• Anniversary

    Happy Birthday, Dear Mr. Gable!

    Today is Clark’s 111th birthday. I suppose it is slightly feasible that he could still be alive today…but not very likely! Knowing him and his modest ways, I am sure he would be shocked that anyone in the year 2012 remembers him and his movies. But we all do! Here’s what Clark was doing every 11 years on his birthday: 1912: Living in a house his father built on Mill Street in Hopedale, Ohio, young Clark was in the fifth grade, playing the horn in the school band and thriving under the attention of his beloved stepmother, Jennie Dunlap. 1923: Clark (or as he was called then, “Billy”) was working at…

  • Gossip

    Gossip Friday: Purple Shorts Exposed!

    From June 1940: Clark Gable would just as soon let the past rest in peace so far as the picture “San Francisco” is concerned. Not because he didn’t play one of his greatest roles. It was a shooting of the earthquake scene that neither he nor 500 extras will forget—even if the film that recorded it ended up on the cutting room floor. Buildings were crumbling, water-mains bursting, horses running madly, and Clark was avoiding falling wreckage. He sprang aside, and as he did so, his trousers caught on the nail of a wooden beam. With a rip they came off. And there was Mr. Gable caught short. Extras broke…

  • Articles

    Articles are Back!

      Thank you everyone for your patience while this site gets a much-needed facelift. I am happy to announce that the Article Archive is back up and running! Here you will find over 100 articles on Clark’s life and career, ranging from 1932 to 2008. Some highlights: Learn about Clark’s favorite pot roast and how to make his favorite pancakes in The Modern Hostess (1934). Read about one lucky contest winner’s date with Clark in I Had a Date with Clark Gable (1936). Hollywood’s Unmarried Husbands and Wives (1939) is the infamous article that called out Clark and Carole, among other celebrity couples, for “acting like they are married even…

  • Films,  Key to the City,  Movie of the Month

    {January Movie of the Month} Key to the City (1950)

    Key to the City is only notable really for the re-teaming of Clark Gable with Loretta Young, his co-star in Call of the Wild fifteen years earlier…oh, and the mother of his daughter, Judy. Loretta was suggested as his leading lady because the studio was trying to bring back some of Clark’s romantic luster as the grim Any Number Can Play and female-less Command Decision has darkened it. Gable is Steve Fisk, the boorish mayor of Puget City, who meets Clarissa Standish (Young), the stuffy mayor of Winona, Maine at the annual mayors conference in San Francisco. They fall in love despite their differences but trouble arises as they try…

  • Gossip

    Gossip Friday: Hypnotic to Most…

    From July 1941: Clark Gable to most women would be hypnotic. Not so to Rosalind Russell, whom he kisses in “They Met in Bombay.” Before shooting, Roz called to her maid: “Bring me my sex appeal!”—perfume atomizer, gum. ____ Roz is hilarious! There’s a great article in the archive in which Roz discusses working with Clark.

  • Anniversary

    Goodbye, Carole

    Carole Lombard Gable died 70 years ago today. Amazing to think that it has been that long, as Carole left in her wake films and tales that seem so modern. I’ve often thought you could drop Carole down in this day and age and she wouldn’t miss a beat. There is no denying that her death infintely shaped Clark Gable’s life from that day on. He was different…and he was never quite the same. From “The Story Gable Wouldn’t Tell”, Modern Screen magazine, November 1942: Dorothy Canfield Fisher once wrote a story about a girl whose parents’ love and dependence on each other grew with every passing year. Then her…

  • Gossip

    Gossip Friday: Puss in Splints

    From January 1941: Latest freak at the Gable-Lombard zoo (which is what Hollywood is calling that amazing San Fernando Valley ranch of the stars) is a cat with one hind leg in splints! Seems that Clark and Carole have no less than twenty cats about the place—and the population is going up steadily. But even so, the famous couple can’t find the heart to dispose of any of them, no matter how steady the rate of production. And when one of them meets disaster—well, the other day one of the cats got in a trap and came out with a broken leg. Instead of having her killed, Carole and Clark…

  • Gossip

    Gossip Friday: Beauty Shop Chatter

    From May 1940: Carole Lombard was at Westmore’s the other day having her hair shampooed and waved. After the star had left, Miss Lombard’s hairdresser took her next appointment–a woman almost too excited to talk. “Tell me all about her,” begged the customer. “Is she going to have a baby like the newspapers say? Wouldn’t it be wonderful if Clark and Carole had a baby? Why, America would go wild!” ________ Shucks, I, for one, am so sad that never happened. Wouldn’t it be something if there was a person walking around today, probably in their 60’s, who was half Clark and half Carole? Talk about hitting the genetic lottery.…

  • Updates

    2011 in Review

    Well, another year is coming to an end and a new one is beginning. Hard to believe in 2012 will be this website will be three years old! 2011 was an exciting year for DearMrGable.com: Over forty new articles added to the Article Archive Thousands of pictures added to the gallery–it now holds over 10,000 pictures! The one year anniversary of this site’s Facebook page–I cherish all the Gable fans I have met through Facebook! The following films were featured as Movie of the Month in 2011: January: Hold Your Man (1933) February: China Seas (1935) March: Saratoga (1937) April: Band of Angels (1957) May: Idiot’s Delight (1939) June: But Not…

  • Gossip

    Gossip Friday: Waitress’ Choice

    From February 1936: On a recent questionnaire given to waitresses at the Beverly Hills Brown Derby, it was discovered that twenty-five of the girls were willing to answer. Thirteen of them were writing poetry, three wrote plays and twenty-three thought Clark Gable the best actor. P.S. Only one little gal had any desire to be an actress!