Friday, April 3, 2020

Review of "Inside the Hollywood Closet: A Book of Quotes" by Boze Hadleigh




Journalist Boze Hadleigh is the author of many books about LGBT culture, popular culture, and show business.


Author Boze Hadleigh

Some of Hadleigh's best known titles are: Hollwood Lesbians; Broadway Babylon; Bette David Speaks; Hollywood Babble On: Stars Gossip About Other Stars; and Celebrity Feuds!: The Cattiest Rows, Spats, and Tiffs Ever Recorded.

In this book Hadleigh uses quotes from people in and around the LGBTQ+ community to illuminate the quandary - past and present - of homosexuals in show business. The book gave me a better understanding of the challenges faced by LGBTQ+ people who may have to choose between personal fulfillment and high profile jobs.

Hadleigh's book is largely quotes, and I'll follow that pattern in my review.

In his introduction, Hadleigh says: "Non-gays in the alleged heartland view gay characters on a screen and hear of openly gay performers and assume gays are now equal to heterosexuals in Hollywood. If only. There's still a long way to go."

Hadleigh believes that gay people in the public eye have a responsibility to come out - to be role models for homosexual youngsters. He stresses: "The LGBT+ movie star who earns millions per film does owe something to truth and integrity and to less fortunate (gay) people like them. For one thing, LGBT+ teens still kill themselves at several times the rate of straight teens. Much of that reflects a lack of positive gay role models."

Hadleigh suggests that Hollywood has a large proportion of homosexuals because, "As gay or lesbian children growing up in heterosexual households we learn to act early, out of self-preservation. A bigger proportion of us consider [becoming] professional actors, partly because we're good at it....also because - so we imagine - it's glamorous and fun."

The book is divided into four sections which, in total, provide a glimpse of what it's like to be gay and subject to intense scrutiny. I'll include a number of quotes from each chapter, but keep in mind that the narrative includes many more quotes, and is significantly more inclusive......as well as tantalizingly gossipy. 😃

**********

Chapter One: Playing the Game

Hadleigh writes: "From the start, acting has been considered more or less a game.....After all, actors pretend, and the words they speak usually aren't their own....Unfortunately the game may sooner or later exert pressure to conform and pander to the masses in the quest for greater success, adulation, and payment."

"Most gay celebrities spend their time and energy - with publicists as their partners in crime - trying to keep the masses from getting the right idea." - Truman Capote


Truman Capote

"Marrying into the opposite sex convinces most of the public you're straight. Cary Grant did it five times. That made him five times more convincing to the average American. - semi-closeted columnist Liz Smith


Cary Grant


"The big game is making money. In show business that justifies just about everything, including living a very distorted and fearful life. Once you come out, you lose the fear and can relax and be yourself." - Ellen Page (Juno)


Ellen Page

"Most minorities have the shelter and protection of their families against the outside world of the cold or cruel majority. But gays are a minority within their own family....most runaway and homeless gay and lesbian teens didn't choose to leave home, they were kicked out." - Florence Henderson (The Brady Bunch)


Florence Henderson

"The irony is, in the old days there were no gay characters upon the screen. There are now, but if it's a major role, it's almost invariably enacted by a heterosexual - in Hollywood this is a requirement." - Sir John Gielgud


Sir John Gielgud

"Reiteration and familiarity make things and people and habits seem comfortable and acceptable. That's why the media has such a powerful effect. That's why for decades religious fundamentalists got government and media to ban mention and depiction of gay people in any medium." - novelist Gavin Lambert (Inside Daisy Clover)


Gavin Lambert

"They rarely acknowledge British influence. Americans have no idea how many of their TV shows originated here....An adaptation of our long-running 'Are You Being Served?' never materialized, partly because of Mr. Humphries, the gay character - the U.S. wanted to drop him or turn him black. Couldn't leave him as he was, nor would it occur to them to have him be gay AND black." - UK casting director Ingrid Gibson


Mr. Humphries (in front), played by John Inman

"As long as we have heterosexual males in charge of practically everything - politically, corporately, religiously, etc. - we will endure misogyny and homophobia. Don't count on them to change or evolve. We must change the system by replacing over half of them, because we, women of all sexualities plus gay men, are over half the population." - female producer J.D. Disalvatore


J.D. Disalvatore

**********

Chapter 2: Out and Outing

Hadleigh writes: "Outing was born to expose hypocritical bigots - usually politicians, preachers, and sometimes actors - who were secretly gay but publicly anti-gay, who fostered homophobia, enacted anti-gay laws, etc. People have always been fascinated by who's secretly gay in showbiz and rumors, usually true, eventually made their way into print."

"Rumor has it that [a young bi-ish actor], in his bid for more leading man parts, to bolster his straight credentials, paid a couple of females to publicly claim he acted inappropriately with them, sexually. I hope this isn't a new trend. But men in Hollywood are just that desperate." - gay activist Donna Red Wing


Donna Red Wing

"When you're in the closet you give away so many good and vital things. One thing you do keep is the fear of being ruined or blackmailed by almost anybody who finds out." Brandon Flynn (13 Reasons Why)


Brandon Flynn

"Public figures are role models and have responsibilities. GLBTQ youth need role models. The rate of gay teen suicide is obscenely higher than for straight teens. Nobody should kill themselves out of shame and because gay stars are too cowardly or greedy to come out of the closet." - George Michael, after coming out


George Michael

"In Hollywood women lose marketability and income when their sex appeal fades. Young, they can be sexually ambiguous. When they're older and want to remain leading ladies they require some opposite sex credentials. That's what started Kate Hepburn off with Spencer Tracey. But it still goes on. - female publicist Ronni Chasen


Ronni Chasen

"I wrote my book because when I grew up there was no such book, and if mine could help just one kid out there who's secretly gay then it's worth it." Broadway icon Tommy Tune


Tommy Tune

"I hated being outed. There was no dignity in it, and it made me feel powerless. But living a life in the closet is worse." - the former Chastity, now Chaz, Bono


Chastity Bono


Chaz Bono

**********

Chapter 3: Loving in Private

Hadleigh writes: "The lifestyles of the rich and famous have always intrigued the public, but until the last several decades their private lives were mostly guarded, by themselves and the media."

Of course this necessitated hiding liasons with same-sex partners.

"A very few, very expensive male escort services are reliable enough for the gay VIP. Even top politicians use these services.....including one Canadian prime minister and one California governor." - Dack Rambo (Dallas)


Dack Rambo

"The police know plenty about some stars' private lives but they don't tell unless a crime occurs." - Erich Segal, professor and novelist (Love Story)


Erich Segal

"A few stars are so worried about publicity on them getting out or they're so afraid of AIDS that their computers are their whole sex lives. Other gay stars keep their sex-rated DVDs at the house of a friend or relative they really trust so in case they die sudden-like the incriminating stuff won't be found in their own homes. What a way to live, eh?" - publicist Paul Bloch


Paul Bloch

"The average public has no idea how ordinary a gay man can be. They aren't all hairdressers, decorators, actors, etc. Gays are in every profession, from garbage collectors and sports to whatever's the opposite of flamboyant." - openly gay actor Cheyenne Jackson (American Horror Story)


Cheyenne Jackson

"I would love to be someone's lesbian crush." - Jane Fonda


Jane Fonda

"Heterosexual men are surprisingly insecure...forever trying to make boys grow up to be 'straight', mostly through sports, endlessly screening male-female kisses and pairing off males and females starting at about age four....The hetero Establishment seems clueless that hetero boys will become hetero men regardless and that gay boys will become gay men despite all the propaganda and sports and shaming." - Charles Nelson Reilly


Charles Nelson Reilly

*********

Chapter 4: Dishing in Public


"The first million-dollar check to fight AIDS was given by a Japanese philanthropist. The second by American magazine publisher Malcolm Forbes, who recruited Elizabeth Taylor [to host AIDS fundraisers], to cloak his true sexuality." - Richard Wherrett, founding director of the Sydney Theatre Company


Richard Wherrett

"Show people are valued at a lower level than purely money people. Look at Jeffrey Epstein. Unlike most disgraced showbiz sexual abusers, straight or gay, as a level-three registered sex offender he remained socially acceptable, still mixing with VIPs in the arts, politics, film, and finance.....Had Epstein been gay, all the money in the world wouldn't have gotten him all those coveted invitations." - investment banker Ardavan Khodayari


Jeffrey Epstein

"Here's how the press works. Cary Grant fathers his first and only child in his sixties. The press is ecstatic: jeez, what a man! The press doesn't question why Grant never had one in his twenties, or his thirties, his forties, or fifties. No, because it's all about hiding homosexuality and extolling heterosexuality." - openly gay ICM agent Ed Limato


Ed Limato

"I feel sorrier for the black gay kids....it's more of a taboo than with the whites. I've read and I've heard mamas say they rather have a son in jail than a son that's a homosexual. So when you hear some black comic ripping gays apart it's really his way of saying he's not gay." - Charles Murphy (Eddie Murphy's brother)


Charles Murphy

"Too many gay men and lesbians - in fact too many women, period - retain some degree of internalized bigotry....of self-hate...from the propaganda everyone grew up with." - Dr. Ruth Westheimer


Dr. Ruth Westheimer

"It's time to live and let live." - Lynn Redgrave, daughter of a closeted gay actor


Lynn Redgrave

**********

It's clear that, though gay people are more accepted than they were in the past, there's still a ways to go. No one should be made to feel unwanted or embarrassed because of who they are.

Thanks to Netgalley, the author (Boze Hadleigh), and the publisher (Riverdale Avenue Books) for a copy of the book.


Rating: 3.5 stars

No comments:

Post a Comment