SIR OSBERT SITWELL, British author born (d. 1969); English writer. His elder sister was Dame Edith Sitwell and his younger brother was Sir Sacheverell; like them he devoted his life to art and literature. The Sitwells – Edith, Sacherverell and Osbert – represented everything that was oh-so-modern to English dandies of the 1920s. Their essays, particularly those by Osbert, are rich in discussions of archaeology, architecture, music, painting and the reverie evoked by names and places. Their charm, culture, and urbanity are recorded in Osbert’s multi-volume reminiscences of their patrician family and estate. Downton Abbey come to life.
Photographs of the Sitwells – particularly of Edith in her bizarre hats, all chosen for effect – are likely to put off the uninitiated from reading them. Drama critic James Agate’s affectionate remark should be taken under advisement: “The Sitwells are artists pretending to be asses.” Noel Coward’s 1923 satire on the Sitwells – in which the sister of the “Swiss Family Whittlebot” intones, “Life is essentially a curve and Art is an oblong within that curve. My brothers and I have been brought up on Rhythm as other children are brought up on Glaxo – resulted in a feud that lasted throughout the lifetimes of the four. Osbert’s great love affair with David Horner (“his great love”) is documented in John Pearson’s joint biography, The Sitwells.
Wally Cox with his boyfriend
1924 -
WALLY COX, American television and motion picture actor, born (d. 1973); Cox attended CCNY, had four months of Army service, and then attended New York University. He supported his invalid mother and sister by making and selling jewelry, in a small shop, and at parties — where he started doing comedy monologues for the guests, which were well-received enough to lead to regular performances at nightclubs such as the Village Vanguard, beginning in December 1948.
Cox appeared in Broadway musical reviews, night clubs, and early TV comedy-variety programs in the period 1949–1951, creating a huge impact with a starring role as a well-meaning but ineffective policeman on Philco Television Playhouse in 1951. Producer Fred Coe approached Cox about a starring role in a proposed live TV sitcom, Mr. Peepers, which he accepted. Peepers ran on NBC for three years and made Cox a household name in the US.
In his early New York days, he was the roommate of his boyhood friend, Marlon Brando, who encouraged him to study acting with Stella Adler. Cox and Brando remained very close friends for the rest of Cox's life, and Brando is reported to have kept Cox's ashes in his bedroom. Brando was quoted as saying, "Like a large number of men, I, too, have had homosexual experiences, and I am not ashamed." Wally Cox was an alleged long time lover of Brando's. Brando is quoted as saying: "If Wally had been a woman, I would have married him and we would have lived happily ever after." After Cox died, Brando kept his ashes for thirty years; they were eventually scattered with his own.
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