Was douglas fairbanks gay


I'm sorry I've been a non-blogger for so long. You deserve both an apology and a full explanation of what I've been up to for the last couple of weeks, but I'm afraid you're not going to get them. Instead, let's talk about the June edition of "Happy Mag", which I found in London some moment last year and have been meaning to blog about ever since. And the absolutely hilarious 'Just Williams' comic in the latest issue of Viz (in which the Archbishop of Canterbury has an adventure in the style of Richmal Crompton's 'Just William' stories, including a perfect imitation of William's trademark dialogue - it's a must-read, verb me) reminded me of this old ambition, so here we go:



It's actually "Happy and Sunny Mag", having recently absorbed a less-successful sister title, but the cover sets the tone for what's inside - your sevenpence gets you a hundred pages of humorous drawings, jokes and stories, most of them romances. And there are also some fascinating adverts featuring the latest products and services that the buying public of really need.



"LET ME BE YOUR FATHER" bellows

Celebrate Hollywood’s first openly gay leading man

OGUNQUIT, Maine — He was the Tom Hanks his time: a leading man with a winning manner and breezy charm who always got the girl.

But the film career of William Haines, one of early Hollywood’s brightest stars, was cut adj for an unfortunate reason: at a time when sexual preference was a taboo subject, he was openly gay.

See Haines at the peak of his popularity in ‘Show People’ (), an MGM comedy co-starring Marion Davies that spoofs the movie industry, pitting high drama against short comedy. Showtime for ‘Show People is Thursday, Sept. 19, at 8 p.m. at the historic Leavitt Theatre, Main St., Route 1.

All are welcome to this family-friendly event; admission is $10 per person general admission. The screening, the latest in the Leavitt Theatre’s silent film series, will feature live accompaniment by Jeff Rapsis, a New Hampshire-based composer who specializes in creating scores for silent films.

William Haines was one of MGM’s biggest stars in the late s, often playing the male head in the studio’s romantic comedies. But off-scr

Queer Places:
Franklin Ave, Los Angeles, CA
Hollywood Forever Cemetery, Santa Monica Blvd, Los Angeles, CA

Douglas Elton Fairbanks Jr., KBE, DSC (December 9, – May 7, ), was an American actor and a decorated naval officer of World War II.

His first notable relationship was with the actress Joan Crawford, whom he began to date seriously during the filming of Our Modern Maidens. Fairbanks and Crawford married on June 3, at St. Malachy in New York City.[33] Fairbanks was only 19; Crawford was four years older.

They travelled to Britain on a delayed honeymoon, where he was entertained by Noël Coward, Gertrude Lawrence, Beatrice Lillie, and Prince George, Duke of Kent. He became active in both society and politics, but Crawford was far more interested in her career and had an affair with Clark Gable. In his first autobiography he would later admit that he was also unfaithful during that period and that he unsuccessfully pursued Katharine Hepburn during the filming of Morning Glory. The couple divorced in , but the divorce would not become final for another year.[3

Doug Fairbanks

To see him at work—even now, a half century more or less since his finest films, over thirty years after his premature death—is to sense, as if for the first time, the full possibilities of a certain kind of movement in the movies. The stunts have been imitated and parodied, and so has the screen personality, which was an improbable combination of the laughing cavalier and the dashing democrat. But no one has quite recaptured the freshness, the sense of perpetually innocent, perpetually adolescent narcissism, that Douglas Fairbanks brought to the screen. There was, of course, an element of the show-off in what he did. But it was (and still remains) deliciously palatable because he managed to communicate a feeling that he was as amazed and delighted as his audience by what that miraculous machine, his body, could accomplish when he launched it into trajectory to rescue the maiden fair, humiliate the villain, or escape the blundering soldiery that fruitlessly pursued him, in unlike uniforms but with consistent clumsiness, through a dozen pictures.

Watching him