55 Queer Films Made Under the Hays Code (1934-1967) (Part 2)

(This article is continued from PART 1 HERE.)

26. Written on the Wind (1956)

Written on the Wind
Douglas Sirk
(APPROVED)

GAY CHARACTER

*Kyle Hadley (Robert Stack) – and A LOW SPERM COUNT

GAY ACTORS/WRITERS/DIRECTOR

ACTOR: Rock Hudson

In director Douglas Sirk’s Southern Gothic melodrama, Robert Stack’s Kyle Hadley, the alcoholic heir of a Texas oil dynasty, has deeper feelings for his childhood friend Mitch (Rock Hudson) than for his lovely new wife (Lauren Bacall). Drenched in magnificent technicolor courtesy of cinematographer Russell Metty, the film’s central tenet is that Kyle and his ruthless sister Marylee (Oscar winner Dorothy Malone) lust after the same man.

Robert Stack received his only Oscar nomination for this role.

“Written on the Wind” is not available for streaming. However, the DVD can be purchased on Amazon.

27. The Bad Seed (1956)

Nature brought her here, and nature took her away!

The Bad Seed
Mervyn LeRoy
(APPROVED)

GAY CHARACTER

*Little Claude Daigle is killed off-camera as the play begins.

When Mervyn LeRoy first saw Maxwell Anderson’s play “The Bad Seed,” he informed screenwriter John Lee Mahin to adapt with minimal changes. Meanwhile, he went to work on toning down the performances. The central character is Rhoda Penmark, a little girl in pinafore dresses and blonde pigtails who embodies evil.

LeRoy brought most of the cast from the stage to the screen intact:

Nancy Kelly (Oscar Nomination for Best Actress) as Christine Penmark, Rhoda’s mother.

Patty McCormack (Oscar nomination for Best Supporting Actress) as Rhoda, the progeny from hell who kills her classmate Little Claude Daigle because he won the penmanship medal she felt she deserved. We later discover that Rhoda is a sociopath and a serial killer. And so was her grandmother, but the expression of the “bad seed gene” ended up skipping a generation.

William Hopper as Col. Kenneth Penmark, Rhoda’s father. He is away on business for most of the movie.

Eileen Heckart (Oscar nomination for Best Supporting Actress) as Hortense Daigle, Claude’s mother.

Frank Cady as Henry Daigle, Clause’s father

Henry Jones as Leroy Jessop, the caretaker.

Evelyn Varden as Monica Breedlove, the neighbor who spoils Rhoda.

Paul Fix is Christine’s father and Rhoda’s Grandfather.

In many ways, “The Bad Seed” is the gay movie experience. Running cartwheels around all the definitions of camp outlined by Ms. Susan Sontag in her famous essay, this theatrical classic is a highwire act for both the director and his actors. Nancy Kelly is ON 100% of the time, straddling the twin minefields of camp and drama yet managing to accomplish both simultaneously. Her work here influenced such genre classics as Robert Aldrich’s “Whatever Happened to Baby Jane” and Brian De Palma’s “Carrie.”

How do we know that Little Claude Daigle was gay?

  • He won a medal for best penmanship.
  • He let a girl beat him up.
  • He let a girl beat him up a second time.

Then there is Miss Patty McCormack’s sweet-as-pie eight-year-old killer whose bratty pronouncements such as “Give me those shoes, they’re mine” have entered the gay lexicon. Rhoda is one of the most sought-after parts of gay theatre groups in the US, and the actors stepping into her shoes are large and male. The size disparity is even more striking when we reach that divine (intervention) ending!

And there are the two performances which work as straight drama: a heartbreaking Eileen Heckart, playing both of her big scenes drunk, as the dead boy’s mother and a beautiful turn by Henry Jones as the simple caretaker who knows Rhoda’s secret and pays dearly for his knowledge. Jones’s character was later taken, fully formed, and transported to Seattle for Ernie Hudson in “The Hand that Rocks the Cradle.”

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28. Tea and Sympathy (1956)

Tea and Sympathy: Queer Cinema
Vincente Minnelli
(APPROVED)

GAY CHARACTERS

*Tom Robertson Lee (John Kerr)

*Bill Reynolds (Leif Erickson)

GAY ACTORS/WRITERS/DIRECTOR

DIRECTOR: Vincente Minnelli

Both John Kerr and Deborah Kerr reprised their roles on the Broadway Stage.

The consensus today is that even if Deborah’s character Laura Reynolds, the mistress of a household of college boys, manages to “save” Tom Robertson Lee’ (John Kerr) from his sensitive (read homosexual) tendencies by seducing him, she cannot save herself from the fact that she married a gay man (Leif Erickson) and is trapped in a loveless union. Bill has taken the opposite road to Tom. He is hyper-masculine, preferring the company of men to women.

In many ways, the film has improved with age. What could not be said under the Hayes code (according to Deborah, the words homosexual, gay, or queer were never mentioned during the entire production – not even, or especially, by gay director Vicente Minnelli) gives it a beauty and delicacy, especially in Deborah’s sublime performance.

And there is her haunting closing voice-over: “One day when you talk about this, and you will, be kind.”

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29. Funny Face (1957)

Stanley Donen
(APPROVED)

GAY CHARACTER

*Maggie Prescot (Kay Thompson)

GAY ACTORS/WRITERS/DIRECTOR

PRODUCER: Roger Edens

WRITER: Leonard Gershe

PHOTOGRAPHER: Richard Avedon

Funny Face,” the 1957 musical romantic comedy directed by Stanley Donen, boasts Audrey Hepburn’s most charming screen performance. Looking fabulous in black during the movie’s first half, she plays a lowly book clerk in a Greenwich village store who is “discovered” by Fred Astaire’s Avedon-inspired photographer Fred Avery and whisked off to Paris for Fashion Week.

Writer Leonard Gershe and producer Roger Edens were one of Hollywood’s A-lister gay couples during the 1950s and ’60s. However, Gershe always maintained that he did not have enough closet space (literally and figuratively) during the relationship.

Fred Astaire plays a Richard Avedon-like fashion photographer, and all the photographs in the movie are by Richard Avedon.

The assorted songs by George and Ira Gershwin. Include “How Long Has This Been Going On?” and “S’Wonderful.”

Audrey does all her own singing and has a lovely voice, which should also have been heard in “My Fair Lady.”

The movie establishes Audrey’s relationship with her favorite fashion designer, Hubert de Givenchy.

The film’s two big musical numbers, both written by Roger Edens, are “Think Pink,” in which Kay Thompson’s Maggie Prescott, the lesbian doyenne of the New York fashion world, unveils her vision for the year ahead (immortal line: “think pink…..bury the beige!”) and, “Bonjour, Paris,” in which Audrey, Fred and Kay, individually, and in concert, celebrate their arrival in Paris (immortal line: “everything from the Montmartre to Jean-Paul Sartre“)

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30. A Touch of Evil (1958)

A Touch of Evil
Orson Welles
(APPROVED)

GAY CHARACTER

*Mexican gang leader (Mercedes McCambridge)

That is Mercedes McCambridge, the unnamed lesbian gang leader getting her kicks while watching Janet Leigh roughed up in her motel room in Orson Welles’ masterwork “A Touch of Evil.”

Famous for its miraculous opening tracking shot at the US/Mexican border (lasting over three minutes) to Marlene Dietrich’s classic final line of dialogue, this magnificent film noir is the third and final of Welles’s three masterpieces after “Citizen Kane” and “The Magnificent Ambersons.”

You’re a mess, honey

Tanya (Marlene Dietrich)

He was some kind of man……What does it matter what you say about people?

Tanya (Marlene Dietrich)

With Charleton Heston, Janet Leigh, Orson Welles, Joseph Celleia, Akin Tamiroff, Ray Collins, Zsa Zsa Gabor, Marlene Dietrich, and Dennis Weaver as the motel night manager. And an unbilled Joseph Cotton as a coroner.

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31. Auntie Mame (1958)

Auntie Mame: Queer Cinema.
Morton DaCosta
(APPROVED)

 

 GAY CHARACTER

*Vera Charles (Coral Browne)

GAY ACTORS/WRITERS/DIRECTOR

DIRECTOR: Morton DaCosta

WRITER: (Original novel: “Mame”): Patrick Dennis (a pseudonym for Edward Everett Tanner III)

ACTRESS: Coral Browne

I must admit that I am not a huge fan of Rosalind Russell, so I fail to see the glory in her performance as gay writer Patrick Dennis’ beloved Auntie Mame. However, most of my gay friends go into a fugue state at mentioning her name. Gay director Morton DaCosta (his real name) directs like he is still in the theatre – he did better in his second and final visit to Hollywood with “The Music Man” four years later. The film is notable for its lesbian character, Vera Charles, played by gay actress Coral Browne. We shall meet Ms. Browne again in our next post.

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32. Cat on a Hot Tin Roof (1958)

Cat on a Hot Tin Roof: Queer Cinema
Richard Brooks
(APPROVED)

 

GAY CHARACTER

*Brick Pollitt (Paul Newman)

 

GAY ACTORS/WRITERS/DIRECTOR

ACTRESS: Judith Anderson

PLAYWRIGHT: Tennessee Williams

 

Written (with James Poe) and directed by Richard Brooks, this very respectable adaptation of the Tennessee Williams play opens with gay ex-athlete and football player Brick Pollitt (Paul Newman in his superstar breakthrough) pining and drinking in his bedroom for the memory of his best friend (read lover) and teammate Skipper, who has recently committed suicide. So, who can blame his wife Maggie (“the cat”), beautifully played by Elizabeth Taylor, who ain’t gettin’ any, when she says that she feels like the cat in the movie’s title?

Meanwhile, downstairs, there is a party for Brick’s Daddy – that would be “Big Daddy” – played by Burl Ives in his most memorable movie role. With Judith Anderson as “Big Mamma,” Jack Carson as Brick’s brother, and Madeleine Sherwood as his awful wife and the mother of their five brats.

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33. Suddenly Last Summer (1959)

Suddenly Last Summer: Queer Cinema.
Joseph L. Mankiewicz
(APPROVED)

GAY CHARACTER

*Sebastian Venable – we never meet him since he has already been torn to pieces and eaten alive by hordes of young men on a European beach.

GAY ACTORS/WRITERS/DIRECTOR

ACTRESS: Katherine Hepburn

ACTOR: Montgomery Clift

PRODUCTION DESIGNER: Oliver Messel

PLAYWRIGHT: Tennessee Williams

Another Southern Gothic, this time from a less-than-inspired Tennessee Williams’ play, Suddenly Last Summer.” We never get to meet the film’s central gay character, Sebastian Venable, since he is already deceased; his body was torn to pieces and eaten by hordes of young men on a beach in Europe before the film begins. He was on vacation, accompanied by his cousin Catherine (Elizabeth Taylor). Understandably, since the horrific incident, Catherine has been mentally unstable and prone to relive the details. Katherine Hepburn plays Sebastian’s mother, Violet Venable, who attempts to bribe a young psychosurgeon (Montgomery Clift) to lobotomize Catherine to stop her from talking.

The movie is risible; its few pleasures come from Hepburn’s regal (but very nasty) mother who will do anything to protect her son’s memory, even if that takes turning her niece into a vegetable and for Oliver Messel’s tropical production design complete with venus flytraps. The sore point for Violet is that, when her beauty faded, she was replaced by Catherine – Sebastian used both to attract the boys. Clift, post-accident, looks ill while Taylor does her worst screen work in that awful monologue where she must recall the events of that terrible summer’s day.

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34. Some Like It Hot (1959)

Some Like It Hot: Queer Cinema.
Billy Wilder
(Not Submitted)

GAY CHARACTER

*Daphne (Jack Lemmon)

Arguably the greatest comedy of all time, Wilder’s (with I.A.L. Diamond) classic screenplay has a gag every other minute, and the movie blesses us with one of the great comedic performances, Jack Lemon’s Jerry/Daphne. Lemon took his character to a place nobody had dared take one before. Jerry believes that he is a woman. Even better, he has you feeling it. Stupendous work from Curtis and Monroe as well. And Joe E. Brown, who delivers the film’s classic closing line.

Some Like It Hot was only the second (following Otto Preminger’s “The Moon is Blue” in 1953) primary Hollywood production to be released without first getting the imprimatur of the Hays code. Wilder thought it didn’t stand a chance of getting approved without cuts. It was released unrated and became an instant smash hit. This marked the beginning of the end for the Hays code.

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35. Pillow Talk (1959)

Pillow Talk (Queer Cinema)
Michael Gordon
(APPROVED)

GAY CHARACTERS

*“Rex,” the gay Texan, Brad Allen’s alter ego (Rock Hudson)

*Tony Walters (Nick Adams)

*Jonathan Forbes (Tony Randall)

GAY ACTORS/WRITERS/DIRECTOR

ACTOR: Rock Hudson

ACTOR: Nick Adams

This was the first of three romantic comedies in which Doris Day, Rock Hudson, and Tony Randall starred together, the other two being “Lover Come Back” (1961) and “Send Me No Flowers” (1964). An enormous success, it was the biggest BO hit of 1959. Hudson plays Brad Allen, a (straight) Broadway composer and playboy who shares a party line with Miss Day’s Jan Morrow, a successful interior decorator (and a virgin) in late1950s New York City. He’s always on the phone, talking to his latest conquests, while she cannot make a single call. Of course, it’s love when they meet, although not strictly at first sight.

To seduce Miss Day’s Jan, Hudson’s Brad invents a gay alter ego, a Texan named “Rex.” “Rex” then mercilessly teases Jan by showing an interest in effeminate things, thereby implying “Rex’s” homosexuality. So, we have a gay actor playing a straight man pretending to be gay.

Gay actor Nick Adams, who died at 36 in 1968, is the butt of most homophobic humor in the movie’s Oscar-winning screenplay.

As Rock Hudson’s buddy/rival in all three Day/Hudson pairings, Tony Randall always brushed up against same-sex innuendo.

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36. Ben Hur (1959)

William Wyler
(APPROVED)

GAY CHARACTERS

*Judah Ben-Hur (Charlton Heston)

*Stephen Boyd (Messala)

GAY ACTORS/WRITERS/DIRECTOR

SCREENPLAY (UNCREDITED): Christopher Fry

SCREENPLAY (UNCREDITED): Gore Vidal

I persuaded the producer, Sam Zimbalist (this was an MGM film and the writer worked not with the director but the producer; later the director, in this case William Wyler, weighed in) that the only way one could justify several hours of hatred between two lads–and all those horses–was to establish, without saying so in words, an affair between them as boys; then, when reunited at picture’s start, the Roman, played by Stephen Boyd, wants to pick up where they left off and the Jew, Heston, spurns him.

Counterpunch: Gore Vidal responds to Charlton Heston. Los Angeles Times, June 17. 1996.

It’s the big one! William Wyler’s religious epic “Ben Hur” starring Charlton Heston and Stephen Boyd as best friends who have a falling out and then must battle it out in a spectacular fashion – although some would argue that the chariot race in the 1925 Fred Niblo/Ramon Navarro silent version is superior – to Miklos Rozsa’s pounding score. If you believe Gore Vidal, it was all because of a lover’s spat. Wyler and Boyd were in on the ruse, and Boyd played his scenes that way, but Heston was not.

The fact that two gay writers, Vidal and Christopher Fry, gave Karl Tunberg’s script its final polish (both went uncredited, with Tunberg getting sole authorship) and that Fry was at Wyler’s side through most of the filming process at Cinecitta Studios in Rome lends some credence to Vidal’s quote. But, more importantly, you feel that there is more than just a bromance. If Wyler hadn’t yelled CUT, Heston and Boyd would have become very intimate!

The final irony: of its 12 Oscar nominations, only Tunberg came away emptyhanded. The Best Adapted Screenplay Award 1959 went to Neil Paterson for adapting John Braine’s “Room at the Top.”

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37. The Dark at the Top of the Stairs (1960)

Delbert Mann
(APPROVED)

GAY CHARACTER

*Sonny Flood (Robert Eyer)

GAY ACTORS/WRITERS/DIRECTOR

SOURCE MATERIAL: PLAY: William Inge

Robert Eyer has a few lovely moments as Sonny Flood, the little gay boy who can’t wait to show his uncle Morris (Frank Overton) his picture book of silent movie stars in gay playwright William Inge’s play “The Dark at the Top of the Stairs.” This beautiful adaptation, directed by Delbert Mann in his interim period between Paddy Chayefsky’s slice-of-life realism and Doris Day’s comedy-romance from a great script by Harriet Frank Jr. and Irving Ravetch boasts superb performances by Robert Preston as his dad Rubin, Dorothy McGuire as his mom Cora, Shirley Knight as his sister Reenie, Eve Arden as s aunt Lotte and above all, Angela Lansbury as Mavis Pruitt, the owner of the local beauty salon who has always loved Rubin.

“The Dark at the Top of the Stairs” is unavailable for streaming. However, the DVD can be purchased at Amazon.

38. Spartacus (1960)**

Spartacus
Stanley Kubrick
(APPROVED)
The scene between General Marcus Licinius Crassus (Laurence Olivier) and his slave Antoninus (Tony Curtis) was initially cut from the 1960 version but saved from the cutting from the floor when the slave revolt epic was restored in 1991.

GAY CHARACTER

*Marcus Licinius Crassus (Laurence Olivier)

GAY ACTORS/WRITERS/DIRECTOR

ACTOR: Laurence Olivier

** With special mention to Amy Heckerling’s “Clueless”

Christian had a thing for Tony Curtis, so he brought over “Some Like it Hot” and “Spartacus”

Cher (Alicia Silverstone) in “Clueless”

I don’t get it. did my hair get flat? Did I stumble into some bad lighting? What’s wrong with me?

Cher (Alicia Silverstone) in “Clueless”

Poor Cher. She finds out that her dreamboat Christian is gay through his excellent taste in film. He is particularly taken with the justly famous “Oysters and Snails” from “Spartacus” where General Crassus gently informs his boyish new slave Antoninus (played by Curtis), a singer of songs, that he likes both and will, therefore, will be vigorously fucking him for the duration of his “employment.” As Crassus exits his bath, this news is enough to make Antoninus disappear and join the growing ranks of Spartacus’ army. At this very moment, Cher also decides to strike a sexy pose. However, she miscalculates and falls off the bed. Christian, the cinema aesthete that he is, barely notices.!

And taste is not the same as appetite and, therefore, not a question of morals

Crassus to his boy slave Antoninus, a singer of songs, in “Spartacus”

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39. Victim (1961)

Victim: Queer Cinema.
Basil Dearden
(Denied due to its frank treatment of homosexuality. Released without a seal of approval. Years later, it received a PG/12 rating from the MPAA)

GAY CHARACTERS

*Melville Farr (Dirk Bogarde)

*Boy Barrett (Peter McEnery)

*P.H. (Hilton Edwards)

GAY ACTORS/WRITERS/DIRECTOR

ACTOR: Dirk Bogarde

ACTOR: Hilton Edwards

Dirk Bogarde plays a successful, happily married (to a woman) lawyer who is being blackmailed because of a gay affair in his past.

This film did more to sway public and political opinion on homosexuality in England than any parliamentary discussion. Six years later, in 1967, homosexuality was decriminalized in Great Britain.

Openly gay Irish actor Hilton Edwards (born in London but immigrated to Ireland in his early twenties) has a small but very memorable scene as a blind patron of a gay bar whom his younger-sighted friend feeds all the gossip. He could be the blackmailer! Edwards and his life partner Micheál Mac Liammóire (né Alfred Wilmore, also in London) founded Dublin’s Gate Theatre, which nurtured such talents as Orson Welles, Geraldine Fitzgerald, and James Mason. When I was growing up, they were Ireland’s “only” homosexual couple. Although fêted by all, their union was always illegal – both actors being long dead before homosexuality was finally decriminalized in Ireland in 1993.

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40. A Taste of Honey (1961)

A Taste of Honey: Queer Cinema.
Tony Richardson
(Not Submitted)

 GAY CHARACTER

*Geoffrey Ingham (Murray Melvin)

GAY ACTORS/WRITERS/DIRECTOR

DIRECTOR: Tony Richardson

ACTOR: Murray Melvin

Although he was playing a teenager, gay actor Murray Melvin was almost thirty when he made “A Taste of Honey” with Rita Tushingham. One of the first openly gay actors he often worked with was Tony Richardson, particularly Ken Russell. His most memorable movie scene is the card game in Stanley Kubrick’s “Barry Lyndon” with its natural candlelight and Schubert’s Piano Trio in E Flat.

Dora Bryan is particularly memorable as Tushingham’s self-centered and alcoholic mother.

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41. The Children’s Hour (1961)

The Children's Hour: Queer Cinema
William Wyler
(APPROVED)

GAY CHARACTER

*Martha Dobie (Shirley MacLaine)

When William Wyler and Sam Goldwyn adapted Lillian Hellman’s play “The Children’s Hour” back in 1936, they changed the lesbian story to a straight triangle with Merle Oberon, Miriam Hopkins, and Joel McCrea and a wonderfully nasty Bonita Granville as the little brat who spreads the false rumor. It worked. It was released as “These Three” and was a considerable success.

Cut to 1961, fresh from his triumph with “Ben Hur,” Wyler decides to remake it, keeping Hellman’s original same-sex theme. He casts two of the greatest actresses in Hollywood, Audrey Hepburn and Shirley MacLaine, as the school mistresses whose lives and careers are destroyed by a rumor spread by one of their vindictive students. This time, MacLaine plays the gay character Martha, who secretly loves her friend and colleague Karen (Hepburn) but can never reveal her true feelings. Meanwhile, Karen is in a stable heterosexual relationship with Joe (James Garner).

Unfortunately, Wyler was stuck between two periods. 1961 was unprepared for an all-out gay film, so he had to be furtive. Not having the courage of his convictions, what started as bravery ended as cowardice, and it’s a shame. If he had waited until 1970, he could have had a triumph. There are moments, from MacLaine in particular, but they are not enough.

For die-hard Wyler fans only.

Playing the grandmother, whose reaction to her granddaughter’s lie sets the plot in motion, Fay Bainter was nominated for an Oscar for Best Supporting Actress. It was her final screen role.

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Advice and Consent: Queer Cinema
Otto Preminger
(APPROVED)

 GAY CHARACTER

*Senator Brig Anderson (Don Murray)

 GAY ACTORS/WRITERS/DIRECTOR

ACTOR: Charles Laughton

 FIRST, LOOK INSIDE AN AMERICAN GAY BAR

 Preminger always liked to be innovative, and he was with “Advice and Consent,” a beautifully written, acted, and directed movie. It also treats its gay subplot with great tenderness and respect, with the consistently superb (and underrated) Don Murray playing a gay senator who is being blackmailed as a new Secretary of State is going through the Senate Approval process. Preminger also likes to play tricks, and Anderson’s arch nemesis, a reactionary Southern senator, is played by gay actor Charles Laughton in his final film role.

Only those scenes with the awful George Gizzard prevent “Advise and Consent” from becoming a classic. He gives a master class in lousy acting while such luminaries as Henry Fonda, Peter Lawford, Burgess Meredith, Walter Pidgeon, Lew Ayers, and Franchot Tone, in addition to Murray and Laughton, do some of the best work of their illustrious careers.

A minor deduction, too, for having to endure a sadly faded Gene Tierney as a Washington socialite whose sole purpose seems to be the thankless and needless task of explaining, to the ladies-who-lunch (and the viewer), the difference between the House of Representatives and the Senate.

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43. Whatever Happened Baby Jane? (1962)

Whatever Happened to Baby Jane (Queer Cinema)
Robert Aldrich
(APPROVED)

 GAY CHARACTER

*Edwin Flagg (Victor Buono)

GAY ACTORS/WRITERS/DIRECTOR

ACTOR: Victor Buono

Thanks to Lukas Heller’s superb adaptation of the Henry Farrell novel, Robert Aldrich’s masterpiece works as both drama and camp. Both of Hollywood’s grande dames, Bette Davis and Joan Crawford, are in top form, with Davis getting the showier role as faded child star Baby Jane Hudson. However, Miss Crawford performs equally superbly as Jane’s sister, Blanche. This former movie queen uses a wheelchair, her career ending abruptly following an automobile accident in the early thirties. She is the eye at the center of Bette’s hurricane.

Gay actor Victor Buono is perfection as Bette’s date Edwin Flagg, who sees something he shouldn’t, leading to Davis’s famous pronouncement “He Hate’s Me.” Cheers to Australian actress Marjorie Bennett, who plays his mother, Dehlia Flagg – she is straight out of a John Waters movie. “Baby Jane” is gay sensibility incarnate. Every Davis line is immortal, but some of my favorites are “You mean all this time we could have been friends,” “Because you didn’t eat your din-din,” and “But Y’are are, Blanche, you are in that chair!”

The great movie score is by Frank De Vol.

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44. That Touch of Mink (1962)

That Touch of Mink
Delbert Mann
(APPROVED)

 GAY CHARACTER

*Roger (Gig Young)

In between the Rock Hudson movies “Pillow Talk” (1959), “Lover Come Back” (1961), and “Send Me No Flowers” (1964), Doris Day paired up with Cary Grant in another movie co-written by Stanley Shapiro. The director is Delbert Mann, a graduate of television and the Paddy Chayefsky school of slice-of-life naturalism (“Marty,” “The Catered Affair,” The Bachelor Party”) who, the previous year with “Lover,” showed a surprising flair for comedy.

When Philip Shayne’s (Grant) Rolls Royce splashes Cathy Timberlake’s (Miss Day) while she is going to a job interview, we know this love-hate relationship can only end with a wedding ring. And, although the chemistry is not precisely scorching, it’s a pleasant journey with gorgeous cinematography by Russell Metty and a bonus trip to Bermuda.

The funniest part of That Touch of Minkis the gay subplot, which involves Gig Young, playing Grant’s financial adviser, Roger, and his psychiatrist, Dr. Gruber (Alan Hewitt). Because he leaves the room as Roger relays some essential information about Cathy, Dr. Gruber thinks Roger is about to embark on an affair with Philip. This leads to the film’s famous final scene involving Roger, a baby carriage, and an astonished Gruber!

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45. Billy Budd (1962)

Peter Ustinov

(APPROVED)

 GAY CHARACTER

*Billy Budd (Terence Stamp)

*John Claggart (Robert Ryan)

*Peter Ustinov (Edward Vere)

GAY ACTORS/WRITERS/DIRECTOR

Herman Melville (author)

This historical drama-adventure film was produced, directed, and co-written (with Robert Rossen and DeWitt Bodeen) by Peter Ustinov. from Coxe and Chapman’s stage play of Herman Melville’s short novel and what many consider his second masterpiece after “Moby Dick, ““Billy Budd.”

Billy Budd is a “handsome sailor” who strikes and inadvertently kills his false accuser, Master-at-arms John Claggart (Robert Ryan). The ship’s Captain, Edward Vere (Ustinov), recognizes Billy’s lack of intent but claims that the law of mutiny requires him to sentence Billy to be hanged.

Ustinov cast a then-unknown Terence Stamp as beautiful Billy. He became an overnight sensation, causing the otherwise unremarkable film to become hugely profitable, and he was nominated for Best Supporting Actor of 1962, losing out to Ed Begley in “Sweet Bird of Youth.” Of course, many, including myself, would argue that Billy is the picture and that the rest of the cast supports him!

Claggart’s jealousy of Billy is never explained, but we presume it is due to his stunning good looks and unbounded optimism. However, many, including gay composer Benjamin Britton, who wrote his famous opera based on the Melville novel, maintain an undercurrent of homoeroticism between Billy, Claggart, and Vere and that this is a Queer novel and a Queer film. Sometimes I feel this; sometimes I don’t. I have not seen the opera.

Melville’s homosexuality is now well known, as are his love letters to Nathaniel Hawthorne.

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46. The L-Shaped Room (1963)

The L-Shaped Room: Queer Cinema.
Bryan Forbes
(APPROVED)

 GAY CHARACTERS

*Mavis (Cicely Courtneidge)

*Johnny (Brock Peters)

 A recording of the song “Take Me Back to Dear Old Blighty, “sung in the film by Mavis, is sampled at the beginning of the title track of the album “The Queen is Dead” by the Smiths.

Writer/director Bryan Forbes’s lovely and faithful adaptation of the Lynne Reid Banks novel boasts Leslie Caron’s most outstanding performance. She is a young woman who is unmarried and waits out her pregnancy in a strange city where she rents the L-shaped bedroom of the title. Having just appeared in “To Kill a Mockingbird,” Brock Peters plays Johnny, a shy, gay musician. At the same time, Cicely Courtneidge is perfect as her understanding landlady, Mavis, who we gradually realize is not only gay but mourning for a lost love.

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47. The Haunting (1963)

The Haunting (Queer Cinema)
Robert Wise
(APPROVED)

GAY CHARACTER

*Theo (Theodora) (Claire Bloom)

As a chic Greenwich Village lesbian named Theo, whose couture is designed by Mary Quant, Claire Bloom is a knockout in Robert Wise’s 1963 movie “The Haunting.” A clever adaptation of the Shirley Jackson novel, it is one of the best haunted-house movies. Theo is one of a panel of experts in the paranormal who are invited to spend a weekend at the notorious Hill House. The house has a long history of strange and tragic happenings. The locals think that it is haunted. Theo always puts the moves on the film’s doomed heroine, Eleanor (“Nell”), played by Julie Harris in her most emblematic screen performance. However, the moves are always subtle and done with great care and concern by Theo, making her one of the cinema’s most enlightened gay characters up to that point in time. Cheers Claire! You always were a class act!

As the caretaker’s wife, Rosalie Crutchley has a great departure scene when bidding Theo and Nell goodbye on their first night in the house; she exits with: “I don’t stay after six. Not after it begins to get dark. I leave before the dark, so there won’t be anyone around if you need help. No one lives any nearer than town. No one will come any nearer than that. In the night! In the dark”!

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48. The Servant (1963)

The Servant
Joseph Losey
(APPROVED)

GAY CHARACTERS

*Hugo (Dirk Bogarde)

*Tony (James Fox)

GAY ACTORS/WRITERS/DIRECTOR

ACTOR: Dirk Bogarde

Adapted by Harold Pinter from Robin Maugham’s novella and directed by Joseph Losey, “The Servant” has a definite current of homoeroticism lurking beneath its master (James Fox) and servant (Dirk Bogarde) power play. A savage indictment of the waning British class system, it’s one of the most chilling films ever made. In all but name, Remade by Donald Cammell and Nicolas Roeg as “Performance” in 1970 with Fox in a similar role and Mick Jagger stepping into Bogarde’s shoes. Winner of Best Screenplay of 1964 from the NYFCC. The stunning black and white cinematography is by Douglas Slocombe.

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49. The Leather Boys (1964)

The Leather Boys: Queer Cinema.
Sidney J. Furie
(Not Submitted)

GAY CHARACTERS

*Pete (Dudley Sutton)

*Reggie (Colin Campbell) – until the copout ending.

 Canadian journeyman Sidney J. Furie, who would come into his own the following year with “The Ipcress File,” does a striking job with this “gay” love story set within the milieu of London’s biker subculture. Working-class teenagers Dot (Rita Tushingham) and biker Reggie (Colin Campbell) get married. Their marriage soon turns sour, and they live increasingly separate lives. Meanwhile, Reggie becomes more involved with his biker friends, especially the, shall we say, somewhat “eccentric” Pete (Dudley Sutton). There is an unfortunate scene in a gay bar towards the end, which leads to an abrupt copout ending. However, the movie’s long closing tracking shot is classic filmmaking.

The Ace Cafe on London’s North Circular Road, the diner/meeting point in the film, was restored and reopened in 2001 after many years of being used as a tire depot.

The Smiths’ “Girlfriend in a Coma features Tushingham and Campbell on the cover.

Influenced Katherine Bigelow’s movie debut “The Loveless” (1981).

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50. The Loved One (1965)

The Loved One: Queer Cinema.
Tony Richardson
(APPROVED)

GAY CHARACTER

*Mr. Joyboy (Rod Steiger)

GAY ACTORS/WRITERS/DIRECTOR

DIRECTOR: Tony Richardson

WRITER: Christopher Isherwood

ACTOR: John Gielgud

ACTOR: Roddy McDowell

ACTOR: Liberace

 Great fun was had by all adapting Evelyn Waugh’s 1948 short satirical novel about the funeral business in Los Angeles. However, understandably, it was not a hit at the box office and ruined any chance of a Hollywood career for Richardson. It now has a cult following and is highly regarded in some quarters, including TheBrownees  Haskell Wexler’s black and white photography is quite stunning. Christopher Isherwood wrote a very witty screenplay. The fantastic cast includes:

  • Robert Morse as Dennis Barlow
  • Anjanette Comer as Aimée Thanatogenos
  • Rod Steiger as Mr. Joyboy
  • Dana Andrews as Gen. Buck Brinkman
  • Milton Berle as Mr. Kenton
  • James Coburn as Immigration Officer
  • John Gielgud as Sir Francis Hinsley
  • Tab Hunter as Whispering Glades tour guide
  • Margaret Leighton as Mrs. Helen Kenton
  • Liberace as Mr. Starker
  • Roddy McDowall as D.J., Jr.
  • Robert Morley as Sir Ambrose Abercrombie
  • Barbara Nichols as Sadie Blodgett
  • Lionel Stander as the Guru Brahmin

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51. Darling (1965)

Darling
John Schlesinger
(APPROVED)

GAY CHARACTER

*Miles Brand (Dirk Bogarde)

GAY ACTORS/WRITERS/DIRECTOR

DIRECTOR: John Schlesinger

ACTOR: Dirk Bogarde

ACTOR: Laurence Harvey

It was so fashionable in 1965, so dated today. Never has a film demonstrated how rapidly modishness withers. Still, it features a star-making and Academy Award-winning turn by the impossibly beautiful Julie Christie, even if far more people saw her as Laura in David Lean’s equally lackluster “Doctor Zhivago,” released the same year. Christie is Diana Scott, a young, successful model in swinging sixties London who plays with the affections of two older men (Dirk Bogarde and Laurence Harvey), one of whom is married and bisexual (Bogarde).

Bogarde and Harvey were both gay in real life, the latter gaining massive advances in his career because of his decade-long relationship with producer James Woolf, who, with his brother John, had founded Romulus/Remus Films in the early 50s and produced Harvey’s star-making performance in “Room at the Top.”

Director John Schlesinger would go on to direct far better Queer Films such as “Midnight Cowboy” and “Sunday Bloody Sunday,” which will be covered in my next post on Queer Cinema: “Queer Cinema Comes Out (1967 – 1976).”

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52. My Hustler (1965)

My Hustler: Queer Cinema.
Andy Warhol and Chuck Wein
(Not Submitted)

GAY CHARACTERS

*Ed – the client (Ed Hood)

*Joe – the older hustler (Joe Campbell)

*Paul – the younger hustler (Paul America)

GAY ACTORS/WRITERS/DIRECTOR

DIRECTOR: Andy Warhol

CO-DIRECTOR: Chuck Wein

ACTOR: Ed Hood

ACTOR: Paul America

ACTOR: Joe Campbell

Prepare to be surprised. If all you have seen of Warhol is “Chelsea Girls” and “Empire State,” don’t give up. “My Hustler” is a hugely different film with a solid narrative and surprisingly good performances. Warhol codirects with Chuck Wein, who is always an enormous influence, and at around 70 minutes, it’s quite a joy to sit through. I have lots of STRAIGHT friends who like this movie.

“My Hustler” is the only extant Factory Film that 1) has been transferred to digital media and 2) has turned a profit.

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 53. Persona (1966)

Persona: Queer Cinema.
Ingmar Bergman
(Approved with two scenes edited out. These have since been restored.)

 GAY CHARACTERS

*Alma (Bibi Andersson)

*Elisabet (Liv Ullmann)

Ingmar Bergman’s masterpiece or, to put it another way, one of the ten greatest films ever made. What is it all about? Each of us brings our baggage to this one and is then transported with our epiphanies. I know it has a beautiful scene in which the leading ladies, Liv Ullmann and Bibi Andersson, caress as their personalities merge and then diverge. Two of the world’s greatest actresses under the gaze of one of the greatest movie directors ever known.

My all-time favorite film not in the English language.

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54. Valley of the Dolls (1967).

Valley of the Dolls
Mark Robson
(APPROVED)

GAY CHARACTERS

*Ted Casablanca (Alexander Davion) is a hairdresser who is often assumed to be gay by others, but his actual sexual orientation is unknown.

Based on Jacqueline Susann’s trashy but compulsively readable novel about three women (Patty Duke, Barbara Parkins, and Sharon Tate) trying to forge careers in the entertainment industry, each descending into barbiturate addiction – the valley of the “dolls”. TCF quickly realized that they had a real turkey on their hands, but the film, coasting on the book’s popularity, was a huge hit. Over time, they also realized that thanks to Miss Patty Duke’s Neely O’Hara and, to a lesser degree, the insanely bad Susan Hayward as fading star Helen Lawson, they had a gay kitsch cult classic, as well. A movie to be seen AT A MIDNIGHT SCREENING WITH A GAY CROWD, PREFERABLY AT THE CASTRO THEATRE IN SAN FRANCISCO – in other words, it’s a Rocky Horror GROUP experience. It should never be seen alone, or you will be feasting on “dolls” yourself. Duke is so bad in this movie because she thinks she is giving a shoo-in Oscar-caliber performance. Amid all the campness, Parkins and a surprisingly moving Tate survive relatively unscathed.

The campy yet haunting theme from the film was written by Andre and Dory Previn and, as sung by Dionne Warwick, reached #2 on the Hot 100 but was NOT nominated for an Oscar in the Best Original Song category.

The two Best Quotes in the movie are, of course, courtesy of Neely:

I have to get up at five o’clock in the morning and SPARKLE, Neely, SPARKLE!

Neely O’ Hara

Ted Casablanca is not a fag, and I’m the dame to prove it

Neely O’ Hara

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55. Reflections in a Golden Eye (1967).

Reflections in a Golden Eye: Queer Cinema.
John Huston
(APPROVED)

  GAY CHARACTERS

*Anacleto (Zorro David)

*Major Weldon Penderton (Marlon Brando)

GAY ACTORS/WRITERS/DIRECTOR

ACTOR: Marlon Brando

ACTOR: Zorro David

WRITER: Original novel: Carson Mccullers: Reflections in a Golden Eye.

Director John Huston’s favorite of all his movies. Not for everyone, but if it’s to your taste, spellbinding. Brando does something unique with his closeted gay character, who is married to Elizabeth Taylor. She is having an affair with their best friend, Brian Keith. Keith’s wife, Julie Harris, has just chopped off her nipples with the garden sears in protest. Her only friend and confidant is her flamboyant Filipino houseboy, Anacleto, brilliantly played by gay actor Zorro David. You are correct if you think you have just entered Carson McCullers’ country.

Additional goodies: Actor Robert Forster (“Jackie Brown”), making his film debut, spends almost the entire movie naked while riding Elizabeth Taylor’s horse!

The haunting score is by Toshiro Mayuzumi.

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