![]() ![]() The tone of the writing is far from scholarly and the anecdotes so titillating that the reader may be justified in assessing Porter as a shrewd a gossip as Hopper. ![]() Porter's Paul Newman/The Man Behind The Baby Blues is, as the words in a police-barricade-yellow banner across the cover proclaim, an exposé. To keep such innuendos out of her column (which would have iced his film career), she wanted him to give her exclusives on his impeding marriage to Joanne Woodward and other tidbits that would scoop her rival gossip columnist Louella Parsons. The point she was making was that she was on to Newman's bisexual life that entailed hot and heavy romances with James Dean, Sal Mineo, Howard Hughes, Montgomery Clift, Marlon Brando, Tony Perkins, George Grizzard and the list goes on. Writer Darwin Porter relates in this tell-all biography that over drinks Hopper regaled Newman with a lot of stories that gave evidence that she was far more knowing of the clandestine going-ons in Hollywood than her "provincial" public image might suggest. ![]() It's an account that guarantees you'll shake your head saying what!?!! on nearly every page. Yes, readers, to paraphrase Margo Channing: Fasten your seat belts reading the celeb bio Paul Newman/The Man Behind the Baby Blues is a bumpy ride, especially if you favor decorum. He's the only man I know who can ejaculate in front of a fully dressed woman who's laughing derisively during the entire process." "I began laughing," Hopper is quoted as saying to Newman, "and continued laughing until he finished with a dramatic flourish all over my doorstep. When she answered the door, he was facing her. Slyly leading up to the deal she wanted to make, Hopper laughingly told the young Newman about how Errol Flynn, angered about an item she put in a column about him, appeared on her doorstep. When Paul Newman was starting up his film career, he was summoned to the home of Hollywood gossip columnist Hedda Hopper, who dished in fan magazines for readers in small town America about the doings of the stars. NOT in a million years would 60 year old Paul Newman be interested in that pudgy buck tooth moron Tom Cruise. Sex is mysterious and he was a very creative guy. I bet Paul Newman did mess with some pretty and talented men in his life. Never quite lived up to what he thought he was as an actor. Took a lot of paychecks for being Paul Newman. He didn't want to be known for being sexy, but he kept on playing up being sexy. He was a serious method actor who always took it seriously. Chicken legs - I heard that's what they called him at home. A very handsome, gorgeous Roman bust of a man. But I've seen a lot of film and Paul Newman was a man. Even Tom Cruise's career beginnings were around the time I was born. It jump-started my career.'ĭirector Robert Wise liked what he saw on TV, and he called Newman to star as the prizefighter Rocky Graziano in ``Somebody Up There Likes Me.' Offsite Link by Anonymous Everything had been cast, so I moved over and played the battler. ``Jimmy Dean was killed right before we were to work together in a television film called `The Battler.' They were going to cancel the show unless I played the part Jimmy was supposed to do. ``During that time, more changes for me,' Newman says. The occasion was the play, ``The Desperate Hours.' Once in New York, he didn't go near Hollywood for two years. Fortunately, he had an ``out' clause in his contract that let him occasionally return to the stage. Today, Newman winces when you mention ``Silver Chalice.' He thought his Hollywood career was over in this first film. ![]()
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