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Actor Richard Chamberlain' Premium Photographic Print - David Mcgough |  Art.com | Richard chamberlain, Chamberlain, RichardRichard Chamberlain (born March 31, 1934) is an American actor who built a career in television, film, and theater playing romantic heterosexual roles. Deeply closeted for most of his life, he at last publicly acknowledged his homosexuality in his 2003 memoir Shattered Love.

Chamberlain, born in Los Angeles on March 31, 1934, grew up in Beverly Hills, but, he says, on "the wrong side of the now-vanished streetcar tracks" in a city whose name is synonymous with affluence. Although the Chamberlains were not rich, they were reasonably comfortable financially. Emotional comfort was a far rarer commodity in the household. Chamberlain's father was an alcoholic who terrorized his wife and two sons with psychological rather than physical violence. In his memoir Chamberlain describes consistent feelings of inadequacy and failure to live up to his father's expectations. Chamberlain entered Pomona College in 1952, intending to major in art, but he soon began appearing in the drama program's plays, enjoying enough success that he decided to pursue an acting career after graduating. His plans were briefly interrupted when he was drafted and served two years in the army. Upon his return to civilian life he enrolled in acting classes, in one of which he met a young man who became his first love. Because of the homophobia prevalent in the late 1950s, the pair were careful to keep the year-long affair "as secret as possible." Chamberlain made his movie debut in the forgettable The Secret of the Purple Reef (1960, directed by William Witney) and filmed a pilot for a proposed television series that never materialized. Shortly thereafter, however, he won the title role in the NBC drama Dr. Kildare, which began its immensely successful five-year run in 1961 and established the handsome Chamberlain as a romantic leading man, the object of desire of both men and women. When Dr. Kildare ended, Chamberlain declined offers of other television series to work in theater and film. This led him to England, where he lived for four and a half years. A highlight of his British sojourn was the opportunity to play Hamlet at the Birmingham Repertory Theatre in 1968. Chamberlain's movie career has included an eclectic mix of projects. His roles in Bryan Forbes's The Madwoman of Chaillot (1969) and Ken Russell's The Music Lovers (1971), in which he played Pyotr Ilich Tchaikovsky, are generally considered among his best, earning critical accolades. He also appeared in Irwin Allen's disaster films The Towering Inferno (1974) and The Swarm (1978) and Richard Lester's The Three Musketeers (1974), among others.

From February to April, 1971, Chamberlain rented Jule Kullberg and Orlena Harsch's home through discreet connections in Seattle gay circles. The actor, who was closeted at the time, could live freely with his then boyfriend in a nonthreatening atmosphere. When Chamberlain occupied the upstairs quarters of their home, the women went to Honolulu, Alaska, and the Oregon Coast to give him some privacy.

Chamberlain was involved romantically with actor Wesley Eure in the early 1970s.

In the late 1970s and 1980s Chamberlain reigned on television as "the king of the mini-series," starring in Centennial (1978, based on the novel by James Michener and directed by Harry Falk, Paul Krasny, Bernard McEveety, and Virgil Vogel), Shogun (1980, based on James Clavell's novel and directed by Jerry London), and the phenomenally successful adaptation of Colleen McCullough's The Thorn Birds (1983, directed by Stan Margulies). Around 110 million television viewers watched the tale of Father Ralph de Bricassart's doomed love for Meggie, an Australian sheep rancher, putting The Thorn Birds among the highest-rated mini-series in the history of television. The mini-series also solidified Chamberlain's status as a mysterious heart-throb for legions of female fans. When cable television began drawing an ever increasing share of the audience, the major networks moved away from producing costly mini-series. Chamberlain returned to the theater, where he undertook such mature roles as Henry Higgins in a 1994 Broadway revival of Alan Jay Lerner and Frederick Loewe's My Fair Lady and Baron von Trapp in a national tour of Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein's The Sound of Music in 1999.

When Chamberlain publicly acknowledged that he is gay in his 2003 memoir Shattered Love, the news came as a shock to virtually no one. That he chose at the age of 68 finally to speak of his sexuality was considerably more surprising. Although the tabloids had outed him in the early 1990s, and his homosexuality was an open secret in much of the theatrical and television community, as well as the subject of gossip in the gay male community, throughout his career he had refused to comment on the topic because, he stated later, of his "own selfrejection" as a gay man. He also feared that coming out might jeopardize his job prospects, which was certainly a valid concern when he was starting out in the early 1960s. Even today many gay male actors wonder if they can be accepted in romantic heterosexual roles if they are openly gay. When Chamberlain finally revealed "the worst kept secret in Hollywood," however, he found his fans "supportive, . . . positive, and friendly." In his memoir Chamberlain writes of his search for inner peace and of his relationship with producer/director Martin Rabbett, his partner from the mid-1970s to 2010. The couple made their home in Hawaii, where Rabbett grew up. The two worked together on various professional projects over the years. One of the most recent was a July 2003 production of Timothy Findley's The Stillborn Lover at the Berkshire Repertory Theater in Stockbridge, Massachusetts. Rabbett directed the play, in which Chamberlain starred as an ambassador who reveals to his family that he is gay. Critic Malcolm Johnson observed that Chamberlain brought "a deep reserve and quiet dignity" to the role, perhaps reflecting both his many years of reticence and his newfound self-acceptance. The couple split amicably in 2010, with Chamberlain moving to Los Angeles. In a 2014 interview, Chamberlain said that while he and Rabbett were no longer intimately involved, they remained close friends.


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