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祝日 / Permanent Vacation
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Antique- Homo- Erotica-Japanese
So cute!
When the gay actor Jean-Claude Brialy, a cinema star of the 1950s and '60s, revealed that Yves Montand had a gay affair with a noted star of French chanson, it sent shock waves throughout France. The singer was Reda Caire. Though flamboyant, Caire was extremely popular in the macho city of Marseille, where he met the young Montand, who was the handsome young son of an immigrant Italian dockworker. Montand became one of the most celebrated French actors and singers. In 1944, he was discovered by Edith Piaf in Paris, and she made him part of her act. Eventually Montand became a huge star with an international fan base. Montand became Reda Caire's private secretary and was his lover for nine months. Caire taught the uncultivated Montand a great deal about singing, stage presence, wardrobe, and the like. Helene Hazera, a cultural critic, radio hostess and expert on French chanson, reported that in Montand's memoir, he wrote that Reda Claire had made advances to him, which he refused, but became his secretary. It was a cover-up attempt, and Brialy's recent outing of Montand's gay affair was no surprise to Parisians in the know. "In fact," Helene wrote, "everyone in show business knew that Montand had been Claire's lover. In the '50s, Montand used to make homophobic jokes about Reda, who called him up one day and said, 'If you say nasty things about me, I can also tell stories about you!' A journalist who has written about Reda Caire, reports that "Once when I was in Marseille, an old queen told me that Reda, who could be quite bitchy, had said of Montand, 'C'est étrange qu'un garçon doté d'un si joli membre puisse sentir si mauvais des pieds' " (It is odd that a boy with such a beautiful membrum should have such smelly feet.) Montand, of course, was well-known for the size of his membrum; his wife, Simone Signoret, used to call Montand "mon etalon" (my stallion). In an interview with the now-defunct French weekly Gai Pied in the 1980s, Montand admitted as a youth having had sex with boys "like all the boys from the Meditérannée".
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A Very Natural Thing (1974) dir. Purusha Larkin
Nudes in coffee
So bold! I'd like to do the same. I once did in Castro in SF after WNBR, but didn't dare elsewhere so far...
Years ago I purchased a collection of snapshots that document the relationship of a gay couple, Roger Pegram and Frank Bushong, who lived in New York City during the 1950s. The photos capture many different aspects of the couple’s life together, including vacations in Provincetown and other locations in New England, Christmas and New Year’s holidays, weekend house parties with friends in Andover, Massachusetts, and even a day in Central Park. I have researched the lives of both men and learned that their relationship spanned the years 1951–1959. However, even after they broke up they remained lifelong friends, and the collection of photos that I have belonged to Roger Pegram who died at the age of 70 in 1999. Frank Bushong died in 1985 at the age of 61. The couple’s social circle was made up of a close-knit group of gay men who worked in business, the arts, and academia. (x)
— Robert Young, Quinnipiac University librarian
You have a beautiful body
Can I also f*ck you for fun sometimes
No.
Should we go out sometime
I don't live openly as gay
Do you hide yourself
Yes I hide myself
Could you give me my coat please
Ph. Eric Keast Burke (New Zealand, Australia 1896-1974), c. 1940