Isabel Pedrejon
Updated Wednesday, February 14, 2024-21:45
Detail The Jordanian princess who appears in the last of 'Star Wars'
Hollywood Alec Guinness, Obi-Wan Kenobi, was bisexual and hated 'Star Wars'
When he lost his virginity at the age of 17 because a neighbor in his Harlem building invited him to her apartment,
Billy Dee Williams
(86) discovered that sex was made for him. The actor, who rose to popularity with the character of
Lando Calrissian in the
Star Wars
saga
, has had a life rich in
pleasurable experiences.
This is how he explains it in his recently published biography
What Have We Here?
which American media such as
People
or
Page Six have already begun to echo.
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He was
married three times,
to Audrey Sellers (1959-1963), Marlene Clark (1968-1971) and Teruko Nakagami in 1972, from whom he separated two decades later
without divorcing
to avoid legal and maintenance costs. After divorcing his first wife, he began
dating a teenage friend
named Yvonne who invited him to participate in an
orgy
when she finished working at the theater. Seeing that scene at home, he preferred to shower and invite
one of the naked young women
to her bed, but as revenge, Yvonne insisted that he watch her have relations with another man. The actor found the scene so funny that
the young woman got
so angry "that she took some scissors and cut off all my beautiful alpaca sweaters. That hurt me almost more than
if she had cut me,"
explains Page Six.
Billy Dee Williams, Harrison Ford, Peter Mayhew and Ewan McGregor.GTRES
Since he started in show business in 1959, Billy Dee Williams
has not stopped working.
He has combined
film, television and theater
without problems until he has become one of the indispensable figures that has allowed him to work with
Alec Guinness
,
Melanie Griffith
(66),
Jack Nicholson
(86) and
Diana Ross
(79), with whom he starred in
The Twilight of a star
(1972) based on the life of Billie Holiday, and
Mahogany, mahogany skin
(1975). The chemistry between both performers was very strong, but
they never slept together.
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As Williams remembers, "Diana was a beautiful woman and I
enjoyed kissing her.
I loved kissing her and that was it. Sometimes kissing could be even better than sex. The only person who had a problem with our kisses was Berry." Berry Gordy (94) was the
founder of Motown Records,
architect of the creation of The Jackson Five and Michael Jackson and
secret lover of Diana Ross,
with whom he had had her daughter Rhonda. The millionaire producer was always present on the filming of
Mohogany
in case the actors crossed the line. "During rehearsals, Gordy always found
a reason to intervene
and stop us just before we got to the point where we were kissing," Williams recalls in his biography.
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It doesn't hurt for the African-American performer to remember
certain hard moments
that ended his friendship with the comic actor
Richard Pryor,
star alongside Gene Wilder of
Don't Shout Me That I Don't See You
(1989). At one point, Williams cut off the relationship with Pryor when he
witnessed the physical and psychological abuse
he inflicted on his wife, Patricia, such as the day "we saw him hit her with
a still-smoking log
that he took from the chimney." ".
Since Williams
was in an open marriage with Teruko,
he decided to maintain a relationship with Patricia Price. For years they had
high-voltage sexual encounters
that drove them crazy, until the interpreter realized that Patricia was too obsessed "to the point that she painted 'I love Billy Dee' on some fences on Mulholland Drive." It all ended when she
accused him of assault,
although she later recanted it and the charges were dropped.