Classic Heartthrobs in Movie & TV That We Swooned Over

Hollywood Hearrtthrobs collage with Paul Newman, Sally Field, Troy Donahue
Everett Collection

Those Hollywood heartthrobs! Paul Newman, Tab Hunter, and more handsome actors of the 1950s and 1960s always light up the silver screen and cause hearts to flutter far and wide. Here we cover a few of our favs.

Rudolph Valentino was film’s first sex symbol

It was probably Rudolph Valentino who got that ball rolling. One of the most famous silent-film icons, Valentino was THE sex symbol of the 1920s. Often cast as a villain during his early film days, he got his big break in a 1921 production called The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse. But it wasn’t until later that year that a film called The Sheik would solidify him as a romantic hero.

THE FOUR HORSEMEN OF THE APOCALYPSE, Rudolph Valentino, 1921

Everett Collection

Offscreen, Valentino was arrested and put on trial for bigamy, which further boosted his allure. Widely known as the “Latin Lover,” his untimely death in 1926, at the age of 31, caused mass hysteria — possibly even suicides — among the multitudes of fans (especially female) who idolized him.

The ’50s & ’60s ushered in the hunks

There have been plenty of others who have caused a stir whenever their film efforts led fans to flock to the box office. Take Paul Newman, for instance. Those blue eyes and that playful look on his face. Those were only some of the things that caused pulses to quicken when Newman graced the screen, whether it was in Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, The Sting or even Slap Shot. Newman had lots of other movie hits. Off the screen, meanwhile, his dabbling in everything from racecars to salad dressings endeared him in lots of other ways.

THE GIRL HE LEFT BEHIND, Natalie Wood, Tab Hunter, 1956

Everett Collection

Tab Hunter carved out a different niche when it came to being a heartthrob. Although he acknowledged that he was gay in his 2006 autobiography, the studio-publicity machine had fiercely downplayed that notion during the height of his fame in the 1950s, even going so far as to cook up fictitious romances with costars like Natalie Wood (The Burning Hills) and Debbie Reynolds (The Pleasure of His Company) in order to maintain Hunter’s image as one of Hollywood’s top romantic leads.

SUSAN SLADE, Troy Donahue, 1961

Everett Collection

When it came to screen sex symbols of the 1950s and 1960s, Troy Donahue was certainly a high-caliber candidate. Blond, blue-eyed and tanned, Donahue got his first big break in a 1959 film called A Summer Place. But it was later stints in such TV series as Surfside 6 and Hawaiian Eye that brought his charisma right into the living rooms of his fans.

TV Heartthrobs

Of course, television expanded the charismatic reach of most Hollywood heartthrobs, exposing them to millions more fans. TV also broadened the scope of what made those hotties so hot. Before Robby Benson found fame as Billy Joe McAllister in 1976’s Ode to Billy Joe, for instance, he cut his teeth on TV, thanks to an early role on a daytime soap called Search for Tomorrow.

THE WALTONS, Richard Thomas, 1971-1981.

Gene Trindl/TV Guide/CBS/Courtesy Everett Collection

For others, meanwhile, it was just the simple nature of a particular TV character that endeared them to fans. The humble persona of John-Boy Walton, for instance, instantly gave Emmy Award winner Richard Thomas an alluring presence on The Waltons. Meanwhile, at the other end of the behavioral spectrum, it was the raw good looks and girl-chasing charms of Mike Seaver on Growing Pains that propelled teen actor Kirk Cameron into the heartthrob arena.

Of course, Cameron wasn’t the first young star to become desirable via the magic of television. Back in the 1950s and 1960s, child actors of various sorts secured places in the hearts and minds of avid young fans, becoming darlings of their particular age groups. And usually, it was that fresh-faced innocence that really bolstered their appeal.

LOST IN SPACE, Billy Mumy, 1965-68.

20th Century Fox Film Corp./courtesy Everett Collection

Jon Provost won over legions of fans with his adventures as Timmy Martin on Lassie. Bill Mumy, meanwhile, did a similar thing in an entirely different setting, as young Will Robinson on Lost in Space.

Dwayne Hickman tapped into something special and different in 1959, when he stepped into the title role of The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis. It was the first network TV show to revolve primarily around the lives of teenagers. And, by breaking down the fourth wall and talking to the audience, Hickman made direct eye contact with his adoring followers as Dobie relayed his easily identifiable struggles with teen life.

Sally Field captured TV hearts in the ’60s

GIDGET, Sally Field (1967), 1965-1966.

Russ Halford/TV Guide/Courtesy Everett Collection

Breaking down the fourth wall and exuding such overt magnetism wasn’t only the domain of young male stars like Hickman, though. There were females who pulled it off as well.

In 1965, for instance, a young Sally Field spoke directly to the audience and won over the first of her millions of avid fans as that fresh-faced teenager in the title role of Gidget. Field didn’t stop there, though. After that short-lived show ended in 1966, Field kept her momentum going by bringing that innocence back to the TV screen a year later — as Sister Bertrille in The Flying Nun.

Classic Hollywood Hunks
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Classic Hollywood Hunks

September 2019

Cary Grant, Sean Connery, Rock Hudson and Paul Newman, smoldered onscreen and, in addition to being smokin’ hot, they were effortlessly cool.

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