• clark gable carole lombard
    Gossip

    Gossip Friday: Brand New Duds

    From November 1939: Fashion and local industry note: Out in Hollywood Clark Gable is sporting a brand new, fringed buckskin jacket made for him by Carl Scherer, Minneapolis Taxidermist. So pleased about it is Clark that he’s just ordered a whole suit of the same. Incidentally, Carole Lombard has also done a bit of shopping in town (by mail). She bought a whole flock of duck decoys from Le Boutin and Leo’s already had two reorders on them. Thought: Perhaps we’re overlooking this Hollywood market.

  • clark gable myrna loy too hot to handle
    Gossip,  Too Hot to Handle

    Gossip Friday: Over and Under Exposed

    From July 1938: As a newsreel cameraman, Clark Gable for a day was convinced he was a flop. For his role as a newsreel cameraman in “Too Hot to Handle,” Gable was called upon to cling to the top of a racing ambulance with his camera equipment while filming Myrna Lot trapped in a crashed burning plane. While Hal Rosson’s cameras were filming Gable and the burning plane on MGM’s Sixty Acres, Gable also was making an actual newsreel of Miss Loy and the blazing plane to be shown on the screen of his boss’ projection room. When Gable returned to the set the next day, he received a regulation…

  • Clark Gable
    Gossip

    Gossip Friday: Too Close and Personal

    From November 1956: Clark Gable has received tempting offers for the film rights to his life story which is a more dramatic tale than most movie heroes boast. But he intends to keep saying no, because he feels many of the most interesting episodes of his part are “too close and personal” to divulge them for public consumption–yet the biography wouldn’t be true without them.

  • Articles

    {New Article} 1948: The Gable Women

    This 1948 article is one in a long list of ones from this time period after the War, after Carole, but before Sylvia, where the press was trying to guess who the next Mrs. Gable would be. This game would restart after Sylvia left the picture. At this point, in late 1948, the list of probable Mrs. Gables was narrowed down to Dolly O’Brien, Slim Hawks, Iris Bynum, Anita Colby and Virginia Grey. what of Anita Colby, Hollywood’s most glamourous executive? The fans were asking that one, because of all the Gable dates, she has received the most publicity.  Anita is one of those girls everybody likes. It seems inconceivable…

  • clark gable jane withers
    Gossip

    Gossip Friday: Just One Question

    From July 1938: For the first time in his motion picture career, Clark Gable met a fan magazine interviewer who was unable to question him. She was Jane Withers. The youthful motion picture actress, acting as guest columnist for a magazine requested an interview from her favorite star. Upon being introduced to Gable on Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer’s “Too Hot to Handle” set, the youngster suddenly found herself speechless. A wide smile came over her face and her lips trembled–but try as she would–Jane just couldn’t talk. Clark, noting her embarrassment, immediately took matters into his own hands and put her at ease by conducting his own interview. By the time the interview…

  • clark gable
    Gossip

    Gossip Friday: Clark in Calgary

    From July 1933: Girls! Girls! Clark Gable may come to Calgary to attend the stampede–but he will accompanied by his wife. Interviewed at the Vancouver hotel last week, Mr. Gable refused to commit himself, but said that there was a possibility of his coming to Calgary. He left the hotel Saturday for an unannounced destination, hinting that it might be Banff and it might be Prince Rupert. Accompanied by Mr. and Mrs. F.N Selman, the party has been travelling by car up the Pacific coast, stopping as long as they wanted in a city and then starting for some other place. At no point would they tell reporters where they…

  • clark gable carole lombard
    Gossip

    Gossip Friday: Everything but Cook

    From January 1937: Clark Gable and Carole Lombard visited a phonograph shop not long back, and bought one of those newfangled machines that combine radio, home-recording, loud speaker, and play twenty-four records at a time. Gable watched its performance, then said to the salesman, “That darn thing does everything but cook.” At which Miss Lombard snickered, “You might say the same of me.”

  • clark gable forsaking all others
    Gossip

    Gossip Friday: Don’t Try Too Hard

    From December 1934: If you would be successful, don’t woo success too hard. This is the only moral Clark Gable has gained from his astonishing career. “Success–this kind of success-was the last thing in my mind,” the star explained frankly. “I liked acting and wanted to make a living at it, but I never once believed I would accomplish more than that.” Gable made these remarks on the set of “Forsaking All Others,” the new all-star picture in which he shares honors with Joan Crawford and Robert Montgomery. The picture, which opens Sunday at the Strand Theatre, was directed by W.S. Van Dyke. “Few professional actors look forward to any…

  • clark gable carole lombard
    Articles

    {New Article} 1940: Joe Lucky

    This 1940 article was in The Saturday Evening Post, whom I’m guessing paid their journalists per word because all their articles are so very bloated. This one is 5,838 words, but who’s counting. Me, the one who typed it, I am the one counting. Anyway. This article is supposed to be about how lucky Clark is and that’s why he is a success. But yet it goes into a rather pointless meandering tale of Clark’s early years working in the oil fields, the lumber camps, as a small time theatre actor–a lot of hard, broke times that eventually led to success. At least the author did indeed interview Clark, so…

  • clark gable carole lombard
    Gossip

    Gossip Friday: His Own Critic

    From July 1936: The big show at a Hollywood boulevard movie house the other evening was for that group of people who sat behind Clark Gable and Carole Lombard at a showing of “San Francisco.” But Gable’s conversation about the picture he’s in didn’t go unnoticed. He’d make a good movie critic.