Calgary Herald

MORE THAN A HEARTTHROB

Book reflects on Hudson’s stardom, closeted love life

- DOUGLASS K. DANIEL

All That Heaven Allows: A Biography of Rock Hudson Mark Griffin

Harper

Had Rock Hudson not died of AIDS in 1985, he might be best remembered as the most successful of the postwar male stars who got into the movies solely on their looks. He remained on the screen for decades because of a likability that can’t be learned or manufactur­ed.

Instead, Hudson became the first celebrity to acknowledg­e that he suffered from the mysterious disease that seemed to target gay men. The potentiall­y career-ending sexual secret he had protected was all but confirmed in the last months of his life.

Mark Griffin’s perceptive and sympatheti­c biography All That Heaven Allows gives Hudson, both the movie star and the man, the kind of reassessme­nt only time can allow. He improved as an actor yet never lost the fear that moviegoers would discover their ideal leading man was only playing a role.

While he needed time and experience to hone his craft, pretending for the cameras came easy to handsome, Illinois-born Roy Fitzgerald. Escaping reality at the Winnetka movie theatre was a must for the boy with an overprotec­tive and domineerin­g mother, a father who walked out on the family, and a stepfather who beat him. Childhood friends remembered Roy for many of the same qualities that made him a favourite with fellow actors and film crews: diligence, generosity, easygoing charm and fun-loving spirit.

Living a closeted life and trying to make it as an actor only added to his insecuriti­es. With his new name, Hudson appeared in more than two dozen films under contract to Universal between 1948 and 1954. Eager to learn, he blossomed under the direction of Douglas Sirk, whose romantic tear-jerkers Magnificen­t Obsession (1954) and All That Heaven Allows (1955) turned Hudson into a heartthrob at 30.

With the hugely successful epic Giant (1956), Hudson was an Oscar-nominated actor and soon Hollywood’s most popular star.

Routine dramas followed until 1959’s Pillow Talk with Doris Day revealed Hudson’s knack for light comedy.

He remained an audience favourite for several more years despite undistingu­ished movies. Imagine what might have been had Universal followed through on its original plan to cast Hudson as lawyer Atticus Finch in To Kill a Mockingbir­d.

All the while Hudson lived and loved on the down-low. A sham marriage around the time of Giant quelled the gossip for a time. Publicly, he played along with the fan magazine image of the happy if lonely bachelor trying to find the right woman when he was actually trying to find the right man. Promiscuit­y and meaningful relationsh­ips marked his private life. Had Hudson been a straight star, he may have been married several times and envied as a ladies’ man.

Griffin suggests that Hudson’s better performanc­es — the paranoia classic Seconds (1966) being one example — came with roles in which he could identify with a character’s internal turmoil.

Wisely, the writer explores Hudson’s films and TV shows without trying to make them more than what they were: generally average entertainm­ent punctuated by occasional hits and many, many misses. (TV’s McMillan & Wife resuscitat­ed his flagging career in the 1970s.) Like most other aging stars, Hudson struggled to find good roles as the wrinkles appeared. Alcohol and cigarettes took a toll on his health long before the AIDS diagnosis.

Given his generation’s intense homophobia and the 1950s Communist witch hunt that ruined so many careers, it’s understand­able that Hudson didn’t want to risk everything as a gay-rights pioneer.

But he was indiscreet enough that his secret was widely known or assumed in Hollywood and elsewhere (FBI and police files suggest as much). He occasional­ly heard gay epithets tossed his way, even when he attended the Los Angeles premiere of Ice Station Zebra (1968).

Griffin’s interviews and correspond­ence with many of Hudson’s co-stars — among them Carol Burnett and frequent costar Doris Day — and many of his lovers show how protective they were of their warm, loyal friend.

Had he lived into the next century, the abandoned and abused boy from Winnetka might have discovered a public ready to root for him to be who he really was.

 ?? UNIVERSAL PICTURES ?? Rock Hudson, pictured with Doris Day in Lover Come Back (1961), hid being gay during his career, a time of intense homophobia.
UNIVERSAL PICTURES Rock Hudson, pictured with Doris Day in Lover Come Back (1961), hid being gay during his career, a time of intense homophobia.
 ?? AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE ?? Doris Day and Rock Hudson were frequent co-stars, working together in several rom-coms in the 1950s and 1960s.
AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE Doris Day and Rock Hudson were frequent co-stars, working together in several rom-coms in the 1950s and 1960s.
 ?? UNIVERSAL PICTURES ?? Doris Day and Rock Hudson share some banter in Pillow Talk (1959), one of several rom-coms in which they starred together.
UNIVERSAL PICTURES Doris Day and Rock Hudson share some banter in Pillow Talk (1959), one of several rom-coms in which they starred together.
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