Dennis Hensley
- Writer
- Producer
- Director
Dennis Hensley is an L.A.-based writer and performer who has worked in
television, film, radio, novels, magazines, cruise ship shows and the
occasional Tweet. He was born in the small town of Holbrook, Arizona on
September 29 and later graduated from Arizona State University with a
Bachelor of Science degree in Broadcasting. After graduating cum laude
from ASU, Dennis moved to Los Angeles and landed a job as a studio page
ushering eager audiences into tapings for such shows as She's the
Sheriff with Suzanne Somers. Sometimes he had the unfortunate task of
turning people away from My Sister Sam and that was a drag, but
otherwise, it was a fun glamorous gig. A year after moving to Los
Angeles, Dennis landed a job as a singer/dancer/Assistant Cruise
Director for Princess Cruises. He would work for the company for nearly
five years, performing in many musical extravaganzas with exclamation
points in their titles. After leaving the company, he created his own
line of cruise-themed greeting cards, which were sold on ships
throughout the world. In 1990, Dennis sold his first story as a writer,
Confessions of a Boy Toy Wannabe, a first-person account of his
harrowing dance audition for Madonna's Blonde Ambition tour, to
Movieline magazine and continued to write for them until its print
demise. When he told Madonna, in a round-table interview in '95, that
if it weren't for her rejecting him, he wouldn't have a writing career,
she replied, "Good for you, you took a negative and turned it into a
positive." She wasn't the least bit British yet. In his two decades as
a journalist, Dennis has written for Hollywood Life, In Style, Us
Weekly, TV Guide, Total Film, Esquire, Cosmopolitan, Glamour, Gotham,
Hampton's, Out, The Advocate and The Face. He's had Charlize Theron in
a bowling alley, Celine Dion in a limo and Carrie Fisher in her own
bed. In 2006, he penned the Ashlee Simpson Marie Claire cover story
where she encouraged teenage girls to love themselves the way they
were, then promptly went out and got a nose job. Says Dennis: "I should
have known something was up when the anesthesiologist showed up at the
end of the interview." As a travel writer, Dennis has written about
such destinations as New Zealand, Zurich, Montreal, Toronto, Prague,
Budapest, Vienna, Dubai, Peru, Brazil and Phoenix, AZ. He penned a
monthly column called "Going My Way" for OutTraveler.com and is a
regular contributor to the online magazine Man About World. In 1995,
Dennis began writing a fiction column for Detour Magazine entitled
Misadventures in the (213). Three years later, he turned his columns
into a novel of the same name that was published by Rob Weisbach Books,
a division of William Morrow. The book spent several weeks on the L.A.
Times bestseller list, and garnered Dennis appearances on The Rosie
O'Donnell Show, CNN and TNT's Movie Lounge. The audio version,
featuring Kathy Griffin as Dandy Rio, was nominated for an audio book
award in 1999. 2000 saw the release of The Water's Fine, Dennis's debut
CD as a singer/songwriter. The album, which was produced by Norman
Arnold was nominated for a GLAMA Award and the song "Shotgun" was the
most requested song at GayBC radio for the first quarter of 2001. In
2013, another track from the album, "Afterthoughts," was included in
the anti-bullying charity compilation CD AnonymUSe. In 2001, Dennis
wrote Independent Spirit Awards, hosted by John Waters, and realized a
lifelong dream of having a celebrity presenter trash his patter-writing
abilities on national television. James Woods did the honors. That same
year, Dennis co-wrote, co-directed, and co-starred with his friend Jack
Plotnick in Evie Harris: Shining Star, a short film about a washed-up
Hollywood actress on a quest to find her star on the Hollywood Walk of
Fame. The 13-minute comedy played festivals across the country and was
a finalist in the 2002 Planet Out Short Film Awards. Dennis was also
seen in the feature film Girls Will Be Girls, again sharing the screen
with the delightfully desperate Evie Harris. Dennis co-wrote the
feature script Testosterone with director David Moreton (Edge of
Seventeen). Based on the novel by James Robert Baker, the darkly comic
suspense drama starred Antonio Sabato Jr., David Sutcliffe, Jennifer
Coolidge, Sonia Braga and Argentine actress Celina Font. The film was
shot in Argentina in 2002, premiered at the Toronto International Film
Festival in 2003 and was released in theaters in 2004, getting the
highest per screen average in the country the weekend it opened. The
fall of 2002 saw the release of Screening Party, Dennis's second book
from Alyson Publications. It was about a group of friends who get
together to watch and crack wise about the movies that have effected
our lives, from Jaws to Pretty Woman to Flashdance to The Sound of
Music. The book was also released as a full cast audio book featuring
Kathy Griffin as the inimitable Dr. Beverly Beaverman. In 2003, Dennis
was nominated for a Lambda Book Award in the humor category for
Screening Party. In 2005, Dennis appeared as one of the "Main Gays" on
the Emmy-winning reality show Kathy Griffin: My Life on the D List.
Favorite scenes included: any scene at the Mexican restaurant Chevy's
and the heart-stopping search for Kathy's Oscar credential just minutes
before she was supposed to go live on the red carpet for E! In 2006,
Dennis worked as a writer on the comedy series Lovespring
International, starring Jane Lynch, Sam Pancake, Jack Plotnick, Wendi
McClendon-Covey and Jennifer Elise Cox and Mystro Clark. Alas, his
episode about a drug de-muler was deemed too offensive for Lifetime to
air but you can get it on iTunes. Other TV writing credits from the
mid-2000's include Fox Televison Studios' Life of Leisure and Bravo's
All-Star Reality Reunion. Also in 2006, Dennis adapted his novel
Screening Party into a TV pilot, which he executive produced and
appeared in alongside Tony Tripoli, Erin Quill, Ossie Beck, Felix Pire
and Nora Burns. The pilot was directed by Chil Kong, a friend Dennis
later cheered on as a "booster" on the game show Deal or No Deal to a
windfall of $211,000! From 2006-2008, Dennis co-hosted the pop
culture-themed radio show Twist, which was syndicated by Clear
Channel's Premier Radio Network and played on stations all across the
country. Dennis is also a frequent guest host on The Frank DeCaro Show
on SiriusXM OutQ satellite radio where he gets to say all the dirty
words he couldn't say on Twist. Dennis is the proud creator and host of
Dennis Hensley's The MisMatch Game, an R-rated updating of the beloved
70's game show, The Match Game. To date, the show has raised over
$110,000 for the LA Gay & Lesbian Center's Homeless Youth Program.
Dennis has also hosted and produced Outfest's Home Video Gong Show
every year since 1998 and is proud to the person who brought clips like
Meat Ass and Dixie Carter's Un-Workout to the masses. 2008 saw the
release of Dipshits, an animated short film about written and directed
by Dennis, with animation by the brilliant Sean Nadeau. It depicted a
conspiracy between Britney Spears, Lindsay Lohan, Paris Hilton, Nicole
Richie and President George W. Bush and featured the vocal talents of
Julie Brown, Stacy McQueen, Madeline Long, Kali Rocha, Maile Flanagan
and John Michael Beck. In 2008, Dennis was one of three winners of the
HBO Shout Short Film Contest and was given a grant to direct his script
for Reunion, a comedic short about a gay TV decorator who returns to
his smalltown high school reunion and gets hit on by someone very
unexpected. After playing festivals around the country, the short aired
on Cinemax-on-Demand and Logo's "The Clip List." Dennis spent three
months in New York City in 2009, working as a writer on Logo's The Big
Gay Sketch Show, writing sketches for such mega-talents as Kate
McKinnon, Julie Goldman, Colman Domingo, Paulo Andino, Johnny McGovern,
Stephen Guarino and Nicol Paone, who starred in "Two Lines with Glenn
Close," Dennis's proudest moment as a writer on the show. In 2010,
Dennis wrote and directed another comic short film, Rubdown, a
based-on-actual-events spy comedy about a guy who goes undercover as a
secret shopper at a spa to make sure a certain masseur isn't breaking
the spa's modesty rules. The short starred Jaimie Fauth, John
McCutcheon and Jackie Clarke and is one of the five titles included the
2011 compilation DVD The Dennis Hensley 5-Pack along with Reunion,
Screening Party, Dipshits and Evie Harris: Shining Star. From 2010 to
2013, Dennis worked as a staff writer on the hit E! comedy show Fashion
Police starring Joan Rivers. The popular segment "Starlet or
Streetwalker" was his idea so no one can ever say he didn't contribute
something to society. Dennis also consulted on the third season of
RuPaul's Drag Race and in 2013, served as Executive Producer/Showrunner
on the comedy series BRKDWN for BounceTV. 2014 saw the release of If We
Took a Holiday, a comedic short film Dennis collaborated on with
comedienne Nadya Ginsburg and filmmaker Glenn Gaylord. In the film,
Dennis and Nadya play loose versions of themselves. It's Dennis's
birthday and he's got the blues after a bad breakup so his actress
friend Nadya agrees to make his birthday special by pretending to be
Madonna all day long. The short premiered at Outfest of 2014 and is
currently starting to play festivals all around the world. Dennis
returned to his cruise ship roots recently, writing and directing the
murder mystery comedy show The Dangerous Hour for Princess Cruises. The
show plays on multiple ships around the world and a follow-up show The
Love Ahoy Reunion Mystery is in the works. Other projects include the
pilot script Rhapsody, a musical dramedy about Dennis's days as a
cruise ship dancer. Dennis also recently wrote a new TV adaptation of
his novel Misadventures in the (213). The story's still set in the
mid-90's so now, it's a period piece.