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Tab Hunter

Tab Hunter (born July 11, 1931) is an American actor and singer who appeared in more than 40 major feature films.Hunter was born Arthur Andrew Kelm in New York City to German immigrants. His father, Charles Kelm, was Jewish and his mother, Gertrude Gelien, a Roman Catholic who later converted to Judaism. Hunter was raised as a Roman Catholic. His father was an abusive man, and within a few years of his birth, his parents divorced and his mother moved with her two sons to California. She reassumed her maiden surname, Gelien, and changed her sons’ name to that as well. As a teenager, Hunter was a figure skater, competing in both singles and pairs, and an ardent horseback rider. Arthur Gelien was signed to a contract at Warner Bros. and christened Tab Hunter by his first agent, Henry Willson. His good looks got him pegged as a teen idol. He landed a role in the film Island of Desire opposite Linda Darnell. However, it was his co-starring role as young Marine Danny in 1955’s World War II drama Battle Cry, in which he has an affair with an older woman but ends up marrying the girl next door, that cemented his position as one of Hollywood’s top young romantic leads.In September 1955, the tabloid magazine Confidential reported Hunter’s 1950 arrest for disorderly conduct at an all-male pajama party. The innuendo-laced article, and a second one focusing on Rory Calhoun’s prison record, were the result of a deal Henry Willson had brokered with the scandal rag in exchange for not revealing his more prominent client Rock Hudson’s sexual orientation to the public. Not only was there no negative impact on Hunter’s career, but a few months later he was named Most Promising New Personality in a nationwide poll sponsored by the Council of Motion Picture Organizations. Although he believed he had a mediocre singing voice, Hunter had a 1957 hit record with a cover of the Sonny James song “Young Love”, which was #1 on the charts for five weeks. His success prompted Jack Warner to enforce the actor’s contract with the studio by banning Dot Records, the label for which Hunter had recorded the single, from releasing a follow-up album he had recorded for them. He established Warner Bros. Records specifically for Hunter.Hunter’s best role during this period was in the 1958 musical movie Damn Yankees, in which he played Joe Hardy of Washington D.C’s American League baseball club. The movie had originally been a Broadway show, and Hunter was the only one in the film version who hadn’t appeared in the original cast. The show was based on the 1954 best-selling book The Year the Yankees Lost the Pennant by Douglass Wallop. For a short time in the late 1960s, Hunter settled in the south of France, where he acted in spaghetti westerns. His career was revived in the 1980s, when he starred opposite transvestite actor Divine in John Waters’ Polyester (1981) and Paul Bartel’s Lust in the Dust (1985). He is particularly remembered by later audiences as Mr. Stewart, the substitute teacher in Grease 2, who sang “Reproduction.” He also wrote and starred in Dark Horse (1992). In Hunter’s 2005 autobiography, Tab Hunter Confidential: The Making of a Movie Star, he acknowledged his homosexuality, confirming rumors that had circulated since the height of his fame. According to William L. Hamilton of the New York Times, detailed reports about his alleged romances with very close friends Debbie Reynolds and Natalie Wood were strictly the fodder of studio publicity departments. As Wood and Hunter embarked on a well-publicized and groundless romance, promoting his apparent heterosexuality while promoting their movies.During Hollywood’s studio era, Hunter says, life “was difficult for me, because I was living two lives at that time. A private life of my own, which I never discussed, never talked about to anyone. And then my Hollywood life, which was just trying to learn my craft and succeed …” The star emphasizes that the word ‘gay’ “wasn’t even around in those days, and if anyone ever confronted me with it, I’d just kinda freak out. I was in total denial. I was just not comfortable in that Hollywood scene, other than the work process.There was a lot written about my sexuality, and the press was pretty darn cruel,” the actor says, but what “moviegoers wanted to hold in their hearts were the boy-next-door marines, cowboys and swoon-bait sweethearts he portrayed.” Hunter has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6320 Hollywood Blvd.

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