Word: gays
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...mother welcomed him when he got home to Brooklyn, and thought he seemed "happy and gay." But that evening on the way to a dance, Edgar ran his stolen car through a red light, and led the cops a wild chase which did not end until they started shooting at him. He was arrested, returned to Fort Dix, and taxed with the murder of the officer. He promptly confessed. But when he was asked about his motive, he was less helpful. Edgar was apparently trying to cooperate, but he just didn't seem to know why he had killed...
...loving former President and his gay companions settled down in Paris' Hotel Plaza-Athéne, near the Champs Elysées, his friends in Mexico found a neat explanation for the trip: he had gone abroad to prepare the way for a family vacation next month...
...Morton-Stewart was blazing a glittering, champagne-splashed trail. In Paris, he enchanted the café set with a series of brilliant parties at a little bistro in the Rue Pierre Charron. But when detectives, spurred on by the travel agency, in Birmingham, arrived to check up on "the gay Englishman." he had disappeared. The travel agency did not say why they wanted Morton-Stewart, only that they were "most anxious to trace him." It was not hard. Soon afterward he checked into Rome's Hotel Excelsior as Horace Albert Hall. He stayed only long enough (a week...
...even as primitive satire, the story is more tolerable than the usual musicomedy romance. There are some amusing burlesque ditties-Who Is the Bravest? and Every Street's a Boulevard in Old New York. There are glittering Miles White costumes and gay Harry Horner sets. As Hazel, Helen Gallagher is an attractive, versatile and spirited malade imaginaire. And, with New York for a locale and a tour of it as part of the plot, Hazel Flagg at times achieves the welcome variety and topicality of a revue...
...Crimson team also included Ralph Brown, Arthur Cuse, Ebenezer Gay, and Willard Nason...