Steven Scarborough Urges You To Support The Chuck Holmes Story

Filed under: Events,News on December 15, 2011 at 1:48 pm

Hot House President and Director Steven Scarborough started his 20+ year career in the adult industry at Falcon Studios, alongside his friend and partner Chuck Holmes. Together Chuck and Steven built the iconic Falcon brand into the world’s largest and most famous gay entertainment name in history. Steven left Falcon to start Hot House in 1993. Filmmaker Michael Stabile has documented the history of Chuck Holmes and Falcon studios in a captivating and vital film entitled The Chuck Holmes Story. You can help make this historical documentary become a reality. The film’s producers are taking donations via the website KickStarter.com. Currently, as of December 15 they have reached 75% of their goal – but they only have FOUR days left to collect donations. If they don’t make their goal of $25,000 they get nothing. Please consider making a generous donation TODAY!

Chuck Holmes, Brad McFadden, Dick Fisk, unidentified model, legendary director John Summers and Steven Scarborough, cir. 1979

Remembering Our Friend And Legendary Director John Summers

Filed under: News on August 23, 2010 at 5:03 pm

We lost John Summers to a fatal heart attack on Sunday, August 22. Not only was Mr. Summers one of the great pioneers of gay porn, he was a colorful personality, and a dear friend.

Summers, along with his contemporaries Chuck Holmes, John Travis, and Matt Sterling, are often considered the creators of gay porn as we know it today. Definitely one of the most prolific directors of the 80′s and early 90s, Summers brought his fondness for young, hung blond boys to video in such XXX blockbusters as Two Handfuls, Big & Thick, Style, and White Men With Big Dicks.

Deeply saddened by the loss of his friend of 30+ years, Hot House director/CEO Steven Scarborough has many fond memories of Summers whom he credits with starting his own career in gay porn. “John introduced me to John Travis, Matt Sterling, and Chuck Holmes in the late 70s and a few years later I started working with Chuck at Falcon. We had some wild times together; John always had some hot new model on his arm. I’ll miss him very much.”

Despite his larger-than-life personality, Summers rarely allowed himself to be photographed. Below are two rare exceptions courtesy of Steven Scarborough.

empress_IAboard Chuck Holmes private yacht The Empress I (l-r) Falcon founder Chuck Holmes, Matt Sterling, Summers, and Steven Scarborough (sometime in the late 80s).

sylvester_concertHolmes, Brad McFadden, Falcon star Dick Fisk, unidentified model, Summers & Scarborough attending the Sylvester Concert at the San Francisco Opera House (1979).