Showing posts with label Rock Hudson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rock Hudson. Show all posts

13/10/2011

Icons: Rock Hudson

Originally posted on www.differentscene.co.uk



This week we are looking at Rock Hudson, another true gay icon, and although he may just seem like another star of the Hollywood golden age, he truly did have a huge impact on gay life, as we know it now.
With a career that spanned over four decades Hudson truly was one of the greatest stars that ever lived, he appeared in over 70 films and made appearances on numerous television shows. He is probably most well known for a number of romantic comedies he made during the 50s and 60s with Hollywood sweetheart Doris Day.
As the years have gone by many things have been written about Hudson that have concentrated on his personal life. The man was a closeted homosexual during a time when homosexuality was still illegal throughout the world and considered to be a mental disability. But where as he may have seemed closeted to the outside world, due to the media not publicising it during the height of his fame, even though they tried, Hudson was in fact very comfortable with who he was and it was apparently known throughout the inner workings of Hollywood that he was in fact gay.
The only problem today is people only tend to remember him because of this, but the fact of the matter is he really was a great actor, I mean he was a gay man pretending to be straight and in a number of his films he was a gay man playing a straight actor who would then play gay to get a woman in a film, sounds confusing right? Well imagine how difficult it was for him. He also had three Golden Globes under his belt along with numerous other acting awards and even has a star on the Hollywood walk of fame. These achievements however seem to be overlooked due to what happened at the end of his life.
In July 1985 after appearing to be extremely unwell after an appearance on a show hosted by Doris Day the media exploded with rumours about what was wrong with Hudson. He had in fact been diagnosed with the HIV virus back in 1984 and had been telling people he had incurable liver cancer, no doubt he lied due to the scrutiny that still surrounded homosexuals and the HIV virus. However after the appearance with Doris Day and after receiving treatment in Paris it was announced to the public that Hudson was dying of AIDS.
This shocking and saddening announcement made Hudson the first high profile person known to be suffering from the virus and helped to bring it to a much higher platform in order for it to be tackled. Comedienne Joan Rivers said about it 1985, “Two years ago, when I hosted a benefit for AIDS, I couldn’t get one major star to turn out. … Rock’s admission is a horrendous way to bring AIDS to the attention of the American public, but by doing so, Rock, in his life, has helped millions in the process. What Rock has done takes true courage.”
She was right it took a lot of courage for Hudson to announce that he was dying of this horrific illness and because of that he opened doors for people to research the disease in order to help the millions who have suffered and are suffering from it now. Thanks to Rock Hudson there is hope for people suffering from HIV and AIDS and hopefully one day there will be a cure, and that is why he is a true Gay Icon.

22/08/2011

Icons: Elizabeth Taylor

Originally posted on www.differentscene.co.uk

Last week we looked Judy Garland, often considered a great gay icon because of her troubled personal life. This week I’m looking at Elizabeth Taylor, but not for her highly publicised personal life.
Miss Taylor is definitely an icon of the golden age of Hollywood, that is undisputable, but it’s because of her extensive charity work and campaigning for funding for HIV and AIDS related charities and projects that give her a place as a gay icon.
Yes, she was a huge film star, starting as child actress she went on to become the highest paid actress in Hollywood in the early 1960’s when she received and unprecedented $1 million fee for her role in Cleopatra, she was also a two time Academy Award winning actress and received numerous other awards and success throughout her 60 year career. Her personal life was highly documented due to her love of wedding rings, she was married eight times and two of those were to Richard Burton.
Yes, Liz Taylor lived an exceptional life, but it was during the AIDS epidemic of the 1980’s where she gained her prominence as an advocate for the gay community and truly became a gay icon.
Spurred on by the death of her good friend and fellow actor Rock Hudson who eventually died of the disease, Taylor became one of the first notable celebrities to help raise money to help fight the disease, back in a time when a number of people still refused to acknowledge it at all. During her time as an advocate for helping to fight the illness Taylor helped raise over $270 million for HIV and AIDS related charities and projects, and set up and organised the first AIDS fundraiser back in 1984, a brave thing for someone to do back then.
In 1985 during the year that Rock Hudson lost his life to the disease, Taylor helped co-found the American Foundation for AIDS Research (amfAR) and also founded the Elizabeth Taylor AIDS Foundation (ETAF) in 1993.
Taylor was a great in woman, and by standing up for something she truly believed in back when it was still a hugely taboo subject shows that she truly embodies every notion of the word icon.
Sadly Taylor passed away in March of this year leaving behind a huge gap, as there will never be another like here.
As former president Bill Clinton said following her death, “Elizabeth’s legacy will live on in many people around the world whose lives will be longer and better because of her work and the ongoing efforts of those she inspired.”