Cary Grant and Randolph Scott met on the set of Hot Saturday and soon began living together in a house nicknamed Bachelor Hall, which they would share off and on for twelve years
(1932-1944). Their affair has always been spun, desperately, as two
stars who lived together merely
because both were "tightwads." During that time, Grant was married to Virginia
Cherrill from February 1934 to March 1935 and to Barbara Hutton from
1942 to 1945. Two questions: What sort of man keeps his house with his
bud even after he gets married, and what sort of tightwad prefers
spending the money to maintain two households rather than one? George
Cukor confirmed that Randolph Scott would talk about their affair to
friends, and a slew of recent biographers have also verified their
relationship. Grant himself told an interviewer that his first two
wives, overlapping with Scott, "accused him of being homosexual,"
though, of course, he always denied it and was as quick to sue for libel. (He sued Chevy Chase for saying, "What a gal!") Several other men have said they had affairs with Grant,
including his chauffeur in 1957 and fashion arbiter Richard Blackwell,
who wrote in his autobiography of having sex with both Grant and Scott.
Grant's fifth and final wife was 47 years his
junior. Born Archibald Leach in Bristol, England he died at 82 in Davenport, Iowa (rehearsing his one-man show) in 1986.
Stephen, ¿Did you know that Randolph Scott's daughter worked at WGBH when we did?
Posted by: Sandy | January 21, 2010 at 05:02 PM
Really good to know about all this thanks for share.
Posted by: Term Papers | February 11, 2010 at 09:42 PM