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Was joan crawford gay

"Like her lover Joan Crawford, Barbara Stanwyck was an earthy bisexual known as "Hollywood's most well-known closeted lesbian...that everybody knew." Clifton Webb called her his 'favorite Hollywood lesbian.' She surrounded herself with lesbians and bisexuals her entire life.

In the late 1920s, she taught dance at a gay and sapphic New York speakeasy owned by Texas Guinan and was ensconced in the city's lesbian crowd with Tallulah Bankhead, Marjorie Main, and Blythe Daly. It was there she met Crawford. Bankhead openly spoke of their affair, as did Crawford, and writers also point to her 30-year relationship with flatten agent Helen Ferguson.

Ferguson lived with Stanwyck even through Stanwyck's two "lavender" marriages, both of which bids insight. In 1928, the 21-year-old married 31-year-old vaudevillian Frank Fay, an arrogant homosexual; alcoholism made him appear to be twice his age. The marriage offered her protection from the press and an entrée to Hollywood. After the ceremony she left for Hollywood and resumed a six-month tour. Their mêlée-filled union ended in divorce in 1935. Fay and Stanwyck shared this home, but

So what is the deal with Joan Crawford?

It’s OK, Sax, I’m here now. Thanks for watching the class while I was in the Teacher’s Lounge.

First off, I should be as “ugly” as Joan Crawford:

http://members.aol.com/harlowgold/joangal.html

Now, I can’t speak for why gay men might or might not like her (we have plenty of gay men here to come in on either side). But feminists should certainly admire Joan! She clawed her way up from nothing, with nobody’s help, and never resorted to the casting couch. Of course she was called a “manipulating bitch,” all strong women are!

As for her acting, I’m with Tove. Joannie gave 110% even in the worst crap. And view her in “Rain,” “Mildred Pierce,” “Possessed” or that last TV spot she did on “Night Gallery” if you think she couldn’t act.

Now. “Mommie Dearest.” I’ve been through this before, but it’s a VERY old thread. “M.D.” started out as a typical star’s-daughter memoir. It was combined with a fictional novel called “The Hype,” from which all the famous scenes were taken (the wire hangers, the rose bush, etc.). Joan’s other children own said time and moment again that NONE OF THIS EVER HAPPENED, but no one wants to hear that. Ye

Debunking Joan Crawford's Sexuality Allegation

Was Joan Crawford a womxn loving womxn or bisexual? The retort is: There is no proof

     The doubt of Joan Crawford's sexuality has been raised in several Crawford biographies, as well as several books on the topic of classic film actors.

However, the majority of the biographers who have broached this topic have never actually researched Crawford's experience, and have simply borrowed the information from other previously-written biographies that claimed Joan was a bisexual. 

     In order to trace the origin of the Joan Crawford bisexuality allegation, we must first establish the first instance when Joan Crawford's sexuality was called into question.

     In October 1978, Christina Crawford published "Mommie Dearest." In the novel, Christina Crawford relays a story that she claimed was told to her by a woman who was their nanny for a period of time.

     Page 129 "Mommie Dearest": 

   "Years later I saw [one of my former nannies] in New York. I was about nineteen at the time [Webmaster's note: therefore this alleged conversation took place in

With Ryan Murphy’s Feud, the Lgbtq+ Agenda Might Be Complete

In his recent politico-philosophical investigation of the rise of Donald Trump, Andrew Sullivan reiterated in passing his view that, after the victory of marriage equality, the gay community has not displayed the “magnanimity” that our culturally vanquished foes deserve. Normally I’d find that questionable; but then, Ryan Murphy and FX announced on Thursday a new entry to the gay impresario’s growing body of “anthology” shows—and, you guys, it’s such a deliciously violent imposition of gay sensibility onto mainstream television that I wonder if Sullivan might be right. With Murphy’s forthcoming Feud, the Homosexual Agenda might be going a step too far—and I won’t do a single thing to halt it.

As the title suggests, each season of Feud will, in the design of American Crime Story, explore an infamous feud. And—I can hardly type the words from palpitations of giddiness—the first entry concerns just about the gayest battle I can think of: Joan Crawford vs. Bette Davis, on the set of What Ever Happened to Infant Jane?in 1962. And then, the casting: Jessica Lange as Crawford and Susan Sarandon as Davis. Valued God. Add to that St

was joan crawford gay

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