Patrick swayze bisexual
The year-old actress has named the ‘Dirty Dancing’ actor and the music legend as her first childhood crushes, and says she was obsessed with both the late stars as a youngster, because they “looked great in extremely tight pants”.
Asked if she ever dreamed of being a Disney star growing up, she said: “No, I wanted to be Judy Garland! I saw adult things at way too new an age. I watched ‘Chinatown’ when I was nine. Patrick Swayze was my biggest romantic interest. He still is. And David Bowie in ‘Labyrinth'. They opened my eyes to sexuality! Whoa! They both looked great in extremely tight pants.”
The ‘Marriage Story’ star began her own career as actress at a young age, and has said she learned how to “push” herself to achieve her goals by the time she was nine years old.
She added to W magazine’s Best Performances issue: “When I was nine years old, working on a film called ‘Just Cause’ with Laurence Fishburne, we were traveling on a plane somewhere for the motion picture, and he said to me, “Do you want to be an player or do you want to be a movie star?” I didn’t perceive what the difference was. I felt
Kirstie Alley Tells All: Private Romance With Patrick Swayze, Calls John Travolta 'Greatest Love'
ABC News' Vanessa Weber reports:
From "Dancing With the Stars" to her famously fluctuating weight, Kirstie Alley is a lady who loves to reinvent herself and isn't scared to tell all. Her latest disclosure: a confidential romance with Patrick Swayze.
The co-stars fell in love working on the movie "North and South," Alley said, and Swayze wanted Alley to receive a divorce from her husband and marry him, but Alley wouldn't perform it.
"I probably was more willing to split up my marriage, and I wasn't willing to break up his marriage," Alley told ABC News' Barbara Walters, in an interview about her unused book, "The Art of Men," which details her ups and downs in life and in love.
Alley's acting career took off, and her devote of Hollywood men did not end with Swayze. After a wildly flourishing run on "Cheers," Street signed on to undertake a film with John Travolta about a talking baby: 's "Look Who's Talking" and love bloomed.
Alley described Travolta, who shares her commitment to Scientology, as "th
John Leguizamo Says Patrick Swayze Was 'Difficult' To Work With
John Leguizamo says he still remembers how hard it was to labor with Patrick Swayze.
The duo co-starred alongside Wesley Snipes in “To Wong Foo, Thanks for Everything! July Newmar” (), a comedy about three drag queens on a road trip. When asked if the late great Swayze was the “angel” he’s remembered as, however, Leguizamo kept it real.
“It was difficult working with him,” he recalled Thursday on Sirius XM’s “Radio Andy.”
“[He was,] I don’t know, just neurotic, maybe a tiny bit insecure,” Leguizamo added, when host Andy Cohen asked for details. “And then Wesley and I, we vibed because, you know, we’re people of color and we got each other.”
Leguizamo was already an established comedian when he was cast in the part, which he said Thursday he “rewrote” because “that role was nothing.” While that creativity landed him his first Golden Globe nomination, Leguizamo said it made Swayze “mad and upset” on set.
“I’m also an improviser, and [Swayze] didn’t like that,” Leguizamo said. “He couldn’t keep up with it. He’d be l
The Untold Truth Of Patrick Swayze
In Ghost, Swayze plays Sam Wheat, a finance dude so in cherish with his wife (Demi Moore) and making sexy pottery with her that after he's killed by street thugs, he hangs around as a ghost to watch over her. Swayze almost didn't obtain the role — director Jerry Zucker eliminated him from consideration very preceding in the production process, telling People that he didn't want to cast him after he "made the mistake of seeing some of his other movies."
But Swayze was a huge star, which landed him an audition that he crushed. When he read the movie's terminal scene, where Sam says goodbye, "We all had tears in our eyes, right there in the office," Zucker said. "I saw a side of Patrick that I never knew existed."
Despite the shaky ground that led to his casting, Swayze went to bat for another crucial cast member. Whoopi Goldberg provided comic relief as Oda Mae Brown, a phony psychic who Sam, a real ghost, uses to keep in contact with the human world. Goldberg wasn't the filmmakers' first choice, and she said on The View in that there was "resistan