Biography
Friends and Family
Johnny Mayer
[Associate]
::
Noah Dietrich
[Associate]
::
Allene Gano
[Mother]
::
Howard Robard Hughes, Sr.
[Father]
Trivia and Quotes
Quotes
Every man has his price, or a guy like me couldn`t exist.
I`m not a paranoid deranged millionaire. Goddamit, I`m a billionaire.
My father told me, never have partners.
Trivia
Became obsessed with Communism during the McCarthy "Red Scare" era. His film The Whip Hand (1951) was originally about a group of Nazi scientists who smuggled the body of Adolf Hitler into the U.S. and worked to revive Hitler in order to try to take over the world again. After it was finished Hughes had it reshot, at great expense, to change the villains into Nazi scientists who are now working for the Communists and have taken over a small American town in order to test germ warfare experiments on its citizens before they unleash the deadly viruses in the U.S.
He was a staunch supporter of the Republican Party
Houston, Texas, has two major commercial airports: William P. Hobby Airport, and Houston Intercontinental Airport. For a brief period, Hobby Airport was renamed Howard Hughes airport. Houstonians objected to it being named after a living person, so this change was short lived, and the name eventually reverted back to being Hobby Airport. In 1997, Intercontinental Airport was renamed Bush Intercontinental, after the still-living President George Bush, whose son was Governor of Texas at the time.
Is portrayed by David Neff in Bettie Page: Dark Angel (2004) and by Milton Buras in The Hoax (2006)
Is portrayed by Leonardo DiCaprio in The Aviator (2004), by Victor Holchak in Hughes and Harlow: Angels in Hell (1978), by Tommy Lee Jones in The Amazing Howard Hughes (1977) (TV), by Jason Robards in Melvin and Howard (1980), by Terry O`Quinn in The Rocketeer (1991) and by Dean Stockwell in Tucker: The Man and His Dream (1988)
Leonardo DiCaprio and Jason Robards received Oscar-nominations for portraying Hughes in a movie.
On July 7, 1946, actress Rosemary DeCamp and her husband were in their house in Beverly Hills, California, when an aircraft piloted by Hughes crashed into the roof of the house next door, and its wing was torn off and sliced through the roof of her house, landing in the bedroom, where she and her husband were. The plane, an experimental model Hughes had developed called the XF-11, had experienced propeller reversal on the right engine after taking off from the airport at nearby Culver City. It finally came to rest after crashing through the wall of the house of another of DeCamp`s neighbors and exploding. Hughes was rescued from the cockpit by Marine Sergeant, William Lloyd Durkin. Hughes was severely injured with a broken leg, multiple cracked ribs on his left side, a dislodged heart, a fractured skull, burns and abrasions over 65% of his body. He was given a 50-50 chance to survive. He paid for the damage to the houses in the neighborhood out of his own pocket and Hughes awarded Durkin a weekly paycheck until the day he died.
The Aviator (2004), the movie based on his life, was released on what would have been his 99th birthday.
The hangar that used to house his famous airplane, the "Spruce Goose," has been used in subsequent years as a filming studio.
Authorized to be awarded a Congressional Gold Medal, 7 August 1939 (53 Stat. 1525). Award was "... in recognition of the achievements of Howard Hughes in advancing the science of aviation and thus bringing great credit to his country throughout the world[.]"
He became obsessed with the "Communist threat" in the early 1950s, having written a series of paranoid articles on the subject that he sent out to newspapers from seclusion.
He had affairs with several of the most famous actresses in Hollywood, among them Jean Harlow, Katharine Hepburn, Bette Davis, Olivia de Havilland, Ginger Rogers, and Ava Gardner. As time went on, he went out of his way to "discover" attractive young starlets (most of whom never hit it big), just so he could sleep with them. He continued this until he stopped producing films in the late 1950s.
His reported appearance when he was found dead was extremely bizarre. He was covered in uncut, matted hair, had extremely long toenails, and the once strapping, 6` 4" man weighed an incredibly low 90 pounds.
Humble, Texas, where he was born, is pronounced "UM-bull." The `h` is silent.
In the 1950s, Robert Mitchum was selected by Hughes to appear in a series of films he was producing. Hughes considered Mitchum a "friend," but (as a paranoid recluse) hardly met the actor. Mitchum was half-way put-off and half-way amused by this "crazy, old man" and clearly saw that he was a surrogate for Hughes as the strapping actor "romanced" young starlets on screen.
It has variously been hypothesized that his crazed behavior in his later, reclusive years was caused by brain damage resulting from a series of accidents, OCD, bipolar disorder, or even paranoid-schizophrenia.
When he produced films, he became obsessed with busty actresses and famously invented a prototype of the push-up bra to make Jane Russell as busty as possible in The Outlaw (1943). Most of the movies he produced are typlified by beautiful, half-naked women and nonsensical action sequences.
After Hughes died, former starlet Terry Moore claimed they had secretly married on a yacht in international waters off Mexico in 1949 and never divorced. In 1984, Hughes`s estate paid Moore an undisclosed settlement.
In public he would often speak with his hand covering his mouth, for fear of being lip-read.
Attended the prestigious Rice University in the 1920s, before dropping out and moving to Hollywood.
Before his death, he lived as a recluse, and Albert R. Broccoli (the producer of the James Bond franchise) used his reclusiveness from the public as a model for the character Willard Whyte in Diamonds Are Forever (1971). Hughes was a fan of the James Bond films, and he kept a 16mm print of the film as a part of his private collection. Broccoli also gave him 16mm print films of all the earlier Bond-films.
He bought Las Vegas television station KLAS (Channel 8), so that he could watch movies into the night. If he fell asleep during a film, he would call up the station and order that the scene he missed be replayed.
He once had an air purifier installed into a car with sealed windows. The purifier cost more than the car, and took up most of the trunk.
His father was the inventor of the "Hughes Rock Eater," a self-sharpening drill bit used for drilling oil wells that is still in use today. Hughes inherited several million dollars but earned the vast majority of his wealth from his own business ventures. Hughes Aircraft and Hughes Helicopters alone were worth $5.5 billion when they were finally sold in the early 1980s.
Ice Station Zebra (1968) is reported to have been his favorite movie
In his later years, he insisted that his personal assistants be Mormons (members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints). Reportedly, this was because Hughes did not want any of his personal assistants drunk on the job, and Mormons are forbidden to drink alcohol.
The Las Vegas casinos he once owned were Castaways, Desert Inn, Frontier, Landmark, Sands and Silver Slipper. As of November 2001, all but the Frontier have been demolished.
Was a major stock holder in an airline that later became TWA.
While he was staying in Las Vegas` Desert Inn Hotel-Casino resort, he bought the establishment in order to avoid being evicted.
|
Comments
Submit a Comment