Tyrone Edmund Power, Jr. (May 5, 1914 – November
15, 1958), usually credited as
Tyrone Power and
known sometimes as "Ty Power", was an American film and
stage actor who appeared in dozens of films from the
1930s to the 1950s, often in
swashbuckler roles or romantic leads such as in
The Mark of
Zorro,
Blood and
Sand,
The Black
Swan,
Prince of
Foxes,
The Black
Rose, and
Captain from
Castile.
Though renowned for his dark, classically handsome looks that made
him a matinee idol from his first film appearance, Power played a
wide range of roles, from film noir to light romantic comedy. In
the 1950s, he began placing limits on the number of movies he would
make in order to have time for the stage. He received his biggest
accolades as a stage actor in
John Brown's Body and
Mister Roberts. Power
died from a
heart attack at the age of
44.
Early life
Born in
Cincinnati,
Ohio
in 1914, the only son of the English-born American
stage and screen actor Tyrone Power,
Sr. and Helen Emma "Patia" Reaume, Power was descended from a
long theatrical line going back to his great-grandfather, the
Irish born actor and comedian Tyrone Power . He had French
blood from both his parents, being descended from Catholic French
Canadians through his mother's Reaume family, and from Protestant
Huguenots through his paternal
grandmother's Lavenu and Blossett ancestors.
Through his paternal
great grandmother, Anne Gilbert, Power was related to the actor Sir
Laurence Olivier; through his
paternal grandmother, Ethel Lavenu, he
was related by marriage to author Evelyn
Waugh and through his father's first cousin, Norah Emily Gorman
Power, he was related to the theatrical director Sir (William)
Tyrone Guthrie, founder of the
Stratford Theatre in Canada
and the
Tyrone Guthrie
Theatre
in Minneapolis, Minnesota
.
During the first year of Power's life, he lived in Cincinnati. His
father was absent for long periods caused by his stage commitments
in New York.
Young Power was a sickly child, and his
doctor advised his family that the climate in California
might be better for his health. The family
moved there in 1915, and Power's sister Anne was born there on
August 26, 1915. The parents appeared together on stage and, in
1917, their movie,
The Planter, was released. Tyrone
Power, Sr., as he later became known, found himself away from home
more frequently, as his stage career took him to New York. The
Powers drifted apart, and they divorced around 1920.
After the divorce, Patia Power worked as a stage actress. In 1921,
at the age of 7, young Tyrone appeared with his mother in the
mission play,
La Golondrina, at San Gabriel, California. A
couple of years later the family moved back to Cincinnati, where
they lived with the family of Patia's aunt, Helen Schuster Martin,
founder of the Schuster-Martin School of Drama. Power's mother
supported her family as a drama and voice coach at the
Schuster-Martin School. For several years she coached her son in
voice and dramatics during her spare time Power grew up in the
Martin household with his two cousins, Roberta and William [Bill],
the children of his mother's aunt Helen and her husband, William
Martin.
Power went to Cincinnati-area Catholic
schools and graduated from Purcell High School
in 1931. Upon his graduation, he opted to
join his father to learn what he could about acting from one of the
stage's most respected actors.
Career
1930s
Tyrone Power joined his father for the summer of 1931, after being
separated from him for some years due to his parents' divorce. His
father suffered a heart attack in December 1931, dying in his son's
arms, while preparing to perform in
The Miracle Man.
Tyrone Power, Jr., as he was then known, decided to continue his
pursuit of an acting career. He went door to door, trying to get
work as an actor, and, while many contacts knew his father well,
they offered praise for his father but no work for him. He appeared
in a bit part in 1932 in
Tom Brown of Culver, a movie
starring actor Tom Brown. Power's experience in that movie didn’t
open any other doors, however, and, except for what amounted to
little more than a job as an extra in
Flirtation Walk, he
found himself frozen out of the movies but making some appearances
in community theater. Discouraged, he took the advice of friend,
Arthur Caesar, to go to New York to get experience as a stage
actor.
Along the way, he stopped in Chicago, where his friend,
Don Ameche, a radio personality, convinced him to
stay awhile to work in radio. He wasn’t able to get a foothold in
radio, however, and he eventually went on to New York. There, he
met
Katharine Cornell, the great
stage actress, who cast him as an understudy for
Burgess Meredith, for the play,
Flowers
of the Forest. A better stage break came, though, when Cornell
put him in the role of Benvolio in
Romeo and Juliet. During this time,
Hollywood scouts saw him and offered him a screen test. Katharine
Cornell advised against going to Hollywood, without a little more
stage experience, and Tyrone Power took her advice. Cornell gave
him a substantial role in her next stage play, St. Joan. Once
again, Hollywood scouts saw him and offered him a screen test.
Cornell told him that he was ready.
Tyrone Power went to Hollywood in 1936, where he was signed by 20th
Century-Fox. He would be their top leading man for years to come.
He got a false start at 20th Century-Fox, though, when he was
assigned to
Sing Baby Sing, at the request of
Alice Faye, already a star for the studio. The
director,
Sidney Lanfield, didn’t
recognize his potential and removed him from the cast, telling him
that he should find another line of work, as he would never become
an actor. Faye intervened again on his behalf, and she convinced
the studio to give him another chance. He was assigned to a small
part in
Girls’ Dormitory. In this movie, he caught the eye
of many fans, among them
Hedda Hopper,
who stayed for a second showing to find out who the young man was
with just a few lines at the end of the movie. Following that, he
was cast in a slightly larger part in
Ladies in Love, which starred
Janet Gaynor,
Constance Bennett, and
Loretta Young. It looked as though 20th
Century-Fox was not going to pick up his option, however, and
Tyrone Power then went to the office of director
Henry King to ask him to consider him
for a role. King was impressed with his looks and poise, and he
insisted that Tyrone Power be tested for the lead role in
Lloyd's of London, a role thought to already belong to Don
Ameche. Despite
Darryl F. Zanuck's reservations, he decided to go
ahead and give him the lead role in the movie, once Henry King and
Fox editor,
Barbara McLean, convinced
him that Power had a greater screen presence than did Don Ameche.
He was fourth billed in the movie, but he had by far the most
screen time of any actor. He walked into the premiere of the movie
an unknown, and he walked out a star, which he stayed for the
remainder of his career.
Tyrone Power racked up hit after hit from 1936 until 1943, when his
career was interrupted for military service. In these years, he
starred in romantic comedies such as
Thin Ice and
Day-Time Wife; in dramas such as
Suez,
Blood and Sand,
The Rains Came, and
In Old Chicago; in the
musicals,
Alexander's Ragtime
Band,
Second Fiddle, and
Rose of Washington Square; in
the westerns,
Jesse
James (1939) and
Brigham
Young; in the war films,
Yank in the R.A.F. and
This Above All; and, of course, the swashbucklers,
The Mark of
Zorro and
The Black Swan.
Jesse James
was a very big hit at the box office, but it did receive some
criticism for fictionalizing and glamorizing the famous outlaw.
The movie
was shot in and around the Pineville, Missouri
area and was Power's first location shoot and his
first Technicolor movie. Before
his career was over, he would have filmed a total of 16 movies in
color, including the movie he was filming when he died. He was
loaned out once, for MGM for 1938's
Marie Antoinette.
Darryl F. Zanuck was angry that MGM used Fox's
biggest star in what was, despite billing, a supporting role, and
he vowed to never again loan him out. Though Power's services were
requested for the role of Ashley Wilkes in
Gone with the Wind, Joe
Bonaparte in
Golden Boy,
Paris in
King's Row, by Harry
Cohn for several films throughout the years, and by
Norma Shearer herself for her planned
production of
The Last
Tycoon to play Irving Thalberg, Zanuck stuck by his
original decision.
He was named the second biggest box office draw in 1939, only
surpassed by
Mickey Rooney.
1940s
In 1940 the direction of Tyrone Power's career took a dramatic turn
when his movie,
The
Mark of Zorro, was released. Power played the role of Don
Diego Vega, fop by day, and Zorro, bandit hero by night. The role
had been made famous by Douglas Fairbanks in the 1920 movie by the
same title. Power's performance was excellent, and 20th Century Fox
often cast him in swashbucklers in the years that followed. Power
was actually an excellent swordsman, and the dueling scene in
The Mark of Zorro is considered one of the finest in
screen history. The great Hollywood swordsman,
Basil Rathbone, who starred with him in
The Mark of Zorro, commented, "Power was the most agile
man with a sword I’ve ever faced before a camera. Tyrone could have
fenced
Errol Flynn into a cocked
hat."
Despite being kept busy making movies at 20th Century-Fox, Tyrone
Power found time to do radio and stage work. He appeared with his
wife,
Annabella, in several
radio broadcasts, including the plays
Blood and Sand,
The Rage of Manhattan, and
Seventh Heaven. He
also appeared with her in the stage play,
Liliom, in
Country Playhouse, Westport, Connecticut, in 1941. He worked with
other big names, in radio. Among those he starred with were
Humphrey Bogart,
Jeanne Crain,
Loretta
Young,
Alice Faye, and
Al Jolson.
Tyrone Power's career was interrupted in 1943 by military service.
He reported to the U.S. Marines for training in late 1942, but he
was sent back, at the request of 20th Century-Fox, to complete one
more film, 1943's
Crash Dive, a
patriotic war movie. He was credited in the movie as Tyrone Power,
U.S.M.C.R., and the movie served as much as anything as a
recruiting film.
Anne Baxter, would
become a leading lady of his, both on the screen and on stage.
Other than re-releases of his films, he wasn’t seen on screen again
until 1946, when he co- starred with
Gene
Tierney in
The
Razor's Edge, an adaptation of
Somerset Maugham's
novel of the same name.
Next up for release was a movie that Tyrone Power had to fight hard
to make – the
film noir,
Nightmare Alley. Darryl F.
Zanuck was reluctant to allow Power to make the movie; his handsome
appearance and charming manner had been a marketable asset to the
studio and Zanuck feared that the dark role might hurt Power's
image. Zanuck eventually agreed, giving him A-list production
values for what normally would be a B film. The movie was directed
by
Edmund Goulding, and, though the
film died at the box office (Zanuck did not publicize it and
removed it from release), Power received some of the best reviews
of his career. The film was released on DVD in 2005 after years of
legal battles, and Power once again received favorable reviews from
21st century critics.
Power's venture into gritty drama was short lived, as he was next
seen in a costume movie,
Captain from Castile, directed by
Henry King, who directed Tyrone Power in eleven movies. After
making a couple of light romantic comedies,
That Wonderful Urge (with Gene
Tierney, his co-star from
The Razor's Edge) and
The Luck of the
Irish (with Anne Baxter), Power found himself once again
in swashbucklers –
The Black
Rose and
Prince of
Foxes.
1950s
As the 1950s rolled around, Power was becoming increasingly unhappy
with his movie assignments, with such movies as
American Guerrilla in the
Philippines and
Pony Soldier, so in 1950 he
traveled to England to play the title role in
Mister Roberts to sellout crowds,
for twenty-three weeks, at the London Coliseum.
His movies had been very profitable for Fox and, as an enticement
to renew his contract, they offered him the lead role in
The Robe. He turned it down
(the job ultimately went to
Richard
Burton) and, on 1 November 1952, left on a ten week national
tour with
John Brown's
Body, a three-person dramatic reading of
Stephen Vincent Benet's narrative
poem, adapted and directed by
Charles
Laughton, and featuring Power,
Judith Anderson and
Raymond Massey; which culminated in a run of
65 shows between February and April 1953 at the New Century Theater
on Broadway.
His studio had granted him permission to seek his own roles outside
20th Century-Fox, with the understanding that he would fulfill his
fourteen-film commitment to them in between his other projects. In
1953 he made
The Mississippi Gambler for Universal
Studios, negotiating a deal entitling him to a percentage of the
profits, and earned a million dollars from the movie.
The critics had applauded his performances in "John Brown's Body"
earlier in the year, a second national tour with the show followed
in October 1953, this time for four months, with Raymond Massey and
Anne Baxter.
Between November, 1954 and April, 1955 he toured the USA and Canada
with British dramatist
Christopher
Fry's
The Dark
is Light Enough , ending with 12 weeks at the Anta
Theater, New York and two weeks at the Colonial Theater, Boston.
His performance in Julian Claman's
A Quiet Place, staged
at the National Theater, Washington, at the end of 1955 was warmly
received by the critics.
Untamed, Tyrone Power's last movie made under his contract
with 20th Century-Fox, was released in 1955, and same year saw the
release of
The Long Gray
Line, a successful
John Ford film
for
Columbia Pictures.
In 1956,
the year Columbia released The
Eddy Duchin Story, another great success for the star, he
returned to England to play the rake, Dick Dudgeon, in a revival of
Shaw's The Devil's Disciple for one week
at the Opera
House
in Manchester
and nineteen weeks at the Winter Garden,
London.
His old boss, Darryl F. Zanuck, persuaded him to play the lead role
in
The Sun Also Rises
(1957), adapted from the
Hemingway
novel. Released that same year were
Abandon Ship and John
Ford's
Rising of the Moon (narrator only). Tyrone Power's
last film role turned out to be one of his most highly regarded,
cast against type as the accused murderer, Leonard Vole, in
Agatha Christie's
Witness for the
Prosecution, directed by
Billy
Wilder. The critic for
The National Post, Robert
Fulford, commented on the "superb performance" of Power as "the
seedy, stop-at-nothing exploiter of women" which was in sharp
contrast to his earlier swashbuckling roles and romantic heroes.
The movie was well received and a success at the box office.
Power returned to the stage in March, 1958 to play the lead in
Arnold Moss's adaptation of
Shaw's 1921 play,
Back to Methuselah. In September
1958, Tyrone Power went to Madrid and Valdespartera, Spain, to film
the epic,
Solomon and
Sheba, to be directed by
King
Vidor. He had filmed about 75 percent of his scenes when he was
stricken with a massive heart attack, as he was filming a dueling
scene with his frequent co-star and friend,
George Sanders. He died enroute to
the hospital.
Yul Brynner was brought in
to take over the role of Solomon. The filmmakers used some of the
long shots that Tyrone Power had filmed, and an observant fan can
see him in some of the scenes, particularly in the middle of the
duel.
Tyrone Power's last movie, fittingly, was to be in a familiar role,
with sword in hand. He is perhaps best remembered as a
swashbuckler, and, indeed, he was one of the finest swordsmen in
Hollywood. Director
Henry King
said, "People always seem to remember Ty with sword in hand,
although he once told me he wanted to be a character actor. He
actually was quite good – among the best swordsmen in films."
Personal life

Tyrone Power and Annabella after their
wedding ceremony in Bel-Air, California in 1939.
Tyrone Power was one of Hollywood's most eligible bachelors when he
married French actress,
Annabella (born Suzanne Georgette
Charpentier) on April 23, 1939. They met on the 20th Century-Fox
lot, around the time they starred together in the movie,
Suez. Annabella was a big star in France when 20th
Century-Fox brought her over to America, and she was given the big
buildup as the next great French star for Hollywood pictures. When
Darryl F. Zanuck, 20th Century-Fox studio boss, realized the
seriousness of the romance between her and his top male star,
however, he strongly objected, fearing that Power would lose part
of his female fan base if he were married. Zanuck offered to give
Annabella plum roles in movies to be filmed abroad, in order to get
her out of the country and away from one of Hollywood's biggest
heartthrobs. When Power and Annabella went against Zanuck's wishes
and married, Annabella's career at 20th Century Fox suffered
greatly. After the marriage, Zanuck refused to assign her to movies
for the studio, in punishment for their disobedience. After her
marriage, she had to wait until after Tyrone Power had left the
studio for military service to make another movie. This lack of
movie work caused the very talented actress to seek stage work in
order to help satisfy her desire to act. In an A&E biography,
Annabella said that Zanuck "could not stop Tyrone's love for me, or
my love for Tyrone." Their marriage, by all accounts at the time,
was a happy one for the first couple of years, but it was on rocky
ground by the time Tyrone left for the U.S. Marines in 1943.
His extramarital affair with
Judy
Garland is said to have contributed to the failure of their
marriage. However, those close to the couple say that there were
also other reasons for the marriage failure.
J. Watson
Webb, close friend and an editor at 20th Century Fox,
maintained, in the
A&E Biography, that one of the
reasons the marriage fell apart was the inability of Annabella to
give him a child. He said that there was no bitterness between the
couple. In a March 1947 issue of
Photoplay, Power was
interviewed and said that he wanted a home and children. Annabella
shed some light on the situation in an interview that she did for
Movieland magazine in 1948. She said, "Our troubles began
because the war started earlier for me, a French-born woman, than
it did for Americans." She explained that the war clouds over
Europe made her unhappy and irritable and, to get her mind off her
troubles, she began accepting stage work, which often took her away
from home, for weeks, or in one case, months at a time. "It is
always difficult to put one's finger exactly on the place and time
where a marriage starts to break up," she said. "But I think it
began then. We were terribly sad about it, both of us, but we knew
we were drifting apart. I didn’t think then - and I don’t think now
- that it was his fault, or mine." The couple tried to make their
marriage work when Power returned from military service, but they
were unable to do so. Annabella claimed that he had changed too
much during the war. They were legally separated in the fall of
1946 and divorced a couple of years later. Despite the divorce,
they remained close until his death.
Following his separation from Annabella, Power entered into a love
affair with
Lana Turner which lasted for
a couple of years. In the fall of 1948, however, he went on a
good-will trip to Europe and South Africa. On that trip, he saw and
fell in love with
Linda Christian,
in Rome. Upon his return to the U.S., he broke the news to Lana
Turner that their romance was over. In her autobiography, Turner
said that MGM, her home studio, and 20th Century Fox, Power's
studio, conspired to break up their romance. Each studio feared
that they would lose their star to the other studio, if they were
to marry. Turner claimed that, when Power made his goodwill trip to
Europe and South Africa, the story of her dining out with
Frank Sinatra, a friend, was leaked to Power,
who became very upset with her "dating" another man, in his
absence. Turner also claimed that there was just too much
coincidence in Linda Christian's being at the same hotel as Tyrone
Power, and she implied that Christian had obtained Power's
itinerary from 20th Century Fox.
Power and Christian were married on January 27, 1949, in the Church
of Santa Francesca, with an estimated 8,000 – 10,000 screaming fans
outside the church. Christian miscarried three times before finally
giving birth to a baby girl,
Romina
Francesca Power, on October 2, 1951. A second daughter,
Taryn Stephanie Power, was born
September 13, 1953. Around the time of Taryn's birth, the Power
marriage was rocky. In her autobiography, Christian blamed her
husband's extramarital affairs on the breakup of her marriage.
However, she acknowledged that she had an affair with
Edmund Purdom, which created great tension
between Christian and her husband. They divorced in 1955.
After his divorce from Christian, Power had a long-lasting love
affair with
Mai Zetterling, whom he
had met on the set of
Abandon Ship. At this point in time,
however, he vowed that he would never marry again, because he had
been twice burned financially from his previous marriages. He also
entered into an affair with a British actress, Thelma Ruby. In
1957, however, he met Deborah Ann Montgomery Minardos. They were
married on May 7, 1958, and she became
pregnant soon after.
She accompanied her
husband to Madrid
in September
1958, for the filming of Solomon
and Sheba. She was worried about his health and
asked him to slow down, but he pushed ahead with the movie. On
November 15, 1958, while filming a strenuous dueling scene for the
movie, he had a
heart attack
and died. His wife gave birth to his son,
Tyrone Power IV, on January 22,
1959.
Military service
In August 1942, he enlisted in the
Marine Corps.
He attended boot camp
at Marine Corps Recruit Depot San
Diego
and then attended Officer's Candidate
School at Marine Corps Base Quantico
, where he was commissioned a Second Lieutenant on June 2,
1943. Because he had already logged 180 solo hours
as a pilot prior to enlisting in the Marine Corps, Tyrone Power was
able to go though a short, intense flight training program at
Naval Air
Station Corpus Christi
, Texas
, where he
earned his wings and was promoted to First Lieutenant.
Power
arrived at Marine Corps Air Station Cherry
Point
, North
Carolina
in July,
1944 and was assigned to VMR-352 as an
R5C copilot. The squadron moved to
Marine
Corps Air Station El Toro
in California in October 1944. Power was
reassigned to
VMR-353 and joined them on
Kwajalein in February 1945.
He flew cargo and
wounded Marines during the Battle of Iwo Jima
and the Battle of
Okinawa. He returned to the United States in November
1945 and he was released from active duty in January 1946. He was
promoted to Captain in the
reserves on May 8, 1951 but was not
recalled for service in the
Korean
War.
In the June 2001
Marine Air Transporter newsletter, Jerry
Taylor, a retired Marine Corps flight instructor, recalls memories
of
World War II. He speaks of training
Tyrone Power as a pilot, saying, "He was an excellent student,
never forgot a procedure I showed him or anything I told him."
Others who served with him have commented that he was
well-respected by those with whom he served.
Honors
Tyrone
Power was honored with having his handprints and footprints put in
cement at Grauman's Chinese Theater
on May 31, 1937. He was honored in a joint
ceremony with
Loretta Young, on the
occasion of the premiere of their movie
Cafe Metropole. At
the time of the ceremony, Tyrone was just 23 years old and had been
a major star for only six months. He signed the cement block, "To
Sid - Following in my father's footsteps", which was a tribute to
his father, stage and film star,
Tyrone Power, Sr..
Tyrone
Power's star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame
can be found at 6747 Hollywood Blvd.
Epilogue
Tyrone
Power was buried at Hollywood Cemetery, now known as Hollywood
Forever Cemetery
, Hollywood, California, at noon, on November 21,
1958, in a military service. The memorial service was held
at the Chapel of the Psalms, Hollywood Cemetery, with Chaplain
Thomas M. Gibson, U.S.N.R. officiating. The active pallbearers were
officers of the
United States
Marine Corps. Honorary pallbearers were
Charles Laughton,
Raymond Massey, Tommy Noonan, Theodore
Richmond, Murray Steckler,
Cesar
Romero, Watson Webb, Milton Bren, James Denton,
George Sidney, George Cohen, Lew Schreiber,
Lew Wasserman, and Harry Brand. Cesar
Romero gave the eulogy, using in it a tribute written by Tyrone
Power's good friend and frequent co-star,
George Sanders. Sanders had written the
tribute on the set of
Solomon and
Sheba, within the first few hours after Power's death. It
read as follows:
I shall always remember Tyrone as a bountiful man, a
man who gave freely of himself.
It mattered not to whom he gave.
His concern was in the giving.
I shall always remember his wonderful smile, a smile
that would light up the darkest hour of the day, like a
sunburst.
I shall always remember Tyrone Power as a man who gave
more of himself than it was wise for him to give, until in the end,
he gave his life.
Flying over the service was
Henry
King, who directed him in eleven movies. Almost 20 years
before, Tyrone had flown with King, in King's plane, to the set of
Jesse James in Missouri. It was then that Tyrone Power got
his first experience with flying, which would become such a big
part of his life, both in the U.S. Marines and in his private life.
In the foreword to Dennis Belafonte's
The Films of Tyrone
Power, King said, "Knowing his love for flying and feeling
that I had started it, I flew over his funeral procession and
memorial park during his burial, and felt that he was with me."
Tyrone Power was laid to rest, by a small lake, in one of the most
beautiful parts of the cemetery. His grave is marked by a unique
tombstone, in the form of a marble bench. On the tombstone are the
masks of comedy and tragedy, with the transcription, "Good night,
sweet prince."
Tyrone Power's will, filed on December 8, 1958, contained an
unusual provision. It stated his wish that, upon his death, his
eyes would be donated to the Estelle Doheny Eye Foundation, for
such purposes as the trustees of the foundation should deem
advisable, including transplantation of the cornea to the eyes of a
living person.
On the 50th anniversary of his death, Power was honored by American
Cinematheque with a weekend of films and remembrances by co-stars
and family, and a memorabilia display. The event was held at the
Egyptian Theatre in Los Angeles from November 14-16, 2008.
Post-death rumors
More than 20 years after Tyrone Power's death, Hector Arce cited
anonymous sources to support his claim that Power was bisexual. Up
until that time, no claims to this effect had been made. In his
1994 autobiography
Crying With Laughter, the British
comedian and actor
Bob Monkhouse
claimed that he had rejected advances from Power.
The fashion critic
Mr. Blackwell, in his 1995
autobiography From Rags to Bitches claimed that he met
Power when a young actor for "romantic moments in his dressing room
and took long rides speeding down Sunset to Malibu
". According to
William J. Mann, in his book
Behind the Screen: How
Gays and Lesbians Shaped Hollywood, 1910-1969, Power was
involved in
homosexual relationships.
In his book,
The Evening Crowd at Kirmser's: A Gay Life in the
1940s, Ricardo J. Brown confirms that he had heard in New York
that there were "a lot of queer people in the theater and the
movies", among them Tyrone Power and
Tallulah Bankhead. In
Oops, I Lost My
Sense of Humor, Lois M. Santalo writes that "many stars of the
silver screen, dating back to Tyrone Power, had been gay". In
Robert Aldrich and Garry Wotherspoon's (both of
Sydney University)
Who's Who in
Contemporary Gay and Lesbian History: From World War II to the
Present Day, Power is listed among the "Top box office stars
who were gay or bisexual".
However, women with whom Power was married or had relationships
have denied any knowledge of homosexual leanings. His second wife,
Linda Christian, asserts that she and Power shared an intense love
and described his love for other women. Lana Turner, in her 1983
book
The Lady The Legend The Truth, and Mai Zetterling, in
All Those Tomorrows (1986) describe their two year long
affairs with Power. Other women with whom he was involved include
Gene Tierney,
Sonja Henie,
Judy
Garland,
Anita Ekberg and Mary
Roblee, an editor. People who knew Power as a close friend have
refuted the claims of
bisexuality:
Bob Buck, a pilot who served
as Power's co-pilot on a trip to Europe and
South Africa in 1947, in his autobiography
North Star Over My Shoulder stated (in responding to
rumors that he had read) "And while talking of Ty, I want to make
this clear, and as loudly as I can: he was not a homosexual..."
.
When asked about the subject on the
Phil Donahue Show in 1982, Lana
Turner said, "I can only say this, naturally I only heard about it
after his death. I think some terrible person wrote a book, but all
the time I knew him there was never a sign of it. Believe me he was
all man." While appearing on behalf of
Pfizer
in 1985,
Alice Faye said, "Well, we were
all babies. We had a great time working together...I never saw any
sign of any such thing." In
On Sunset Boulevard by Ed
Sikov [describing a trip that
Billy
Wilder took with Power and Charles Laughton] "Wilder saw no
evidence of homosexuality in Power." William Martin, Tyrone's
cousin and close boyhood friend, who also lived with Tyrone in
Hollywood from 1936 to 1939, always maintained that such rumours
were completely preposterous. "If Ty became bisexual, it happened
after 1939", Martin said. His daughter Romina states: "Tyrone Power
was not gay or bi-sexual. It's too easy to make a fast buck off of
someone who is not around anymore to tell the true story. It's
interesting to see what people suppose about one's parent. But more
interesting yet, is the truth." Further references to Power's
heterosexual relationships can be found
in the following:
Investigation Hollywood by Fred Otash,
The Gift Horse by Hildegard Knef,
Linda: My Own
Story by Linda Christian,
Lana: The Lady, the Legend, the
Truth by Lana Turner,
Whisper magazine, 1954,
No
More Tomorrows by Mai Zetterling,
Debbie: My Life by
Debbie Reynolds,
People Will Talk by John Kobal,
Queen
of Ice, Queen of Shadows: The Unsuspected Life of Sonja Henie
by Raymond Strait,
Self-Portrait by Gene Tierney and
Mickey Herskowitz, and
In Spite of Myself: A Memoir by
Christopher Plummer.
Height
There have been conflicting claims as to what his height was.
According to military record and television transcripts of
What's My Line, he was 6'
(1.83m).
Dorothy Kilgallen, whom Power once
dated, claimed his height at 6' (as did Power and John Daly) on an
episode of
What's My Line in 1955. While blindfolds were
on, Kilgallen asked, "Are you over 6 feet?" Power answered in his
fake voice, "No". When
Arlene Francis
correctly guessed that it was Power, Kilgallen was upset. "What do
you mean Tyrone you're not six feet tall?" she wanted to know. Both
Daly and Power corrected her together, "You said
over 6
feet".
Other sources cite his height as 5' 10" (1.78m).
Power's passport states that he was 5'11-1/2" tall.
Wives and children
- 1) Annabella, married April
23, 1939 and divorced January 26, 1948
- One daughter Anne Power (Annabella's daughter, adopted by
Tyrone Power)
- 2) Linda Christian, married
January 27, 1949 and divorced August 7, 1956
- 3) Deborah Ann Montgomery Minardos, married May 7, 1958
Filmography
References
External links