Nov. 23, 2005 - Issue #527: Filumena
Three Dollar Bill
Hollywood Confidential
When I learnt a couple years ago that 1950s matinee idol Tab Hunter was going
to come out in his forthcoming memoirs, I told my friend author Felice Picano
who’d had lunch with the onetime Hollywood heartthrob.
“He’s a wonderful man,” Felice told me, which only made me
want to interview Tab Hunter even more.
Well, I finally got to blab with Hunter last week, the day after he returned
home to Santa Barbara after a cross-country U.S. book tour to promote his
bestselling memoirs Tab Hunter Confidential: The Making of a Movie Star
(Algonquin Books). I can’t tell you enough how terrific Hunter’s
autobiography is, an immensely frank and entertaining read that, Hunter
proudly tells me, has just been ranked Amazon’s number-two pick for
best books of 2005.
“I thought about writing my memoirs a long time ago but didn’t
have the guts,” Hunter explains. “Then when I heard someone else
was going to write a book, I said what the hell. I hate talking about my
private life but I had to do it (come out). I had to be fair.”
Tab Hunter Confidential tells the quintessential Hollywood fairy tale of a
gorgeous young kid—in this case a young Art Gelien—who was named
Tab Hunter by Henry Willson, the (in)famous Hollywood agent who also created
Rock Hudson and Rory Calhoun, sex symbols who became known as Harry
Willson’s boys. Along the way, Hunter publicly dated the likes of
Debbie Reynolds and, by the age of 25, was a number-one box-office draw
who’d even had a number one hit single with the song “Young
Love.”
“The studio system was an incredible thing,” Hunter recalls.
“I was very fortunate to be part of that era. Jack Warner conducted his
symphony as he saw fit. He had a whole publicity wing to build you.
It’s a totally different ball game today. They’re corporate now.
You can’t compare old and new [Hollywood].”
“Even in Hunter’s heyday, people joked about his synthetic
persona the way we joke today about teenybopper acts like Jesse McCartney and
Ashlee Simpson,” Salon recently noted. “When Hunter’s fame
began to dim, he resorted to cheesy B-movies with titles like Operation
Bikini and an endless grind of dinner-theatre engagements that helped him pay
the rent and support his ailing mother. For all that, Hunter seems
astonishingly free of bitterness.”
Today, Hunter is the happiest he’s ever been—and being out of the
closet has a lot to do with it. Back in the 1950s, when homosexuality was
still illegal, Hunter led a double life, though he never went as far as his
onetime boyfriend of two years, Hollywood immortal Anthony Perkins, who even
got married and had a family.
“I was a little frightened of being blackmailed but you have to stay
your course as best you can,” says Hunter. “Jack Warner never
ever said a word to me. Whereas Paramount said words to Tony. [Director]
George Abbot didn’t want me in Damn Yankees because I was too gay. When
George fired me, Jack said, ‘Wait a minute, I bought Damn Yankees for
Tab Hunter.’ When I was in [the scandal rag] Hollywood Confidential,
Jack told me, ‘Today’s headlines, tomorrow’s toilet
paper.’ That was the closest he ever came to talking to me about my
sexuality. But, yes, there were two personas—I was Tab Hunter, no
question about that.”
Still, Hunter, now 74, did not want to go down in history like Perkins, who
died of AIDS in 1992. “When Tony’s [autobiography] came out, I
tell ya, a lot of it was bunk. Everybody puts their spin on stuff.” As
Hunter writes in his own memoirs, “Nothing came between Tony and his
career.”
Hunter is stunningly honest in Tab Hunter Confidential, which is chock full
of personal anecdotes about everyone from Tallulah Bankhead (“She
became a caricature of herself”) and Rudolf Nureyev (“I felt
terrible when he died of AIDS”) to Gary Cooper and John Wayne.
Some of his kindest words are reserved for Divine, the late drag queen
immortalized in the films of director John Waters. Waters, who cast Hunter
opposite Divine in Polyester and Lust in the Dust, recently said of Hunter,
“Making out with Divine, that’s beyond the bravery of coming
out.”
When I bring that up, Tab cracks, “When John asked me, ‘Do you
want to kiss a 350-pound transvestite?’ I said, ‘I’ve
kissed worse.’”
These days Hunter, a staunch Catholic, lives with his partner of over two
decades, Allan Glaser, and Hunter has been quoted by the gay press as being
against gay marriage. But when I question Hunter about that, he replies,
“I think [gay marriage] depends on the person. It’s their choice.
God gave us a wonderful thing called free will. Let’s hope we make good
choices.” V
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