Read "Madam Valentino". I forget the author. Rambova was highly sucessful when she married relatively unkmown Valentino. His career exploded and he became a hot commmidity. She did not want to be Mrs. Valentino and became a pain to the studios. I saw her as the first real feminist at war with the system. The system won. They divorced but they had a rollicking good time while together. After the divorce she never spoke of him again. She married a Spanish nobleman, was targeted by both sides -- communists and Franco-- in the Spanish Civil War, barely escaped with het dog and her life, became a respected Egyptologist and died from sclerodoma sometime mud century having never capitalized on her relationship with Valentino. A fascinating life story.
I loved the Carol Burnette parody of Lunt and Fontanne. It was called Funt and Mundane, with Harvey playing Funt and Carol playing Mundane. Harvey always played Funt as a foppish man and I never knew it was based on this real couple Btw, Hepburn and Tracy were NEVER married. He was married to another woman and it was said for years he had an affair with Hepburn. There's no information that either of them was homosexual. Do better
@@girlonfire981 I'm sure he did but his word means nothing when Tracy was only ever attached to women. Can't speak on Hepburn, she might be bi but I don't take someone else's word on something if it comes out AFTER they die. Where's the evidence?
@@girlonfire981 He was a used-up ninety-year-old rent boy when he wrote his ridiculous book. He was working as a barman at garden parties and about ten bucks away from homeless. He sure waited an awfully long time to spill his dirt, huh girley? He was full of it and so are you.
Found it interesting that the narrator and writer didn’t know Hepburn and Tracy were never married. He was catholic and would t divorce his wife.
Narrator is AI and very annoying. I wish they’d stop with it!
They were each other's beards.
Read "Madam Valentino". I forget the author. Rambova was highly sucessful when she married relatively unkmown Valentino. His career exploded and he became a hot commmidity. She did not want to be Mrs. Valentino and became a pain to the studios. I saw her as the first real feminist at war with the system. The system won. They divorced but they had a rollicking good time while together. After the divorce she never spoke of him again. She married a Spanish nobleman, was targeted by both sides -- communists and Franco-- in the Spanish Civil War, barely escaped with het dog and her life, became a respected Egyptologist and died from sclerodoma sometime mud century having never capitalized on her relationship with Valentino. A fascinating life story.
I loved the Carol Burnette parody of Lunt and Fontanne. It was called Funt and Mundane, with Harvey playing Funt and Carol playing Mundane. Harvey always played Funt as a foppish man and I never knew it was based on this real couple
Btw, Hepburn and Tracy were NEVER married. He was married to another woman and it was said for years he had an affair with Hepburn. There's no information that either of them was homosexual. Do better
Scotty Bowers provided much dirt on both Tracy and Hepburn
@@girlonfire981 I'm sure he did but his word means nothing when Tracy was only ever attached to women. Can't speak on Hepburn, she might be bi but I don't take someone else's word on something if it comes out AFTER they die. Where's the evidence?
@@girlonfire981 He was a used-up ninety-year-old rent boy when he wrote his ridiculous book. He was working as a barman at garden parties and about ten bucks away from homeless. He sure waited an awfully long time to spill his dirt, huh girley? He was full of it and so are you.
AI voice?
Yes. Annoying isn’t it!
Redundancy. Too much stating the same comments to expand the conversation
11:28
I absolutely love. Hepburn and Tracy
Not more of this stuff😒