Ocean lover Rock Hudson

Rock Hudson loved ocean and water in general. He used to have a house by the sea and a boat.

Rock Hudson, photo taken at the time he was making “Bend of the River” 1952

Rock Hudson with Betty Abbott, Palm Springs 1955

Rock Hudson with Jeffrey Hunter and Barbara Rush

ca. 1940-1959, Las Vegas, Nevada, USA — Las Vegas: Photo shows Rock Hudson (1925-1985) lying sideways on the diving board of the pool at the Flamingo Hotel in Las Vegas.  Ca.

ca. 1940-1959 — Photo shows Rock Hudson in a bathing suit, using a pay phone.  Ca. 1940s-1950s. — Image by © CORBIS

Rock Hudson in a pool 1954

Rock Hudson leaving pool. Unknown date

Rock Hudson at the Beach circa 1955.  Sorry can’t put that label away or in a corner :(

Sep. 1956, Napa Valley, California, USA — Rock Hudson on Boat Prow — Image by © Ted Streshinsky/CORBIS

September 1958, Napa Valley, California, USA — Jean Simmons and Rock Hudson take time out from filming on the set of “This Earth Is Mine” to go for a boat ride on the Napa river — Image by © Ted Streshinsky/CORBIS

ca. October 1958, Napa, California, USA — Portrait of Rock Hudson, a day on set of  “This Earth is Mine” — Image by © Ted Streshinsky/CORBIS

Rock Hudson 1959 © 1978 Gene Trindl

Rock Hudson’s first boat KHAIRUSAN – 1957. Thanks Kay for sharing ;)

Sailing Portrait of celebrity actor Rock Hudson on a yacht during photo shoot.. CA 2 16 1960

01 Nov 1960 — Rock Hudson Water-skiing in Italy — Image by Leo Fuchs. http://www.leofuchs.com

Rock Hudson with George Nader water skiing

Rock Hudson at his Malibu beach home circa 1960 Photo by Joe Shere


Candid Pictures of Rock Hudson With Costars

Original caption: 5/12/1965-Hollywood, CA: Film star Rock Hudson is under fire from American actresses for choosing European girls as his leading ladies. In his last six movies, only one feminine co-star, Doris Day, has broken the monopoly held by such European beauties as Gina Lollobrigida (L, “Strange Bedfellows”) and Claudia Cardinale (R, “Blindfold”). Hudson’s polite advice to American actresses is: “Scream at the writers. They’re the ones who write the foreign girls into the movies I make.”

Rock with Carol Burnett and Jim Nabors at the Academy Awards, April 10, 1967

Having a look to publicity pictures on the set of  “Come September” with co-stars Gina Lollobrigida and Walter Slezak

 

Rock Hudson and Mae West rehearsal for the Oscars

 

 

Rock Hudson and Bobby Darin having a chat during a break on the set of  “Come September”.

Pictures courtesy of  Leo Fuchs

 

Rock Hudson and Tippi Hedren

Rock Hudson, Mort Sahl (2L),  Esther Williams and Tallulah Bankhead rehearsing for tv show “The Big Party”

 

Broadway star in “Sugar Babies” Ann Miller celebrates her 57th birthday at a party at Bruno Restaurant, with best wishes from Rock Hudson and Carol Channing. April 8, 1980

Rock Hudson and Liza Minella — Image by © Bettmann/CORBIS

 

 


Dog lover Rock Hudson

Rock Hudson had till 7 dogs at the same time.

From left to right : Fritz, Murphy ( the lucky one in his arms ), Wee Wee and Sally. Courtesy Harry Langdon funds.

Rock being kissed by his little poodle Demi.

1957, Los Angeles, California, USA — Rock Hudson with Phyllis Gates — Image by © John Bryson/Sygma/Corbis

Candid one of Rock Hudson with his little poodle called Demi Tasse.     Thanks a lot Kay for sharing  ;)

Thanks Kay for sharing ;)

Scene from “All that Heaven allows”

Young Rock with pet irish setter, Tucker, during a break on set.  Thanks Kay for sharing  ;)

In the 70’s at home. Rock Hudson and pet irish setter. Thanks Kay for sharing ;)

With pet irish setter at home

All pictures below can be bought at www.rexfeatures.com

Rock Hudson February 5, 1985

Rock Hudson and pet irish setter in 1974

Rock Hudson and dalmatian dog in 1954


Douglas Sirk, a real father

“He was like ol` Dad to me, and I was like a son to him, I think. When you`re scared and new and you`re trying to figure out this thing, and suddenly an older man will reach out and say, `There, there, it`s okay,` that was Douglas Sirk.”    Rock Hudson

Their collaboration started in 1952  and spanned for 6 years,  friendship forever

Has Anybody Seen My Gal ? (1952)

All I Desire (1953)

Taza, Son of Cochise (1954)

Rock Hudson and Barbara Rush between scenes of  “Taza, son of Cochise”

Magnificent Obsession (1954)

Douglas Sirk (second from left) with Barbara Rush, Jane Wyman, Greg Palmer, Rock Hudson, and R. Husson on the set of   “Magnificent Obsession”

Captain Lightfoot (1955)



All That Heaven Allows (1955)

Rock Hudson, Jane Wyman and Agnes Moorehead with Douglas Sirk on the set of “All That Heaven allows”

The happy go lucky Sirk ensemble from “All That Heaven Allows” : from left to right : Russell Metty, Agnes Moorehead, Douglas Sirk, Jane Wyman, Rock Hudson, Ross Hunter, and dialogue director Jack Davis.

Written on the Wind (1956)


Battle Hymn (1957)

Rock Hudson pushes the wheelchair of his director on Battle Hymn, Douglas Sirk, while his co-star Dan Duryea kneels beside the chair. 1956.


The Tarnished Angels (1958)



The Sirk – Hudson connection by Mark Rappaport

In this book, the author throw light on another side of their collaboration and reasons why Douglas Sirk took Rock Hudson under his wings :

“It’s a clichéd truism that moviemaking is a collaborative art. Of course it is, and there are dozens, if not hundreds, of examples of directors working time and again with the same crew members, trusted writers, cameramen, production designers, editors, even costume designers, to prove it. We all know about the collaborative relationship between Fellini and Nino Rota, between Hitchcock and Bernard Herrmann. But what interests us the most is the collaboration between a director and a star. The examples are legion (… )

One of the most important Hollywood director-actor partnerships was between Douglas Sirk (né Detlef Sierck in Hamburg) and Rock Hudson—nine movies at Universal, the smallest and least important of the major studios: Has Anybody Seen My Gal? (1952), Taza, Son of Cochise (1954), Magnificent Obsession (1954), Captain Lightfoot (1955), All That Heaven Allows (1955), Never Say Goodbye (1956), Written on the Wind (1956), Battle Hymn (1957), and The Tarnished Angels (1958). (Although Sirk is uncredited on Never Say Goodbye and disowned the movie, he did work on it, and there are so many similarities and points of reference in it to other Sirk movies, both thematically and emotionally, I feel it should be counted.) Maybe it was a shotgun marriage—Sirk was one of the studio’s most important directors, if not the most important, and Hudson was one of the very few stars at the company whose name meant anything at the box office. But there’s more to it than that.

It’s a strange phenomenon about Sirk : so many of his films are centered around mother love, either thwarted, obsessive, overly protective, or rejected, or various combinations thereof—Schlussakkord (1936), La habanera (1937), All I Desire (1953), Imitation of Life (1959), and, yes, even Never Say Goodbye—or have parents with spoiled, selfish, even monstrous teenage children, as in All That Heaven Allows and There’s Always Tomorrow (1956), one would never guess that one of the major tragedies of his life involved his son. His only child, from his first wife, was born in 1925. She became a Nazi Party member in 1929. When Sirk married again, to Hilde Jary, a Jewish actress, his first wife refused to let him see their son again. Sirk and Jary left Germany in 1937. His son, Klaus Detlef Sierck, had been a child actor in Nazi films, including several by the most notorious of all Nazi directors, Veit Harlan, who made the infamous Jew Süss. Sirk’s son died at the age of eighteen, fighting with the German army on the eastern front in 1942. No parent, however estranged from his child, ever recovers from that. The only picture of Sirk’s that even touches on this subject is perhaps the most personal of his films, A Time to Love and a Time to Die (1958).

A Time to Love and a Time to Die,
a sympathetic story of a young Nazi soldier on the eastern front, was greeted with head-scratching bewilderment when it first appeared. It was only thirteen years after the war had ended. The world was still recovering from the revelations of the Nazi atrocities, and here was Sirk making what seemed like an apologia for the Nazis and sympathetically portraying the hardships and devastation ordinary Germans had had to bear during a war that they unleashed on the world. But today it can be seen for what it was: a devastating picture of the destruction that war visits on everyone, victims and perpetrators alike—and one of his most heartfelt films. It was also an unvarnished attempt to reconcile with his estranged and long-lost son.

Let’s put it another way. Hudson, who was born the same year as Sirk’s son, said, “He was like ol’ Dad to me, and I was like a son to him, I think. When you’re scared and new and you’re trying to figure out this thing, and suddenly an older man will reach out and say, ‘There, there, it’s okay,’ that was Douglas Sirk.” For his part, Sirk saw something in Hudson that he responded to, and especially something the camera responded to, which had possibilities. After having worked with Hudson on Has Anybody Seen My Gal?, in which the actor is remarkably effective in a light comic role, and Taza, Son of Cochise, Sirk felt Hudson was ready for, and fought for him to be in, Magnificent Obsession. Sirk, ever the aesthete, was never quite as sentimental or as gushing as Hudson in interviews. “He wasn’t very much, but he was also very young. At Universal, he was considered a very bad actor. However, he was very eager to learn. His dream was to become a good actor, and I can say, not without pride, that I helped him become one,” Sirk recounted in a 1967 Cahiers du cinéma interview. Hudson became a huge star as a result of being in Magnificent Obsession.

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On the set of All That Heaven Allows

To capitalize on this newly earned stardom, Sirk and Hudson (as well as Jane Wyman, the star of Magnificent Obsession) made All That Heaven Allows, another movie ostensibly about a young hunk in love with an older, more conventional woman. Hudson doesn’t have much to do except keep his pompadour in place and wear a series of stunning lumberjack plaids. But he suggests an unwavering masculinity as a perfect foil to Wyman’s brilliantly nuanced and conflicted performance. (Check out her dazzling, tossed-off delivery when her daughter says that at least they don’t bury the wives along with their deceased husbands, the way they did in ancient Egypt: “Don’t they? Maybe not in Egypt.”) Written on the Wind gives Hudson many more opportunities as the embittered and cynical, but nevertheless loyal, retainer to the oil-rich Hadley family. His stolidity balances and keeps a lid on the excessive theatricality and self-dramatization that characterize the Robert Stack and Dorothy Malone characters. There was also The Tarnished Angels, which we’ll get to later, but by the time A Time to Love was made, Hudson was too big a star to play such a relatively undemanding role, and furthermore, his authenticity as a young soldier would have been undermined by the familiarity audiences had with Rock Hudson the star (and, in any case, Universal was grooming John Gavin, who played the role, to be the next Rock Hudson).

Perhaps the most touching part of Magnificent Obsession is that it spells out so boldly, and in a very direct way, the connection between Sirk and Hudson. Otto Kruger, a dead ringer for Sirk, plays Hudson’s teacher/guru/role model. He is the guiding, mentoring father figure. He teaches him the meaning of what will eventually become the magnificent obsession of the title for Rock—giving to others and asking nothing in return—and is there to guide him in moments when he feels he can’t quite live up to his own expectations. Rock, who becomes a surgeon in order to cure Jane Wyman of her blindness, which he caused in the first place, has to operate on her. The resident doctor is not up to the task, and it has to be done immediately. What the medical emergency is, is never quite explained. Neither is a reason given for Otto, a painter, to be allowed to watch the operation from a raised, glassed-in amphitheater, usually reserved for other professionals and medical students. But let’s not get bogged down in annoying details here. Before the operation, Rock falters. He isn’t sure he is capable of doing it. He glances up at Otto, who beams down on him and smiles encouragingly, as if to say, “You can do it.” Not that he knows anything about the complications of the operation itself or even the medical procedures involved. But it is a symbolic, paradigmatic moment in which the father figure, from on high, gives the son permission to be all that he can be—Sirk, the director, the father, is giving Rock, the acolyte looking for guidance and reassurance, the permission and encouragement to be Rock Hudson, one of the biggest stars of the fifties.

Sirk ultimately paid Hudson the highest compliment he could give when he chose him to play the lead in The Tarnished Angels, an adaptation of Faulkner’s 1933 novel Pylon. If A Time to Love was one of Sirk’s most personal films, equally close to his heart was The Tarnished Angels, a movie he had wanted to make since the thirties, when he was still at UFA. Hudson’s is a thankless role, an alcoholic newspaper reporter who is outside the main story until he insists on forcing his way in, but he is really wonderful in it. It ranks with his very best work, along with Seconds (1966), and suggests the actor Hudson might have been, given the right roles, which clearly Sirk was capable of giving him.

Unfortunately, maybe more for Hudson more than for Sirk, The Tarnished Angels was to be their last collaboration. After that and A Time to Love and a Time to Die, Sirk directed Imitation of Life (1959), the most successful movie of his career and, indeed, the most successful that Universal had ever produced. But he was forced to retire for health reasons shortly afterward. This is what Sirk had to say about Hudson in arguably his very best performance, in arguably Sirk’s best movie: “He accepted the role in Tarnished Angels, a part that was very far from what he usually played. I couldn’t see another American actor in the role.”

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Beachside for Magnificent Obsession

Pictures of Douglas Sirk  :




Dancing Rock Hudson

“Young contract players like Rock and the others who came on board around the same time were given a modest salary and rigorous training in nearly everything : acting, singing, dancing, horseback riding – in fact, in anythingthe studio heads thought might come in handy.”

From IDOL, Rock Hudson The true story of an american film hero by Jerry Oppenheimer and Jack Vitek

Come September :

Photos courtesy of Leo Fuchs. http://www.leofuchs.com

All that Heaven allows :



Miscellaenous :

Rock Hudson 1962 Dani Crayne Life Magazine 1960s

Leslie Caron and Rock Hudson in “A very special favor” dancing set. Courtesy of Leo Fuchs photography http://www.leofuchs.com

Has anybody seen my Gal ?