Sign in to wowOwow

Enter the email address that you used when registering at wowOwow.
The password field is case sensitive. Click here if you have forgotten your password.

Please register for wowOwow

Newsletter subscriptions
Sign up to receive wowOwow's weekly newsletter and get our best picks delivered right to your inbox. Our newsletter content is hand-picked by the wowOwow editorial team and provides the top features, news, and commentary from our site. Subscribing to our newsletter is free and safe. We will never share your email or other information with a third-party without your direct consent.
By registering, you indicate that you have read and agree
with our privacy policy and terms of service.

A Friend Stopped By | 06/02/2009 11:00 pm

What Is It About Adam Lambert? by Allegra Huston

The author of Love Child reflects on the panty-throwing days of yesteryear … and on the latest inspiration for the flinging of undergarments from ‘American Idol.’
By Allegra Huston
© Getty Images

Editor’s Note: Allegra Huston’s new book, Love Child: A Memoir of Family Lost and Found, hit bookstores in April and has received rave reviews from Melik Kaylan at Forbes, the Daily Telegraph and wOw’s own Liz Smith, among others. Allegra is the youngest daughter of film director John Huston and sister of Oscar-winning actress Anjelica Huston. She was born in London, raised in Ireland and Los Angeles, and now lives in Taos, NM. She was a publisher in London for nine years and has been a freelance writer and editor since 1994.

In the early ’80s, I moved to London and discovered that housewives were throwing their panties at Freddie Mercury. I found it baffling. Tom Jones I could understand, though I didn’t buy into it; but Freddie Mercury was so obviously gay. These 40-something women in polyester dresses and perma-set hair were making idiots of themselves on the BBC, as if they didn’t understand what gay was.

I haven’t had a crush on a famous person since my yearning, aged 14, for John Travolta to rescue me from the mountaintop house ...

Could they really not know? I was only 16, but I knew perfectly well – maybe it was because I came from Los Angeles. I’d gone to Frederick’s of Hollywood with my stepmother to buy pink ostrich-feather mules in a size 13 for her friend Philip, to assist in his transformation into Marcia Hardridge.

And now I’m in my 40s, and, if I were the panty-throwing type, I’d want to throw mine at Adam Lambert. What has happened to me?

I’ve never liked the front-combed hair-in-the-face look. I don’t know that I’d actually vote for the black nail polish. And I’m a bit worried that he’s got some ghastly secret piercings. To be honest, I’m not really sure I want to find out. But there’s something about him that keeps me — and half the women I know — replaying old "American Idol" episodes on DVR and gazing at photographs of his blue-penciled eyes. (Let’s not forget that Brando did eyeliner too.) Bravery, maybe — he hooked me with “Ring of Fire.” The damn-the-torpedoes flamboyance, the oh-my-god-what-did-I-just-do look when he finished. The intense self-discipline obvious behind the recklessness. And the sweetness. And the smile.

Frankly, I don’t mind whether he’s kissing a guy or a girl in that photo with the overcoat and scarf and purple hair held back by sunglasses; it’s a very sexy photograph. I wouldn’t want to print it out if he was kissing a girl. I’d be jealous of her. A guy, I can’t compete with. 

I’m thinking it may be better to have a crush on a gay man. I haven’t had a crush on a famous person since my yearning, aged 14, for John Travolta to rescue me from the mountaintop house that, behind my grandmother’s back, we called Gloom Castle. I felt like an idiot then, and I’d feel like one now if I was mooning around over photos of Johnny Depp or Denzel Washington and wondering whether, if we were stuck in an elevator together, they just might be up for it. Of course, they’re more my age. I was at university listening to the original “Mad World” when Adam Lambert was born.

He’s utterly unattainable. So what am I thinking? This way, I can really laugh at myself. I’m not like those Freddie Mercury housewives; I know the score. This is not a sad obsession. I’m hoping it might be chic.

More From Allegra Huston:

"What would you do if you knew you couldn’t fail?" Seduce Adam Lambert, Obviously
 

12429 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment

Isabel R.

NS,

Underground doesn’t really work for me anymore.  DH hasn’t asked me to stop posting here-he knows what the answer would be anyway. I am being stubborn about it because it isn’t about Adam, it’s about me. I do not need to be sanctioned. I am not cheating, spending lots of our money,etc. It is a passion,with its pros and cons, but is passion  a bad thing?

Your trip to Europe sounds like it gave you a healthy break.

My obsession is cooling , which is a good thing. For the whole summer Adam was my imaginary  friend. I could hold conversations about a variety of subjects,and he always valued my opinion. The imaginary friend aspect has almost completly disappeared, thanks to my DH. We have been talking to each other much more openly, and our relationship is getting so much bettter.

I shared with him my Adam dream, the only one I’ve ever had.(it’s not what you think) DH and I were making out in an elevator;I had pushed him into the corner and started kissing him. The elevator stopped and someone got on, but we were oblivious. Then I heard a little chuckle, and turned to find Adam standing there, looking at us in the amused and tolerant way people do when they see a couple in love. I said to Adam, "this is your fault, you got us talking to each other." He just smiled, probably just humoring his crazy-ass fans. That was the end of the dream.

By Isabel R. on 11/10/2009 10:43 am
Northern Spirit

Hi Isabel,

I think we all need to find a way to balance Adam with other things in our lives or else something (relationships, health, work) will suffer. Looks like we’re both on the road to healthy Adamizing. Now, if I could only lessen my addiction to the WoW site :) , which in my case, is really the only place I go to now for Adam information because it takes time to visit all the Adam sites that are out there.

So glad to hear that your relationship with DH is getting better, and to tell you the truth, I can sense it now in your writing style…or maybe that’s just time taking its effect. I know I’ve become less reserved over the past few months here. It’s a different world on these ‘forums’. Whatever the reason, Adam is having a positive effect on our lives.

I want a dream like that!

By Northern Spirit on 11/11/2009 7:49 am
Isabel R.

NS,

It’s not the kind of Adam dream that I would have wished for earlier this summer, but really, it has a way better conclusion. Satisfying to all.

By Isabel R. on 11/12/2009 11:06 am
Juneau Underwood

Dear Isabel,

I was coming through old postings and came across this one which I hadn’t seen before. I love how your excitement about Adam has led to more openness with your husband. Same thing has happened to me. Although imaginary Adam is still hanging out with me from time to time.

xoxo

Juneau

By Juneau Underwood on 11/21/2009 6:22 pm
Isabel R.

Juneau,

I am glad to hear that you and your husband have learned to be more open. It is a really hard thing to be in a marriage. Adam is still a bit of a sticking point with us, though. It still upsets him a lot.

By Isabel R. on 11/22/2009 11:00 am
Kate Sistergood

My DH, and several other men I know, is obsessed ( with a small O) with Beyonce. Especially with this video -

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8mVEGfH4s5g

…can’t say I blame them ! 

 

By Kate Sistergood on 11/08/2009 11:05 am
DeeDee Glambert

I’m in the same boat as you - single, no one peering over my shoulder (& if I was still married, I would do what I damn well pleased - been through too much & life is too short), and i can lust after Adam 24/7 and enjoy it. If iI was still married and had my DH (hate that abbreviation) lust after a female singer, my opinion would be, just becasue you’re married doesn’t mean that you don’t have eyes and can’t look - nobody died,so go ahead.  People need to exercise some freedom of self- expression in marriage, or else the marriage starts to fall slowly apart.

DeeDee

By DeeDee Glambert on 11/08/2009 2:17 pm
Northern Spirit

You’re right, Dee Dee, it is important to retain self expression, and I would add, identity, in a marriage. I sometimes wonder how it is that some people forget how to do things on their own when they get married (have their own set of friends, hobbies, likes and dislikes, etc.). Getting married shouldn’t mean losing one’s individuality.

Now when one person in a marriage is obsessing over someone, like, say, Adam, but it could be anything, really, even total preoccupation with a hobby, where it takes that person away from the other for extended lengths of time, at what point is it too much and the other feels neglected, maybe even jealous. Surely some ill feelings are going to emerge and strain the marriage. Having daily visual and verbal reminders of that obsessee (is there such a word?) around compounds the problem. We have already heard about some DHs’ grumblings already from our dear Glambertinae. 

Anyway, it’s just been at the back of my mind these past few months how the DHs are fairing. Some, as we have heard, are perfect angels about the whole thing, and their the ones who probably realized right away how they’ll benefit from it all….on so many levels.

By Northern Spirit on 11/08/2009 6:32 pm
Isabel R.

DeeDee,

You are right, people do need freedom of self expression, and this has always been an area I have struggled with in marriage. I am developing more of a voice, but it is a rocky road. I should have been more courageous years ago-it wouldn’t be so hard now.

By Isabel R. on 11/10/2009 10:48 am
Niamh Cat

 I didn’t mean to shake you up, there. I really appreciate feeling free to post this stuff and be accepted.   ((((((((((Y’all)))))))))

It’s wonderful that you and your DH are rediscovering music together. So cool that you went to the Daughtry concert. We haven’t been to a concert in longer than I care to think, but we’re really enjoying a lot of the new artists I’ve discovered this summer. DH loves the Kings of Leon and considers them a major additon to our faves.

By Niamh Cat on 11/07/2009 10:24 pm
clare Bowles
Love, Love, Love Kings of Leon….not so big on the lyrics though. 
By clare Bowles on 11/08/2009 12:00 am
Niamh Cat

With them the lyrics are secondary to me. I’m not a big lyrics person generally, unless they’re really exceptional. Before Adam and my modern pop renaissance I didn’t have too much vocal music on my pod.

By Niamh Cat on 11/08/2009 6:34 am
Isabel R.

N.Cat,

I am excited that I’ve been introduced to the Kings of Leon. LOve, love, love his voice. So mournful and unique. I am really getting a musical education this year.

By Isabel R. on 11/08/2009 10:27 am
Isabel R.

Adam’s Eye,

Isn’t it fun to talk to your DH about this stuff. I have been talking about music more with mine.

I don’t know much about Creed, but I did see a video of theirs on TV the other day. I think the lead singer has an excellent voice. I doubt Adam will sing any of theirs, though-I remember him saying in the RS article that he dislikes Creed and Nickelback. I don’t know why. I also wish he hadn’t stated that in an article-it doesn’t seem nice, and he will probably meet the band members one of these days, and be embarassed that he said he didn’t like them. I’m sure he didn’t think of his words as having any kind of real impact at all, but he is famous, and his words do matter. That kind of sucks, in a way.

I want to see the MJ movie, even though I wasn’t a real fan during his life. I want to see it even if the Adam video isn’t in it.

Love,

Isabel

By Isabel R. on 11/08/2009 11:09 am
Northern Spirit

Glambertinae,

This is somewhat Adam related, being Lady Gaga, one of Adam’s new collaborators.

Have you all seen Lady Gaga do her acoustic version of Paparazzi? I think it’s brilliant. Just love it, and love her.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oP8SrlbpJ5A

 

By Northern Spirit on 11/07/2009 7:22 pm