Elizabeth Taylor had intimate relations with President John F. Kennedy and actor Robert Stack, when she was a teenager, described in the latest unauthorized biography of the actress.
The new biography of the actress, “Elizabeth Taylor: There is Nothing Like a Dame” was written by Danforth Prince and Darwin Potter. The authors have spent many years trying to get unpublished information about one of the most beautiful Hollywood stars, according to contactmusic.com. The new book promises to provide readers with juicy details “about relationships and love life of Liz Taylor”.
According to Prince and Porter, Reagan was 36 years old when he invited the much younger Taylor to dine with him at his residence in the Hollywood Hills. Then U.S. President fell for the purple eyed teen.
The “Hot, Unauthorized and Unapologetic) biography of Elizabeth Taylor cites a conversation she had with a close friend: “Reagan treated me like I was a grown woman, which delighted me. We sat on the sofa and I was sure that he wanted to take the lead, but seemed too shameful to take the first step. I was the aggressor. Following a fervent foreplay on the couch, I went into the bedroom.”
Details of Taylor’s relationship with Kennedy will surely surprise readers of the new biography, as the authors say that the actress and politician used to attend, along with actor Robert Stack, the sexual escapades that were held in the politician’s pool.
Danforth Prince and Darwin Potter also argue that Elizabeth Taylor had affairs with other stars including Peter Lawford, Errol Flynn, Tony Curtis, Paul Newman and Frank Sinatra. She tried to blackmail Sinatra to marry her, telling him that she bears his child.
But the great love of Liz Taylor was actor Richard Burton, with whom she was married. In a passage from his intimate diaries, Burton testified: “I was exceedingly lucky all my life but my best luck was Elizabeth. She turned me into a male model… she is an extraordinary and wild girlfriend-mistress, she is shy, spiritual and difficult to fool.”
“She is a brilliant actress, is beautiful beyond any porn dream, she can be arrogant and stubborn, but also forgiving and loving. She tolerates my flaws and alcohol addiction, her stomach hurts when I am away from her and she also loves me. She’s like a catalog that can not be covered entirely, an almanac for poor Richard. And I will love her forever,” added the actor.
Even after the second divorce, the passion between Liz – who died last year at the age of 79 – and Burton (who died in 1984 at the age of 58) continued to exist, and he expressed his devotion to Liz in some other notes.
Elizabeth Taylor has earned her fame at age 12, with her role in “National Velvet” (1944), and was awarded two Oscars for “Butterfield 8” (1960) and “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?” (1966), the latter with Richard Burton as partner.

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