Boze Hadleigh (claims to have been born in 1954) is an American journalist, interviewer and writer primarily of gossip about homosexuals of Hollywood.
A linguist, originally known as George Haddad-GarcĂa, who allegedly can converse in five languages, Hadleigh has an M.A. in journalism and has traveled to 48 countries. He has been called the "Samuel Pepys of Hollywood".
He has written more than 15 books and also writes extensively for magazines. His work has appeared in more than 100 publications including TV Guide, Playboy, and Us Weekly.
He lives in Beverly Hills, California, and in Sydney, Australia. He is of Jewish and Latino descent.
Most of his books deal with well-known homosexual, lesbian and bisexual actors, actresses, and singers, most of whom are supposed to have talked in detail about their sex lives and the sex lives of their contemporaries with him.
Every person that Boze Hadleigh controversially claimed as being gay or bisexual, such as Gary Cooper, were all deceased, and as such no contradiction could be made and apparently no defamation lawsuits are possible, even from dissenting families.
Hadleigh's first book, Conversations With My Elders (republished as Celluloid Gaze) includes interviews with actors Sal Mineo and Rock Hudson; directors George Cukor, Luchino Visconti, and Rainer Werner Fassbinder; and designer, photographer, and author Cecil Beaton.
Their frank conversations with the author reveal much about the lives and careers of these celebrities and how their homosexuality affected both. According to Midwest Book Review, the book "is a ground breaking collection of interviews with six men who share a common and unusual trait relevant to their success in the movie-making industry: they were gay, and during their lifetimes, they concealed their sexual orientation from the public. Yet these interviews are remarkably open and candid about how these men's sexuality affected their lives and careers. ... Celluloid Gaze is an informed and informative contribution to Film History and Gay Studies academic reference collections and supplemental reading lists, as well as highly recommended reading for fans of the film work of Sal Mineo, Luchino Visconti, Cecil Beaton, George Cukor, Rainer Werner Fassbinder, and Rock Hudson."
Hadleigh's book Hollywood Gays is a report on interviews with prominent film personalities, such as Liberace, Anthony Perkins, Randolph Scott, and several others, most of them widely known as homosexual. Publishers Weekly said about the book:
The Lavender Screen: The Gay and Lesbian Films - Their Stars, Makers, Characters, and Critics is a collection of gay and lesbian film lore covering movies with homoerotic themes and more or less openly gay films throughout the history of film.
Gays and Lesbians in the Music World is one of the first books that document the artistic contributions of gay and lesbian musicians and performers. According to Madonna, it "cuts through the role-playing crap and shows the music world as it really ... is! It's camp with a High-C!"
The author could have been no more than 18 years old when he, according to his own account, met movie star Sal Mineo for an interview.
In the case of actress Agnes Moorehead, she had died in 1974 and suffered from cancer during the last year of her life. Hadleigh, based on the age he provides, was no more than 19 year old at the time he claimed to have gotten an interview with the dying movie star, in which, in any event, she did not deny or confirm anything.
Similarly, he would have been a 22-year-old when Luchino Visconti was supposed to have granted him an interview.
American biographers | American journalists | Gay writers | Hispanic writers | Living people
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"Boze Hadleigh".
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