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#BornThisDay: Actor, Tab Hunter

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July 11, 1931– Arthur Andrew Kelm Gelien was a champion equestrian & figure skater before an agent, Henry Willson, turned him into Tab Hunter (the same agent that came up with the name Rock Hudson). Hunter has appeared in over 40 films & has worked on stage & TV. My favorite Tab Hunter role is Joe Hardy in the 1958 film version of the musical Damn Yankees. Telling of his star power at the time, Hunter was the only actor in the film who had not been in the original Broadway cast. The property had been purchased especially for Hunter to show off his special talents, a gift from Jack Warner, & a chance to work with director Stanley Donen & choreographer Bob Fosse.

In 1954, the year of my birth, Hunter, then just 23 years old, blond haired & blue eyed, the perfect product of a popular perceptibility, as free from cynicism & care as a cloudless sky, was the #1 USA male box-office star, with a hit film, Battle Cry. Closet case Merv Griffin had nudged Hunter to read the Leon Uris book of Battle Cry, which he knew was in pre-production. Hunter screen-tested a dozen times before landing the role, beating out James Dean & Paul Newman. Warner Brothers. gave him a 7 year contract. Dean, Natalie Wood & Hunter were the last 3 actors signed to the studio in those last days of the old studio system & the last to get the kind of push & publicity that a big studio could make possible for their young stars. Hunter was all over the fan magazines, known as “The Sigh Guy.” At the end of the 1950s, he was Warner’s top-grossing star. He was also #1 on the pop music charts with Young Love, topping Elvis Presley (not easily topped).

The studio was sending him out on dates with starlets to movie premieres, industry parties, & the Academy Awards. Warners most frequently paired him with Natalie Wood, just off of Rebel Without A Cause (1955). Hunter:

“I just loved going out with Natalie. She was like my kid sister.”

Hunter’s career might have unraveled just when it was taking off because Confidential Magazine published a story about how Hunter had been arrested at a “pajama party”, a euphemism for a shindig attended by gay people. The gossip rag had been tipped off to the story by his ex-agent Willson in exchange for killing a story about Rock Hudson’s gay life in Hollywood. The story didn’t end up hurting Hunter, just weeks later he was proclaimed Most Popular Young Star by Warner Bros.

But, by 1960 his fame ride was running out of gas. Troy Donahue had been invented & he became the next Tab Hunter. Hunter, at 28 years old, was more or less over. He began a 46 year spiral into spaghetti westerns (Hunter describes them as  “short on the meat sauce”), TV series guest sots, dinner theater, infomercials, & the film Won Ton Ton, The Dog Who Saved Hollywood (1976).

Suddenly in the 1980s, after the long trip through the depths of cinematic dreck, plus a heart attack, Hunter was rediscovered by our hero John Waters. In Polyester (1981), Waters chose Hunter, who had once starred opposite John Wayne, to play opposite the divine Divine.  His work in Polyester reinvented Hunter as an ironic illustration of his own Hollywood iconography.

Hunter said Hollywood in the 1950s had its own version of “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” that he calls “Don’t Complain, Don’t Explain”, letting the studio take care of the actors, & allowing the public draw its conclusions.Hunter:

 “Hollywood will just take you, chew you up, spit you out, dump you on the side & go on to the next, & it’s kind of tragic.”

In 2005, Hunter released a terrific & very readable memoir Tab Hunter Confidential: The Making Of A Movie Star. In the book he finally publicly came out of the closet, 50 years after the start of his career. He claims that he wrote to book because:

“You should get the story from the horse’s mouth, not from some horse’s ass after I’m dead & gone.”

“Life was difficult for me, because I was living 2 different lives at that time. A private life of my own, which I never discussed, never talked about to anyone. Then my Hollywood life, which was just trying to learn my craft & succeed… the word ‘gay’ wasn’t even around in those days & if anyone ever confronted me with it, I’d just kinda freak out. I was in total denial. I was just not comfortable in that Hollywood scene, other than the work process. There was a lot written about my sexuality, & the press was pretty darn cruel.”

Hunter enjoyed romances with gay actor Anthony Perkins & figure skater Ronnie Robertson before settling down with his partner of 40 years, Allan Glaser, a handsome producer. Glaser is the producer of the new documentary Tab Hunter Confidential, directed & written by Jeffrey Schwarz. The film can be seen tonight at Outfest, LA’s annual LGBT film festival.

Glaser & Hunter live in Montecito, along with their 2 whippets, where they raise horses.

He was one of my very first crushes. I think Tab Hunter was & remains a blond bombshell. I don’t hate that he is a Republican… but, I do hate his Republicanism.

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#RealEstatePorn–Glass House Edition: A 60s Classic Outside Chicago for $600K

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Designed and built by H.P. Davis “Deever” Rockwell as the architect’s personal residence in 1964, this glass house is a real gem. Like the designer of THE most famous glass house, Philip Johnson, Rockwell was student of Mies van der Rohe too. The student put to work what he learned from the famed grandfather of modernism in creating this glass and concrete home. The “House on a Bluff,” as it was called, sits on two and a half acres and is a pretty roomy 3,600-square-fee with four bedrooms and three baths. The listing agent Joe Kunkel told Curbed;

“Many of the famous glass homes are now museums. But this is one of the few that someone can buy and actually live in.”

For $619,000, that’s gotta be a steal, right? Have a look at the next glass house post and you tell me.

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(via Curbed)

The post #RealEstatePorn–Glass House Edition: A 60s Classic Outside Chicago for $600K appeared first on World of Wonder.

#RealEstatePorn–Glass House Edition: A Philip Johnson Art Box In New Canaan for $14 Million

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Another student of Ludwig Mies van der Rohe, the late elder statesman of modernism, designed this stunner. Philip Johnson‘s own famous Glass House is nearby, but this one, as the Sotheby’s listing says, is much more livable –and it’s for sale;

Considered the most “livable” of Philip Johnson’s work, Wiley House, has been restored and maintained to the highest standard, without regard to cost. As much Art as it is Home, Wiley House represents the finest example of Philip Johnson’s work, and perhaps the ultimate Mid-Century Modern home available in the world.

It’s 4 bedrooms, 5 baths on 6 acres but otherwise Sotheby’s doesn’t tell you much else about it –but if you want a round pool and an art gallery on your property –and you’ve got $14 million– this is your place.

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The post #RealEstatePorn–Glass House Edition: A Philip Johnson Art Box In New Canaan for $14 Million appeared first on World of Wonder.

#FirstLook: Read The First Chapter of Harper’s Lee’s First Novel in Over 50 Years, “Go Set A Watchman”

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Nearly 60 years ago, when she was 31, Harper Lee submitted her first attempt at a novel to the publisher J.B. Lippincott. It was titled Go Set a Watchman. Ms. Lee’s editor thought the story was lacking but thought the flashback scenes were good and she suggested she instead write about her protagonist as a young girl. The result was the Pulitzer Prize-winning classic, To Kill a Mockingbird.

Now that first novel, Go Set a Watchman is coming out on Tuesday and apparently, it has had very little editing. Jonathan Burnham, publisher of HarperCollins says;

“It was made clear to us that Harper Lee wanted it published as it was. We gave the book a very light copy edit.”

The first chapter of the anticipated book introduces us to the beloved character, Scout, as a sexually liberated woman in her twenties, traveling from New York to Alabama to visit her sick father and weigh a marriage proposal from a childhood friend. It also includes a bombshell about Scout’s brother.

GO SET A WATCHMAN
Chapter 1

Since Atlanta, she had looked out the dining-car window with a delight almost physical. Over her breakfast coffee, she watched the last of Georgia’s hills recede and the red earth appear, and with it tin-roofed houses set in the middle of swept yards, and in the yards the inevitable verbena grew, surrounded by whitewashed tires. She grinned when she saw her first TV antenna atop an unpainted Negro house; as they multiplied, her joy rose.

Jean Louise Finch always made this journey by air, but she decided to go by train from New York to Maycomb Junction on her fifth annual trip home. For one thing, she had the life scared out of her the last time she was on a plane: the pilot elected to fly through a tornado. For another thing, flying home meant her father rising at three in the morning, driving a hundred miles to meet her in Mobile, and doing a full day’s work afterwards: he was seventy-two now and this was no longer fair.

She was glad she had decided to go by train. Trains had changed since her childhood, and the novelty of the experience amused her: a fat genie of a porter materialized when she pressed a button on a wall; at her bidding a stainless steel washbasin popped out of another wall, and there was a john one could prop one’s feet on. She resolved not to be intimidated by several messages stenciled around her compartment—a roomette, they called it—but when she went to bed the night before, she succeeded in folding herself up into the wall because she had ignored an injunction to PULL THIS LEVER DOWN OVER BRACKETS, a situation remedied by the porter to her embarrassment, as her habit was to sleep only in pajama tops.

Luckily, he happened to be patrolling the corridor when the trap snapped shut with her in it: “I’ll get you out, Miss,” he called in answer to her poundings from within. “No please,” she said. “Just tell me how to get out.” “I can do it with my back turned,” he said, and did.

When she awoke that morning the train was switching and chugging in the Atlanta yards, but in obedience to another sign in her compartment she stayed in bed until College Park flashed by. When she dressed, she put on her Maycomb clothes: gray slacks, a black sleeveless blouse, white socks, and loafers. Although it was four hours away, she could hear her aunt’s sniff of disapproval.

When she was starting on her fourth cup of coffee the Crescent Limited honked like a giant goose at its northbound mate and rumbled across the Chattahoochee into Alabama.

The Chattahoochee is wide, flat, and muddy. It was low today; a yellow sandbar had reduced its flow to a trickle. Perhaps it sings in the wintertime, she thought: I do not remember a line of that poem. Piping down the valleys wild? No. Did he write to a waterfowl, or was it a waterfall?

She sternly repressed a tendency to boisterousness when she reflected that Sidney Lanier must have been somewhat like her long-departed cousin, Joshua Singleton St. Clair, whose private literary preserves stretched from the Black Belt to Bayou La Batre. Jean Louise’s aunt often held up Cousin Joshua to her as a family example not lightly to be discountenanced: he was a splendid figure of a man, he was a poet, he was cut off in his prime, and Jean Louise would do well to remember that he was a credit to the family. His pictures did the family well—Cousin Joshua looked like a ratty Algernon Swinburne.

Jean Louise smiled to herself when she remembered her father telling her the rest of it. Cousin Joshua was cut off, all right, not by the hand of God but by Caesar’s hosts:

When at the University, Cousin Joshua studied too hard and thought too much; in fact, he read himself straight out of the nineteenth century. He affected an Inverness cape and wore jackboots he had a blacksmith make up from his own design. Cousin Joshua was frustrated by the authorities when he fired upon the president of the University, who in his opinion was little more than a sewage disposal expert. This was no doubt true, but an idle excuse for assault with a deadly weapon. After much passing around of money Cousin Joshua was moved across the tracks and placed in state accommodations for the irresponsible, where he remained for the rest of his days. They said he was reasonable in every respect until someone mentioned that president’s name, then his face would become distorted, he would assume a whooping crane attitude and hold it for eight hours or more, and nothing or nobody could make him lower his leg until he forgot about that man. On clear days Cousin Joshua read Greek, and he left a thin volume of verse printed privately by a firm in Tuscaloosa. The poetry was so ahead of its time no one has deciphered it yet, but Jean Louise’s aunt keeps it displayed casually and prominently on a table in the livingroom.

Jean Louise laughed aloud, then looked around to see if anyone had heard her. Her father had a way of undermining his sister’s lectures on the innate superiority of any given Finch: he always told his daughter the rest of it, quietly and solemnly, but Jean Louise sometimes thought she detected an unmistakably profane glint in Atticus Finch’s eyes, or was it merely the light hitting his glasses? She never knew.

The countryside and the train had subsided to a gentle roll, and she could see nothing but pastureland and black cows from window to horizon. She wondered why she had never thought her country beautiful.

The station at Montgomery nestled in an elbow of the Alabama, and when she got off the train to stretch her legs, the returning familiar with its drabness, lights, and curious odors rose to meet her. There is something missing, she thought. Hotboxes, that’s it. A man goes along under the train with a crowbar. There is a clank and then s-sss-sss, white smoke comes up and you think you’re inside a chafing dish. These things run on oil now.

For no reason an ancient fear gnawed her. She had not been in this station for twenty years, but when she was a child and went to the capital with Atticus, she was terrified lest the swaying train plunge down the riverbank and drown them all. But when she boarded again for home, she forgot.

The train clacketed through pine forests and honked derisively at a gaily painted bell-funneled museum piece sidetracked in a clearing. It bore the sign of a lumber concern, and the Crescent Limited could have swallowed it whole with room to spare. Greenville, Evergreen, Maycomb Junction.

She had told the conductor not to forget to let her off, and because the conductor was an elderly man, she anticipated his joke: he would rush at Maycomb Junction like a bat out of hell and stop the train a quarter of a mile past the little station, then when he bade her goodbye he would say he was sorry, he almost forgot. Trains changed; conductors never did. Being funny at flag stops with young ladies was a mark of the profession, and Atticus, who could predict the actions of every conductor from New Orleans to Cincinnati, would be waiting accordingly not six steps away from her point of debarkation.

Home was Maycomb County, a gerrymander some seventy miles long and spreading thirty miles at its widest point, a wilderness dotted with tiny settlements the largest of which was Maycomb, the county seat. Until comparatively recently in its history, Maycomb County was so cut off from the rest of the nation that some of its citizens, unaware of the South’s political predilections over the past ninety years, still voted Republican. No trains went there—Maycomb Junction, a courtesy title, was located in Abbott County, twenty miles away. Bus service was erratic and seemed to go nowhere, but the Federal Government had forced a highway or two through the swamps, thus giving the citizens an opportunity for free egress. But few people took advantage of the roads, and why should they? If you did not want much, there was plenty.

The county and the town were named for a Colonel Mason Maycomb, a man whose misplaced self-confidence and overweening willfulness brought confusion and confoundment to all who rode with him in the Creek Indian Wars. The territory in which he operated was vaguely hilly in the north and flat in the south, on the fringes of the coastal plain. Colonel Maycomb, convinced that Indians hated to fight on flat land, scoured the northern reaches of the territory looking for them. When his general discovered that Maycomb was meandering in the hills while the Creeks were lurking in every pine thicket in the south, he dispatched a friendly Indian runner to Maycomb with the message, Move south, damn you. Maycomb was convinced this was a Creek plot to trap him (was there not a blue-eyed, red-headed devil leading them?), he made the friendly Indian runner his prisoner, and he moved farther north until his forces became hopelessly lost in the forest primeval, where they sat out the wars in considerable bewilderment.

After enough years had passed to convince Colonel Maycomb that the message might have been genuine after all, he began a purposeful march to the south, and on the way his troops encountered settlers moving inland, who told them the Indian Wars were about over. The troops and the settlers were friendly enough to become Jean Louise Finch’s ancestors, and Colonel Maycomb pressed on to what is now Mobile to make sure his exploits were given due credit. Recorded history’s version does not coincide with the truth, but these are the facts, because they were passed down by word of mouth through the years, and every Maycombian knows them.

“. . . get your bags, Miss,” the porter said. Jean Louise followed him from the lounge car to her compartment. She took two dollars from her billfold: one for routine, one for releasing her last night. The train, of course, rushed like a bat out of hell past the station and came to a stop 440 yards beyond it. The conductor appeared, grinning, and said he was sorry, he almost forgot. Jean Louise grinned back and waited impatiently for the porter to put the yellow step in place. He handed her down and she gave him the two bills.

Her father was not waiting for her.

She looked up the track toward the station and saw a tall man standing on the tiny platform. He jumped down and ran to meet her.

He grabbed her in a bear hug, put her from him, kissed her hard on the mouth, then kissed her gently. “Not here, Hank,” she murmured, much pleased.

“Hush, girl,” he said, holding her face in place. “I’ll kiss you on the courthouse steps if I want to.”

They walked arm-in-arm down the track to collect her suitcase. “How’s Atticus?” she said.

“His hands and shoulders are giving him fits today.”

“He can’t drive when they’re like that, can he?”

Henry closed the fingers of his right hand halfway and said, “He can’t close them any more than this. Miss Alexandra has to tie his shoes and button his shirts when they’re like that. He can’t even hold a razor.”

Jean Louise shook her head. She was too old to rail against the inequity of it, but too young to accept her father’s crippling disease without putting up some kind of fight. “Isn’t there anything they can do?”

“You know there isn’t,” Henry said. “He takes seventy grains of aspirin a day and that’s all.”

Henry picked up her heavy suitcase, and they walked back toward the car. She wondered how she would behave when her time came to hurt day in and day out. Hardly like Atticus: if you asked him how he was feeling he would tell you, but he never complained; his disposition remained the same, so in order to find out how he was feeling, you had to ask him.

The only way Henry found out about it was by accident. One day when they were in the records vault at the courthouse running a land title, Atticus hauled out a heavy mortgage book, turned stark white, and dropped it. “What’s the matter?” Henry had said. “Rheumatoid arthritis. Can you pick it up for me?” said Atticus. Henry asked him how long he’d had it; Atticus said six months. Did Jean Louise know it? No. Then he’d better tell her. “If you tell her she’ll be down here trying to nurse me. The only remedy for this is not to let it beat you.” The subject was closed.

“Want to drive?” said Henry.

“Don’t be silly,” she said. Although she was a respectable driver, she hated to operate anything mechanical more complicated than a safety pin: folding lawn chairs were a source of profound irritation to her; she had never learned to ride a bicycle or use a typewriter; she fished with a pole. Her favorite game was golf because its essential principles consisted of a stick, a small ball, and a state of mind.

With green envy, she watched Henry’s effortless mastery of the automobile. Cars are his servants, she thought. “Power steering? Automatic transmission?” she said.

“You bet,” he said.

“Well, what if everything shuts off and you don’t have any gears to shift. You’d be in trouble then, wouldn’t you?”

“But everything won’t shut off.”

“How do you know?”

“That’s what faith is. Come here.”

Faith in General Motors. She put her head on his shoulder.

“Hank,” she said presently. “What really happened?”

This was an old joke between them. A pink scar started under his right eye, hit the corner of his nose, and ran diagonally across his upper lip. Behind his lip were six false front teeth not even Jean Louise could induce him to take out and show her. He came home from the war with them. A German, more to express his displeasure at the end of the war than anything else, had bashed him in the face with a rifle butt. Jean Louise had chosen to think this a likely story: what with guns that shot over the horizon, B-17s, V-bombs, and the like, Henry had probably not been within spitting distance of the Germans.

“Okay, honey,” he said. “We were down in a cellar in Berlin. Everybody had too much to drink and a fight started—you like to hear the believable, don’t you? Now will you marry me?”

— You can read the rest of the chapter here. Excerpted from Harper Lee’s Go Set a Watchman, to be published July 14 by HarperCollins. It’s the biggest pre-order of any book since Harry Potter. You can get yours here.

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#FirstLook: “Batman v Superman” Comic-Con Trailer

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Here’s your very FIRST LOOK at the official trailer for next year’s most anticipated movie Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice. This is something comic book fans and audiences have been wanting to see for 75 years and by the looks of this trailer, it was well worth the wait. We didn’t count how many times we screamed out of excitement, but it was enough to get a noise complaint. Regardless, watch the trailer. And then watch it again. RIP to Marvel. DC is coming.

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It’s Birthday, Bitch

#BornThisDay: Actor, Cheyenne Jackson

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July 12, 1975Cheyenne Jackson is just too much. Too much of everything: tall (6’3”), powerfully built, good-looking with jet-black hair & piercing blue eyes, sings like a dream, dances, acts, principled, well-regarded in the industry, & an out & proud gay guy. Have you heard his fabulous 2008 album with Michael Feinstien, The Power Of Two, or seen his hilarious turn on 30 Rock as Danny, the irony free Canadian brought on to The Girly Show (the show within a show) to attract Middle-American viewers, or maybe his leading man roles in Broadway musicals Xanadu (2007), Finian’s Rainbow (2008) or Damn Yankees (2009)? Show biz trivia: Jackson had a only a week of rehearsals for before opening night of Xanadu, a role that had him dancing & singing on roller skates.

Over on The Facebook, I recently devoted a post to the sublime actor Gena Rowlands on her birthday & noted that her most recent film, 6 Dance Lessons In 6 Weeks (2015) was playing On Demand. I finally caught it & the movie is rather stagy, but Rowlands & her co-star Jackson, playing a gay ballroom dance instructor were delightful & had real chemistry. I caught him on Bravo’s Watch What Happens Live! with my boo Andy Cohen & I was disarmed by his natural charm & charisma. How funny that he came clean as a devoted Bravo watcher & a big fan of all The Real Housewives Shows?

Jackson & I might be fated to meet, as it seems that he has been chasing me across the cosmos. He grew up in a Christian Conservative family, in a small town just outside of my hometown of Spokane & later moved to that city when he graduated high school. Jackson:

 “Growing up gay in that town was very hard, but my parents were awesome.”

My first professional job, at 17 years old, was acting in summer stock in Coeur d’ Alene, Idaho. I was thrilled with this job. I was making $75 a week, plus room & board. I thought I was so rich! I was making a living as an actor! Decades later, Jackson’s first professional show, at age 18, was as an actor in the same summer theater in Coeur d’Alene, where he was making $280 a week. Jackson: “I thought I was so rich!”

In the 1980s & 1990s, I worked steadily as an actor in Seattle including featured roles at Seattle Civic Light Opera & The Village Theatre. In the late 1990s, Jackson worked at Seattle Civic Light OperaThe Village Theatre, playing leads in Grease, Joseph & The Amazing Technicolor  Dreamcoat, & West Side Story, just as I was leaving Seattle to move to Portland. In the spring of 2002, he starred in Seattle’s Fifth Avenue Theatre’s production of The Most Happy Fella & a revival of Hair, just as I was starting over in my new city. I once had hair & I can only rest assured that Jackson & I were never up for the same role.

Jackson had just one contact when he moved to NYC, actor Marc Kudisch, who he was once understudied in Seattle. Kudisch set Jackson up with an agent who signed him on the spot. Within a few weeks, Jackson was cast in his first Broadway show after going to only a single audition. He was just shy of his 27th birthday.

In more crazy parallels in our lives, I moved to NYC with only a single contact, I had one audition for a Broadway show, I once had a 27th birthday, & I once had an agent. I feel that with so much in common it’s a phenomenon & Jackson & I must be fated to meet.

Jackson on being an openly gay actor:

“The more it happens, the easier it is for others, although I do understand why some actors choose not to come out. I have several famous friends who are still in the closet.”

On working with Alec Baldwin on NBC’s 30 Rock:

I’ve learned to be totally comfortable around Alec Baldwin, but he used to scare the crap out of me. He’s so alpha male. He’ll move you out of the way if you’re in his light, & one time I thought he was done talking & I started to say something & he put his big beefy hand on my arm to silence me.”

In films Jackson most notably portrayed 9/11 victim & gay hero Mark Bingham in the Academy Award nominated United 93 (2006) & Liberace’s jilted boyfriend in the HBO biopic Behind The Candelabra (2013) with Michael Douglas & Matt Damon.

He has an album of tasty self-penned tunes, Drive (2012) that gets a lot of play at my house. He is an active supporter LGBT rights & is the International Ambassador for amfAR (The Foundation For AIDS Research). Last autumn, Jackson married actor Jason Landau. Cheyenne Jackson turns 40 years old today. I was once 40 years old, although I don’t remember anything from that year.

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Watch Now: “Pretty Things” Episode 2

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Wowlebrity Damiana Garcia is back with the second episode of her wig-filled sketch extravaganza “Pretty Things”! This 22-minute episode, co-starring actor/Ditty Bops singer Amanda Barrett, features the music videos “Straight For A Minute” and “Johnny Jimmy Joe,” another installment of the Slamdance award-winning “Popcorn,” Damiana’s interview with grad student/sex worker Barbara Zuckerman, the boarding school saga “Mulberry Commons,” “Sugar & Pepper” cartoons, and more. New full episodes will be posted on The WOW Report every Sunday night; be sure to subscribe to the “Pretty Things” YouTube channel to not miss an episode!

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It’s Birthday, Bitch

#BornThisDay: The Hollywood Sign

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July 13, 1923The Hollywood Sign, aside from a passion for Hollywood history, the industry & the town, I have a real connection to the place. My father grew up in the Silverlake neighborhood & I chose to attend Loyola Marymount University. They were happy years, full of adventures. I actually love the city. I was always thrilled whenever I caught view of the Hollywood Sign from anywhere around town. For me, it symbolized not just the glamour & excitement of the film industry, but also the hardship & heartbreak of trying to be an actor.

The Hollywood Sign was the project of the Los Angeles Times publisher Harry Chandler as an epic $21,000 billboard for his upscale Hollywoodland real estate development in Beachwood Canyon. The sign was intended to play the role of a giant marquee for a city that was constantly announcing its own gala movie premiere.

It took 200 workmen to get it erected. 7 miles of road had to be cut into the mountainside & 300,000 cubic yards of dirt had to be moved.

The sign is located on the south slope of Mount Lee, the tallest point in LA, in Griffith Park, north of the Mulholland Highway. The Hollywood Sign measures 450 feet long, its 13 mammoth letters are 45 feet high, & it’s visible from all parts of Hollywood & many other neighborhoods of LA. It is massive. Each letter is constructed of 3’×9′ metal squares rigged together by an intricate frame of scaffolding, pipes, wires & telephone poles. All of the building materials had to be brought up precipitous Mount Lee on simple dirt paths.

A giant white dot, 35 feet in diameter, lit with hundreds of 20-watt lights on the perimeter was constructed below the sign to catch the eye. The sign itself featured 4,000 20-watt bulbs, spaced 8 inches apart. In the 1920s, the sign blinked into the Hollywood night: “Holly” first, next “wood” & at last, “land”, & then to make the point, a giant period for punctuation. The effect was truly spectacular. The bulbs were changed daily by a caretaker who lived in a small house behind one of the sign’s giant “L’s.

In 1932, a despondent Hollywood hopeful, Peg Entwistle, jumped to her death from the Sign’s giant letter “H.”

The last 4 letters were removed in 1945, after Hollywood was well known as the world’s film capital, & the sign had become a famous landmark.

In 1973, the Hollywood Sign was officially named “Los Angeles Cultural-Historical Monument #111”. The ceremony, hosted by film great Gloria Swanson, was blanketed in a thick fog, obscuring the event.

During the 1960s, residents fled Hollywood for suburban San Fernando Valley & the studios relocated to other parts of town. By 1970, Paramount Pictures was the only studio left. Hollywood, the neighborhood, fell into disrepair & many of the grand old movie palaces became adult theaters. Crime soared, & the beautiful boulevards were devastated by urban decay. The Hollywood Sign was dilapidated & rusted, like an old star from the silent film era. It was no longer lit at night.

When I lived there in the 1970s, the top of the “D” & the entire third “O” had slid down Mount Lee, & an arsonist’s work had burned the bottom of the second “L.” Someone, & it wasn’t me, had altered the Sign’s letters to read “Hollyweed”.

In 1978, because of a campaign to restore the landmark by musician Alice Cooper (who donated the missing O), a committee set out to replace the deteriorated sign with a more permanent structure. 9 donors each gave $27,700 to replace the old letters with new ones made of steel, guaranteed to last.

The new version of the sign was unveiled on Hollywood’s 75th anniversary, in 1978, broadcast before a live TV audience of 60 million people. Those donors were:

  • H – Terrence Donnelly: publisher of the Hollywood Independent Newspaper
  • O – Giovanni Mazza: Italian movie producer
  • L – Les Kelley: originator of the Kelley Blue Book
  • L – Gene Autry: singer, actor, businessman
  • Y – Hugh Hefner: founder of Playboy magazine
  • W – Andy Williams: singer, TV host
  • O – Warner Bros.
  • O – Alice Cooper, who donated in memory of comedian Groucho Marx
  • D – Dennis Lidtke: LA business person

In spring 2010, Hefner donated the final $900,000 needed to save the Hollywood sign from extinction. The land on which the sign sits, once owned by Howard Hughes, who had planned to build a house there for Ginger Rogers, had been announced as the site for a fancy new hotel. To save the sign, the LA Trust For Public Land, a conservation group, needed to raise $12.5 million.

Donations came from Steven Spielberg, Tom Hanks, Aileen Getty, Norman Lear, plus Sony, NBC Universal, & Warner Bros., but were still $1 million short.  Hefner:

 “I am proud we were able to come together & create a public/private partnership to protect this historic symbol that will continue to welcome dreamers, artists & Austrian bodybuilders for generations to come.”

The Hollywood Sign has been a star in many films, playing itself in Hollywood Boulevard (1935), Hollywoodland (2006), The Black Dahlia (2007), Mulholland Drive (2001), South Park: Bigger, Longer, & Uncut (1999). A giant ape scales it in Mighty Joe Young (1998). It gets blow to bits by aliens in Independence Day (1996), set on fire in Escape From LA (1996), & collapses to dust in Earthquake (1974).

The sign is featured during the first & final shots of Ed Wood (1994). My favorite of the Hollywood Sign’s movie roles is in Chaplin (1992). There is a great scene where Charles Chaplin (Robert Downey, Jr.) & Douglas Fairbanks, Sr. (Kevin Kline) ride horses up to the sign where Fairbanks pees on the sign while Chaplin gives a rousing speech about the rising tide of Americanism. Fairbanks then proceeds to climb the sign, performing gymnastics on one of the letters as the camera pulls back to reveal the entire “Hollywoodland” sign with the lights of the city below.

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The Queen of Denial: Bill Cosby’s Wife Camille Says “Those Women” Willingly Had Sex & Took Drugs

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Bill Cosby, Camille Cosby

Is Bill Cosby’s wife Camille or Cleopatra? The New York Post reports that, during a meeting last week, Bill Cosby’s wife of 51 years, Camille, told a group of “close professional advisors” (whatever that means?) that she believes her husband’s accusers consented to both drugs and sex. This on the heels of an AP report of a 2005 deposition in which Bill Cosby admitted to buying Quaaludes, “with the intent of giving them to young women he wanted to have sex with.” The Post says;

“Camille still doesn’t believe that Bill provided drugs and had sex with women without their consent,” said a source employed by the Cosby family. “She’s well aware of his cheating, but she doesn’t believe that her husband is a rapist.”

Mrs. Cosby is “a proud, dignified but stubborn woman. You can say that she’s standing by her husband, but really, the more people stand against him, the more she perceives it as an affront to her and all that she’s done to make him a star,” said another source who’s done business with the ­Cosbys and remains close to them.

“They are making him out to be such a bad guy, a monster,” Camille allegedly said during the meeting. According to a source, Camille—who is also Bill’s business manager—strategized with lawyers and PR professionals to repair Bill’s reputation. Though that seems an unlikely scenario given the preponderance of evidence that Bill Cosby is a serial rapist. Nearly 50 women have now come forward with eerily similar accounts of drugging followed by sexual assault.

Make up your own story about the clueless Camille, but she’s been in denial for 6 decades, so do you expect her change her mind or her story at THIS point? Stockholm Syndrome has fully set it. (Photo, AP; via New York Post)

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#LGBT: Caitlyn Jenner Praises John Oliver For Transgender Rights Episode of “Last Week Tonight”

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Caitlyn Jenner seen leaving 'An American in Paris' show in NYC

Apparently, Caitlyn Jenner is behind on her TV viewing. She was “blown away” by a segment on Last Week Tonight from June 28 which highlighted the importance of transgender rights. Cait tweeted a “bravo” to the HBO series and to John Oliver himself over the weekend, linking to the video which has over 2.6 million views, so far. Oliver said in the 16-minute segment;

“For all the strides transgender people have made lately, let’s not get too complacent.”

He also called out the media for rampant misreporting on Jenner’s transition and the irresponsibility inherent in referring to someone by the name or gender by which they simply don’t identify.

“It’s pretty simple: call them whatever they want to be called. You can do it. We do it all the time. David Evans woke up one day and said, ‘Everyone call me The Edge.’ And we all went, ‘Fine, The Edge, are we talking the noun or the verb?’”

What he said. Bravo. Brava, is right.

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(Photo, Pacific Coast News; via EW)

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#HandToGod: The Guy Who Charged His Phone Onstage Holds a Press Conference, “It’s Fun. It’s a Joke.”

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You read the story. The theater-goer epidemic, that was apparently started by the ever-trendsetting Madonna, continued with the doofus that tried to plug his phone in to a stage set outlet. The Long Island lacrosse-playing college student came forward to do a press conference. Nick Silvestri, 19, read a statement before a group of reporters admitting,

A publicist for Hand to God, the play that transferred from off-Broadway and earned several Tony nominations, had initially said the press conference would start at 2 p.m., but Silvestri, who attends Nassau Community College, didn’t surface until 2:30. He then read this statement;

“The past few days have been really crazy, and I wanted to have the opportunity to try to explain what happened and also offer an apology.

Ultimately, before coming to see Hand to God I downed a few drinks and I think that clearly impaired my judgement. Before the show started, I noticed that my phone’s battery was low, and the only power outlet I saw was on stage. I think you all know what happened next, and I don’t have a very good answer for the question that many of you are probably wondering: What was I thinking? I guess I wasn’t really thinking.

I don’t go to plays very much, and I didn’t realize that the stage is considered off limits. I’ve learned a lot about the theater in the past few days – theater people are really passionate and have been very willing to educate me. I can assure you that I won’t be setting foot on a stage ever again, unless I decide to become an actor.

I would like to sincerely apologize to the Broadway community, all the other people in the audience that night, and most importantly the cast and crew of Hand to God. I am on my college lacrosse team, and I know just how bad it feels when you are out there working your ass off, and it feels like the crowd isn’t on your side or isn’t paying attention. I feel terrible if any of the amazing actors in this show felt at all disrespected by my actions.

Going to see a Broadway show is one of the most special things you can do in New York City, and if I want to give one message to folks out there it’s that you should give your complete attention to the actors on stage. You can make phone calls and send text messages all day long, so when you’re in the theater for a couple hours, just put the phones away and enjoy the show. Once again, I’m sorry for my actions, and I hope that I can become an example of a great theatergoer in the future. Thank you so much for listening.”

Somehow did this happen to to draw attention to the play which has been struggling to sell tickets? Silvestri insisted that he wasn’t part of a viral marketing stunt, saying;

“Take it as it is. It’s fun. It’s a joke.”

He said in his statement that he had been drinking. Reporters pointed out that he’s underage and he became vague about the drinking and a publicist kept Silvestri from answering “probing” questions, like

“Do you have the phone?”

Maybe a drunk Silvestri WAS just dared to go charge his phone onstage by a friend who then filmed him and posted it to YouTube. That’s how it’s done in 2015. Voila, there’s your 15 minutes. No matter that the world thinks you’re an idiot.

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(via Gothamist)

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#PictureThis: Attach This To Your iPhone To Get a Pro Shot of Manhattanhenge

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DxO-ONE-TiltYes, you must have heard of it. Manhattanhenge. It’s also referred to as the Manhattan Solstice, occurs when the setting sun aligns with the east–west streets of the street grid in the city. The best views of the sun perfectly setting between some of the city’s most iconic buildings are offered at 14th, 23rd, 34th, 42nd, 57th, and those streets nearby at around 8:15 PM. It usually strikes twice a year, in late May and again in mid July. Last night had everyone out with their camera phones. But to get a REALLY pro shot, you might try the DxO One, a compact gizmo with an SD slot, touch screen and internal battery with its own lens that gives you raw 20.9 megapixel images. DxO uses the image processing technology that presently is used in over 300 million phone cameras. This new camera weighs less than an iPhone and is 2.65 inches high. You can easily carry it in your pocket. The iPhone screen acts like the viewfinder. To get technical, you also have ISO selection from 100 to 51,000. All the controls you’s expect on a DSLR are present like manual, aperture and shutter priority as well as scene selection mode options. Unfortunately, this new camera isn’t available sometime in August. But you’ll be ready for next year’s Manhattanhenge.

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Nick Jonas Discusses His Gay “Kingdom” Character At Outfest LA Panel

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My boo Nick Jonas attended a panel at Outfest in Los Angeles on Sunday night looking super scrumptious and as sweet and articulate as ever. In a panel discussion alongside his Direct TV show Kingdom‘s writer Byron Balasco, Nick dished out some details about his closeted gay character, Nate. If you’re unfamiliar with the show, viewers found out at the end of season one that Nate is gay and closeted, and is shown struggling to keep the secret from his family of fighters.

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Balasco mentioned there was hesitancy to cast Jonas initially because of Disney reputation past, not knowing how the MMA world would accept him in the role. But ultimately Nick won the part simply by nailing the audition. The panel was also asked if Nate will have sex scenes in upcoming episodes, and Balasco answered by saying “A man has needs.”

He also discussed his first encounter with gay people:

http://jobrosnews.tumblr.com/post/124012914105/wehonights-nick-jonas-at-outfest-la-discussing

 

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July 14: It’s Your Birthday, Bitch!

#BornThisDay: Writer, Arthur Laurents

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Laurents with Tom Hatcher

Laurents with Tom Hatcher

 July 14, 1917Arthur Laurents, as the story goes: late for his place on a panel discussion, Laurents burst onto the stage draped in mink & announced: “Behold, a living legend!” Stephen Sondheim, also on the panel, looked up & said: “Wrong on both counts”.

I just ate up his trio of memoirs Original Story By (2000), & Mainly On Directing (2009),The Rest Of The Story (2012), each chock full of great dishy theatre & Hollywood stories. He is important to me in the many ways. I admire the way he boldly lived his life & I love his work, most especially because he wrote the book for my favorite musical Gypsy (1959), which I find to be a near perfect piece of theatre. Musical Theatre fanatics will go on forever discussing who the greatest Mama Rose in this landmark musical might be. The casting can be a playful parlor game or a bitter argument for fans. Laurents directed 3 revivals of Gypsy including my favorite version starring my good close personal friend Angela Lansbury in 1974, plus Tyne Daly in 1989 & Patti Lupone’s 2007 Tony Award winning turn.

In 2010, at 92 years old, he directed a revival of West Side Story, a theatre classic for which he wrote the original lean & strong book. In this production, it was Laurents’s conceit to have the Sharks & their girls, who are from Puerto Rico, speak & sing in Spanish. The cast would all be young & if not Puerto Rican, at least Hispanic. Laurents has explained that the idea came from his partner of 52 years, Tom Hatcher (Laurents & actor Farley Granger were lovers in the late 1940s), who admired a production of the musical in South America. It was also Hatcher who urged Laurents to revive Gypsy with LuPone, so that the controversial Sam Mendes directed 2003 production starring Bernadette Peters would not be the last Gypsy in Laurents’s lifetime.

Laurents won 4 Tony Awards & was nominated for 6 Academy Awards, winning for his screenplay for The Turning Point (1977).

His life encompassed great swaths of 20th century history & the famous figures within it. His theatre career had barely started when Laurents was drafted into the Army in 1941. He spent the war years writing training films & radio propaganda shows under the command of Private George Cukor. He had also had come to terms with his gayness, & soon lost count of the sexual experiences he experienced while in the Army. In Original Story By he writes openly of his lifetime of gay encounters, referring to his partners as “those unremembered hundreds.”

As a gay man living as openly as possible during some of this country’s most dangerous times, Laurents was a role model of discretion, but living the way he wanted, despite public opinion & cruelty against gay people everywhere.

The last line of Original Story By writes of Hatcher, who was Laurents’ partner for more than 5 decades:

 “As long as he lives, I will.”

But, Hatcher left this world in 2006 & Laurents, in his 93rd year, adjusted to life without him. When they first became a couple, Laurents claims his mother was more unhappy that Hatcher was a Gentile than that her son was gay.

Laurents led a rather wild life:

“I drank an awful lot, I drugged an awful lot. But I think I have a built-in governor, because at any point I would say OK, I’ve had enough, & I’d go home to bed. I assumed everybody could do that. I was never one for going to bars, that kind of thing. I was a hopeless romantic. Well, no one could have that much sex & be entirely romantic, but the dangerous side never appealed to me.”

Even with Laurents’ long & passionate affair with Farley Granger, Hatcher was undoubtedly the great love of Laurent’s life & their life together is one of the world’s great love affairs. Laurents:

“Tom & theatre, that’s what my life has been. & that’s what my book is… an effort to say thank you by doing what I can to make the theatre indestructible & to keep Tom alive.”

From the memoir:

“From Tom’s pool, you can see into the heart of his garden. In summer, we swim laps every day. Often, we walk through the park & then sit on that bench, looking at the view. Yesterday, we sat there a little longer than usual, just looking at the changing light, not saying anything. But Tom reads my mind: ‘You’re going to live 20 more years,’ he assured me.”

Laurents worked in many genres. The stage was his first love, & he wrote for it for 65 years, creating comedies, romances, musicals & serious dramas that explored questions of ethics, social pressures & personal integrity with themes of antisemitism, male friendship, loyalty & political betrayal. His screenplay for The Way We Were (1973) was based on Laurent’s own experience with the House Un-American Activities Committee in 1950. Because of a casual remark made by fellow playwright Russel Crouse, Laurents was called to testify before the committee & he was blacklisted, sending him into exile in Europe for 3 years in the company of Granger.

In later years, he would work again with the men who had informed on him, Elia Kazan & Jerome Robbins (at one time Laurents’ BFF), although he protested when Kazan was given a special Academy Award for Lifetime Achievement in 1999.

 “Writers are the chosen people. I am happiest when sitting alone & putting my daydreams & fantasies down on paper.”

He was by all accounts, a real son of a bitch, but an exceptionally talented son of a bitch. When asked for a quote for a New York Magazine profile of Laurents in 2009, talented composer Mary Rodgers, daughter of famed composer Richard Rodgers, quipped: “Call me when he’s dead.”

Laurents made his final exit, upstage center, in May 2011. The next evening the theatre lights on Broadway were dimmed in his memory. This is a just a partial list of Laurent’s contribution to our popular culture:

Librettos: Gypsy (1959), Nick & Nora (1991), West Side Story (1957), The Madwoman Of Central Park West (1979), Hallelujah, Baby! (1967), Do I Hear a Waltz? (1965), & Anyone Can Whistle (1964)

Direction: Anyone Can Whistle, La Cage Aux Follies (1983), The Madwoman of Central Park West, Gypsy (1974, 1989 & 2008), I Can Get It for You Wholesale (featuring a very young Barbra Streisand), Invitation To A March (1960)

Plays: Invitation to A March, A Clearing In The Woods (1952), The Time Of The Cuckoo (1957), The Bird Cage (1950), Home Of The Brave (1945), Jolson Sings Again! (1999)

Screenplays: Anastasia (1956), The Turning Point (1977), The Way We Were (1973), Gypsy (1962), West Side Story (1961), Bonjour Tristesse (1959), Summertime (1955, from his play The Time Of The Cuckoo), Anna Lucasta (1959), Home Of The Brave (1949), Rope (1948), Caught (1949), The Snake Pit (1948)

“I reached a point where I had been drinking so much & screwing so much, it just depressed the hell out of me. Somebody said to me: ‘if you don’t stop going to parties, you’ll never write a play’. So I wrote a play.”

The post #BornThisDay: Writer, Arthur Laurents appeared first on World of Wonder.

#NoJoke: Escaped Drug Lord “El Chapo” Threatens To Make Trump Swallow His “Bitch Words”

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Trump meets with families of people killed by illegal immigrants in Beverly Hills, California

Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman, head of Mexico’s Sinaloa Cartel being escorted to a helicopter in Mexico City, following his capture

Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman, head of Mexico’s Sinaloa Cartel being escorted to a helicopter in Mexico City, following his capture

Apparently, this is no joke. Donald Trump has got an actual hit out on him now. The presidential hopeful has called the FBI to look into threats against him on Twitter by the son of Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman, the infamous Mexican drug kingpin who escaped prison for a second time over the weekend. @ElChap0Guzman, an account reportedly run by the drug lord’s son, Ivan tweeted;

“Keep fucking around and I’m gonna make you swallow your bitch words you fucking whitey milkshitter.”

Well, roughly, I guess –the attack was written in Spanish. It was a rebuttal to Trump’s Twitter rant on Sunday about Guzman’s escape. Trump tweeted;

“Can you envision Jeb Bush or Hillary Clinton negotiating with ‘El Chapo,’ the Mexican drug lord who escaped from prison?”

“The U.S. will invite El Chapo, the Mexican drug lord who just escaped prison, to become a U.S. citizen because our ‘leaders’ can’t say no!”

Trump has lost a slew of supporters in June following his racist remarks on Mexicans living in America, told TMZ he would’t be kept quiet by these threats. Trump owns the Miss U.S.A. pageant and the winner, Miss Oklahoma, was forced to answer as to her thoughts on the matter, as well. They were no revelation, as you can imagine.

“I’m fighting for much more than myself. I’m fighting for the future of our country which is being overrun by criminals.”

El Chapo, Ivan, if you’re reading this –honestly, I never liked the guy either. Donald, I think you’d better clam up on this issue for a while, ’til the heat dies down.

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(Photos, AP/UPI; via New York Post)

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#TakeMeToChurch: A Theologian Says “Jesus Was Queer”, Intersex or Maybe Even Trans

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Dr. Reverend Bob Shore-Goss

Dr. Reverend Bob Shore-Goss

Dr. Reverend Bob Shore-Goss holds a doctorate degree in Comparative Religion from Harvard, so he knows his stuff. The openly gay senior pastor, told Vice magazine;

“At the very least, Jesus was queer. He broke the rules of his culture, of heteronormativity. He subverted masculinities and gender codes in his culture. Queer doesn’t necessarily mean sexual orientation, but it can include that.

Perhaps he was intersex or trans, because he was born without a father, and therefore was born female and took on the phenotype of a male.”

Shore-Goss said that Saint Paul would probably be described as a closeted homosexual today…

“they didn’t have those words at the time. There was no concept of sexual orientation, but there was a concept of gender.

So, in the Bible, when a man sleeps with another man like with a woman, it’s an abomination. See, the emphasis is on a man betraying his status: He has feminized himself. So it’s a gender violation as opposed to a sexual violation.”

The openly gay senior pastor also said he’d like to hop into the sack with JC (for spiritual reasons, of course!) and when asked whether Jesus was a top or a bottom?

“Versatile.”

Amen.

(via Gay Star News)

The post #TakeMeToChurch: A Theologian Says “Jesus Was Queer”, Intersex or Maybe Even Trans appeared first on World of Wonder.

#FirstLook: Who Had a “Big Hand” In Lady Gaga’s New “AHS: Hotel” Teaser?

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Michael Schmidt made this leather and Swarovski  crystal-mesh embellished wheelchair for Gaga's "Paparazzi" video in 2009

Michael Schmidt made this leather and Swarovski crystal-mesh embellished wheelchair for Gaga’s “Paparazzi” video in 2009

It’s just ten seconds, but it’s the PERFECT tease for Lady Gaga‘s turn on the upcoming season of American Horror Story: Hotel. I first saw it on my old pal Michael Schmidt‘s Facebook wall with the teasing caption;

“A little something I’ve been working on…”

Schmidt has made amazing costumes and accessories for icons like Madonna, Cher, Rihanna and Dita Von Teese. American Horror Story was smart to enlist his genius. More likely it was Gaga herself that brought in Schmidt. Among other things, he made this leather and Swarovski-embellished wheelchair for her Paparazzi video. (Check out his work here, you’ll be impressed.)

AHS’s creator, Ryan Murphy, spoke at a Comic-Con panel this weekend about Gaga’s casting explaining that, while he receives a lot of phone calls from actors wanting to be on the show, when Gaga wrote him about the role;

“I responded YES – CAPS CAPS CAPS.”

Then, she called Murphy.

“The best words you can ever hear are, ‘Please hold for Gaga.’ She was lovely. She told me she had an acting background. She told me she wanted to play someone evil. I said, ‘OK, you came to the right place.’”

And he revealed that we’ll see characters from previous seasons checking into the hotel. OK, I’m in. Watch.

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