Kirstie Alley surprised public once again. In a new preview of her interview with Barbara Walters played during a Wednesday, November 7 episode of "Good Morning America", she defended John Travolta concerning rumor that the actor is gay.
"I know John. With all my heart and soul, he's not gay," the Veronica
Chase of "Veronica's Closet" stood up for the Daniel "Danny" Zuko of
"Grease". She added, "I think it's some weird way, in Hollywood, if
someone gets big enough and famous enough, and they're not out doing
drugs and they're not womanizing, what do you say about them?"
In a previously-released excerpt of her "20/20" interview with Barbara,
the actress who claimed that she had lost 100 lbs in September 2011 also
admitted that John was the "greatest love" of her life. She said that
she fell in love so hard with the "Face/Off" actor after she met him on
"Look Who's Talking" movie set in 1989, but she tried to hold it since
she was still married to actor Parker Stevenson at the moment.
"Believe me, it took everything that I had, inside, outside, whatever,
to not run off and marry John. And be with John for the rest of my
life," she confessed. On why she didn't split with Parker at the time,
the 61-year-old actress explained, "Because I feel like when you marry
someone you're supposed to work hard at it, and you're supposed to make
it work."
John was accused of sexual abuse by several males earlier this year. The
first charge came from a male massage therapist, who claimed that John
mauled him and masturbated at the Beverly Hills Hotel on January 16. A
second lawsuit came from another male therapist, who claimed to be
sexually harassed by the 58-year-old actor at an Atlanta hotel on
January 25. Both lawsuits were dismissed in May.
On September 27, a defamation lawsuit launched by writer Robert Randolph
against John and his attorney, Marty Singer, was also dismissed. The
writer wrote a book about the "Pulp Fiction" star's alleged sexual
behavior, and complained that Marty's response in a letter to the writer
harmed him. The case was dropped once Judge Malcolm Mackey of Los
Angeles Superior Court found out that the letter was under free speech
protection.
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Source: aceshowbiz.com
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