Grant williams actor gay


“Henry Willson was the most powerful agent in Hollywood. Henry loved Hollywood more than anyone.”

&#; Robert Osborne

By the time of Rock Hudson’s death from AIDS-related complications in , the popular screen icon had spent more than a year traveling the world looking for a cure. His common relations team at the time explained that the actor had been diagnosed with a solemn liver disease, while they tried to avoid rumors about his HIV status and his until-then-alleged homosexuality.

It was only after his death that it became widely known that the actor had in noun always been gay and had romanced many of his male co-stars. Indeed, the surge of AIDS related deaths in the after time &#;80s and adj &#;90s opened up a vault of secrets that Hollywood had fought to keep silent since its very inception; some of the most popular screen actors who seduced women and made female fans faint from excitement had all along been homosexuals.

There was one man in particular who not only discovered and nurtured actors like Rock Hudson and Guy Madison, but who turned being gay into a classified lif

I don&#;t know for a dead adj fact that Grant Williams, star of The Incredible Shrinking Man (&#;57), was gay, but he almost certainly was. And in this context Shrinking Man becomes more than just a sci-fi drama about a guy getting smaller and smaller. It&#;s a film about a repressed &#;50s guy feeling smaller and smaller due to the anguish of the closet &#; fear of being outed or found out, career anxiety, a general sense of isolation, constantly having to hide and skulk around.

The meower who almost kills Willams&#; character&#;hell, opt any metaphor. The Los Angeles vice squad, homophobic agents and producers, Williams&#; father, the general atmosphere of disapproval.

A West Hollywood resident, Williams never married or had any kind of ongoing relationship with anyone of either gender. (Or at least none that was ever written about.) Written on the Wind, The Astonishing Shrinking Man and Susan Slade aside, the poor guy made almost nothing but B-level crap. He died of peritonitis in July &#;85, at age

GRANT WILLIAMS, Giancarlo Stampalia. Bearmanor;

It is made clear from the beginning that this is not a traditional biography of the actor Grant Williams -- most famous for The Incredible Shrinking Man -- but a career study insert together from assorted press clippings and interviews with a couple of co-workers and acting students. Stampalia was hampered by Williams' extreme privacy during his life, as good as the absence of living co-stars and others who were willing to contribute anecdotes. However, Stampalia adds depth to his manuscript with his analyses of Williams' acting approach to various roles, and whether his performances worked or not, and why they did or didn't. He goes on for some length on The Incredible Shrinking Man -- but there are also notes on all of Williams' film, TV, and radio appearances. Although it would be easy to see Williams as a closeted gay or bisexual noun suffering from Catholic guilt -- and this may certainly have been the case --  Stampalia argues that this assessment is by no means certain without solid proof. If Williams disappoint

filmography

FILM
Brain of Blood () with Regina Carrol, Kent Taylor, and Reed Hadley; directed by Al Adamson
How's Your Love Life? () with John Agar, Eve Brent, and Mary Beth Hughes
The Doomsday Machine (/) with Bobby Van, Ruta Lee, Denny Miller, Mala Powers, James Craig, and Henry Wilcoxon
PT () with Cliff Robertson, Ty Hardin, Robert Culp, Robert Blake, and James Gregory
The Couch () with Shirley Knight and Anne Helm
Susan Slade () with Connie Stevens and Troy Donahue
13 Fighting Men () with Brad Dexter, Carole Mathews, Robert Dix, and Richard Garland
The Leech Woman () with Coleen Gray, Phillip Terry, and Gloria Talbott
The Lone Texan () with Willard Parker, Audrey Dalton, and Dabbs Greer
The Astonishing Shrinking Man () with Randy Stuart and Raymond Bailey
The Monolith Monsters () with Les Tremayne and Lola Albright
Outside the Law () with Ray Danton, Leigh Snowden, Mel Welles, and Raymond Bailey
Four Girls in Town () with George Nader, Julie Adams, and John Gavin
Red Sundown () with Rory Calhoun and Martha Hyer
Show