Robert wagner is gay

So was Robert Wagner bi or what?

This book review says his first divorce from Natalie was brought about when she walked in on him and another guy.

And there's that persistent rumor that the identical thing happened on The Splendor that night with Christopher Walken, which prompted the drunken Natalie to try to get off the boat- with tragic results.

So... did R.J. like hole and pole? He never really pinged to me, though he was handsome enough to get anyone.

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by Anonymousreply 185January 8, 2021 10:05 AM

He was certainly handsome enough in his prime, that's for sure. Some pics and scenes in his movies show a very promising bulge begging for attention.

So, I vote Bi.

He is heartbreaking in "With A Song In My Heart" with Susan Hayward. Going from a shiny eyed grinning recruit to an void shell shocked veteran in the Army hospital audience.

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by Anonymousreply 1February 11, 2014 10:32 AM

Spencer Tracy was very interested in him, and RJ was regarded as his 'protege' - doing 2 films with him. They are meant to be brothers in the 1956 The Mountain but Wagner then in his 20s looked like a teenager while Tracy seemed old enough to play h

Natalie Wood caught husband Robert Wagner cheating on her with a MAN two decades before she died mysteriously on a yacht with him and Christopher Walken, actress' sister claims in bombshell interview

The sister of late actress Natalie Wood has revealed that her first marriage to Robert 'RJ' Wagner ended after she caught him cheating on her with a man.

Lana Wood, 72, offered the bombshell revelation in chapter three of Fatal Voyage: The Mysterious Death of Natalie Wood, saying that her starlet sister caught Wagner in the arms of another man in June of 1961.

The 12-part audio documentary provides a detailed look into Natalie's life via exclusive interviews with Hollywood insiders who watched her blossom as a toddler star, rocket to full-fledged fame and ultimately meet an untimely death while on a yacht with Wagner and Christopher Walken.

Natalie herself described the terminate of her first marriage in veiled language in a never-before-seen memoir, obtained by the makers of the podcast.

Natalie Wood and Robert Wagner are seen together in 1960. Natalie's sister claims that their first marriage ended the following year after she caught Wagner in the arms of another man

'My marria

Natalie Wood's anguish after catching husband Robert Wagner 'romping' with their butler

Natalie Wood and Robert Wagner were Hollywood's golden couple but their marriage went into a dangerous downward spiral after she allegedly caught him 'intertwined' their live-in butler

Natalie Wood appeared to have it all support in 1961 - she was 22 years senior, married to one of Hollywood's most handsome actors and was on the cusp of superstardom herself.


The actress was married to her childhood crush - Robert Wagner - and was just months away from the release of her films West Side Story and Splendour In The Grass with Warren Beatty.


However, her marriage was dealt a crushing inflate that the couple struggled to recover from.


According to a new biography of Wood by Suzanne Finstad, the actress went to pieces after allegedly catching her husband in a clinch with their English live-in butler.

In the guide, it's suggested that Wood woke up in the middle of the bedtime at their Beverly Hills home and found her husband missing.

She went looking for him and set up him "in flagrante" with David Cavendish - an employee who lived w

Robert Wagner on Life, Career and Natalie

Sept. 22, 2008 — -- With five decades as an actor under his belt, Robert Wagner has a lot of stories to tell, and in his new memoir, "Pieces of My Heart," he opens up about his career and personal life.

The star of such films like "Kiss Before Dying," "The Longest Day" and "The Pink Panther," Wagner talks about about the sudden death of his life's love, actress Natalie Wood.

Read an excerpt of "Pieces of My Heart" below and test out more books featured on "Good Morning America" by checking out our library.

Each of the major studios was like a royal court that was in competition with the other royal courts. Each studio had a social lion who maintained a prestigious individual salon, and it wasn't necessarily the studio leader. Then there were the salons that owed no special allegiance to any studio, but cherry-picked from all the elites, such as the one maintained by Bill and Edie Goetz.

At Fox, the elite circle was presided over by Clifton Webb. I worked with Clifton on "Stars and Stripes Forever," a biopic about John Philip Sousa, then &q