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I was in love with her. She was very loving, very caring, very involved with me, and highly sexed. Making love with her was an entirely different thing than I had ever experienced. I had been with girls, and I had been with women, but I had never been with a woman with her level of knowledge, her level of taste. I was so incredibly taken with her, taken by her. We were both at turning points in our lives. She had been married to Robert Taylor for over ten years when he went to Italy to make Quo Vadis and had an affair, at which point Barbara [Stanwyck] threw him out. She was bitter about Taylor; she acted very quickly, almost reflexively, although I don't know that she thought it was too quick. I don't know precisely what went on between them; we never got into it. In fact, I went hunting with Bob Taylor a few times, and I think he might have known about us. At any rate, she had just gotten her divorce when we met. She was at a very vulnerable moment in her life and career. The forties are a dangerous time for any woman, and especially so for an actress whose work is her identity—definitely Barbara's way of life. The transition to playing middle-aged women has unnerved a lot of actresses—some of Barbara's contemporaries, such as Norma Shearer and Kay Francis, quit the business rather than confront it—but she faced it straight on because that's the kind of woman she was. The continuity of her career was more important to her than any individual part. Like so many people in show business, she was a prisoner of her career. Because of my youth, I suppose in one sense I was a validation of her sexuality.


Robert Wagner


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Did you know about Robert Wagner?

Evil's henchman Number 2 in all three films: Austin Powers: International Man of Mystery (1997) Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me (1999) and Austin Powers in Goldmember (2002). As Wagner is considered "a suave icon of American caper television including It Takes a Thief and Hart to Hart" Robert Glenister (Hustle's fixer Ash Morgan) commented that "to have one of the icons of that period involved is a great bonus for all of us". In 2005 Wagner became the television spokesman for the Senior Lending Network a reverse mortgage lender and in 2010 began as a spokesman for the Guardian First Funding Group also a reverse mortgage lender.

He also had a recurring role as Teddy Leopold on the TV sitcom Two and a Half Men. In movies Wagner is known for his role as Number Two in the Austin Powers trilogy of films (1997 1999 2002). Wagner's autobiography Pieces of My Heart: A Life written with author Scott Eyman was publiRobert Wagnerd on September 23 2008.

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