![]() Cesar Romero, who others romantically linked to Power in the early 30s, said that Power “loved the ladies,” but it didn’t stop Romero from procuring the occasional trick for him. In William Mann’s “Behind the Screen: How Gays and Lesbians Shaped Hollywood,” there’s even more evidence that Power enjoyed the company of young men. ![]() Longtime sex worker to the stars Smitty Hanson described Power as “a homosexual who found himself married with girls from time to time.” Power’s final marriage may, in fact, have been an open one. Perhaps Power wasn’t as kinky as was once thought, but it’s pretty clear that he got around. If there’s such a thing as normal gay sex, that’s what he was interested in.” Setting the record straight, he explained that “Ty was never out in what he wanted to do. You want the fame and fortune and you have this awful load to carry.”Īnother ex-hustler spoke out after Kenneth Anger’s “Hollywood Babylon” alleged that Power’s kink was coprophagia. I think that’s what kept him under wraps. ![]() “I know he went with a few gay guys,” Power’s friend Chuck Walters told Arce in the 1970s. He brought the main character of Somerset Maugham’s quizzical religious saga “The Razor’s Edge” to life in the film of the same name, and swashbuckled his way through 1949’s Prince of Foxes, a Borgia drama.īut what we he doing behind the scenes? According to biographer Hector Arce, getting busy with boys. But that seems like the main one: in almost all of his film roles throughout that decade, Power played a man of action, tortured by internal pain. ![]()
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