In the premiere episode of Ryan Murphyâs âHollywood,â an aspiring actor named Roy Fitzgerald (played by Jake Picking) visits a gas station-turned-brothel called the Golden Tip in search of male companionship. Attempting to meet other gay men elsewhere, he explains to viewers, is to risk being outed and thus blacklisted by the studio system.
Over the course of the next six episodes, Fitzgerald changes his name to Rock Hudson and lands a debut part in a movie â all while being verbally and sexually abused by a Svengali-like manager, Henry Willson (Jim Parsons). By the season finale, Hudson finds the courage to denounce Willsonâs exploits, go public about his sexuality and attend the 1947 Academy Awards on the arm of a screenwriter boyfriend, Archie Coleman (Jeremy Pope).
âHollywood,â which debuted on Netflix last week, presents an alternate history of cinemaâs golden age. The limited series follows an ensemble of artists and industry moguls, including a director (Darren Criss) and the wife of a studio executive (Patti LuPone), pushing for on-screen diversity. Along the way, the film also reimagines the career trajectories of several legendary stars, including Hudson, Anna May Wong and Hattie McDaniel.
âThe show really comments on the abuse of power,â Picking told HuffPost. âI think thatâs always going to be relevant, not just within the entertainment industry.â
The real-life Hudson, Wong and McDaniel experienced homophobia, racism and sexism as they fought to make a name for themselves in the arts. âHollywoodâ suggests their authentic lives might have been received differently if such barriers, which are still facing marginalised groups today, had been shattered some 70-plus years ago through cultural milestones.
And in reality, Hudsonâs talents were, at first, dubious at best â which âHollywoodâ alludes to by showing him fumble his way through a screen test. The âcasting couchâ misconduct he endured from Willson, who would remain his agent until 1966, is also well-documented. By the late 1950s, however, Hudson was one of Hollywoodâs most bankable leading men, starring in films such as âMagnificent Obsessionâ and âGiant,â for which he scored an Oscar nomination.
The Illinois nativeâs sexuality was said to be an open secret â so much so that Willson hastily arranged for him to marry a talent agency secretary, Phyllis Gates, in 1955 to ward off media speculation about his private life. The couple divorced three years later.
Hudson continued to act regularly through the 1970s and â80s, and he never actually addressed his sexuality publicly â unlike in the show. He died in 1985 at age 59 of an AIDS-related illness.
âTo me, Rock was a hero because he was resilient, but the tragedy is the fact he had to hold onto a painful secret,â Picking said. âAny signs of his quote-unquote âeffeminacyâ were eradicated. His wrists were slapped, his hips were straightened, his teeth were fixed.â
âTo judge anyone in that way is just toxic and close-minded,â he added.
An admirer of Hollywood greats like James Dean and Marlon Brando, Picking prepared to play Hudson by reading Mark Griffinâs biography of the actor, âAll That Heaven Allows,â as well as âThe Man Who Invented Rock Hudson: The Pretty Boys and Dirty Deals of Henry Willson,â to get a better grasp of the role the real-life Willson played. He also watched many of Hudsonâs films on silent to be able to effectively mimic the actorâs body language.
Picking, who relocated to Los Angeles from the East Coast before his first on-screen role in 2013âs âThe Way, Way Back,â said he related to âthe feeling of lonelinessâ Hudson experienced during his early years in Hollywood.
âHe was an airplane mechanic in World War II and came here and was driving a packing truck of frozen peas and carrots and, you know, hoping to bump into someone influential,â Picking said. âI definitely could relate to that, coming from the East Coast. I usually associate seasonal changes with whatâs going on. So when I moved here, I had existential angst because every day felt the same.â
âHollywoodâ looks poised to be a breakout moment for Picking, who previously had supporting roles in âDirty Grandpaâ and âBlockers.â Heâll hit the big screen later this year in âTop Gun: Maverick,â alongside Tom Cruise.
The intentional revisionism presented in âHollywoodâ has, thus far, largely divided critics. For his part, Picking said the showâs melding of fact and fiction conveys a hopeful message of âtriumphâ and âempathy,â which heâd like to carry forth into a second season.
âThe thing to take away is that you can be who you are and be proud of that,â he said. âMy hope is that Rock would root for that sentiment.â