Boasting a plot co-written by Roger Ebert that's too mind-blowingly bizarre to summarise, and a heavier emphasis on full nudity and graphic sex scenes than had always been typical of his films, Up! According to contemporaries, the director used the film to depict a personal tragedy of his own not unlike the Shakespearian original.
You need to turn them both in.
The actress apparently did her part to keep her fledgling porn career alive.