modeling and performing in softcore adult productions that utilized simulation or strategic camera angles to obscure explicit content. She also secured minor roles in low-budget films and television programs. In 1997, she participated in a collection of independent productions for both television and film distribution.
The circumstances surrounding McComas's death in November 2009 have conflicting accounts. Her official website stated she succumbed following an extended illness, though other sources attribute her death to suicide by firearm.
In 1990, McComas faced legal troubles when she was arrested alongside a fellow dancer on prostitution charges brought by Hamilton County authorities. By 1994, she had established herself as a business owner, founding Extasy Entertainment, an enterprise that supplied dancers to venues and private clients across the Cincinnati region. During this period, Cincinnati lacked traditional strip clubs, making her service-based business model particularly significant in the local market.
McComas spent the majority of her career engaged in nude modeling and performing in softcore adult productions that utilized simulation or strategic camera angles to obscure explicit content. She also secured minor roles in low-budget films and television programs. In 1997, she participated in a collection of independent productions for both television and film distribution.
The circumstances surrounding McComas's death in November 2009 have conflicting accounts. Her official website stated she succumbed following an extended illness, though other sources attribute her death to suicide by firearm.