Preface
It was a pity, Gore Vidal once remarked, that Denham Fouts never wrote a memoir. Vidal described Denny as "un homme fatal".
Truman Capote found that "to watch him walk into a room was an experience. He was beyond being good-looking; he was the single most charming-looking person I've ever seen." Capote loved to conjecture that "had Denham Fouts yielded to Hitler's advances there would have been no World War Two".
Jimmie Daniels, the nightclub singer who performed at his own Harlem club that bore his name, thought Denny "was about the most beautiful boy anybody had ever seen. His skin always looked as if it had just been scrubbed; it seemed to have no pores at all, it was so smooth."
To King Paul of Greece he was "my dear Denham" or "Darling Denham", and the King's telegrams to Denny from the Royal Palace always were signed "love Paul".
Peter Watson, the wealthy financial backer of the popular British literary magazine Horizon, had an erection whenever he was in the same room with Denny.
The artist Michael Wishart met Denny for the first time at a party in Paris and realized instantly he was in love and that "the only place in the world I wanted to be was in Denham's bedroom".
Best-selling author Glenway Wescott thought Denny "absolutely enchanting and ridiculously good-looking. . . . He had the most delicious body odor; I once swiped one of his handkerchiefs."
Lord Tredegar, one of the largest landowners in Great Britain, saw Denny being led by the police through the lobby of an expensive hotel on Capri, convinced the police to let him pay the bills Denny owed, and then took Denny to accompany him and his wife as they continued on their tour of the world.
Christopher Isherwood, who Denny considered his best friend, called him "the most expensive male prostitute in the world".
Today, someone who projects such an instant and potent power of attraction could forge a successful career, perhaps as a male model, as a character in a daytime soap opera, as a tabloid celebrity, as a television or movie star, maybe even as an acclaimed actor. But Denny was born in 1914 when such options were not yet available to those rare individuals endowed with this sort of sexual magnetism. He never did write a memoir that would have told his strange story, that may have explained how it felt to possess those magical powers, to occupy the thoughts of another, to become the obsession of their lives. How would it feel to be Aschenbach's Tadzio in Thomas Mann's Death in Venice? To be Humbert's Lolita in Nabokov's masterpiece? Jay Gatsby's Daisy in The Great Gatsby?
"The mass of men," Thoreau was brave enough and honest enough to write in Walden, "lead lives of quiet desperation." Most of us come, go, and are gone, our lives lived in shades of gray no more distinguishable, no more memorable, than the squirrels in a park on a coming of winter morning. Denny was one of those rare individuals who, whatever his faults, brought color into the black and white etchings of everyday life.
Denny never did write his own story, but he does move through many memoirs of the times. And for some of the most renowned authors of those times, he was a muse, and that color he brought into a squirrel-gray world inspired them to capture him in their prose. Denny is "Paul" in Christopher Isherwood's Down There on a Visit. He is a character in Gore Vidal's novel The Judgment of Paris, and in his short story "Pages from an Abandoned Journal". He appears in Truman Capote's infamous Answered Prayers on which the author was working, or not working, when he died. He was proud to find himself a character in Somerset Maugham's The Razor's Edge.
To be immortalized in a story by a famed author would be enough to earn a footnote in literary history. To have inspired the body of work Denham Fouts did is to become a legend. This is his story.
CHAPTER ONE
It had been a long six years since Peter Watson sent Denny to the United States as the Nazis marched toward Paris. Now, at last, in the Spring of 1946, as weary and war-wounded Europe was beginning to heal, Denny returned to Paris, heading straight to Peter Watson's apartment at 40 Rue du Bac.
It was a "sombre faubourg apartment with the eighteenth century windows," as one friend described it, where, in paneled rooms that before the War had been filled with sculptures and antiques, Watson had hung the modern masterworks he had been acquiring, a collection of what he felt were the most interesting paintings of each of the artists he was collecting, the best of de Chirico, Gris, Klee, Miro and Picasso. Six servants had managed the enormous apartment which was in an elegant eighteenth century townhouse right off the Boulevard Saint Germain, close to the Seine. It was set back from the street with a private garden behind it, and through the large windows and French doors leading out to a terrace was - - Paris: the Eiffel Tower, the Grand Palais, the roof of the Louvre, the Sacre Coeur, and not far away, Notre Dame and the Jardin du Luxemburg.
Peter had not been prepared for what he found when, after the War, he and his friend Cyril Connolly returned to Paris in July 1945. When they unlocked and opened the door, they were shocked. "My flat's a shambles", Peter wrote to a friend "- - really heartbreaking and so filthy." His extraordinary art collection (which in today's dollars would have been valued at well over $100 million) had disappeared. What furniture remained was broken, dirty draperies hung in shreds, everything of value was missing, including what little he had hidden before evacuating as the Nazi tanks approached the city. Connolly found the once grand quarters "very dilapidated and buggery" and "terribly depressing, empty of everything, no hot water, no clean sheets . . . My bed is a sofa in the dining room - - nowhere to unpack anything, and I have to go through Peter's room whenever I want to go to the bathroom. It is so strange that Peter, who once had a genius for gracious living now comes to symbolize morbid discomfort to me." For Connolly the flat was "heavily mined" with reminders of his ex-wife Jean; there, still hanging where Jean and Denny had nailed it for Christmas in 1938, was a scraggly piece of dried out mistletoe.
Discouraged, depressed by what he found and did not find, Peter nevertheless had worked to prepare the apartment for a party, a special party to celebrate the return to Paris, to him, after six years of separation, the love of his life, his obsession: Denham Fouts.
One of the guests at Peter's party that evening was Michael Wishart, the seventeen year old grandson of Colonel Sidney Wishart who had been the Sheriff of London, the son of Ernest Wishart who owned an estate in Sussex near the sea, and of the sophisticated, glamorous, free-spirited Lorna, who gave birth to Michael when she was seventeen, and who, whenever possible, sped away from her husband's estate in her chocolate brown Bentley, racing straight for London's nightclubs, and, a series of lovers.
Michael Wishart would become an artist, a painter of some renown, a precocious talent who was selling his paintings when he was fourteen and had his first exhibition in London, and a well received exhibition at that, at the Archer Gallery at the age of sixteen. He was, in fact, precocious in many respects. Michael was twelve when Great Britain declared war on Germany and Messerschmitts began flying over the English Channel. Those occasional German aviators who managed to parachute from their stricken fighters were captured and put to work by the English. One, not much older than Michael, "blonde and arrogant, the incarnation of a Hitler Youth poster", was brought to work on Michael's family's estate. Michael found intriguingly irresistible this sullen POW named Harm, and when no one was watching, began bringing him small gifts - - cigarettes, chocolates, beer. At that age, Michael already was quite handsome with his thick dark hair and eyebrows, seductive eyes and mouth, cleft chin, baritone voice. He and the foreign laborer could communicate only by glances, but those glances soon became more meaningful and Michael thought he could read in them that "he would follow wherever I led." Michael was correct. One day, as Michael was seated by a stone wall sketching a landscape, the German youth came and sat down next to him. Michael walked with him through the orchards, past classical statuary, through gates in walls and hedges, across fields to an abandoned shed, and there "we made a private truce without waiting for the general armistice to be declared., for which I feel toward him nothing but gratitude." It must have been quite a private armistice with Harm. Forty years later, and an extremely sexually active four decades they were, Michael would write that "I have never since experienced physical desire comparable to that which I felt for the German POW." He added that "thanks to him, and his silk parachute, I can say that homosexuality came to me, quite literally, 'out of the blue'". At the time, though, Michael was alarmed about what he had done and about what he was feeling, and wasted no time seeking a psychiatrist to determine what was wrong with him and to cure him. After a number of unsatisfying sessions, the psychiatrist left him with these words: "well, old fellow, remember that variety is the spice of life."
Truly words to live by. And live by them Michael did. Throughout his life, his affairs with women were as passionate as those with men, and he moved back and forth between the sexes and between partners with abandon.
The onset of the War created for Michael something of a holiday atmosphere, a time, like summer vacation, when society's rules seemed to go by the wayside. Whenever school was out, he traveled to London. By day, he pursued his art and met other artists. By night, the streets of London were black, an inky darkness shattered by the wail of air raid sirens, by bursts of batteries of anti-aircraft artillery, by the fear...