Rock Hudson was secretly ‘hitting on’ James Dean on ‘Giant’ set 

Rock Hudson cemented his legacy as an icon of the Hollywood Golden Age with turns in hits like “Giant,” “Pillow Talk” and more.

The late actor’s biographer Mark Griffin appeared in the recent HBO documentary, “Rock Hudson: All That Heaven Allowed,” and has alleged that Hudson made sexual passes at costar James Dean.

Hudson — who died from an AIDS-related illness in 1985 — kept his homosexuality a secret among the social circles of Tinseltown.

Griffin claimed in the special that Hudson was “privately hitting on Dean” during shooting the 1956 drama.

“According to some accounts, James Dean was rather disdainful of Hudson,” he went on.

“Dean considered it hypocritical that Rock was maintaining this hetero facade in public,” Griffin explained. “Some might consider that a case of the pot calling the kettle black.”

“Giant” also starred Hudson’s friend Elizabeth Taylor, and was Dean’s last movie he shot before his 1955 death in a car crash.

The “East of Eden” alum portrayed a ranch hand, who enters into a bitter feud with a wealthy Texas rancher (played by Hudson) for over a period of several years.

The “Rebel Without a Cause” actor died in 1955 at the age of 24.
Courtesy Everett Collection

Griffin also alleged in the documentary that Dean was involved with a gay media executive who was pals with Hudson’s agent, Henry Willson.

“If you’re talking about shrouded sexuality, they weren’t all that different,” he noted.

In an archived interview featuring Hudson from 1983, he stated that he despised his younger castmate.

The “Dynasty” actor said that the only reason that “Giant” director George Stevens had cast Dean, was because he was “new and hot.”


Hudson was 59 when he died in 1985 from an AIDS-related illness.
Hudson was 59 when he died in 1985 from an AIDS-related illness.
Photofest

“As I said, I didn’t like the fella too much. I don’t know if I should say anymore. Jimmy was dead before the picture was over,” Hudson said at the time.”I don’t like to talk against anybody, and I don’t like to talk against the dead, so I think I should shut up.”

The doc also explored Hudson’s marriage to Willson’s secretary Phyllis Gates.

Gates and the Illinois native were married from 1955 until 1958.

Griffin dished that Gates had no idea that Hudson was gay when they first began dating.

“[It] is really hard to swallow given the fact that virtually every bit player, makeup man, assistant gopher at Universal knew the score about Rock Hudson. How did she possibly miss the memo?” Griffin wondered about Gates’ confusion.

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