Mike Connolly and the Manly Art of Hollywood Gossip

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McFarland, Jun 12, 2003 - Performing Arts - 206 pages
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In 1954, Mike Connolly, the gay gossip columnist for the Hollywood Reporter from 1951 to 1966, was described by Newsweek as "probably the most influential columnist inside the movie colony," the one writer "who gets the pick of trade items, the industry rumors, the policy and casting switches." He was indeed one of the most talented and influential members of the Hollywood press of his time, and his column, for those who could read between the lines, was a daily chronicle of gay goings-on. Fifty years later, his cumulative output is a virtually untapped lode of gay Hollywood history. Mike Connolly's life and work are the focus of this book. It considers his formative years, his pre-World War II life at the University of Illinois and in Chicago, and the ways in which the homosexual community in Hollywood lived lives both secretive and open in the forties, fifties and sixties. It also examines the literary merit, power and newsworthiness of Connolly's "Rambling Reporter" column in the Hollywood Reporter and its significance as a chronicle of gay Hollywood life; the previously unexplored role of Connolly's column in the Hollywood blacklist and how his anti-Communist crusade was rooted in his earlier campaign to close down the brothels in his college town; and how his life informed his column and his column shaped his life.
 

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Contents

Fool for Fellas
9
Confidential Confidential
27
Ill Quit Tomorrow
39
Prayers for Peace
50
Battler for Chastity
60
Nose for News
74
How to Succeed in GossipMongering
86
Indecency
102
Glutton for Punishment
116
Coverage Coverage
128
Tasks for Tomorrow
138
Notes
149
Bibliography
163
Index
177
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About the author (2003)

Val Holley is a legislative and reference librarian in Washington, D.C.

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