Friday, May 29, 2026

Larry King, Tennis Promoter and Billie Jean's Former Husband, Dies at 81


Sad to hear about the death of Larry King, the dreamy All-American boy who helped build women's tennis during his 22-year marriage to Billie Jean King and then stood by her when her lesbian affair was revealed. He was 81 and died following an unspecified illness.

His tennis legend ex, who was godmother to his children from a second marriage, shared the news on social media, writing: 
Larry was one of the unsung heroes in the establishment of women’s professional tennis in the early 1970s.

Larry and I met at Cal State LA, where Larry opened my eyes to feminism. We were married for 22 years and in business together for decades. He was involved behind the scenes when the Original 9 signed our one dollar contracts, and he and I co-owned several tournaments on the Virginia Slims Tour.

He was integral and did much of the important legal work to establish the Women’s Tennis Association and the historic Battle of the Sexes match in 1973; and the Women’s Sports Foundation and womenSports magazine in 1974. He also was a co-founder of World TeamTennis.

Larry’s intelligence, love, commitment, and humor helped me navigate my career for more than 20 years.

Ilana, my wife and business partner, and I are deeply saddened by Larry’s passing and we extend our deepest condolences to his wife, Nancy, and their children - our godchildren - Sky (his wife Caroline and daughter Athena) and Katie.

In the documentary "Give Me the Ball!," which premiered at the Sundance Film Festival but still hasn't made its way to me, Larry revealed that he was unaware of Billie Jean’s relationship with Los Angeles hairdresser Marilyn Barnett until shortly before it became front-page news in 1981, when Barnett sued the tennis legend for palimony and publicly outed her. At the time, Larry says he and Billie Jean had “an open kind of relationship.” 

“I didn’t know that this was going on,” Larry says in the film. “Billie Jean never mentioned it to me until the day before it hit the press.”

Billie Jean, who married him in 1965, says her sexuality wasn’t something she understood at the time. “I didn’t have much experience with sex at all or anything. One girl kissed me in college. That was it,” she explains in the documentary. 

“Everybody thinks I was hanging with girls. I wasn’t at all. We had a great time, fell in love. I thought he was the one.… Larry was different from other guys. He was a feminist.”

Larry, who says in the documentary that he “thought she was the cat’s meow” when he first met Billie Jean, says that while he supported her career, it ultimately took a toll on their relationship. 

“Billie Jean changed women’s tennis. And she wanted to change the world,” he said. “I tried to fit into that plan, but it was more the life that Billie Jean wanted. It wasn’t the life I wanted.”

Billie Jean added: “He wanted us to have children and everything, but I started to realize something isn’t right.”

After an abortion that was made public by Larry -- “I wasn’t gonna tell anybody,” Billie Jean said -- the early '70s were “really bad” for the couple, eventually leading to discussions about divorce. 

“I thought when we got married forever, it was forever,” Larry said. “I considered the divorce stuff to be more nonsense than reality.”

“It wasn’t right for Larry and I to stay married,” Billie Jean added. “I didn’t know what I was doing. I hadn’t figured out who I was, and he shouldn’t have been suffering through that either. I kept pleading with him to divorce me, and he wouldn’t do it. It was all about me; it wasn’t about him. I was the one having challenges. I was so confused.”

Despite having an open relationship by the time Billie Jean began her secret romance with Barnett, Larry said he didn’t view the hairdresser as a serious threat. 

“I didn’t really look at Marilyn Barnett as a real threat,” he said. “It would have bothered me a lot more if she had male friends, but it didn’t bother me that she had female friends because I didn’t really look like I was competing with them.”

Larry stood by Billie Jean’s side during the infamous press conference where she admitted to the affair -- which was the moment I first figured I out what I "was" -- and remained close after their divorce in 1987. (Larry has been married to Nancy King since 1990.) 

Billie Jean -- who technically did not officially come out until an Advocate magazine article in 1998(!) -- married former tennis player Ilana Kloss in 2018 -- says everyone involved eventually found happiness. 

“Larry and I, we’re still friends,” she said. “[He and Nancy] have two children. We’re the godmothers. Ilana and I are so happy now.”

Marilyn Barnett, however, died by suicide on May 5, 1997, at the age of 49, having previously become a paraplegic in October 1980 after "falling" 30 feet from the balcony of the Kings' Malibu beach house, which local fire department logs from the time noted as a "possible suicide attempt."

Now confined to a wheelchair and unable to work to support herself, Barnett filed her high-profile palimony lawsuit six months after the fall. Barnett’s lawsuit failed entirely, resulting in no financial settlement, no property rights and an immediate eviction order. The court rejected claims to the Malibu home, with the judge criticizing Barnett for attempted extortion by withholding private love letters in exchange for a $125,000 settlement.

Here's hoping he's hitting on a multi-colored court in the sky!


January 30, 1945 - May 29, 2026


Remains of the Day (05/29)


The List: My love of "The Pirate Movie" is well-documented -- and now I'm dying that the cast reunited in L.A. to celebrate the classic cult film
















Hot Cats of the Day: Two of Harvey's cousins are now cohabitating and it looks like they're taking it in stride! 


Fight Back: You've got another chance to experience David Wise's theatrical ACT UP experiment on June 15 in NYC. Details HERE.

Thursday, May 28, 2026

Chicago, Cher and the Crawfords

 

Hello, page turners!

Since I last wrote, I did indeed complete Erik Larson's "Devil in the White City," which I received as a gift in 2007. I hadn't peeked at any reviews, but since finishing I concur with a lot of readers that the "b" plot -- the titular devil of a serial killer -- was unnecessary given that the main story about the World's Columbian Exposition (aka the 1893 Chicago World's Fair) was utterly fascinating and had nothing to do with the sicko.

My guess is Larson didn't think anyone would read a book solely about the fair, so wove in the murder stuff to get people to pay attention. (Spoiler: It worked. The book spent years on the New York Times Bestseller list and became a defining work in popularizing modern narrative nonfiction.) 

Kudos to my friend Marc for suspecting I would enjoy it, even if I was too stubborn to appreciate it for nearly 20 years!

At the same time, I've been revisiting my brother Bill's second book, "The Elephants of Style," because I miss his wit.

And then I dug into the first part of Cher's memoir and nearly sobbed when it abruptly ended even before "Come Back to the Five and Dime, Jimmy Dean, Jimmy Dean." 

I thought I was a superfan of the Emmy-, Grammy- and Oscar-winning star, but I must say I was stunned by how much I didn't know. (Add Ms. Sarkisian to the list of people whose lives no one will ever live again, with the rags to riches and back again existence dating back to her girlhood.) She's a fantastic storyteller and doesn't shy away from uncomfortable topics. Part II can't arrive quickly enough. 


Right now I'm listening to the 40th anniversary edition of "Mommie Dearest" -- which must have come out in 2018 -- and getting a real wake-up call about audiobooks. 

I loved hearing Jeff Hiller tell his story and thought Will Patton brought "On the Road" to life. And I wish to God my brother had recorded audio versions of his three books. But I find Tavia Gilbert, who apparently is actually an award-winning narrator, incredibly annoying and it's making me root for Joan. (Having the right person on board is obviously more important than I realized.) 

I'm just starting Chapter 13, but at the rate I'm going, I'm not sure I'll be happy unless Christina's dead. What is up with this woman's intonations and why isn't someone slapping her?


Still hoping for more connections on Goodreads -- does anyone still use that besides me? -- and tell me what you're reading in the comments.

On the Rag, Vol. 909


This week's rag 'n' mag roundup features Christopher Cote, Bruno Miranda, Michols Peña, Alan Cumming and more BELOW

Wednesday, May 27, 2026

Remains of the Day (05/27)




















Tuesday, May 26, 2026

The 'West Side' Mangler

 

While I applaud my favorite local sandwich shop, Giacomo Fine Foods, for getting new and clearer signage, there's no way a business on the Upper West Side of Manhattan can allow this to stand in good conscience. While I'm tempted to start picketing to get it re-made, I don't dare say a thing given my turbulent relationship with the establishment.


Still, such protests have been known to work before in this neck of the woods. :-)


The Upper West Side's Grammar Table weighs in!