• clark gable
    Gossip

    Gossip Friday: Earn Respect

    From May 1954: “I saw Clark Gable the other night in New York. Now there’ a really great guy. They don’t call him “The King” for nothing. I used to hang around the caddy shack at the club when I was a kid hoping for a chance to pack his bag. Sometimes I got it. If I didn’t, I followed him around. He was always swell to me, always my idol. Still is. So when I saw him in Twenty-One I went right up. He’d been in Europe for a long time but I might have seen him yesterday. He said some pretty nice things about me, said he was…

  • clark gable
    Articles

    {New Article} 1934: What’s Happened, Gable?

    The latest article in the Article Archive is a typical one for the period. The MGM publicity machine was very keen on painting Clark Gable as this rebellious rogue who scoffed at fame and stardom and wanted nothing more than to walk away from it all. “The fault lies purely with myself,” [Clark] said. “I thought I wanted something, something I find I don’t want at all. I was not meant to be a motion picture actor—or any actor. But in the beginning I didn’t realize that I thought I wanted acting fame more than anything in the world. How, then, can Hollywood be blamed for giving me what I…

  • clark gable carole lombard
    Gossip

    Gossip Friday: Besieged

    From September 1941: Clark Gable, Carole Lombard Besieged by Film Fans Here Actor-Couple Signs 150 Autographs Before Hiding in Hotel; On Way to Hunt in Canada Albuquerque, New Mexico–Two old hunting pals spent a few hours in Albuquerque Monday, after their eastbound plane was grounded by bad weather–and Alvarado Hotel employees were almost swamped by a rush of autograph seekers. The reasons: one of the hunters is Clark Gable, motion picture star, who was accompanied by his wife, Carole Lombard of the screen. Gable’s hunting pal is H.H. Fleishman, of MGM Studios, who also was accompanied by his wife. The party was on its way by air to Manitoba, Canada,…

  • clark gable carole lombard
    Gossip

    Gossip Friday: Strange Quartet

    From November 1938: A strangely assorted quartet that meets once or twice a week in the valley for rounds of bridge or badminton is composed of Clark Gable, Carole Lombard and Mr. and Mrs. Andy Devine. The Devines have many other intimates, but Gable and Lombard keep much to themselves. When they do step out socially, it is invariably over to Andy’s ranch.

  • joan crawford clark gable
    Gossip

    Gossip Friday: Screenwriter’s Problem

    From November 1956: Joe Mankiewicz saw a preview of Clark Gable’s “King and Four Queens” and mentioned the screenwriter’s problem in writing a Gable film. Mankiewicz once was assigned to write a movie starring Gable and Joan Crawford. He said: “If Joan Crawford started from 59th St. to Times Square on New Year’s Eve, and Clark Gable from 34th St. to Times Square–with a million people between them–the audience would know from the start that they would fall in love. The only thing for the writer to do is show how and where they are to meet.”

  • clark gable run silent run deep
    Gossip

    Gossip Friday: Gable Says No to Natural

    From November 1956: When we saw Mr. Gable at the Goldwyn Studios recently we tried to get him to compare today’s leading ladies with stars of the past he has worked with. “Not a chance,” said Mr. Gable. “I don’t want to lose my head around here but I’ll talk generally about actresses without naming names. “For one thing I don’t think actresses are as attractive today as they used to be. When I think of movie stars I think of Joan Crawford. When she walks into a room you know she’s there and she knows how to present herself. You never see her unless she is groomed and looks…

  • clark gable carole lombard
    Gossip

    Gossip Friday: Patched Up

    From September 1936: Clark Gable and Carole Lombard decided t patch up their quarrel for the sake of the joint box they owned for last week’s Pacific southwest tennis tournament. Another interested observer at the matches was Mrs. Rhea Gable, who spent most of the time looking sadly at the husband from whom she is separated and his blonde companion.