Rock Hudson, James Dean, Montgomery Clift, Anthony Perkins, Farley Granger, Tab Hunter: Was any
heartthrob movie star straight in the conservative 1950s? Hunter and
Perkins dated each other for several years while the press reported
phony stories that Hunter was involved with Debbie Reynolds or Natalie
Wood. Born Arthur Kelm, he changed his name made more than fifty movies; his triumphs were Damn Yankees, Lafayette Escadrille, and That Kind of Woman.
He recorded a pop song, Young Love, which was the #1 hit in the U.S.
for a month in 1957, and made many subsequent albums. He had a
short-lived television show and a famous flop on Broadway, co-starring
with Tallulah Bankhead in Tennessee Williams’ The Milk Train Doesn’t Stop Here Anymore,
which closed after five performances. Smaller movies followed. In the
1980s he had a comeback, starring twice with Divine, first in Polyester, then in Lust in the Dust,
which he co-produced with Allan Glaser. Hunter did not come out until
September 2003, when at 72, he sold a book proposal for a memoir that
would discuss his life candidly. Tab Hunter Confidential
appeared in 2005 and revealed he and his producer Allan Glaser have been romantic partners for twenty-five years. They live in Montecito.
For ten years, from 1972 to 1982, Vito Russo toured the country giving
what today would be a PowerPoint presentation about the portrayal of
lesbians and gay men in the media. His devastating book on the subject,
The Celluloid Closet,
published in 1981 and revised in 1987, was years ahead of its time and
remains essential reading today. The book was made into a documentary
in 1996, six years after his death from aids. Russo’s sharp critique of
the industry led him to co-found the Gay and Lesbian Alliance Against
Defamation (GLAAD). It is hard to imagine the principled visionary
connected to today’s GLAAD, which endorsed such overblown
caricature-fests as Boat Trip and, yesterday, praised I Now Pronounce You Chuck and Larry
despite the movie’s continual use of “stereotypes and slurs” according
to Damon Romine, GLAAD’s director of entertainment media.
Comments