• Gossip

    Gossip Friday: Practice Makes Perfect

    From October 1937: Recently Clark Gable, in a picture, was required to crawl under a bed for a comedy scene. He tried it several times but with no success–the director didn’t like it. Exasperated, the director went through the whole scene, himself, to show Clark how it should be done. As he scrambled out from under the bed he said, “You see, Clark, there’s nothing to it–it’s an easy stunt.” “Yeah,” retorted Clark, “it’s easy for you–but look at all the practice you’ve had!” ___ It was actually under a couch–in Saratoga.

  • News Clippings

    {In the News} Kay Williams Divorces Adolph Spreckels, Dates Clark Gable Again 1951-1954

    When we last left Kay, she was married to Adolph Spreckels Jr. and had just given birth to their second child. September 13, 1951: Fifth Wife Sues Spreckels Heir Los Angeles–The fifth wife of Adolph B. Spreckels II, 39-year-old heir to a sugar fortune, has sued him for divorce, alleging cruelty. The former Kay Williams, 33, who married Spreckels six years ago, asked the court in her suit yesterday to oust her estranged mate from the Bel Air mansion they occupy. She claims Spreckels persists in staying there although they became estranged September 5. Mrs. Spreckels, former actress, alleged in her complaint that her husband used physical violence on her…

  • News Clippings

    {In the News} Kay Williams Marries Adolph Spreckels 1945-1951

    Picking up with where we left off, Kay and Clark Gable are broken up and so Kay has moved on.. September 7, 1945: Kay Williams Is Bride Hollywood–Blond actress Kay Williams, who last year was reported engaged to Clark Gable, today was honeymooning with sugar heir Adolph Spreckels, Jr., of San Francisco. Same date: Film actress Kay Williams and Adolph Spreckels, Jr., sugar fortune heir, were married last night at the home of a Wickenburg justice of the peace. Adolph Spreckels Jr. was the grandson of Claus Spreckels, founder of the Spreckels sugar company. Now that she married Adolph Jr., you thought that was the last we’d see of  her…

  • Gossip

    Gossip Friday: Party at Sonja’s

    From 1945: It took her a long time to go social, but Sonja Henie finally cracked out with Hollywood’s first post-war party. She gave it the works! There was a buffet supper served inside a huge tent. A dance floor, music, and not coin a phrase, more stars than there are in heaven. Clark Gable was with Anita Colby–not serious (they say) but having such fun together. Joan Fontaine and Mrs. Ronald Colman wore the same “exclusive” gown, which didn’t make Joan too happy. Joan Crawford and Phil Terry arrived early, left early and danced only with each other. They missed the best impromptu floor show pit on by Danny…

  • Gossip

    Gossip Friday: Hey There!

    From December 1955: Hey There! When I pulled my auto to a stop at a Ventura Boulevard intersection, I noticed a familiar face in the car beside me. Figuring the handsome actor would be embarrassed to see me staring, I casually turned away. But to my amazement, I heard a rambling, nonsensical whistle directed at me. I then realized he was trying to attract my attention in the hope that I would recognize him. I shyly acknowledged Clark Gable’s persistence and in an instant a worried look disappeared from his face and he was smiling and beaming at me! Incidentally, Mr. Gable surely can’t carry a tune! Nancy Wyatt Fresno,…

  • News Clippings

    {In the News} Kay Williams Dates Clark Gable (For The First Time) 1944-1945

    When we last left Kay, she’d been awarded a divorce from her second husband, Argentine millionaire Macoco. Before we get into 1944, I want to address some inconsistencies about when Clark Gable and Kay Williams first got together. In her book, “Clark Gable: A Personal Portrait,” Kay details the following: I turned down the initial invitation to meet [Clark]. It was in 1942, shortly after I arrived in Hollywood. I had a stock contract at MGM, the same studio where Gable was the reigning star. I was living in a small apartment in Westwood when one day I received a call from Benny Thau, an MGM executive and technically, one…

  • News Clippings

    {In the News} Kay Williams 1937-1943

    Just as I did for Clark Gable’s fourth wife, Sylvia Ashley, I’ve rounded up newspaper blurbs about his fifth wife, Kay Williams. Kathleen “Kay” Williams was born on August 7, 1916 in Erie, Pennsylvania. Her father left the family when Kay was very young and so she, her brother Vincent and sister Elizabeth were raised solely by her mother, Joan, on a peach farm. Kay knew her good looks could get her more than Erie could offer, and so she took off for New York at age 17 to become a fashion model in New York. She was soon heralded as “The Most Beautiful Model in the World” and appeared…

  • Gossip

    Gossip Friday: New Gal on His Arm

    From January 1955 (Louella Parsons): When Clark Gable allows his picture to be taken again and again with the same girl at social events, it begins to look serious. Well, the King has been photographed many times lately with Kay Williams Spreckels, beautiful blonde ex-wife of sugar millionaire Adolph Spreckels.  Kay was terribly in love with Clark before she married Spreckels and apparently he was in love with her. They went together for a long time but then, without a word, Gable walked out of her life. I’d be the last to prophesy that he will marry Kay now. But there’s no telling with Clark, though I do know he…

  • Uncategorized

    Gossip Friday: Quiet Ann

    From December 1949: I remember a party when Loretta Young was at the same dinner table with Ann [Sheridan] and Clark Gable. Loretta talked brilliantly. Ann made no attempt to take the spotlight. In fact, she didn’t speak more than half a dozen words. She offered nothing–just laughed loudly when Loretta or someone said something amusing. ____ Kind of an awkward dinner table…

  • Articles

    {New Article} 1938: Getting Gay with Gable

    Ok, ok, stop laughing about the title of this article. “Gay” meant something else entirely in 1938! This article is about attending a dinner party with Clark Gable, Carole Lombard, Walter Lang and his wife Fieldsie and Claudette Colbert. So the next morning Clark, who is a good shot, brought back a bevy of wild duck and because he lives at a big hotel in Beverly Hills and has no cook, no valet, no chauffeur, no second maid, no China boy (“I’m not helpless,” says Mr. Gable when someone suggests that a movie star ought to have servants), he dumped them on Walter Lang’s ping pong table and said it…