Showing posts with label Hollywood memorabilia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hollywood memorabilia. Show all posts

Thursday, 2 July 2020

An inspiration to us all



Olivia de Havilland...



...still going strong at 104!

Dame Olivia Mary de Havilland DBE (born 1st July 1916)

Tuesday, 15 October 2019

He helped put the ‘wood’ in Hollywood



"Sex was a major industry during those lean and troubled years. It not only provided a welcome relief from the harsh reality of everyday life but was also a lifesaver for many young people who simply could not find legitimate work elsewhere. I wasn’t the only kid in town turning tricks."

"I became the go-to guy in town for arranging whatever people desired. And everybody’s needs were met. Whatever folks wanted, I had it. I could make all their fantasies come true. No matter how outrageous or offbeat people’s tastes, I was the one who knew how to get them exactly what they were after."




From The Guardian:
Scotty Bowers was a 23-year-old petrol station attendant on Hollywood Boulevard when the actor Walter Pidgeon pulled up to the pump and asked the dimpled blond to jump in his Lincoln. It would be the ride of his life. Pidgeon was gay, claims Bowers in his autobiography Full Service: My Adventures in Hollywood and the Secret Sex Lives of the Stars, and that afternoon they became lovers. Bowers himself transcended labels. Years later, he startled sexologist Dr Alfred Kinsey by checking off every sex act on his list (and took him to orgies to prove it). Guys, girls, spouses, kings, consorts – and a three-way with Ava Gardner and Lana Turner. Bowers had done it all.




So, farewell then, Scotty Bowers - the man (if his endless tales are all true) who bedded everyone from J Edgar Hoover to Bette Davis to the Duke and Duchess of Windsor to George Cukor to Vivien Leigh to Spencer Tracy to Cecil Beaton to Cary Grant and Randolph Scott, and pimped found illicit liaisons for the likes of Montgomery Clift, Rock Hudson, Tyrone Power, Charles Laughton, Cole Porter, Gore Vidal, and... Katharine Hepburn!



From an article by Michael Strangeways in Seattle Gay Scene:
Though Scotty Bowers has been backed up and verified by many, including authors Gore Vidal and Armistead Maupin and historian William Mann, there were still many who screamed “no proof!” and “Scotty Bowers is a liar!!!” and “NONE OF THIS COULD POSSIBLY BE TRUE!!!!”

Personally, I don’t know how the naysayers can prove that THEY are any more “correct” than Mr. Bowers. How do THEY know that Kate Hepburn wasn’t a lesbian? Because of her VERY carefully controlled image, which she worked very hard to maintain, for the duration of her professional life, promoting her and Tracy as THE Romantic Couple of the Golden Age of Hollywood…despite the fact the pair didn’t actually ever live together and spent YEARS apart from one another. Or the fact that Hepburn lived the majority of her adult life surrounded by lesbian women...

...There’s also those who poo poo the need for the rich and famous to hire some guy who worked at a Richfield gas station and as a part time bartender to service their needs, or hook them up with other sex workers. But, there weren’t very many options for anyone if they were seeking out gay or lesbian encounters in a pre-Stonewall world. Straight men could go to madames (and Hollywood has always had them; still does!) with great ease but if you were a female seeking a male or female bed mate, or a gay man, it wasn’t easy. Picking up people at work/on the street was very dangerous and any bar or club that identified as a queer business was prone to being raided with all the customers thrown in jail. Scotty Bowers, and others, provided a vital service to Hollywood professionals (as well as non famous names including behind-the-scenes people in the industry) seeking companionship and discretion.
I have not read the book, nor seen the film documentary of Mr Bowers' life story, but of course I knew of the man, his notoriety, his "hinted-at" contributions to Hollywood Babylon and numerous other "scandalous exposés" in the gossip columns. He straddled two worlds - the post-War era of moral paranoia and domestic idealism, and also its dark underbelly, where the most outwardly clean-living citizens and stars alike sought to satisfy their secret desires. A remnant of a naughty "hidden society", we mourn his passing - there are so few left to tell the tales any more...

...and speaking of those tales, and that film documentary:



RIP George Albert "Scotty" Bowers (1st July 1923 – 13th October 2019)

Thursday, 25 January 2018

From tiny "eeks!" to nerve-shattering "y-y-y-i-i-i-i-s!"







At the moment, in the last throes of sorting stuff before we move to Dolores Delargo Towers #4 on Saturday - I'm with Ezelle!

Aaaaaaaaargh!

Wednesday, 16 December 2015

Fabulous, darling









As James St. James at The WOW Report puts it:
It’s the Joan Collins auction you’ve been waiting for your whole life! Julien’s Auction House is auctioning off items belonging to the legendary Dame Joan Collins – including some god-awful ’70s furniture, a “silver articulated lobster,” a monogrammed silver julep cup, several outfits from Dynasty, the dress she wore in a recent Snickers commercial (!), and some reeeeally fun Versace aerobic wear.
To view it in all its glory, here is the programme:

The Collection of Dame Joan Collins

Thursday, 15 March 2012

The half-million-pound dream



From The Guardian:

"A new record for the price of film memorabilia is expected to be set with the sale of a rare Metropolis movie poster – yours for $850,000."

That's £542,507 in proper money!

More record-breaking movie posters

The poster for Fritz Lang's Metropolis is indeed an object of great beauty. Here at Dolores Delargo Towers, it would look fab in the West Wing.

However, could we ever imagine having that kind of money to spend - on a poster?

These are the things that dreams are made of...

Wednesday, 30 November 2011

Objects of desire, part 2


Marilyn Monroe “Cherie” iconic green and black-sequined leotard designed by Travilla for Bus Stop


Tallulah Bankhead silver lamé robe designed by Rene Hubert from A Royal Scandal

A second auction of Debbie Reynolds’ Hollywood collection is set for 3rd December 2011 in Beverly Hills, and there are many more beautiful objects of desire up for sale this time round - if only one had the money!

The magnificent Debbie Reynolds Collection auction in June far exceeded its initial estimates, and earned a place in the Guinness World Records after selling Marilyn Monroe's iconic white "Subway Dress" for $5.52 million (£2.8 million), making it the world's most expensive dress. Will they break records this time around, I wonder?


Betty Grable heavily beaded aqua dance costume designed by Earl Luick from Springtime in the Rockies


Gladys Cooper aubergine period gown and coat designed by Edward Stevenson from At Sword’s Point

On sale this time are at least two of Betty Grable's shimmy dresses, Tallulah Bankhead's silver robe, several gowns by Adrian and Travilla including those worn by Zsa Zsa Gabor, Alice Faye, Sonja Henie and Norma Shearer, Marilyn Monroe's basque from Bus Stop, Mitzi Gaynor's feather showgirl hat, Barbra Streisand's swan outfit from Funny Girl, period costumes worn by the likes of Gladys Cooper and Olivia de Havilland, and outfits worn by Esther Williams in her Busby Berkeley aquatic extravaganzas...

My favourite of all the items must be this fantabulosa silver and black sequined star outfit designed by Donald Brooks for Julie Andrews in Star!



Sigh.

Debbie Reynolds - the Auction, part 2