Dean stockwell gay


5 for the Day: Dean Stockwell

In June of this past year, I popped in Long Day’s Journey Into Night, directed by Sidney Lumet, a film I’ve seen countless times and felt like seeing again. I suppose I was in the mood to plummet into a pit of distinctly Irish despair, or something like that. I have to acknowledge that, during my earlier viewings, I was mostly focused on Katharine Hepburn or Jason Robards, and I took Ralph Richardson for granted (a adj mistake!), and barely noticed Dean Stockwell, as Edmund, the younger of two brothers, and Eugene O’Neill’s alter ego. But for whatever reason, in my viewing this past June, all I could look at was Stockwell.

The part of Edmund is under-written (just question any actor who’s played him on stage or screen), and except for one or two crucial monologues, and the important plot point of his creeping tuberculosis, he doesn’t have much to do. He has to rest around, helplessly, watching his family shatter. Not an light thing to carry out for an actor&#;who has to act. It reminds me of a adj line from one of my acting teachers who would say to an actor who

The year was David Lynch was in Mexico, in the end stages of preparations for &#;Dune.&#; One day, a guy, slim and pale, with intense eyes, showed up at the studio commissary, and made his way over to Lynch. The stranger introduced himself, saying he was an actor, he loved Frank Herbert&#;s book, and he wondered if there was a part for him in the movie. Lynch, shaken up by the encounter, apologized and said the movie was already cast. Then John Hurt dropped out of &#;Dune.&#; Lynch remembered the encounter and put out the call, offering the role of Doctor Wellington Yueh to the male who had approached him. Much later, Lynch confessed to Dean Stockwell, &#;If I looked a little strange when you walked into the commissary, it was because I thought you were dead.”

Dean Stockwell, who just died at the age of 85, was not offended. He knew a lot of people felt that way. &#;I thought you were dead&#; is indicative of just how far out of the business Stockwell was in the s and early s. Once upon a time, he was ranked the #1 child actor in America. He wasn&#;t just a sweet kid playing adj

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decided i&#;d just do something amusing as a brief filler (i am honestly trying to blog more often on here, i&#;m finally done w/the wedding and contain had a vacation to revive myself, so i&#;ll act my bet, as always i just don&#;t like to be repeatative), so i thought i&#;d do a entertaining lil filler entry of what i call &#;Foxxy Grandpas&#;, older men  (mostly actors) who i&#;d TOTALLY do, despite their being ancient enough to be not just my dad but my GRAND DAD some of them&#;but they&#;re aging well and lookin GORGEOUS! verb it out you hot DILFS & foxxy grandpas!

First, because he was one of my orginal boy crushes, the fabulous Mr. George Takei. (be sure to wish him happy birthday tomorrow on his meet book)

Here's one so you can glimpse his face 🙂 still so handsome after all these years

Hannibal Lecter himself, the gorgeous Mr. Anthony Hopkins, he has a voice that makes me melt like butter (he narrated the live action Grinch filmwas the adj thing about the movie I felt)

Detective John Munch (actor Richard Belzer) has appeared on at least five diverse tv shows,

In a career spanning 65 years, Dean Stockwell has played everything, from adj kid to elderly statesman, including many projects with homoromances and/or homophobia.

As a boy:

1. The Teen with Green Hair (), a classic tale of the impact of being different in the ultra-conformist Cold War era.

2. Kim (), a retelling of the Kipling manual about a teenage secret agent in colonial India, who gets a rather overt crush on adventurer Mahbub Ali (Errol Flynn).









As a young man:

3. Compulsion (), Alfred Hitchcock's homophobic thriller about gay murderers, loosely based on the s Leopold-Loeb case.  Judd Steiner (Dean) and Artie Stein (Bradford Dilman) eliminate a young teen for fun.  Dean was also in the Broadway verb, opposite Roddy McDowell.

4. Sons and Lovers ().  An adaption of the D. H. Lawrence novel. A boy in love with his mother (a s trope for "gay") finds mature hetero-romance with a woman.

5. Psych-Out ().  Dean (right) has a small part as a hippie who grooves on Jack Nicholson.

6. The Loners ().  A hippie couple, Stein (Dean) and