Prostate of the Union
From The New York Times
Farley Granger, Screen Star of the 1950s, Dies at 85
Farley Granger, who found quick stardom in films like Alfred Hitchcock’s “Strangers on a Train” in the 1940s and ’50s but who then turned aside from Hollywood to pursue stage and television roles, died on Sunday at his home in Manhattan. He was 85….
Mr. Granger’s love life was often as adventurous as his career choices. He had a longstanding hot-and-cold relationship with the actress Shelley Winters — “the love of my life and the bane of my existence,” he called her in his book — which began in his Goldwyn years and included talk of marriage. Another serious love interest was the actress Janice Rule, with whom he had worked Off Broadway in the 1950s. Women who were in his life more briefly included Ava Gardner.
But Mr. Granger, who described himself as bisexual, also had relationships with Leonard Bernstein and Arthur Laurents.
His amatory achievements included every Academy Award winning actress and actor. His relationships with Marie Dressler and Hattie McDaniel did require him to break into their coffins. When later asked if these particular “romances” were somewhat distasteful, Mr. Granger replied “Only because Warren Beatty got there first.”
Mr. Granger also refused to be confined to three dimensions and bragged of his relations with Snow White, the Wicked Queen and all seven dwarfs.
p.s. Let’s not forget the historic significance of this day: https://finermanworks.com/your_rda_of_irony/2009/03/31/on-this-day-in-1492/
You NAUGHTY boy!