Raymond (above) with Dolores del Rio in Flying Down to Rio* 1933.
His wife of 28 years, Jeanette MacDonald, was much more famous, but Gene Raymond (1908-1998) had a solid career as a leading man of stage, film and TV. He had a strapping physique with blond hair and blue eyes. He was also a singer and composer, writer, director and producer – and a decorated military pilot.
Louis B. Mayer of MGM studios arranged the marriage to prevent MacDonald from marrying her on-screen partner Nelson Eddy, which would have ruined her career. Mayer was concerned that a MacDonald-Eddy marriage would end in divorce, due to their temperaments, then he would lose his lucrative box office team. MacDonald had an affair with Eddy anyway, and Gene Raymond continued to have affairs with other men. In fact, on their honeymoon MacDonald caught Raymond in an embrace with actor Buddy Rogers.
Raymond and wife Jeanette MacDonald (below).
But it gets even messier. Raymond, whose career peaked during the 1930s and 40s, was arrested three times for having sex with men, the last of which occurred in England during WWII. In 1938 Raymond began sharing a house with a 19-year-old actor and was arrested on a morals charge following a raid on a homosexual night club, requiring MacDonald to bribe police in order to obtain his release. An enraged Louis B. Mayer ordered the couple to resume the appearance of a happily married couple. Although he had arranged the marriage, Mayer had Raymond blacklisted following his 1938 arrest for homosexual activity; he made only 7 films from 1940-1948, whereas he had averaged four movies a year prior to the 1938 arrest. Raymond also had affairs with Rock Hudson, Cesar Romero and Robert Stack.
He appeared opposite W.C. Fields, Humphrey Bogart, Ann Southern, Charles Laughton, Loretta Young, Bette Davis, Jean Harlow, Dolores del Rio, Fred Astaire, Joan Crawford, Robert Montgomery, Carole Lombard, Robert Mitchum and his own wife, who recorded “Let Me Always Sing,” which Raymond composed. Jeanette MacDonald also sang several of Raymond’s songs in her concerts. In 1948's Million Dollar Weekend, Raymond was also director and writer, in addition to being a cast member.
Raymond remarried after Jeanette MacDonald’s death but continued to attend meetings of the Jeanette MacDonald International Fan Club. He retired from the Air Force in 1968 as a colonel. For his contribution to the motion picture and television industries, Raymond has two stars on the Hollywood Walk of Fame: at 7003 Hollywood Boulevard and 1704 Vine Street, respectively.
Enjoy this clip from Flying Down to Rio (1933) with Delores del Rio. Raymond is very blond and a very young 25:
If Gene Raymond was arrested for homosexual activity in 1938, how did he survive to become a Colonel in the air force?
ReplyDeletehe was a priest too
DeleteBecause he was close friends with the General.
DeleteHollywood moguls covered up arrests, abortions, affairs etc, They paid people off. Cover ups are a well know fact.
ReplyDeleteThis piece is ridiculous, beginning with Louis B. Mayer blacklisting anyone from a studio other than his own. If they wanted him, he would have worked more. That he made films, and was a television host speaks against this infantile premise, whether or not he was gay.
ReplyDeleteFrom your blogger:
DeleteMany sources relate the "power" of Louis B. Mayer over stars, even those not working for him. I don't make this stuff up. Raymond, accustomed to making 5 movies a year, didn't work in films for two years as a result of Mayer's tampering.
For starters, go to:
http://maceddy.com/biography/biography-3/
He wasn't a TV host. Gen Rayburn was not Gene Raymond
DeleteYour blogger begs to differ.
DeleteFrom his obituary:
He was host, panellist or actor on many television shows including Fireside Theatre, Ironside and The Girl from U.N.C.L.E. and had appeared in touring or summer stock productions of popular plays like The Voice of the Turtle, Private Lives and the musical Kiss Me Kate.
His blond hair had such a shiny sheen, unlike other actors. How was it done?
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ReplyDeleteFlying Down to Rio is better known as the film which initiated the pairing of Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers, whose big dance number at the end of the film completely overshadowed the featured stars. Also there's a story in Raymond's Wikipedia biography that Nelson Eddy beat Gene Raymond up after discovering that he had been abusive to McDonald. Which was also covered up.
ReplyDeleteWhy on earth would they stay married for 28 years if all this were true.? Stars separated and divorced all the time in those years.
ReplyDeleteHollywood studios would force/encourage anything to protect their money machines -- their actors and actresses. Easier to put a lid on their star's homosexual dalliances if he were married to a woman. Then they could pass it off as "gossip" or "rumors."
DeletePoor Jeanette Macdonald...I read that Gene was physically abusive towards her too? I hope that’s not true. Many closeted men took their frustrations out on their wives because they were unable to live their truth. One of my aunts worked for a neighbor to the MacDonald family in Philadelphia. They met her once and said that she was sweet natured.
ReplyDeleteWho was Nelson Bentley Hees, the person Raymond married after MacDonald died? Sounds like a guy? In 1975 there were no gay marriages so how could Gene Raymond have “married” a guy—Nelson Bentley Hees
ReplyDeletefrom your blogger:
ReplyDelete"Nelson" was a woman, known to her friends as "Nel"
Nelson “ Nellie” Ada Bentley Hees was a woman. just read her obit
ReplyDeleteGene Raymond married my aunt Nelson Hees, and he lived with her at her estate in Pacific Palesades until his death. He became a rather bitter person, my aunt died first of alzheimers...I always very much enjoyed my aunts company, as she was a very glamorous creature, lots of interesting friends and very adept at skiing and paddle tennis....It was not very enjoyable for my family to visit with them as a couple as Gene was very irritable and had a chip on his shoulder. Being of a different generation, we didn't know of his stardom and I think that was very hard on him. We also didn't know that he was gay....and I don't know if my aunt knew that.....She took excellent care of him when he had health issues, and he had lots of freedom at her estate.
ReplyDeleteYour reply is so interesting and insightful, especially that it is firsthand. I wonder why Gene was bitter and had a chip on his shoulder, beyond his star losing its light. Any thoughts?
ReplyDeleteEveryone paints Gene as the villian. I think it was a forced lavender marriage BUT both Gene and Jeanette benefitted from it. So as far as Gene was concerned, he lived his life during a closeted gay era and she could have Nelson. Good arrangement which enabled them to lead their separate lived unhindered by the rotten press (Gene had one too you know, not just Jeanette). I think Gene lived up to his end of the bargain, but Jeanette would interfere and ruin Gene's ability to lead his life at home as a gay man like he needed. That's why I believe he was so bitter. His life was wrecked by that time. He played fair, she should have too.
ReplyDeleteHi Paul, I think that you are right in that he never was allowed to
ReplyDeletebe himself, and that may have been a big part of why he seemed so bitter. In reflection, I am sure that it was hard for him to have our family over and my aunt getting all the loving attention which he was so used to in his youth. Thank you for
your observations, nice to put things in the right perspective!
Thank you so much for your comment. And more so, that it gave a new perspective to you. Me too, to be honest. I looked after the elderly all my adult life. I found that women age gracefully. Men are taught by their parents to be strong, arrogant and conceited. So when they are young, and very handsome, esp., like Gene Raymond was, the world is theirs to have. But unfortunately by the time they hit 50, their looks fade, and their strength, as does their accomplishments..often all they have are memories of yesterday, when they were on top. By the time they are older, they really resent life. My dad was like this, and if I didn't work on it every day, at almost 60, I could feel me going like this too. But I refuse to. Gene's problem is he got old...too old to act, to old to be remembered by anyone, too old to be attractive to young gay men, and my guess he felt like a relic, waiting to die. But for your Aunt, that just couldn't have been easy AT ALL! After all, she got older and it sounds like she didn't succumb to being an antique. It sounds like your Aunt really enjoyed life...all of it, and that is the way it should be. That is the lesson I take from this and thank you so much for reminding me. It is one that is just too easy to forget. Merry Christmas and God bless you!!
DeleteI just wanted to add, I researched Gene because I just felt there was much more human to the story than he was a total villain and Jeanette was the ingenue who could do no wrong. He came from a violent home where his parents fought ferociously. His real home became the theater and the actors there. That is where I believe he was introduced to the gay lifestyle from age 12-23, I think with older men. Then Hollywood, stardom. In the late 30's he always sought young men/teens, just like he was in the theater. In the studio days, they didn't care what you did, as long as you didn't interfere with them making money. That included not getting caught doing anything the public would turn against...ok to do it, not ok to get caught, so lots of coverups. Then they are yesterday's news and it's over when they get too old.
ReplyDelete