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Gossip Friday: Rhett’s Horse
From July 1939: Clark Gable is becoming so attached to the splendid five-gaited horse which he rides in “Gone with the Wind” that he is seriously considering its purchase for his own use.
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Gossip Friday: Belated Honeymoon
From July 1939: The only people, apparently, who don’t know where Clark Gable and Carole Lombard are going to spend their belated honeymoon are Mr. and Mrs. Gable. Gable admitted that he and Mrs. Gable have discussed a motor trip through Europe (Gable has never been abroad)), Alaska, the Panama Canal and South America. “We haven’t gotten around to Africa yet,” grinned Gable, “or Niagara Falls.” But with Metro Goldwyn Mayer speeding work up on “The Great Canadian,” to follow “Gone with the Wind,” the chances are that the Gables will spend their honeymoon in Hollywood. ___ “The Great Canadian” wasn’t made, with or without Gable. And unfortunately, Clark and…
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Gossip Friday: Not Magnificent
From July 1939: Metro people who have seen some of the 16 reels of “Gone with the Wind” say Clark Gable dominates the picture. Warner-ites confide that Olivia de Havilland steals it. Selznick employees claim it’s a triumph for Vivien Leigh, who is in almost every scene. But nobody says it’s magnificent.
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Gossip Friday: Update on Scarlett
From July 1939: Hollywood–The movie capital has not been kind to Vivien Leigh, and Miss Leigh, in turn, hates Hollywood. Neither knows much about the other, but it is unlikely that there will be time for revision of opinions. When the last mile of film has been ground through David Selznick’s cameras, his Scarlett O’Hara expects to be gone with the wind. On January 13 (which fell on a Friday), when Miss Leigh was formally signed to the most coveted role in the most talked-about picture in screen history, Hollywood welcomed her with mixed jealousy and resentment, blank puzzlement about her qualifications, feigned pity for the difficulty of her role,…
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Gossip Friday: An Adult Approach
From December 1948: Clark Gable, on the lack of movie attendance of oldsters: “Maybe we should take a more adult approach to films. Heaven knows, my pictures haven’t contributed much in that regard.”
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Gossip Friday: Number One Guest
From July 31, 1938: Clark Gable is the nation’s Number One guest. Name any kind of a beauty contest, rodeo, festival, benefit or fraternal clam bake and the chances are 10 to 1 Gable has been invited to attend it. Ten percent of the Gable fan mail consists of invitations–conventions, personal appearances, cornerstone layings, graduation ceremonies, banquets and purely social events. It runs a close second to the 12 percent who won’t believe he prefers Carole Lombard to them–and daintily offer their hand and heart in marriage.
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Gossip Friday: You Beat Us
From June 1940: Clark Gable and Carole Lombard are confirming the baby item to close friends. They sent one pair of new parents a congratulatory wire saying: “Nice going, you beat us but not by much. ___ Sadly, not true.
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Gossip Friday: Gable in the Midwest
From June 5, 1947, Decatur, Illinois: Bradley’s cabins parking lot and office swarmed with crowds of celebrity seekers last night as word got around that Clark Gable was staying there. But the night clerk and A.E. Bradley, operator, claimed to know nothing of the film star’s presence. A man named Al Menasco, a stranger in Decatur, reserved a cabin at Bradley’s and visited cordially with the clerk. But no one at Bradley’s knew that the famous Clark Gable was Mr. Menasco’s traveling companion, Mr. Bradley insisted today. But the crowd knew. Several persons had seen the two men eating dinner at the Hotel Orlando’s Commodore room last night and many…
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Gossip Friday: Don’t Got Milk
From July 1940: I hate to tell this on Clark Gable and Carole Lombard, nor does it seem possible, but when they built their barn, they bought a cow, which turned out to be a heifer (ingenue to you). Never having had a calf, it couldn’t give milk. Carole learned the truth, and exchanged it for a cow. Then they bought everything that Goes into a first-class commercial dairy, so they would have fresh milk daily.
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Gossip Friday: Our Home is Our Own
From July 1939: There is something of a race on among some hundred or so journalists and magazine writers to get a description of the Clark Gable-Carole Lombard estate. There seems to be a distinct catch in it, or the newlyweds absolutely refuse to have their place photographed in detail. “It isn’t that we want to be mean,” explains Carole, “but we like to feel that our home is our own, and anyway it isn’t finished yet. Possibly it never will be finished. That’s why it keeps us interested.” Gable admits he has always wanted to farm. It has been a suppressed desire for years and now that he has…