In 1968, a year before Stonewall, 18-year old Joseph Cali was playing chess and cruising in Washington Square Park in Manhattan when he was approached by George Haimsohn, author of
Stories of the Homosexual Life, The Gay Psychedelic Sex Book, The Gay Coloring Book, A Summer on Fire Island, and the book and libretto for the musical
Dames at Sea, which was currently playing off-Broadway.
Haimsohn was also a photographer, working under the name Plato, and invited Joe to model.
His first full frontal photo appears in a 1968 issue of
Go Guys. The text says that Joe is a "fast shooting star on the physique horizon....well equipped to handle himself in any tight spot."
Tell me more, tell me more, did he get very far?
The photo set and magazine work paid for Joe's tuition at Siena College, where he led anti-war protests, starred in the play Drunkard, and worked as a stage manager for The Gingham Dog.
He moved to Los Angeles in 1973, and continued to pose for the Model of the Month Club and Photozique, while making the rounds of auditions.
Joe's big break came in 1977, when he was cast as Joey, best buddy of John Travolta's Tony in the disco drama
Saturday Night Fever
More Brooklyn-disco roles followed, including Flatbush, a tv series about a gang called the Fungos. Joe starred as Presto opposite Adrian Zmed as Socks. It only lasted for six episodes.
He got 19 episodes of
Today's FBI in 1981-82 as Nick, the "Ethnic" member of the team according to Wikipedia. I'm not sure what his ethnicity was.
More Joseph Cali after the break. Warning: Explicit