George Nader


George Nader was an American actor and writer. He appeared in a variety of films from 1950 through 1974, including Sins of Jezebel, Congo Crossing, and The Female Animal. During this period, he also did episodic television and starred in several series, including NBC's The Man and the Challenge. In the 1960s he made several films in Germany, playing FBI agent Jerry Cotton. He is remembered for his first starring role, in the low-budget 3-D sci-fi film Robot Monster, known as "one of the worst films ever made".
Discreetly gay during his acting career, he and his life partner Mark Miller were among Rock Hudson's closest friends. After retiring from acting, he wrote Chrome, a science-fiction novel dealing positively with a same-sex relationship.

Early life

Nader was born in Pasadena, California, the son of Alice, who was from Kansas, and George G. Nader, who was from Illinois and of Lebanese heritage. He earned his Bachelor of Arts in theatre arts at Occidental College.
During World War II he served in the US Navy as a communications officer in the Pacific theater from 1943 to 1946.

Early career

Nader began his acting career in 1950. He appeared in several productions at the Pasadena Playhouse over four years, which led to a number of bit parts in films. He was in Rustlers on Horseback for Republic Pictures while also appearing on stage in Summer and Smoke at the Pasadena Playhouse.
He had small parts in You're in the Navy Now, The Prowler, Take Care of My Little Girl, , and Two Tickets to Broadway. He had a bigger part in a Tim Holt Western, Overland Telegraph, and a drama, Monsoon. He was going to star in a film called GI Smith, but production was cancelled. He had unbilled bit roles in the studio films Phone Call from a Stranger and Down Among the Sheltering Palms.

Leading man

Nader's first starring role was in Robot Monster, a 3-D feature film directed by Phil Tucker. Although the film is remembered primarily for its "camp" attributes as "one of the worst films ever made", it was financially successful and led to more prominent roles for Nader in other films. He supported Paulette Goddard in Sins of Jezebel and had a supporting role in Carnival Story. He was the male love interest for Miss Robin Crusoe at Fox.
Meanwhile, Nader appeared regularly on TV shows such as Schlitz Playhouse of Stars, Hallmark Hall of Fame, Letter to Loretta, Cavalcade of America, Lux Video Theatre, and The Pepsi-Cola Playhouse.

Universal Pictures

His rugged good looks won him a contract with Universal Studios, for which he made a number of films, although he often found himself in the shadow of more famous leading men such as Rock Hudson, Tony Curtis, and Jeff Chandler. His first film for Universal was a Western, Four Guns to the Border, wherein he was billed beneath Rory Calhoun and Colleen Miller. He followed it with Six Bridges to Cross, supporting Tony Curtis and Julie Adams in a role that Chandler had turned down.
Nader was promoted to lead in The Second Greatest Sex opposite Jeanne Crain and in Lady Godiva of Coventry opposite Maureen O'Hara, stepping in for Chandler again. In 1955, he won a Golden Globe Award for "Most Promising Newcomer."
He starred opposite Virginia Mayo in Congo Crossing and was second-billed to Chandler in Universal's expensive war epic Away All Boats. He was Esther Williams's leading man in The Unguarded Moment, which starred a young John Saxon. He had top billing in Four Girls in Town and Man Afraid. Nader supported Audie Murphy in Joe Butterfly, a military comedy. He had the lead in Appointment with a Shadow and Flood Tide. He was Hedy Lamarr's love interest in The Female Animal, replacing John Gavin. He had the starring role in Nowhere to Go, a 1958 British crime drama featuring the screen debut of Maggie Smith.

Television

Nader moved into regular television roles in the late 1950s, appearing in several short-lived series, including The Further Adventures of Ellery Queen and The Man and the Challenge. In 1961, he appeared in an Alfred Hitchcock Presents episode "Self Defense", with Audrey Totter. In the 1961–62 season, he appeared as insurance investigator Joe Shannon in the syndicated crime drama Shannon, co-starring with Regis Toomey.
Nader appeared frequently on The Loretta Young Show, a dramatic anthology series on NBC.
He produced and directed Walk by the Sea.

International

Nader had the title role in a European swashbuckler, The Secret Mark of D'Artagnan. He made Zigzag in the Philippines and The Great Space Adventure for Albert Zugsmith. He starred in The Human Duplicators and regularly guest-starred on TV shows. Nader went to Germany to star as FBI agent Jerry Cotton in the German film Tread Softly. It was a hit and led to a series of films: Manhattan Night of Murder, Tip Not Included, The Trap Snaps Shut at Midnight, Murderers Club of Brooklyn, Death in the Red Jaguar, Death and Diamonds, and Dead Body on Broadway.
In Europe he also appeared in The Million Eyes of Sumuru and The House of 1,000 Dolls. One of his last films was Beyond Atlantis, made in the Philippines.

Writing

In the 1970s, Nader suffered an eye injury in an automobile accident, which made him particularly sensitive to the bright lights of movie sets and forced him to retire from acting. He began writing, including his 1978 science fiction novel Chrome, which dealt with a forbidden romance between a man and an android.
According to Variety's Army Archerd, Nader had completed a book called The Perils of Paul about the gay community in Hollywood, which he did not want published until after his death.

Personal life

Although Nader was not openly gay during his film career, he generally did not feign relationships with women to conceal it, instead deflecting questions by saying that he had not met "the right one".
Nader lived with his life partner, Mark Miller, whom he met in 1947 while they were acting in a play together.
Miller worked as Rock Hudson's personal secretary from 1972 until the star's death, and the couple inherited the interest from Hudson's $27 million estate after his death from AIDS complications in 1985. Hudson biographer Sara Davidson described Nader, Miller, and another person as "Rock's family for most of his adult life." Nader publicly acknowledged his sexual orientation shortly afterward.
Nader and Miller eventually settled in Palm Springs.
Stricken by multiple medical problems, Nader entered the hospital in September 2001. He died on February 4, 2002 in Woodland Hills, California, of cardiopulmonary failure, pneumonia, and multiple cerebral infarctions. He was survived by Miller, his cousins Sally Kubly and Roberta Cavell, and his nephew, actor Michael Nader. His ashes were scattered at sea; a cenotaph in his honor, together with Mark Miller and Rock Hudson, exists in Cathedral City's Forest Lawn Cemetery. In 2002, a Golden Palm Star on the Palm Springs, California, Walk of Stars was dedicated to him.

Filmography