Three Dollar Bill by award-winning journalist Richard "Bugs" Burnett is the only syndicated LGBTQ column in Canadian publishing history
Saturday 20 June 2015
HOLLYWOOD HEARTTHROB TAB HUNTER SETS THE RECORD STRAIGHT
This interview with Tab Hunter originally ran in Three Dollar Bill on November 24, 2005
When I learned 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 even begin to tell you 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 fairytale 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, he was a number one box office draw who’d even had a number one hit single with the song Young Love.
Thursday 18 June 2015
DISHING WITH IRISH DRAG SUPERSTAR PANTI BLISS
Panti Bliss is the guest of honour at Toronto’s Green Space Festival’s all-drag Starry Night, co-presented by Pride Toronto on June 25 |
This is an expanded version of Bugs’
interview with Panti Bliss originally published in Daily
Xtra
Irish drag queen and
“accidental activist” Miss Panti Bliss became a YouTube sensation in January
2014 when she walked on the stage at the Abbey Theatre in Dublin and gave a
touching and memorable speech on homophobia.
“Have you ever been
standing at a pedestrian crossing when a car drives by and in it are a bunch of
lads, and they lean out the window and they shout “Fag!” and throw a milk
carton at you?” Miss Panti asked the Abbey Theatre audience rhetorically. “Now
it doesn’t really hurt. It’s just a wet carton and anyway they’re right – I am
a fag. But it feels oppressive.
“When it really does
hurt, is afterwards. Afterwards I wonder and worry and obsess over what was it
about me, what was it they saw in me? What was it that gave me away? And I hate
myself for wondering that. It feels oppressive and the next time I’m at a
pedestrian crossing I check myself to see what is it about me that ‘gives the
gay away’ and I check myself to make sure I’m not doing it this time.”
I can relate: I live
in the McGill Ghetto in downtown Montreal and I can’t tell you how many times
over the years folks in drive-by cars have screamed “Faggot!” at me at the
corner of Parc Avenue and Milton.
The video of Panti's speech
went viral — it has been seen more than 700,000 times on YouTube — and landed her a
North American lecture tour.
Upon her return to
Dublin, publishing house Hachette Books Ireland asked Panti (aka Rory O’Neill)
to write her memoirs, Woman in the Making.
“The turnaround on the
book was less than six months,” Panti says. “But saying I cashed in suggests I
was given loads of money, and I wasn’t. It is part memoir, part rant. And I
have two chapters about the aftermath of my lecture at the Abbey Theatre. It
was an insane period in my life, exciting and exhilarating.”
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