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Mar 9, 2019

Jan-Michael Vincent's First Boyfriends



The Banana Splits Adventure Hour (1968-70), was a Saturday morning anthology series starring an animatronic rock band, with psychedelic blackouts, corny jokes, very bad songs, and cheesy cartoons.  But the live-action segment, Danger Island, offered a glimpse of a 1960s gay couple.

Archaeologist Professor Hayden (Frank Aletter, who starred in It's About Time), his daughter Leslie (Ronne Troup), and their young, tanned, and remarkably toned assistant, Link (Jan-Michael Vincent, who would go on to star in Big Wednesday) are searching for a lost city in the uncharted South Seas. Suddenly pirates attack. 

Link is knocked overboard, and sees the ship explode, so he assumes that his friends are dead; he therefore swims for the nearest island, fighting a shark en route. Crawling onto the shore, half-naked and half-drowned, he encounters a pair of long-time castaways.  

The tall, muscular African-American Morgan (Rockne Tarkington) wears a brown vest that accentuates his biceps.  His boyfriend, the short, slim Pacific Islander Chongo (professional stuntman Kahana), who is mute and somewhat addled, wears a yellow vest that looks like it was meant for a girl.

The couple invite Link back to their cave-home, where Chongo fusses over him like a drag queen auntie, making him try on one inappropriately risqué costume after another and in the process “accidentally” fondling his hard chest and shoulders.

Link settles on skintight white pants and a blue sailor shirt (but not to worry, it’s always being torn open or ripped off). Meanwhile, Morgan advises him of the severity of their situation: Danger Island is overrun by wild animals, savages, and pirates, all with different specialties of murder and mayhem (thus its name). 



Eventually Professor Hayden and Leslie, not dead after all, join the party, and they spend many cliffhangers looking for the lost city and fighting the promised wild animals, savages, and pirates (who drool enthusiastically over hardbodied Link). 

 In the last episode, they have thwarted every villain and acquired a boat, and they prepare to head back to civilization. But Morgan and Chongo decline rescue: “We’ve been living this way too long,” Morgan explains, his arm cozily around his partner’s waist. “We wouldn’t know how to live civilized.” 

They say goodbye and walk off arm in arm. I cannot imagine what the actors thought they were portraying in this scene. I can only advise Morgan and Chongo that they could live “this way” quite happily in Greenwich Village or the Castro, with the first heady days of gay liberation immanent.

5 comments:

  1. We need about sixteen of them. (Rick and Morty reference.) No reference to his nude scene in Buster and Billie?

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    1. The nude scene was famous at the time, but I never saw the actual movie.

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  2. J-MV is seriously f'ed up from booze and drugs, missing a leg and has vouce box problems.

    He's on Twitter which he thinks will get him back into Hollywood, bragging about stiffing bars for drinks, offering to sell disgusting mementos and bashing fags.

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    1. I ran into JMV in the elevator at the New York Hilton back in the late 1990's. It was obvious who it was, I recognized him immediately although he was quite dissipated and just a shadow of his former beauty remained. He was partially toothless, bad skin, longish hair and unkempt. I'm guessing this part but it was kinda obvious that he was on his way to a romp with a prostitute (they were making out - i was the only other person in the elevator.) I was a bit shaken and sad to see his condition because he looked so unhealthy. JMV died in Asheville NC in 2019.

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  3. So, wait, does the shirt follow Voyager rules or something? (All damage is undone at the end of the episode/issue.)

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