The former blue-collar worker from Ohio with the prominently jutting ears became the 'King of Hollywood', a title based on his being the leading male box office attraction throughout the 1930s. The dashing, mustachioed image of Rhett Butler in "Gone with the Wind" (1939) remains indelibly associated with the name Clark Gable, but before his "Frankly, my dear, I don't give a damn" made screen history, Gable (with the aid of his MGM publicist Howard Strickland) had already established a distinctive screen persona as the virile, lovable rogue whose gruff facade only thinly masked a natural charm and goodness.
Following his marriage to actress Josephine Dillon, Gable played bit parts in several silent Hollywood features (e.g., "The Merry Widow", 1925) but he first achieved fame as a leading man on Broadway in the late 20s. With the flourishing of sound films, Gable joined the new generation of movie actors who made the move from New York to Hollywood in the early 30s. On the advice of director/actor Lionel Barrymore MGM granted him a screen test and, after a talkie debut in a Pathe western ("The Painted Desert" 1931), Gable signed a contract with the prestigious Metro studio, where he remained until 1954. In his first year alone, Gable appeared in a dozen features, quickly rising from supporting player to romantic lead. He was teamed with all of MGM's leading ladies, most notably opposite Norma Shearer in "A Free Soul" (1931), Greta Garbo in "Susan Lenox, Her Fall and Rise" (1931) and Joan Crawford in "The Possessed" (1931)--though he proved equally adept in male-oriented action sagas ("The Secret Six", "Sporting Blood", "Hell Divers", all 1931).
Despite his rising popularity, Gable balked at having to play gangsters and overly callous characters. In a now legendary act of studio disciplining, Louis B. Mayer "punished" Gable by loaning him out to lowly Columbia for a role in a minor romantic comedy. The project, Frank Capra's "It Happened One Night" (1934), unexpectedly became the first film to sweep the five major Oscars (for best actor, actress, director, writer, and picture) and vaulted Gable to new prominence in the industry. His sensational appearance "sans" undershirt in the film's bedroom scene went down in Hollywood legend as the event that caused American males to make fewer trips to the haberdasher. While its effect on undershirt purchases may be purely apochryphal, the publicity from the event no doubt led to Gable's next major role, that of the bare-chested Fletcher Christian in MGM's "Mutiny on the Bounty" (1935), another Oscar-winner for Best Picture.
With such success under his belt, Gable commanded even greater star treatment at Metro and began appearing in fewer films each year, although his range of genre vehicle expanded. He continued his string of romantic comedies with Jean Harlow ("Red Dust" 1932, "Hold Your Man" 1933, "China Seas" 1935, "Wife vs. Secretary" 1936, and "Saratoga" 1937), but also made off-beat musical appearances ("San Francisco", "Cain and Mabel", both 1936; the comedy-drama "Idiot's Delight" 1939, in which he sang "Puttin' on the Ritz"), action dramas ("The Call of the Wild" 1935, "Test Pilot" 1938) and romances ("Love on the Run" 1936). With MGM even 0promoting his image in its other feature films (Judy Garland singing "Dear Mr. Gable--You Made Me Love You" in "Broadway Melody of 1938" and Mickey Rooney doing Gable impressions in "Babes in Arms" 1939) Clark Gable remained King of the Hollywood box office throughout the decade, culminating in his highly publicized and memorable performance in "Gone With the Wind." Only his ill-conceived biopic "Parnell" (1937) interrupted a string of popular successes.
Gable's reign at the top of Hollywood stardom in 1939 was enhanced by his storybook romance and marriage to actress Carole Lombard. Her untimely death in a plane crash in January 1942 marked a tragic downturn in Gable's life. He turned his back on his film career and enlisted in the Army Air Corps. After two years of decorated combat service, Gable returned to the screen in 1945 with his macho hero's image only further amplified. But despite much studio publicity for his return in "Adventure" ("Gable's Back and Garson's Got Him") and some box office success, Gable's post-war film career consisted mostly of routine, undistinguished vehicles. He consistently starred in one film a year, but never regained his status of 30s. Still, there were no pretenders to the throne. When MGM remade "Red Dust" in 1953 as "Mogambo", Ava Gardner was in for Harlow, Grace Kelly played the Mary Astor role, and Gable's part? Only Gable could fill Gable's shoes, even twenty-one years later.
After a short-lived marriage (Lady Sylvia Ashley) and an unsuccessful attempt at independent production in the 1950s, Gable proved himself the King one last time, romancing the fragile Marilyn Monroe in John Huston's "The Misfits" (1961). His performance was greatly praised, but Gable had insisted on performing his own stunts, including breaking a horse. Doctors had warned him about an already weakened heart and the exertion proved too much (this would be Monroe's last completed film as well). He widowed his fifth wife, the former Kay Spreckles, in 1960, shortly before she gave birth to John Clark Gable, the son Gable had always longed for. As per his last wishes, Spreckles buried him alongside the great love of his life, Carole Lombard.
Family
FATHER: William Henry Gable. Oil driller.
MOTHER: Adeline Gable. Born c. 1870; Roman Catholic; died on November 14, 1901.
STEP-MOTHER: Jennie Gable. Died in 1920.
DAUGHTER: Judy Lewis. Psychotherapist, former actor. Born on November 6, 1935; mother, Loretta Young; Lewis believed she was adopted until she learned the truth of her parentage as an adult.
STEP-DAUGHTER: Joan Spreckels.
SON: John Clark Gable. Actor. Mother, Kay Spreckels; born shortly after Gable's death on March 20, 1961.
Companion
WIFE: Josephine Dillon. Actor. Married in December 1924; divorced in April 1930; born c. 1889.
COMPANION: Joan Crawford. Actor. Reportedly had an on-again, off-again relationship over a 10-year period; frequently co-starred together in such films as "Dancing Lady" (1933) and "Strange Cargo" (1940).
WIFE: Rhea Langham. Married on June 19, 1931; divorced in March 1939.
COMPANION: Loretta Young. Actor. Had affair during filming of 1935's "The Call of the Wild"; gave birth to Gable's daughter Mary Judith but passed her off as an adopted child; daughter did not learn truth of parentage until she was an adult.
WIFE: Carole Lombard. Actor. Married from March 29, 1939 until her death in a plane crash on January 16, 1942; popular film star in the 1930s and early 40s in such films as "Twentieth Century" (1934), "My Man Godfrey" (1936), "Nothing Sacred" (1937) and "To Be or Not to Be" (1942); acted opposite Gable in the 1932 "No Man of Her Own".
WIFE: Lady Sylvia Ashley. Former actor. Married on December 20, 1949, divorced in 1952.
WIFE: Kay Williams Spreckels. Married from July 1955 until his death in 1960.
Milestone
1901: Mother died when he was nine months old; sent to live with maternal grandparents
1903: Father and stepmother reclaimed him
1910: Family settles in Hopedale, Ohio
1917: Moved to Ravenna with father and stepmother; eventually returned to Hopedale
1915: Amateur acting debut in school play
1919: Settled in Akron and worked in a tire factory
1921: After stepmother's death, moved to Tulsa, Oklahoma with his father
1922: Joined Astoria Players Stock Company
1924: Became a member of Josephine Dillon's Stock Company
1924: Moved to Hollywood
1924: First film as actor, a bit part in "Forbidden Paradise"
1925: Can be spotted as an extra in Erich von Stroheim's "The Merry Widow"
1928: Broadway debut, "Machinal"
1930: Signed contract with MGM
1931: First sound film as actor in "The Painted Desert"
1931: Attracted attention when he pushed reigning screen queen Norma Shearer around (in the role of her brutish gangster lover) in "A Free Soul"; subsequent leading role opposite other MGM divas Greta Garbo and Joan Crawford confirmed his star status
1932: Starred in "Red Dust"
1934: Won Best Actor Oscar for comic role of a newspaperman chasing a runaway heiress in "It Happened One Night"
1935: Picked up second Academy Award nomination for performance as Fletcher Christian in "Mutiny on the Bounty"
1937: Made rare box-office flop, "Parnell", a biopic about the Irish statesman
1937: Sued by a woman from England who claimed that he was the father of her 13 year-old child; Gable was able to prove that he was in Oregon in 1923 when the child was conceived
1939: Starred in his best-remembered film, "Gone With the Wind", as Rhett Butler; received third Oscar nomination
1942: Enlisted in Army Air Corps as private; last film for three years, "Somewhere I'll Find You"
1944: Discharged as Major
1944: Awarded Air Medal
1945: Made first film after returning from war service, "Adventure"
1953: Starred in "Mogambo", playing the leading role in the remake of the 1932 film "Red Dust" in which he also starred
1954: Parted company with MGM
1956: Formed Russ-Field-Gabco production company (with Jane Russell and her husband Bob Waterfield)
1961: Starred in last film, "The Misfits"
1976: Portrayed in the feature biopic "Gable and Lombard" by James Brolin (Jill Clayburgh played Carole Lombard)
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