The Man Who Invented Rock Hudson: The Pretty Boys and Dirty Deals of Henry Willson
- File Size: 5384 KB
- Print Length: 468 pages
- Publisher: Carroll & Graf Publishers; 1st edition (August 31, 2005)
- Formats: Hard copy and E-book
- Language: English
- ASIN: B001UQ67YG
- Text-to-Speech: Enabled
My Review previously posted in March of 2008:
Robert Hofler's book is not about Rock
Hudson. It's not about Troy Donahue, Alain Delon, or Rory Calhoun although
these and many other Hollywood stars (mostly male) feature heavily in the four
hundred and twenty pages of "The Man Who Invented Rock Hudson: The Pretty
Boys and Dirty Deals of Henry Willson".
The story recounts the career of one of
Hollywood's most successful film agents—Henry Willson—and it's not pretty at
all.
Willson, while he lived, was a man of
simple contradictions. Born on the East Coast of the US, he was socially an
ultraconservative, politically a Republican, and as gay as a holiday table. If
one defines a pederast as a person who prefers sex with those between the ages
of seventeen and nineteen, then Henry is your man. Willson hated effeminate
men, often ridiculing them openly and loudly, in the swank restaurants and
clubs that make up so much of Hollywood legend, yet he loved young boys and he
made them famous. If any loved him in return none admitted it. He made them
wealthy and immortal in films. They left him old, penniless and forgotten in a
charity home.
Artful seduction of naive ambition,
career blackmail, and bodily assault all play a part in Willson's wheeling and
dealing in the Hollywood of the 1930s, 40s, and 50s.
On reading "The Man Who Invented
Rock Hudson: The Pretty Boys and Dirty Deals of Henry Willson", I felt I
was sitting in an easy chair while an old friend confided secrets long
forgotten. Of course none of Robert Hofler's stories about the young and famous
men of Willson's casting couch were secret—even when they occurred.
Hofler's writing is witty and I love
that, but I confess that I found his cutting from an event, say, in 1960, to
another in 1940, eye stopping.
For those who love to read about the
movie stars of yesteryear, this book is right up your alley. If however, you
are looking for details on the sexual exploits of The Rock, save your money.