
After doing some hard time, Calhoun was discovered by A-list actor Alan Ladd, whose wife cast him in a number of walk-on roles with notable stars like Laurel and Hardy. Calhoun was then picked up by agent Henry Willson, who handled a stable of actors that, including Rock Hudson and Troy Donahue, all sort of looked like each other. Willson, who found his actors in various stressed backgrounds, schooled them in manners and diction, à la Henry Higgins in 'My Fair Lady.' With Willson's representation, Calhoun worked with stars like Rhonda Fleming, Edward G. Robinson, and Shirley Temple.
An odd episode during this time was Willson leaking the story of Calhoun's tarnished past to the tabloid gossip press in order to distract them from early rumors of homosexuality floating around Hollywood about his other client, Rock Hudson. The jail stories only served to enhance Calhoun's tough-guy reputation in the biz. Willson seemed to have the knack for picking actors with “slumdog” backgrounds which gave them an almost mythically loaded backstory. He guaranteed that the gossips would have a story arc for Willson's clients when the hacks finally took notice of them. That's some PR genius.
Calhoun went on to form his own production company, Rorvic, which made a number of western shoot 'em ups like the one pictured here, 'The Hired Gun.' The Hired Gun is the story of Calhoun, a bounty hunter of sorts, being paid to bring Marilyn Monroe lookalike, Anne Francis (60s TV's gal private eye 'Honey West'), back to justice at the end of a rope in Texas. Francis is accused of killing her husband, but (gee wiz) Calhoun falls in love with her on the trip!
Fun factoid about Calhoun: he's in the 80s horror classic 'Motel Hell.'
(A shout out to Wiki's 'Rory Calhoun' entry for detail's of Calhoun's life)
1 comment:
I love "The Hired Gun." Great article, thank you so much!!
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