But three years ago, Sargent, who died of prostate cancer at 64 on July 8, grew tired of pretending. Incensed by Gov. Pete Wilson's decision to veto California's gay-rights bill, Sargent declared his sexuality before a sizable Hollywood gathering on National Coming Out Day. "It was such a relief," he said afterward. "It was like a healing. Now," he joked, "I'm a retroactive role model."
Born Richard Cox in Carmel, Calif. (his mother was a former silent-film actress; his father, a World War I hero and a Hollywood publicist), Sargent made, he later admitted, "a couple of good college tries at suicide" at Stanford. He drifted into movies, then got his break in Bewitched, which left him financially independent.
When he learned he had cancer in 1989, Sargent stayed involved in gay-rights issues. His lover for the past four years was Albert Williams, 36, a writer and producer who says Sargent "faced death like a champion. He knew he was going to die and tried to keep everyone's spirits up." Five days before his death, Sargent threw his annual Fourth of July bash at his house atop the Hollywood Hills. Throughout his illness, Elizabeth Montgomery was a constant visitor. "He was a great friend," she said. "I will miss his love, his sense of humor and his courage."
Saved by the Bell Reunion
The hookups, the meltdowns, the memoires
The case reveals what was really going on what they think of each other now!















