Thursday, February 6, 2020

(Mini) Fun Find: Movie Stars Magazine, April 1965

Why mini? Well, the Fun Find I brought to you a short while back was not the magazine I had intended. It was an extra one I had around. The featured rag was supposed to be this one, purchased out of town at an antique mall during one of my periodic jaunts. Thing is, I took it out of its protective sleeve only to find that the original owner had sliced it to bits! Panels, pictures and even full pages were missing... What pissed me off is that the tag on it wasn't marked "as is" or anything. Still, I was able to salvage enough content for a smaller than usual presentation, with apologies for the occasional MIA section or segment. There's still a little bit of entertainment to be had.

Connie Stevens has fun hair here. She and James Stacy wed in 1963 and did not wind up having (or adopting) any babies before their 1966 divorce. In 1967, Stevens married singer Eddie Fisher and they had two daughters, but that union was doomed from the start and ended in divorce by 1969. Stacy was involved in a serious motorcycle accident in 1973 that took one arm and one leg from him and Stevens rose to the occasion, hosting a fundraiser to help with his expenses. He even returned to acting with some success, but as he got older, the wheels came off and he was involved in more than one incident of sexual imposition.
It's actually been fifty-five years since this fun photo-op and Mr. Richard Chamberlain is still with us at age eighty-five! He still acts occasionally, too.
When this blurb about Bewitched's Elizabeth Montgomery being directed by her real life husband while acting with her on-screen husband was written, no one knew that she'd ultimately have still another husband! Dick York had to leave Bewitched due to excruciating back pain in 1969 and was replaced by Dick Sergeant.
This is practically all that's left of a page for a column called "Inside Whispers." What's neat about it is that almost every single gossip blurb has a corresponding picture to go with. And rare pictures are always welcome! George Hamilton's pilot was not picked up. His date is actually Inger Stratton, who was a TV guest star in the mid-to-late 1960s and landed a couple of supporting film roles. Judy Garland and the kids look pretty happy. I think most of us know that Debbie Reynolds' husband gambled away a lot of his own money and most of hers, leaving her in a real mess!
John Wayne's "licking" of cancer was not permanent. By 1979, he succumbed to the disease. Michael Callan and his then-wife Carlyn divorced in 1967. Sammy Jackson was a southern-fried actor who starred in the TV series No Time for Sergeants after personally appealing to Jack Warner for a shot at the part. Laurie Sibbald left screen acting for good in 1967. Gene Barry was wed to his wife Betty for nearly sixty years until her death! Jack Mullaney died of a stroke at only age fifty-two.
A couple of Hollywood veterans here, Greer Garson (who took in a cast party for Hush, Hush Sweet Charlotte!, 1964!) and Miss Barbara Stanwyck.
Sue Lyon has a cute up-do going on here. She was married five times in all, one of them to a prison inmate convicted of murder! Joan Crawford looks happy with her teen castmates, both of whom were quite pedestrian and never went anywhere. Stuart Whitman and his first wife divorced in 1966. He has quietly lived on to be ninety-two as of this writing! Carolyn Jones married again in 1968 to a Broadway conductor, her third of four unions.
At this time, Donna Reed was still enjoying the success of The Donna Reed Show, which ended in 1966. She barely acted again until coaxed onto the hit soap Dallas, with dire results. Sammy Davis' mother looks pretty good for having a thirty-nine year-old son!
The cover story contains some rare pics of Jackie Kennedy and the kids.
I know the mystery of which three words they are referring to is burning a whole in your psyche, so I will reveal them to you. As a nation continued to mourn the loss of its President and she was left with two small children who now had no father, the three words that allegedly made her bloom again are: "We need you."
Jeanette MacDonald was only sixty-one years old when she passed away. I didn't know it, but she had endured a lifelong heart condition (suffering a heart attack at age twenty-six) and was the reason she couldn't carry a child to term. 
The backstory of MacDonald, screen partner Nelson Eddy and MacDonald's husband Gene Raymond could hardly be more scandalous. She reportedly had eight miscarriages of Eddy's babies (!) and the two led a secret, on-again/off-again affair for most of their lives. Meanwhile, Raymond was discovered in bed with fellow actor Buddy Rogers on their honeymoon! The marriage had been arranged by Louis B. Mayer, who forbid her from marrying Eddy. Nonetheless, the pair stayed together twenty-eight years (and he rewed in 1974 for another two decades.) Eddy died of a cerebral hemorrhage in 1967 at age sixty-five.
A full-page portrait of Peyton Place's Mia Farrow. At the time she was denying any sort of relationship (including any pending marriage) with Frank Sinatra but they did marry in 1966 (divorcing in 1968.)
In this instance, the "discrimination" is that Robert Vaughn was highly drawn to blonde, Marilyn Monroe types rather than brunettes or redheads. He claimed to be waiting until he'd achieved movie stardom before marrying, focusing mostly on his career in the meantime.
Vaughn waited until 1974 (when he was forty-two!) to finally wed for the first time. He married long-haired brunette actress Linda Staab, who he met while filming his TV show The Protectors in England. She became a blonde for periods of their marriage, which lasted until his death in 2016. They had two adopted children.
The grey block is a piece missing from the opposite page. If you know anything at all about The Fugitive, then you know that this whole "story" is nothing but a bit of fluff in which the plotline of the show is being used as headline bait for the star, David Janssen.
Janssen's show was very popular, with his unjustly-accused character endlessly on the run from town to town, encountering all new people with every episode.  The two-part finale, in which he finally comes face to face with the elusive one-armed man (who had killed his wife) still holds the #3 spot today for all time household television viewers with a 72% share!
Fans of Miss Annette Funicello ought to enjoy this photo-filled spread on her marriage to Jack Gilardi.
Of some interest in the Frankenstein-ish assembly of her wedding gown with bits of Marlene Dietrich's and Elizabeth Taylor's (who hated one another!) old costumes being absorbed into it! LOL
The gargantuan affair (check out that cake!) didn't mean the marriage was to last till death parted them. They split in 1981 after three children were born. She married again in 1986, which lasted until her death in 2013.
If you can tear your eyes away from the ad in the upper-left corner, this feature tells of various goings on in the month of December 1964 (despite the April 1965 cover date. Those were always far flung in the future to keep magazines on the stand for as long as possible.) Nat King Cole was gone by February 1965 having experienced weight loss and back pain from a sizable tumor in his lung, which was ultimately removed to little avail. He was forty-five when he died. (Lesser known is that he'd been "seeing" future Petticoat Junction and Hee Haw actress Gunilla Hutton, who pleaded with his wife and the mother of his five children to divorce him!) Lance Reventlow (the only child of Barbara Hutton) died in a 1972 plane crash. James Stacy's "series" And Baby Makes Three only saw light of day as a TV-movie in 1966.
The questions that these fans ask are so hooty (and sometimes nervy!) I always love seeing Chad Everett's face. Maureen from Portland, Oregon... hopefully she got a life. LOL
David Hedison is another man who waited a while to marry. He was forty-one when he wed in 1968, but it lasted until her 2016 death. He passed away three years later at ninety-two.
Jill Ireland did do a few more episodes of The Man from U.N.C.L.E but in 1967 she took off her wedding band from David McCallum for real and married her husband's friend Charles Bronson. "Grand Hotel" was going to star Jack Lord, Barry Fitzgerald, Barry Sullivan and Chad Everett, but wasn't picked up. Neither was "The Mayor," which costarred Robert Colbert.
Ann-Margret and Roger Smith had a successful union from 1967 until his death of a neuromuscular disease in 2017 at age eighty-four.
The "trouble" mentioned in the blurb about Richard Crenna is a defamation lawsuit (and injunction) that Notre Dame filed against 20th Century Fox over the way their football team and school in general was portrayed in John Goldfarb, Please Come Home! (1965.) Remarkably, the studio won the case rather than the school, but the movie was not a financial success.
Ernest Borgnine did wed Donna Ranscourt in 1965, but they were through by 1972. Brett Halsey's marriage to Heidi Bruhl lasted for a dozen years. Tommy Kirk's drug arrest was the beginning of the end of his Disney career, though there was more to it than that. He was also accused of a sexual relationship with a fifteen year-old boy (when Kirk was twenty-one) and Walt Disney fired him after receiving a complaint from the boy's mother.
The Hollywood Calendar continues on this final page. Elvis Presley's movie title was changed to Harem Scarum (1965.) I recently read Jim Brown's auto-bio and in it he says that singer Trini Lopez (who was experiencing a hot streak at the time) began making a lot of story-line and screen-time demands during The Dirty Dozen (1967) so Robert Aldrich had his character die in the initial parachute descent and wrote him out of the rest of the movie! (Other sources say Lopez walked out at Frank Sinatra's suggestion.) Some of the stories missing from this defaced issue include ones on Mia Farrow, Elvis Presley, Nick Adams and Yvette Mimieux.
For the sake of some color, I give you this "hooty" back cover.
BONUS PICS

After seeing Richard Chamberlain applying his Santa disguise, I thought maybe some of you might like to see more Dick Pics. LOL  Here are some more shots of Mr. C. as a young man during and shortly after his Dr. Kildare heyday.


"Now hold still... I'm just going to give you a little prick."




I figured y'all would just flip over this one...!



12 comments:

Dan said...

Enough with the celebrity gossip - I want to know more about Norforms! Specifically, where do I put them and what do they do when they get there? As for 'internal bathing' - I love an outdoor shower as much as anyone, but right now it's too darn cold.

Well, any girl who pays attention to this magazine and still fails to get a movie star bust that drives the men wild has only herself to blame.

Richard Chamberlain never did much for me. A little too clean cut, perhaps. But he certainly knows how to wear a bathing suit.

Jeanette McDonald's sister, Blossom Rock, was Grandmama on the Addams Family TV show.

hsc said...

Dan, I'd answer your questions about Norforms and "internal bathing," but I wouldn't want to be a douche!

Poseidon, even with missing parts this was a great find. That last picture of Richard Chamberlain (on the Elizabeth Montgomery page) and the caption: "...no one knew who was behind the beard until Dick unmasked himself. Fooling half of H'wood, was more fun than he bargained for."

And I'd forgotten how trashy some of the ads were in magazines like this around this time. That ad for a hunk of lingerie that can be worn as a lacy bra OR a pair of crotchless panties-- why, that's slutty AND thrifty! Genius!

BTW, notice the ads encouraging women to join some sort of voodoo cult or something. Maybe that's how you get boobs like the models in those pictures in the other ads?

And I'm disappointed to hear that the three little words that caused Jackie to "bloom again" and ended her reign as "America's grieving widow" weren't: "Nobody's buying it!"

Gingerguy said...

Curious how Jim Stacy lost an arm and leg but was still a predator, must've been verbally aggressive?
I saw what they did and I know who they are in the Joan picture. That movie still has one of my favorite speeches when she calls the child a "little tramp"
I love Annette's wedding look, it's a little fussy and looks uncomfortable but beats the pants off today. All around a great era for hair too, everyone looks great.
Richard Chamberlain had a hot body boy, what a babe!
This was hootier than a Hootenanny

jobj69 said...

Hi Poseidon! Hope you are well...thanks for these entertaining tidbits. As others have pointed out, some of the hooty advertisements are classic! I, too, was tickled by the "internal bathing" phrase...and I guess big boobs were really all the rage in the 60's, what with the number of ads promising ways to acquire them.

Richard Chamberlain was a handsome clean-cut type, who I feel got better with age...and I love the fact that he needs such a big fig leaf to conceal his...well, you know...lol.

Poseidon3 said...

Dan, hilarious reactions to the vintage ads...! The target gal for this rag is flat-chested, has corns and stinks "down there" if you go by the ad content! LOLOL Richard C. is not my type at all either, but I try to put other options out there occasionally besides my burly Clint Walker types. ;-) I always found it stunning that the heroine of "Rose Marie" and "The Merry Widow" was the sister to Grandmama Addams! Ha ha!

hsc, again, hilarious! The quote about Santa Dick... amazing, right?! I somehow missed that ad for the bra-panty and had to go back and find it. Unreal...! The least they could have done was a BOGO so that you didn't have to choose between the two. I was waiting for the three words from Jackie to be, "Mrs. Aristotle Onassis!" Ha ha!

Gingerguy, I was so careful with James Stacy not to use wording like, "The motorcycle wreck cost him an arm and a leg." !!! The wild thing is, despite his rough later years, the accident was not his fault at all. He was struck by a drunk driver, poor thing. A girlfriend was on the bike, too, and was killed, so it was a considerable tragedy. I too love when Joan goes after that girl in "ISWYD" and grabs her and calls her names. I often think (or thought... it's been a while) that Annette seemed a bit squatty and thick in those "Beach Party" movies and she looks pretty slim in her dress, which is great.

jobj69, the ads have it, clearly. Maybe I oughtta dig out an old mag and scan only the ads!! LOL You know who remind(s) me of Richard Chamberlain for some reason? Not doppelgangers or anything, but in their basic body types and sort of in their faces: The Property Brothers. And I can barely stand them. Ha ha! Something about their robotic expressions and adenoidal voices just drive me crazy. Young Richard (who did have a nice voice) has that sort of lean, androidish face. But he did clearly have a nice, fit physique. And his place in my heart is assured through both "The Three Musketeers" and his disaster movie appearances.

Dan said...

So with you on those Property Brothers. They may be very nice guys, but I am not just NOT attracted to them, I find them annoying. Mike Rowe from 'Dirty Jobs', on the other hand......

The 'feminine freshness' bit reminds me of one of my high school jobs in a local drug store. One day I was given the job of reorganizing the feminine hygiene department - you know, douches, tampons, pads, and all those other mysterious potions and implements. I had no idea that, at least at that time, some of this stuff was SCENTED! I recall one product that advertised 'a lovely herbal scent'. Why would any woman want a woowoo that smells like pesto?

I also made regular home deliveries (in a push button transmission Polara) to an ancient woman who went through an industrial size tube of Preparation H about every week. That must have been one tight sphincter.

BrianB said...

I can't get my head around that Gene Raymond and Buddy Rogers story! I never heard any stories about Gene Raymond so that bit was totally under my radar. Wasn't he married to Barbara Stanwick? Buddy Rogers was in Wings which won the first Academy Award for Best Picture but was quite popular as a band leader and I read that at his peak he was promoted as "America's Boy Friend". I guess so!!

Ironically I did hear stories years ago about Nelson Eddy having a hidden gay life but it sounds like maybe not. In fact I heard he and Jeanette hated each other but maybe that was a story to throw people off the scent.

And speaking of scents, back around Jeanette and Nelson's time apparently Lysol was a recommended feminine hygiene product! Are we sure Gwyneth Paltrow didn't come up with the term "internal bathing"?

I think an ad post would be awesome! I sure remember seeing that "Play Guitar in 7 Days" ad! I hope that poor girl learning to play wearing a swimsuit and a cowboy hat (!) had a residual clause in her contract, that ad seemed like it ran for years!

BrianB

Poseidon3 said...

BrianB, I don't believe Gene Raymond and Ms. Stanwyck were ever married. She had Frank Fay and then Robert Taylor (issues there of their own!) And, yes, I recall Buddy in "Wings." Who could forget that farewell scene between he and Richard Arlen!? I didn't know about this post before I wrote mine, but it has some fascinating details and pictures in it regarding the Eddy/MacDonald/Raymond/Rogers/Pickford thing...!

http://godsandfoolishgrandeur.blogspot.com/2013/11/gene-raymond-buddy-rogers-and-three.html

This story has also been published in books about MacDonald and even Raymond's gay side turns up in one Loretta Young bio. (Still another source has him involved with Cesar Romero, Robert Stack (!) and Rock Hudson along the way... Hmmmm.

Walter Mason said...

Gosh, Richard Chamberlain was beautiful.

cheripiez67 said...

for some odd reason this made me giggle @"Now hold still... I'm just going to give you a little prick. yeah i know this blog was posted years ago, but i just recently came across it, like they say better late than never.

Poseidon3 said...

I try, cheripie! Thanks for commenting. ;-)

Paul said...

I interviewed everyone from columnists Jim Bacon, Vernon Scott, Bob Thomas over the years. In addition, producers Joe Pasternak and Ross Hunter as well as Jane Powell and many others, over the past 40 years. Much of their stories are contained in my latest book, "A Sprinkling of Stardust Over the Outhouse".

To a person, they denied the stories about Gene Raymond being gay.

However, the stories about Nelson Eddy spilled forth in great abundance including a fling he had with Hunter in the 40's, his 1938 affair with Tyrone Power when Power was at MGM filming "Marie Antoinette" as well as his years with actor William Tannen for whom he procured a role in 1940's "New Moon"

Raymond, who was a Colonel in the Air Force came up squeaky clean.

Pasternak planned to reteam MacDonald and Eddy at Metro in 1949 but the morals clause Eddy was told to sign-off on, was a deal breaker. Likewise, Ross Hunter contends that the reason Eddy would not reteam with MacDonald for the 1963 Hunter film, "The Thrill of it All" (The Arlene Francis/Edward Andrews roles) was because Eddy was uncomfortable being around Hunter after Eddy had picked-up Hunter in the 1940's for sex.

Both Unter and Pasternak spoke on the record and allowed me to record them. Neither would have any reason to lie.