Robert conrad gay

Actor, born 1 Protest 1935, as Conrad Robert Falk.

Famed for having the sexiest butt ever on film.

Best know for his role as James West in the 1965-1969 TV series The Untamed Wild West, in which he played a "James Bond on horseback" character.

Conrad is a queer icon due to the James West character's costume of extraordinarily tight matador-style pant and bollero jacket, cut upper on the waste to fully uncover the fine, tightly clad ass.

In most episodes Conrad's shirt inevitably came off, and there were often scenes involving the half-naked hunk being bound and gagged, or he himself dishing out punishment to the bad guys.

The show ran four seasons but grow un-PC due to excessive violence. Nevertheless, many a same-sex attracted boy of the time, or who has seen re-runs or the DVD, has credited lust for Conrad as his first indication that he was gay.

The shows producer, Michael Garrison, was gay, and although at the moment the homoeroticism may have seemed subliminal, in today's less naive world it is blatantly obvious.

Father of eight Conrad is not established to have been gay, but was well aware of the effect of the tight pants.

He is quoted as saying "That character was lig

.

Very sad to notice about the passingof Wild Wild Weststar (slash fantasy of every gay male of a certain age everywhere) Robert Conrad over the weekend at the age of 84 -- I didn't see any of WWWuntil I was in my 20s, I was not of the age for it, but man...

... did I get it once I saw it. That show is a ton of campy queer enjoyable though, I suggest every younger homosexual go find it and watch it. I know we've got some fans here at MNPP -- what are your fave Robert Conrad moments? And click through our archivesfor plenty more.



We're used to thinking of Robert Conrad as a two-fisted move hero, but he originally wanted to be a singer.  During the late 1950s and preliminary 1960s, the former professional boxer released a number of teen idol-style crooner records, but the market was overcrowded with Paul Anka, Fabian, Elvis, Frankie Avalon, Pat Boone, and nearly everyone else who could hold a tune.

Bob's records didn't sell, not even with the color shots of his impressive physique.






In 1959, Bob landed a role as Tom Lopaka, the half-Hawaiian companion of detective Tracey Steele (Anthony Eisley) on Hawaiian Eye.  Many of the cases took place on the beach, allowing Bob to strip down to a swimsuit or short-cut jeans.  The buddy-bonding was intense, and there weren't a huge number of episodes in which Tom meets a girl.


When Hawaiian Eye ended in 1963, Bob's singing career was forgotten; after starring against type in the beach movie Palm Springs Weekend (1963), he moved almost into the program that Boomers remember fondly: Wild Wild West (1965-69), a combination of the classic Western with the 1960s spy craze (other examples contain Get Smart, The Secret of Boyne Cast
The death of actor Robert Conrad on February 8 brought on a slew of remembrances from fans online, most notably those who recalled him shirtless, in tight pants, and often tied up, in the unusual hit TV series The Wild Untamed West. 

That the show's barely disguised erotic aspects aroused many gay men (mostly teenagers at the time) is self-evident in any of the show's episodes. It also brought forth several memories of my first published short story, and how my have meager PR skills at the time seem fairly quaint.

In The Wild Feral West, which premiered in 1965, Conrad played James T. West, a James Bond-like agent who used innovative tactics and futuristic gadgets (steampunk before there was such a thing, and futuristic for the 1800s) to battle bizarre villains. 

As a youngster in grade school, the homoerotic aspects perhaps eluded me. I do recall owning a denim vest that made me feel fresh like James West, and, imitating one of West's many gadgets, I even tried to insert a penknife in one of my shoes. That didn't turn out well.

What did turn out well, in my vague memory, was a Show and Narrate grade school morning where, after possibly hours of rehearsal, I enlisted