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and then they found that two or three other couples had preceded them and that they would have to wait for those marriages to be performed. . “I have almost a clear week!” he told her with vast excitement. The chapel was in use and no one knew when the happy pair could be married in it. it was probably just as well that the kindly Mr. and Mrs.
Cookson had gone along, after all; the principals in this drama were so bemused.
They found a wedding chapel called The Wee Kirk o’ the Heather and made an appointment to be married there that afternoon. The minister offered a compromise and invited them to be married in his living room.
Chris pinned her gardenias to her shoulder and Tom nervously located the ring .
He appeared in the plays "Run Sheep Run" (1938) and "Clean Beds" (1939), He initially used the stage name "Richard Alden", but later changed his stage name to "Tom Drake".
In the early 1940s, Drake started appearing in theatrical films.
LGBT Hollywood: Self-Destructive Hart, Ambitious Clift
LGBT Hollywood on TCM: Titles include a classic Montgomery Clift star vehicle and two hetero-washed musical biopics
Turner Classic Movies continues with its Gay Hollywood presentations tonight and tomorrow morning, June 8–9.
Following the War, Drake appeared in over 30 films and several television series. . Ann Sothern was just much too tall (and older) for him. “It so often doesn’t give you enough time for the niceties of life . about them. could be heard bustling to and fro doing something about food for those other couples. Keefe Brasselle. . Raymond Burr.
122m
7:45 AM SUMMER STOCK (1950)
Director: Charles Walters.
Cast: Judy Garland, Gene Kelly, Eddie Bracken, Gloria DeHaven, Marjorie Main, Phil Silvers, Ray Collins, Nita Bieber, Carleton Carpenter, Hans Conried.
109m
9:45 AM THE ENCHANTED COTTAGE (1945)
Director: John Cromwell.
Cast: Dorothy McGuire.
So when he learned, eight months or so ago, that Chris was in Hollywood with her three-year-old daughter and that she had been divorced, he wasn’t really very much surprised. That, you might have thought, was that. . . (One assumes that it’s a mere coincidence that gay rumor subjects Cary Grant and Tyrone Power are also featured.)
Night and Day (1946), which could also be considered part of TCM’s homage to birthday girl Alexis Smith, who would have turned 96 today, is a Cole Porter biopic starring Cary Grant as a posh, heterosexualized version of Porter.
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