from 'the mercury news:'
Hepburn, the star of “Morning Glory,” “Philadelphia Story” and “The African Queen,” was a lesbian, Bowers claims. Meanwhile, the gruff “Boys Town” and “Father of the Bride” star was bisexual — so he and Hepburn were beards for each other.
Bowers’ steamy revelations about Hepburn and Tracy, as well as other celebrities like Cary Grant and the Duke and Duchess of Windsor, also came in his 2012 book “Full Service.” With the documentary now in theaters, it looks like Bowers’ book may become a feature film, with Fox Searchlight developing a biopic on Bowers, Variety reported.
In both Bowers’ book and the documentary, “Scotty and the Secret History of Hollywood,” the World War II Marine combat veteran and bisexual hustler said he became good friends with Hepburn and fixed her up with more than 150 women over the course of nearly 40 years.
And he claims he actually had a sexual relationship with Tracy. In his 2012 memoir, “Full Service,” Bowers said Tracy would drink heavily before they had sex, BuzzFeed News reported.
from 'indiewire:'
At the opening-night party of Matt Tyrnauer’s hit documentary “Scotty and the Secret History of Hollywood” at Tim Burton’s Chateau Marmont apartment, Scotty Bowers, the tousle-haired author of 2012 tell-all “Full Service: My Adventures in Hollywood and the Secret Sex Lives of the Stars,” celebrated his 95th birthday.
“So how gay was Spencer Tracy?” I asked him.
“He got drunk and thanked the man beside him in the morning for taking care of him,” he said with a gap-toothed grin, taunting me with his next provocation: “He didn’t just suck cock, he crunched it!”
We laughed. “And how gay was Katharine Hepburn?”
“She loved one woman for 40 years who left her to marry a rich man,” he said. He claims to have arranged 150 get-togethers with women over five decades for Hepburn. That was his job — putting gay people together via a Hollywood gas station for rendezvous with movie stars, from Charles Laughton to Walter Pidgeon.
In the film, the late Liz Smith goes on the record for the first time to confirm that Hepburn had lesbian relationships. With Tracy, “Scotty is a primary source,” said Tyrnauer. “As far as I know, he and Tracy were alone when these things happened.”liz smith went on the record. that should put the matter to rest. but still many refuse to believe that katharine had affairs with women - let alone that she was a lesbian.
those are from the last few years. let's go further back, from 'usa today' in 2006:
Quoting sources such as the screenwriter James Prideaux, Mann states unequivocally that Hepburn and the socialite Laura Harding were lovers. (Hepburn dismissively addressed the lesbian rumors in Me.)
they seem shocked and dismayed that they even had to mention it.
katharine was a lesbian.
it's not something bad. it's not something to be embarrassed about. she's dead and it's 1 of the things that makes her interesting.
she's not interesting because she was a nice person. she wasn't a nice person - as jane fonda makes clear.
1) kate was awful in 'on golden pond.' she didn't come across like a mother - loving or otherwise. she was lousy.
2) she gave jane hell but i don't really care. kate never should have been cast in the film.
jane was making it for her father and henry never played opposite hepburn. he did make movies with barbara stanwyck (who wanted the part - loretta young did as well). henry fonda and barbara stanwyck were friends. they were also a screen couple. in 1938, they made 'the mad miss manton' together, in 1941, they made 'the lady eve' and 'you belong to me' together. reteaming them for 'on golden pond' made sense.
also making sense? casting bette davis in the role. bette and henry made 2 films together - 1937's 'that certain woman' and 1938's 'jezebel.'
but katharine comes across like a closested gym teacher, not a mother. it's the worst performance hepburn ever gave. it's embarrassing to watch.
loretta young probably would have been the best choice. the wife in 'on golden pond' is supposed to have a dreamy attachment to norman (her husband). loretta young could have projected that easily.
he and loretta starred together in 1939's 'the story of alexander graham bell.'
loretta looked the part. here she is at the 1982 academy awards ('on golden pond' was released in 1981 and is 1 of the nominated films she's noting as she presents the award for best picture).
and though hepburn had 3 oscars when she was cast in 'on golden pond,' loretta had 1 oscar herself. and bette davis had 2 oscars. any actress in that role in 'on golden pond' would have won the oscar.
let's close with c.i.'s 'Iraq snapshot:'
Friday, June 19, 2020. Turkey continues its invasion of Iraq, the
country's prime minister remains silent even as protests mount in the
streets, we look at the US presidential race, and more.
Angela Walker, angela@howiehawkins.us
Kevin Zeese, Press Secretary, 301-996-6582, kevin@howiehawkins.us
They say the nationwide uprising against police brutality and racism should raise these demands in order to make more fundamental changes in public safety systems than only reforming police practices and shifting some money in police budgets to social services.
The movement is also demanding to Defund the Police. Defunding means scaling back what police do and transferring the savings into social services, schools, housing, and community economic development. Defunding means removing police from dealing with many social problems such as homelessness, drug use, sex work, mental health crises, domestic disputes, and school discipline that are better addressed by other trained first responders, including social workers, EMTs, doctors, child protective services, therapists, and legal aid lawyers.
Reforming police practices and reallocating portions of police budgets to the provision of social services are not enough. These reforms do not shift the power to control policing to the people the police are supposed to protect and serve. These reforms do not provide enough resources to resolve the social problems that police are now sent in to contain because the system has criminalized problems like poverty, homelessness, mental health issues, and drug use. These reforms do not decriminalize personal drug use and possession, the largest single category of arrests and imprisonment in the US criminal justice system.
If we are going to truly create a public safety system that serves and protects the people, we must add three critical demands to the our menu of reforms:
1. Community Control of the Police
Police brutality will not stop as long as the police can continue to police themselves and brutalize people with impunity. We need Community Control of the Police to make the police work for the people and be held accountable for misconduct. Community control means police commissions, publicly-elected or randomly-selected like juries, with the power to hire and fire the police chief, to independently investigate and discipline police misconduct, to formulate and oversee police practices and budgets, and to negotiate police union contracts. Community control shifts the power over policing to the people and away from the police and the power structure that created the abusive policing system we now have.
2. Federal Social Investment to End Poverty and Economic Despair
Police budgets do not have enough money with reallocations to pay for the services and economic development that working-class communities of color need. Sending in cops instead of social services and economic resources has been at the center of the public austerity program of the power structure. As part of reimagining public safety, it is time to fight crime by fighting poverty instead of sending in the police for every social problem. That will require a multi-year, multi-trillion federal investment in community-controlled housing, schools, social services, and businesses in the communities of color that have been impoverished by generations of discrimination by racists who exploit these communities.
3. Decriminalize Drugs
Ending the war on drugs will take the single biggest bite out of police budgets. Drug law offenses account for 16% of all arrests and are the single biggest category of arrests. Drug offenses account for about 1 in 5 people in jail or prison, including 46% of federal prisoners. Drug abuse is a health problem, not a criminal problem. Instead of a criminal offense, we must make drug use and possession a violation that refers drug users to medical and social services.
We discuss this approach in more detail in our policy paper on Reimagining Public Safety.
Turkey
continues its invasion of Iraq -- it's bombing the country with war
planes and has sent foot soldiers into the country. The Arab League,
the UAE and Saudi Arabia have all condemned the actions of the Turkish
government. Another country joins them this morning. EGYPT TODAY reports:
In a statement by the Egyptian Foreign Ministry, Egypt affirms its
complete rejection of any interference affecting the sovereignty of any
of the brotherly Arab states.
“Egypt stresses utter rejection of any interferences that may undermine the sovereignty of any of its brotherly Arab countries, taking into account the consequences of these actions in further fueling instability in the region, while calling on all parties to respect the sovereignty of Iraq, and to spare it any international or regional rivalries that would hinder the achievement of the aspirations of the government and people of brotherly Iraq for stability and development,” the statement read.
“Egypt stresses utter rejection of any interferences that may undermine the sovereignty of any of its brotherly Arab countries, taking into account the consequences of these actions in further fueling instability in the region, while calling on all parties to respect the sovereignty of Iraq, and to spare it any international or regional rivalries that would hinder the achievement of the aspirations of the government and people of brotherly Iraq for stability and development,” the statement read.
The Turkish government is calling their act of terrorism Operation Tiger-Claw.
The Turkish government insists that they are battling the PKK. Who? Aaron Hess (International Socialist Review) described the PKK in 2008,
"The PKK emerged in 1984 as a major force in response to Turkey's
oppression of its Kurdish population. Since the late 1970s, Turkey has
waged a relentless war of attrition that has killed tens of thousands of
Kurds and driven millions from their homes. The Kurds are the world's
largest stateless population -- whose main population concentration
straddles Turkey, Iraq, Iran, and Syria -- and have been the victims of
imperialist wars and manipulation since the colonial period. While
Turkey has granted limited rights to the Kurds in recent years in order
to accommodate the European Union, which it seeks to join, even these
are now at risk."
The Turkish
government regularly issues statements praising themselves for killing X
number of PKK. They never acknowledge when they kill civilians. In yesterday's snapshot, we noted Abbas Maghdid, the 30-year-old shepherd that the Turkish government killed in this week's attacks. Today, ALJAZEERA and ASHARQ AL-AWSAT note Abbas.
Kurdish political sources said that the broad Turkish operation
underway in northern Iraq could not have been possible without prior
coordination and facilitation with the Kurdish parties, especially the
Kurdistan Democratic Party led by Masoud Barzani. The Iraqi government
strongly condemned the Turkish incursions and summoned the Turkish
ambassador in Baghdad, Fatih Yildiz, twice within the space of 36 hours.
The sources indicated that Kurdish authorities are looking for ways to protect their interests with some Arab countries while Turkey is circulating news that the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) is receiving support from countries hostile to Ankara, and especially after reports indicating that Turkey is building military bases in northern Iraq.
Local sources said that the authorities of the Kurdistan Region of Iraq associated with Barzani are still keeping silent about the Turkish military operation, while tracking money transfers directed to support the opposition PKK.
Iraqi-Kurdish political analyst Hoshyar Malu said that “Turkey is violating international law while the Iraqi government is showing a timid reaction” regarding the first Turkish air strikes, a reaction that did not deter a ground operation.
The sources indicated that Kurdish authorities are looking for ways to protect their interests with some Arab countries while Turkey is circulating news that the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) is receiving support from countries hostile to Ankara, and especially after reports indicating that Turkey is building military bases in northern Iraq.
Local sources said that the authorities of the Kurdistan Region of Iraq associated with Barzani are still keeping silent about the Turkish military operation, while tracking money transfers directed to support the opposition PKK.
Iraqi-Kurdish political analyst Hoshyar Malu said that “Turkey is violating international law while the Iraqi government is showing a timid reaction” regarding the first Turkish air strikes, a reaction that did not deter a ground operation.
Mustafa
Al-Kadhimi has been prime minister of Iraq since May 7th. Though he
sought media attention last week by taking reporters with him for a
for-show tour of Mosul, he's remained silent on the Turkish attack.
This as the Iraqi people are being informed that they're losing jobs.
His silence only makes him look weak. And his administration already
has enough problems. MEMO reports:
The
Association of Muslim Scholars in Iraq accused the Iraqi government and
Shabak militia Thursday of torturing prisoners in jails in Nineveh
governorate, Anadolu reports.
“Detainees
in the government’s and militia’s prisons in Iraq are subjected to
heinous crimes that go against human nature,” the association’s general
secretariat said in a statement.
“A
report issued Wednesday by the Iraqi Center for Documentation of War
Crimes revealed extensive human rights violations that are
systematically taking place in intelligence prisons in Nineveh
governorate at the hands of intelligence agents and the militia, known
as the Shabak militia,” the statement added.
There has been no comment from the Iraqi government.
"No
comment" really isn't a position that indicates leadership. Mustafa
replaces a prime minister who couldn't finish his term because the Iraqi
people saw him as inept. Mustafa risks the same route currently.
The
fact that protests are already being mounted should indicate to Mustafa
that the time for silence has ended and he needs to make some sort of
statement.
In the US, the Libertarian Party has selected their nominee for US president: Jo Jorgensen.
May 23rd, she became the party's nominee. The always ridiculous Dean
Obeidallah immediately wrote a column for CNN telling people not to vote
for her. As a Muslim, he insisted, the only choice was Joe Biden.
As
a Muslim? The Drone War is something Lying Dean never heard of? The
Iraq War? When has Joe Biden ever done anything other than persecute
Muslims?
Dean's just another whore trying
to tell you who to vote for. Your vote is your vote. Use it as you see
fit. That includes not voting if you don't believe in the rigged
process.
Iraq War veteran Adam Kokesh was also seeking that nomination. We'll again note his interview with Jorgensen from last week.
Gloria La Riva
is another candidate for the US president. She is the presidential
nominee for both the Party for Socialism and Liberation and the Peace
and Freedom Party.
That's
two women who are running for the US presidency. Meanwhile, despite
vowing long ago that he would select a woman as his running mate if he
got the nomination, Democratic Party nominee Joe Biden still seems
unable or unwilling to choose. Gretch The Wretch is out -- not just due
to her looking the other way as police attacked civilians, but also
because of her husband's abuse of office that they tried to play down as
a joke. It wasn't a joke and before Memorial Day ended, Gretch The
Wretch was off the list. Press favorite Amy Klobuchar also took a
tumble -- her 'hard on crime' stance turns out to really just be, attack
African-Americans. She was notified late Wednesday that she was
eliminated -- no rose from Bachelor Joe -- which is why she gave her
interview yesterday pretending she'd made the decision to leave the
process and consideration. Right now, the campaign's leaning towards
one of these three: Elizabeth Warren, Kamala Harris and Susan Rice.
Susan
Rice is the first you can toss out. Squinty-eyed and untrustworthy,
the Biden campaign's polling suggests adding Susan to the ticket does
very little. She's a War Hawk who supported the Iraq War and is little
known despite holding prominent positions. Those who do know of her
tend to hold an unfavorable position towards her. As one of his
advisors told me, "We do not have the time to run a presidential
campaign and rehabilitate his running mate at the same time. Susan
buried her own career on that fateful Sunday." He's referring to her
going from chat show to chat show insisting that the attack in Benghazi
was the result of a YOUTUBE video.
The same
advisor says Kamala polls better than Elizabeth. (Stanley Greenberg has
publicly stated that adding Elizabeth to the ticket would ensure
victory for Joe in November.) Elizabeth has a number of negatives
which, the advisor points out, is one of the reasons she didn't end up
with the presidential nomination. Kamala is seen as more of a blank
slate that voters can project upon while Elizabeth's previous baggage
weighs her down.
Joe has very little to offer
so he continues to tease this out. It's the only remotely interesting
thing about his dull and uninspiring campaign.
Another person who would like to be president? Howie Hawkins.
Howie Hawkins
is seeking the Green Party's presidential nomination and he's already
selected his running mate: Angela Nicole Walker. Though he is currently
the presidential nominee for the Socialist Party USA, he has not
secured the nomination from the Green Party.
The
Green Party will hold their convention online in July (the ninth
through the twelth). Hawkins leads in most polling and his only
double-digit contender a month out from the convention is Dario Hunter.
Polling at less than three percent are David Rolde, Sedinam
Moyowasitza-Curry, Dennis Lambert, Kent Mesplay, Jesse Ventura (who has
done press but has not officially entered the race -- and has stated he
will not run for the office but will consider it should the office be
offered to him), Susan Buchser Lochocki and Chad Wilson.
Howie Hawkins' campaign issued the following this week:
For Immediate Release: June 18, 2020
Howie Hawkins, howie@howiehawkins.usAngela Walker, angela@howiehawkins.us
Kevin Zeese, Press Secretary, 301-996-6582, kevin@howiehawkins.us
Hawkins and Walker Call for More Radical Changes to Policing
Howie Hawkins and Angela Walker, the leading candidates for the Green Party nomination for president and vice president, released the following statement today calling for community control of the police, large-scale federal spending to end poverty, and the decriminalization of drugs.They say the nationwide uprising against police brutality and racism should raise these demands in order to make more fundamental changes in public safety systems than only reforming police practices and shifting some money in police budgets to social services.
Creating a Public Safety System That Really Protects and Serves
By Howie Hawkins and Angela Walker
June 18, 2020
A long menu of policing reforms has been thrust into public debate
and legislative consideration by the nationwide uprising against police
brutality and racism. Many of the proposed reforms of policing practices
at the state, local, and federal levels are good policies.June 18, 2020
The movement is also demanding to Defund the Police. Defunding means scaling back what police do and transferring the savings into social services, schools, housing, and community economic development. Defunding means removing police from dealing with many social problems such as homelessness, drug use, sex work, mental health crises, domestic disputes, and school discipline that are better addressed by other trained first responders, including social workers, EMTs, doctors, child protective services, therapists, and legal aid lawyers.
Reforming police practices and reallocating portions of police budgets to the provision of social services are not enough. These reforms do not shift the power to control policing to the people the police are supposed to protect and serve. These reforms do not provide enough resources to resolve the social problems that police are now sent in to contain because the system has criminalized problems like poverty, homelessness, mental health issues, and drug use. These reforms do not decriminalize personal drug use and possession, the largest single category of arrests and imprisonment in the US criminal justice system.
If we are going to truly create a public safety system that serves and protects the people, we must add three critical demands to the our menu of reforms:
1. Community Control of the Police
Police brutality will not stop as long as the police can continue to police themselves and brutalize people with impunity. We need Community Control of the Police to make the police work for the people and be held accountable for misconduct. Community control means police commissions, publicly-elected or randomly-selected like juries, with the power to hire and fire the police chief, to independently investigate and discipline police misconduct, to formulate and oversee police practices and budgets, and to negotiate police union contracts. Community control shifts the power over policing to the people and away from the police and the power structure that created the abusive policing system we now have.
2. Federal Social Investment to End Poverty and Economic Despair
Police budgets do not have enough money with reallocations to pay for the services and economic development that working-class communities of color need. Sending in cops instead of social services and economic resources has been at the center of the public austerity program of the power structure. As part of reimagining public safety, it is time to fight crime by fighting poverty instead of sending in the police for every social problem. That will require a multi-year, multi-trillion federal investment in community-controlled housing, schools, social services, and businesses in the communities of color that have been impoverished by generations of discrimination by racists who exploit these communities.
3. Decriminalize Drugs
Ending the war on drugs will take the single biggest bite out of police budgets. Drug law offenses account for 16% of all arrests and are the single biggest category of arrests. Drug offenses account for about 1 in 5 people in jail or prison, including 46% of federal prisoners. Drug abuse is a health problem, not a criminal problem. Instead of a criminal offense, we must make drug use and possession a violation that refers drug users to medical and social services.
We discuss this approach in more detail in our policy paper on Reimagining Public Safety.
###
Joseph Kishore is the presidential nominee for the Socialist Equality Party and his running mate is Norissa Santa Cruz.
This
is not the first time the candidates have been noted at this site. We
will continue to note them. Joe Biden would probably prefer that we not
note -- or at least comment -- on him. If you have a favorite above
and don't feel they got enough attention in this snapshot, grasp that
this is not the only coverage at this site of the candidates. Also
grasp that with any candidate outside the duopoly, we can only do so
much. Meaning if Dario Hunter, to pick one example, isn't making
videos, giving interviews, Tweeting or campaigning regularly, there's
not a great deal I can do to note his campaign.
The following sites updated: