George Hamilton’s life more interesting than movies he made

  • By Edward Guthmann San Francisco Chronicle
  • Thursday, November 20, 2008 4:31pm
  • Life

George Hamilton doesn’t care if people call him a dandy, a twit, an aging roue. He doesn’t care if they look at him and see only the suntan and the Jay Gatsby clothes, and forget that he’s been a working actor for 50 years.

“I think it’s much better to be underestimated,” he says. “I love it. People think you don’t get it, or you don’t see it or understand it. But it gives you the best upper hand you can possibly have.”

Today, Hamilton is best known for his enthusiastic, self-parodying appearance on the second season of “Dancing With the Stars.” He was 66 at the time — he had the Cloris Leachman slot — and lasted six weeks, finishing fifth in the competition. He says it gave him a whole new fan base.

“It was great to be young again, to beat the clock, even if it was only for a few weeks,” Hamilton writes in his new memoir, “Don’t Mind If I Do” (Touchstone; $26). Co-written with William Stadiem, the book opens with the “Dancing” gig and then flashes back to a peripatetic, wildly improbable life.

To a great extent, “Don’t Mind If I Do” is a defense of extravagance and high style. In Hamilton’s case, it was a family tradition that began with his bon vivant mother, Teeny, and his older brother, Bill.

“I was never an earthshaking actor,” Hamilton, 69, said over lunch at the Ritz-Carlton. “What’s interesting is that I’ve survived. My life was always more interesting than the films I was in.”

Hamilton is a natural raconteur — he hosted a short-lived talk show with ex-wife Alana Hamilton Stewart — and he has a knack for turning conversation into entertainment. He looks like a prince or a count: navy blazer and gray slacks, pinstriped shirt and brown loafers. Dark hair with a crescent of white along the hairline. Bleached-white teeth.

Hamilton lives in Palm Beach and Los Angeles today. His son by Alana Stewart, Ashley, is 34 and working as a standup comic. G.T., his son by ex-girlfriend Kimberly Blackford, is 9.

By nature, Hamilton does nothing by half measures. He dated President Lyndon Johnson’s plain-jane daughter, Lynda Bird, performed a “Pygmalion” on her and took her to the Oscars. He squired Elizabeth Taylor in her slimmed-down, post-rehab period, dated Danielle Steel and partied on Imelda Marcos’ yacht, where “caviar in oil drums was brought aboard.”

He says he lost his virginity to his stepmother at age 12 (“my own sexual bar mitzvah”), had a gun pointed to his head by Evel Knievel (whom he played onscreen) and discovered early on that suntanning would be for him “what the phone booth, funny blue suit and cape were for Superman.”

It’s a bizarre life story, and it all started with his charismatic, four-times-married, Arkansas-raised mother, Anne. “Wildly unrealistic,” he calls her, “the ultimate Southern belle.” Called “Teeny” by her friends, she was equal parts Auntie Mame, Holly Golightly and Scarlett O’Hara.

George — the spawn of Teeny’s second marriage, to a glamorous bandleader — was the middle son and the most outgoing. David, 13 months younger, was the quiet one. Half-brother Bill, the product of Teeny’s first marriage, was gay, closeted and the chief conjurer of Teeny’s lush, Lalique-and-Cartier lifestyle.

Hamilton was 16 when Teeny, between husbands, decided to take her sons on a cross-country husband hunt. For $1,300 they bought a Lincoln Continental. “The goal was to visit all her old boyfriends, the ones she had passed up,” he writes.

Teeny’s road trip is the subject of “My One and Only,” a forthcoming movie starring Renee Zellweger. The project began more than 10 years ago, long before Hamilton wrote his book, when Hamilton’s friend, Merv Griffin, decided that Teeny’s peregrinations were fodder for a film comedy.

Bill and Teeny are both dead, and Hamilton says he wrote the book for them. “They would have adored the idea that a book was written about them and a movie made about them. That’s all they wanted out of their lives. What better than to have given them a stage to be famous?”

Talk to us

> Give us your news tips.

> Send us a letter to the editor.

> More Herald contact information.

More in Life

Photo courtesy of Historic Everett Theatre
The Elvis Challenge takes place Saturday at the Historic Everett Theatre.
A&E Calendar for May 8

Send calendar submissions to features@heraldnet.com. To ensure your item is seen by… Continue reading

Kyle Parker paddles his canoe along the Snohomish River next to Langus Riverfront Park on Thursday, May 8, 2025 in Everett, Washington. (Olivia Vanni / The Herald)
Tip to Tip: Kyle Parker begins his canoe journey across the country

The 24-year-old canoe fanatic started in Neah Bay and is making his way up the Skykomish River.

Photo provided by Subaru U.S. Media Center
Subaru Adds Bronze And Onyx Trims to 2025 Ascent

Three-Row Family SUV Delivers Equal Parts Safety And Comfort

The 2025 Hyundai Santa Fe Hybrid SUV (Provided by Hyundai).
2025 Hyundai Santa Fe Hybrid evokes outdoor adventure

Boxy styling leaves lots of room for gear. A refined ride ensures comfort around town.

The 2025 Toyota Sienna minivan in the top-level Platinum grade (Provided by Toyota).
2025 Toyota Sienna maintains reputation for fuel efficiency

Every model in the minivan’s lineup has a hybrid powertrain.

An autumn-themed display at Wagner Jewelers in Marysville. (Olivia Vanni / The Herald)
Shine bright with Snohomish County’s top jewelry finds

Three dazzling shops where elegance, craft, and sparkle come together.

The 2025 Lexus TX 350 is a three-row luxury SUV. It’s offered in Base, Premium, Luxury, and F Sport Handling grades (Provided by Lexus).
2025 Lexus TX 350 welcomes new F Sport Handling model

Unique exterior highlights, a glass roof and sport-tuned suspension are among the attractions.

Hybrid Touring Photo Provided by Subaru U.S. Media Center
2025 Subaru Forester Hybrid Increases Fuel Economy And Range

Sixth-Generation Model Receives Complete Refresh

Image from Pexels.com
Top 3 Cannabis Shops You’ll Love in Snohomish County

Looking for quality products and good energy? Let’s discover the top spots.

Image from Canva.com
Chic & unique: The top 3 boutiques in Snohomish County you need to visit

From trendy finds to timeless pieces, discover the hidden gems that are redefining local fashion.

Image from Canva.com
Find your next favorite read in Snohomish County

Explore three of the finest bookshops where stories and community come together

Image from Canva.com
Say “I Do” to these stunning wedding venues

From rustic barns to elegant halls, discover where love stories in Snohomish County begin.

Support local journalism

If you value local news, make a gift now to support the trusted journalism you get in The Daily Herald. Donations processed in this system are not tax deductible.