F or over 30 years, scripts have floated around Hollywood promising to tell the story of Montgomery Clift, one of the most innovative and handsome actors in history. It hardly helped lend nuance to that reading that Clift was a well-known and long-time abuser of pain killers and alcohol, actions which likely sped his death from a heart attack at 45 in In fact, the attitudes he and his family held towards his relationships with men were strikingly modern. More, it analyzes the new view of masculine beauty he helped introduce to the screen. A deep trove of never-before-revealed evidence makes that disparity bracingly clear. The director himself never met his famous uncle, having been born eight years after his death.
His exceptional good looks captured the hearts of millions of women. Even Elizabeth Taylor wanted him. The guy had everything to live for. So why did Montgomery Clift end up an emotionally tormented drug addicted alcoholic living in self-imposed hell? That secret, depending on your source, was that Clift was gay or bisexual.
Making Montgomery Clift: truth behind gay self-loathing myth
Jack Larson, an actor-writer who is best-known to the general public for his role as cub reporter-photographer Jimmy Olsen in the popular television series Adventures of Superman from , has died at age We always went places together. We never pretended. I always did what I felt like doing.
His father was of English and Swedish descent and his mother was from a Jewish family from Germany and Russia. He graduated from Montebello High School in , aged 17 and at times claimed as his birth year. Larson found the role of cub reporter Jimmy Olsen on The Adventures of Superman to be a handicap, because he became typecast as a naive young man.