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Gossip Friday: A No Show
From November 1943: Clark Gable Rumor Travels Merry Round and Ends Nowhere Birmingham, Alabama—At 7:02am The News phone rang and an excited and youthful voice asked, “Is Clark Gable coming?” “No,” said The News, kindly but firmly. That’s what The News thought. The Army had said so, and The News believed the Army. From 7:03 to 11:59 the Frank Nelson Building, the Jefferson County Courthouse, the Tutwiler Hotel and all downtown Birmingham seethed with rumors that Clark Gable had been here since 9, that Clark Gable would arrive at 3, that Clark Gable was marching through the city at the time in a parade. But at noon came an explosive…
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Gossip Friday: A Hearty Laugh
From January 1941: Seen: Clark Gable and Carole Lombard having a hearty laugh in a café as they read a fan mag story prophesizing their divorce.
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Gossip Friday: A Fashionable Escort
From February 1937: Clark Gable and Carle Lombard were seen lunching in the Turf Club. Gable terminated a Utah hunting trip with Dr. Franklyn Thorpe, Mary Astor’s ex-husband, to get back and escort Carole. Gable wore a Cheviot tweed, with plain back jacket, and two side vents in the coat. A green oxford shirt, with button down collar, green tie, brown suede shoes and Tyrolean hat, hit the new men’s fashion note.
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Clark Gable in Tampa Part 5: Mrs. Gable is Nice
For the last segment of our series of interviews Clark Gable gave at the Tampa International Airport in February 1958, it appears that as the female reporters were hounding Clark asking him mundane questions, a male reporter managed to talk to Kay Gable. Mrs. Gable is Nice, Male Reporter Says by Leland Hawes, Tribune Staff Writer I had Mrs. Gable all to myself–for 10 nice minutes while her crinkle-browed husband was nearly “skwushed” by a squad of inquiring reporters, female variety. A cool, cool blonde with blue, blue eyes, Kay Gable didn’t twitter an eyelash at the spectacle of her chunk-of-man surrounded by palpitating pulchritude. “It’s really rather refreshing to…
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Gossip Friday: Most Nervous
From June 1945: Clark Gable’s studio made it a sort of public unveiling when reported for his first camera assignment after having spent more than three years–all of them after he was 40–as a buck private-to-major in the air forces. Most nervous man on the set: Clark Gable.
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Clark Gable in Tampa Part 4: His Ears Aren’t So Big After All
Continuing in our series of Clark Gable being interviewed at the Tampa International Airport in February 1958, here’s Part 4, in which you find out he loves huckleberries, if he still loves acting, and if he’d consider going to the moon: His Ears Aren’t So Big After All by Ramona Demery, Tribune Staff Writer I’m rather new at this thing, I guess you call it a cub reporter. Well, not even that, for my job is to keep the floor clean, file weddings and write garden club notices. Then along came a chance to interview Clark Gable. What a madhouse: four women firing questions at once. This one just gave…
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Gossip Friday: Good Picture
From September 1947: Clark Gable has finally seen “Gone with the Wind.” He was telling on the “Homecoming” set how he happened to miss it. At the world premiere in Atlanta he was so weary from the civic celebration that he put his feet up on the railing before the front row and slept right through the picture. When it came to the premiere here [in Los Angeles], his wife, the late Carole Lombard, said she didn’t want to sit through the four-hour show again. So they walked through the crowds, down the aisle and right out the back exit. Recently a friend arranged a showing and invited Cark. “Good…
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Clark Gable in Tampa Part 3: Scarlett Never Got Rhett Butler Back
Continuing our series of articles from Clark Gable being interviewed at the Tampa International Airport in February 1958, here’s Part 3, in which he gives an answer to whether he thinks Rhett ever goes back to Scarlett, and he spoils the end of Run Silent Run Deep: Scarlett Never Got Rhett Butler Back By Panky Glamsch, Tribune Staff Writer Just as Rhett Butler never returned to Scarlett in Gone with the Wind, Clark Gable may never return to The Tribune Woman’s Department. But at least four women staff members will never be the same. The day it was announced The King would arrive at Tampa International Airport, the air was…
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Gossip Friday: Very Much All Right
From March 1941: Wouldn’t you think that, after coming 3,000 miles to see Clark Gable (and a few others), and, after rearranging a whole week so as to be able to get out to MGM, when he would be working on a picture–wouldn’t you imagine that we’d have something very serious and important to talk about? Something like the Rhett Butler portrayal which climaxed his career. Or like the shoulder which gave him so much trouble a few months ago. Or like his home life. Or Carole Lombard. Well, we did touch on those subjects, of course, but lightly. No need to say much about Rhett Butler, since Gable put…
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Clark Gable in Tampa Part 2: He Looked at Me–And I Reached For The Wall
Continuing in our series of articles posted in the Tampa Tribune in February 1958, here is Part 2 of Clark being interviewed at the Tampa International Airport: He Looked at Me–And I Reached For The Wall by Lee Winter, Tribune Staff Writer Clark Gable’s whiskery glance stirred up a thick batter of longing among women waiting in the cold wind at the airport. Mostly, they were older women who strained for that first look at the tall figure striding from the plane. One woman tore a button off her glove as she leaned on the wire fence. Later, she told me that her first memory of Clark Gable was a…