He is pictured with his friend Christo, during preparations to HustlaBall ceremony in Berlin The documentary delves into the traumatic childhood of Agassi, growing up gay in the suburbs of Tel Aviv. 'I put the money away and then Mum got back from work and I said 'I did something all night long, I’m so sad, I’ll never be a prostitute'. I came home at 10am, wasted with $4,000 depressed, crying. He said: 'The first time I escorted was in Israel, I wouldn’t let him do what he did to me unless he paid me. He revealed that his first time being paid for sex was accidental, and said that while he was left 'depressed and crying' - he would eventually weigh up the shame he felt, compared to the money he could make. It soon emerged that Jonathan was not just a porn star, but had also been working as a male escort. And it's always like I'm the one to blame.' They threw s*** at me because I'm feminine. He added: 'A ten-year-old breaks his arm you'd expect his classmates to come and visit. Jonathan went on: 'They said, 'Go through window' and I said 'I don't want to do this', and I swear, I'm tearing up.' Jonathan is pictured preparing for the HustlaBall ceremony in Berlin At many points in the film, Agassi spoke about his troubled relationship with his father, who had abandoned him as a child.