Clark Gable
William Clark Gable (February 1, 1901 – November 16, 1960) was an American actor renowned for his rugged masculinity and charismatic screen presence in over 60 feature films, earning him the moniker "King of Hollywood" from a 1938 poll conducted by columnist Ed Sullivan.[1][2] Gable rose to stardom in the early 1930s with leading roles in MGM productions, culminating in his Academy Award for Best Actor win for portraying a roguish reporter in It Happened One Night (1934), the first film to sweep the major Oscars.[3] He received further Best Actor nominations for his portrayals of Fletcher Christian in Mutiny on the Bounty (1935) and Rhett Butler in Gone with the Wind (1939), the latter being one of Hollywood's highest-grossing films adjusted for inflation.[3][2] In his personal life, Gable married actress Carole Lombard in 1939, forming one of Hollywood's most celebrated couples until her death in a 1942 plane crash while returning from a war bonds tour.[4] Devastated, he enlisted in the U.S. Army Air Forces as an aerial gunner and combat photographer, flying missions over Europe and producing propaganda films before being discharged in 1944 with the rank of major.[5] Gable's post-war career included acclaimed performances in films like The Misfits (1961), though he died shortly after its completion from a heart attack.[6]Early Life
1901–1919: Childhood and Family Influences
William Clark Gable was born on February 1, 1901, in Cadiz, Ohio, to William Henry Gable, an oil-well driller, and Adeline Hershelman Gable.[2] [7] The family resided in a modest home in the small town, where Gable was the only child.[8] At six months old, he was baptized in a Roman Catholic church in Dennison, Ohio.[2] Adeline Gable died on November 14, 1901, at age 32, from epilepsy, when her son was ten months old.[9] William Henry Gable remarried in April 1903 to Jennie Dunlap, a 33-year-old woman from nearby Hopedale, Ohio.[7] Jennie raised the young Gable, providing a stable maternal influence during his formative years.[2] She emphasized personal grooming and proper attire, shaping his appearance and manners from an early age, which contributed to his later polished public image.[10] The family relocated several times within Ohio due to William Henry Gable's itinerant work in the oil fields, exposing young Gable to rural and boomtown environments.[11] Described as tall, shy, and possessing a loud voice, Gable grew up under his father's influence, who instilled a strong work ethic through involvement in manual labor and family responsibilities.[2] By his mid-teens, around age 16, Gable left high school to take on odd jobs, reflecting the practical, self-reliant upbringing shaped by his father's occupation and the era's economic demands.[12] These family dynamics fostered resilience and independence, key traits evident in his later career pursuits.[2]1920–1924: Theater Beginnings and Early Struggles
In 1920, at age 19, Gable received a small inheritance that enabled him to leave manual labor jobs in Ohio and pursue acting ambitions, joining the Jewel Players stock theater troupe for minor roles in traveling productions.[13] [12] This marked his initial foray into professional stage work, though opportunities remained limited amid the competitive regional theater circuit, where he performed in vaudeville-style shows requiring versatility in small parts.[13] By 1923, after the Jewel Players disbanded due to bankruptcy, Gable hitchhiked to Portland, Oregon, and secured a position with the Astoria Players Stock Company, a troupe that performed at the Liberty Theatre in Astoria and toured sites along the Columbia River, including Ilwaco, Clatskanie, and Kelso.[13] [14] There, he met Josephine Dillon, the company's director and a veteran actress 17 years his senior, who recognized his raw potential despite his unpolished appearance and limited experience.[15] [13] From 1923 to 1924, Gable trained intensively under Dillon at Portland's Little Theater, where she coached him on diction, posture, and stage presence while funding cosmetic enhancements, such as dental work and hairline adjustments, to refine his look for professional demands.[14] [13] The Astoria Players encountered persistent financial hardships, including cast defections and operational deficits, forcing the group to disband and return to Portland via rudimentary transport like milk barges, underscoring Gable's early reliance on unstable repertory work amid economic precarity in the Northwest theater scene.[14] On December 13, 1924, Gable married Dillon in Los Angeles after following her westward, a union that blended personal partnership with professional mentorship but highlighted his ongoing dependence on her guidance during these formative struggles.[13] [16]Professional Career
1924–1930: Transition to Silent Films and Stage Polish
On December 13, 1924, Gable married Josephine Dillon, a theater director and actress seventeen years his senior, in Los Angeles, California.[16] Dillon, who had coached Gable in diction and stagecraft since their meeting in Portland, served as his manager and financed their relocation to Hollywood, where she continued to refine his appearance and performance skills to suit professional demands.[17] Gable secured uncredited extra roles in silent films starting in 1924, appearing in at least a dozen such productions through 1930, including walk-on parts in The Merry Widow (1925), The Plastic Age (1925), and The Johnstown Flood (1926).[18] These bit parts provided minimal exposure but allowed him to observe film production techniques while supplementing income from manual labor and odd jobs.[19] Parallel to his film extras work, Gable honed his craft in regional theater, performing in stock company productions such as Lucky Sam McCarver alongside Pauline Frederick at the Lobero Theatre in Santa Barbara on July 9, 1926, and a supporting role in Chicago in 1927 that garnered positive reviews.[20] In 1928, he took a lead role in the New York production of Machinal at the Plymouth Theater, demonstrating growing versatility in dramatic roles.[8] By 1930, Gable's stage performance as the convict Killer Mears in The Last Mile at the Belasco Theatre in Los Angeles, beginning June 7, showcased his commanding presence and drew notice from film industry figures, including MGM executives who signed him later that year.[8][21] This blend of persistent stage training and incremental film experience equipped Gable with the poise and vocal clarity essential for the impending transition to sound cinema.1930–1934: Breakthrough at MGM and Early Stardom
In 1930, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM) production chief Irving Thalberg signed Clark Gable to a long-term contract at a starting salary of $650 per week, recognizing his potential after a screen test and stage performances.[22] This deal marked Gable's entry into a major studio system, transitioning him from bit parts in independent films like The Painted Desert (1931) to more prominent supporting roles.[23] Early assignments emphasized his rugged, masculine screen persona, often as tough heavies or romantic antagonists, which resonated with Depression-era audiences seeking escapist strongmen. Gable's initial MGM appearances included Dance, Fools, Dance (February 1931), where he played a gangster opposite Joan Crawford, who had specifically requested him after seeing his work; this led to their first of eight collaborations and boosted his visibility.[24] He followed with loaned-out roles such as in Warner Bros.' Night Nurse (July 1931), portraying a brutal chauffeur, and MGM's The Secret Six (April 1931), further typecasting him in criminal parts.[23] By mid-1932, Gable secured his first lead in Red Dust, a steamy plantation drama co-starring Jean Harlow, whose on-screen chemistry—highlighted by scenes of raw physicality—propelled him to leading-man status and established him as MGM's top male draw after box-office success.[25] Additional hits like No Man of Her Own (1932, loaned to Paramount) and Strange Interlude (1932) solidified his appeal, with fan mail surging and theaters reporting increased attendance for his films.[26] MGM loaned Gable to Columbia Pictures in 1933 for It Happened One Night (released February 1934), a screwball comedy directed by Frank Capra, where he played reporter Peter Warne opposite Claudette Colbert; despite Gable's initial reluctance—viewing it as a demotion—he delivered a charismatic, everyman performance that won him the Academy Award for Best Actor on February 27, 1935.[27] The film's unprecedented sweep of the five major Oscars, combined with cultural phenomena like a reported drop in undershirt sales after Gable's shirtless scene, cemented his stardom and influenced MGM to feature him in prestige projects thereafter.[28]1934–1940: Iconic Roles and Gone with the Wind
In 1934, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer loaned Gable to Columbia Pictures for It Happened One Night, directed by Frank Capra, where he played cynical reporter Peter Warne who aids spoiled heiress Ellie Andrews (Claudette Colbert) on her cross-country journey. Released on February 22, 1934, the screwball comedy grossed over $2.5 million domestically against a $325,000 budget and swept the Academy Awards, with Gable winning Best Actor for his charismatic portrayal that blended rugged charm and quick wit.[29][30] This unexpected triumph, initially viewed by MGM as a punitive assignment, cemented Gable's status as Hollywood's preeminent leading man.[31] Returning to MGM, Gable starred in Mutiny on the Bounty (1935) as first mate Fletcher Christian, leading a rebellion against tyrannical Captain William Bligh (Charles Laughton) aboard the HMS Bounty during a voyage to Tahiti. Released on November 8, 1935, the adventure epic earned $4.5 million at the box office and garnered eight Oscar nominations, including one for Gable as Best Actor alongside nods for Laughton and supporting actor Franchot Tone.[32][33] Critics praised Gable's swashbuckling heroism and moral conviction in the role, drawn from Charles Nordhoff and James Norman Hall's novels, though the film took liberties with historical events for dramatic effect.[34] Gable continued with high-profile vehicles like China Seas (1935), reuniting with Jean Harlow as a ship's officer entangled in smuggling and romance, and San Francisco (1936) as saloon owner Blackie Norton amid the 1906 earthquake, which featured innovative special effects and earned Spencer Tracy a supporting Oscar. In 1937, Saratoga paired him with Harlow as a gambler opposite her horse breeder, becoming MGM's biggest hit of the year at $3.4 million despite Harlow's death from uremic poisoning during production on June 7, 1937, which halted filming temporarily.[22] Test Pilot (1938) cast Gable as daredevil aviator Jim Lane with Spencer Tracy and Myrna Loy, showcasing his action-hero prowess in aerial sequences.[35] The pinnacle of this era arrived with Gone with the Wind (1939), for which MGM loaned Gable to producer David O. Selznick to portray Rhett Butler, the suave blockade runner and Scarlett O'Hara's (Vivien Leigh) complex love interest in the Civil War epic adapted from Margaret Mitchell's 1936 novel. Filming for Gable's scenes began in January 1939 under director Victor Fleming, with the full film released on December 15, 1939, after premiering in Atlanta on December 13; it shattered records with $30 million in initial U.S. rentals. Gable's interpretation of Rhett—embodying cynical pragmatism, Southern gallantry, and emotional depth—earned a Best Actor nomination, highlighted by his delivery of the improvised-strengthened line "Frankly, my dear, I don't give a damn," which MGM executives initially resisted but Selznick championed for authenticity.[36] The role, long coveted by Gable after reading the book, amplified his "King of Hollywood" persona, drawing on his established masculine appeal while demanding nuanced vulnerability.[37] By 1940, Gable's string of successes included Strange Cargo, a philosophical drama with Joan Crawford exploring redemption on a prison escape, reinforcing his versatility beyond romantic leads. These years established Gable as a box-office juggernaut, with films consistently ranking among MGM's top earners and his rugged masculinity defining the era's male ideal.[22]1940–1942: Pre-War Commercial Peaks
In 1940, Gable achieved one of his career's commercial pinnacles with Boom Town, directed by Jack Conway and co-starring Spencer Tracy as a rival oil prospector, Claudette Colbert as Gable's steadfast wife, and Hedy Lamarr as a seductive interloper. Released on August 30, the film depicted the rough-and-tumble world of wildcatters whose partnership fractures amid fortune, betrayal, and romantic entanglements, grossing $9.17 million domestically and ranking as the year's top box-office earner.[38] Its success stemmed from Gable's rugged charisma contrasting Tracy's moral rectitude, drawing audiences to theaters amid pre-war escapism.[39] Later that year, Gable paired with Joan Crawford for the eighth and final time in Strange Cargo, directed by Frank Borzage, portraying an escaped convict leading a ragtag group through the Australian outback in a tale blending adventure, redemption, and mysticism. Released in March, the film generated $1.31 million domestically and $603,000 internationally, yielding a modest profit of $21,000 despite mixed critical reception over its allegorical elements.[40] Gable's portrayal of a cynical drifter seeking spiritual awakening capitalized on his established "man's man" appeal, though the picture underperformed relative to Boom Town.[41] Comrade X, a screwball comedy directed by King Vidor and released December 13, 1940, reunited Gable with Hedy Lamarr as an American journalist in Soviet Russia smuggling a disillusioned streetcar conductress to freedom. The satire on communism, echoing Ninotchka, earned over $2 million in its debut year, buoyed by Gable's roguish humor and Lamarr's glamour amid geopolitical tensions.[42] Box-office tallies reflected Gable's draw as MGM's premier male star, with adjusted domestic grosses underscoring its profitability.[41] Transitioning to 1941, They Met in Bombay, directed by Clarence Brown and released February 18, cast Gable as a con artist impersonating a British officer alongside Rosalind Russell's jewel thief in a globe-trotting caper evading authorities from India to China. The adventure-comedy profited MGM $350,000, leveraging Gable's debonair action-hero persona during a period of rising global conflict.[43] Honky Tonk, directed by Jack Conway and released October 1, featured Gable as a gambling saloon owner clashing with a reform-minded judge's daughter (Lana Turner) in a Western-tinged drama of corruption and redemption set in a boomtown. As MGM's highest-grossing release of 1941 with $3 million in earnings, it highlighted the lucrative Gable-Turner chemistry sparked by their off-screen rapport.[38][44] Gable's final pre-enlistment film, Somewhere I'll Find You, directed by Wesley Ruggles and released August 27, 1942, paired him again with Turner as war correspondents separated by Japanese aggression in Southeast Asia, emphasizing patriotic themes of reunion and duty. Filmed before Gable's February 1942 induction into the U.S. Army Air Forces following Carole Lombard's death, it grossed solidly, with adjusted figures affirming its appeal as a wartime morale booster.[45] These productions collectively marked Gable's zenith as a box-office magnet, with MGM leveraging his star power for aggregate returns exceeding tens of millions amid escalating world events.[41]1942–1945: World War II Military Service
Following the death of his wife Carole Lombard in a plane crash earlier that year, Clark Gable enlisted as a private in the United States Army Air Forces on August 12, 1942, in Los Angeles, California, despite being 41 years old and beyond draft age, and over objections from Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer studio executives and President Franklin D. Roosevelt.[46] [47] He completed Officer Candidate School at Miami Beach, Florida, graduating as a second lieutenant on October 28, 1942, followed by specialized training in aerial gunnery at Tyndall Field, Florida, and photography courses, as well as turret gunner instruction at bases including Spokane, Washington, and Biggs Army Air Field, Texas.[46] [48] Initially assigned to the First Motion Picture Unit for propaganda film production, Gable requested and received combat assignment with the 351st Bombardment Group of the Eighth Air Force, stationed at RAF Polebrook, England, arriving in early 1943.[49] [46] As a captain and qualified aerial gunner, he flew at least five operational missions over Nazi-occupied Europe in Boeing B-17 Flying Fortresses between May 4, 1943—targeting aircraft factories in Antwerp, Belgium—and September 23, 1943, including raids into Germany, serving as an observer-gunner while filming over 50,000 feet of combat gunnery footage despite not being required to participate in hazardous frontline duties.[49] [50] Utilizing the mission footage, Gable produced and narrated the 1945 documentary Combat America, a recruitment and training film for the Army Air Forces that depicted the realities of bomber operations, including crew losses and flak damage experienced by his group.[46] For his voluntary combat exposure and contributions, where fellow crew members suffered casualties, Gable received the Air Medal and Distinguished Flying Cross, and was promoted to major before completing his active service in 1944.[49]1945–1953: Post-War MGM Resurgence
Following his discharge from the U.S. Army Air Forces in October 1944, Gable returned to Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM) under his existing contract, which extended until 1954, to resume film work after a three-year absence from the screen.[18] His first postwar production was Adventure (1946), directed by Victor Fleming and co-starring Greer Garson as a librarian who marries Gable's rough-hewn merchant mariner character, Harry Patterson; the film was released on December 28, 1945, and marketed aggressively by MGM with the slogan "Gable's back and Garson's got him."[51][52] Despite the high-profile pairing and Gable's status as a decorated war veteran—having earned the Distinguished Flying Cross and Air Medal for his service—the movie earned lukewarm critical reception for its contrived romance and failed to match the commercial heights of Gable's prewar successes like Gone with the Wind (1939).[18][53] Gable continued with MGM vehicles aimed at reestablishing his rugged leading-man persona amid shifting audience preferences toward more introspective postwar narratives. In The Hucksters (1947), he portrayed a cynical advertising executive navigating corporate intrigue alongside Deborah Kerr and Ava Gardner, reflecting Hollywood's brief engagement with media industry satires but yielding modest box-office returns.[54] Homecoming (1948), a wartime romance co-starring Lana Turner as a nurse who rekindles passion with Gable's surgeon upon his return from Europe, explored themes of emotional reintegration but similarly struggled to recapture prewar enthusiasm, grossing approximately $2.7 million domestically against higher production costs. Later that year, Command Decision (1948) cast Gable as a hard-nosed Air Force general in an ensemble war drama with an all-male cast including Walter Pidgeon and Van Johnson, drawing on his real military experience yet prioritizing strategic tension over action; it performed adequately but highlighted Gable's transition to authoritative, mature roles.[54] By the late 1940s, Gable's output included Any Number Can Play (1949), where he played a gambling casino owner confronting family estrangement with Alexis Smith and Wendell Corey, and Key to the City (1950), a romantic comedy opposite Loretta Young that emphasized lighthearted banter amid professional rivalries. These films sustained his top billing at MGM but evidenced declining draw, as Gable's mustache-free, weathered postwar image clashed with the studio's efforts to pair him with younger stars, prompting negotiations over salary and role approval.[54] Productions like Across the Wide Missouri (1951), a Western narrated by Gable as a trapper in the 1830s fur trade with María Felipa Schell, and Lone Star (1952), where he embodied a Texas Ranger mediating annexation disputes alongside Ava Gardner and Lionel Barrymore, leaned into historical adventure to leverage his outdoor-man appeal, though voiceover narration in the former distanced him from direct heroism.[54] The period culminated in 1953 with Mogambo, directed by John Ford and co-starring Ava Gardner and Grace Kelly in a Technicolor African safari remake of Gable's 1932 hit Red Dust; Gable reprised his philanderer role as a big-game hunter entangled in a romantic triangle, earning praise for his commanding presence and contributing to the film's strong global earnings exceeding $4 million in rentals.[54] Never Let Me Go (1953), a Cold War romance shot in England with Ann Blyth, depicted Gable rescuing his ballerina wife from Soviet captivity, marking one of his final MGM assignments before contract expiration.[54] Throughout these years, Gable's persistence at MGM—despite initial postwar flops and industry shifts toward method acting and youth—affirmed his enduring marketability as a symbol of unyielding masculinity, even as he navigated creative frustrations and pushed for profit participation in future deals.[55]1953–1960: Independent Films and Final Projects
In 1953, Gable completed his final films under Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, including Mogambo, before his long-term contract expired in 1954, marking the end of the studio era's structured system and allowing him to freelance as an independent actor. This transition aligned with the industry's shift away from the studio model, enabling Gable to negotiate per-film deals with greater creative input and compensation, though it demanded self-promotion and selective project choices amid declining box-office appeal for aging stars.[56][55] Gable's initial independent outing, The Tall Men (1955), was a Western produced by 20th Century Fox and directed by Raoul Walsh, in which he played Colonel Ben Allison, a Confederate veteran driving 7,000 cattle from Texas to Montana post-Civil War, navigating rivalries with rancher Nathan Stark (Robert Ryan) and romance with Nella Turner (Jane Russell). Filmed on expansive locations in Montana and Ireland to capture authentic herd movements involving thousands of animals, the film emphasized rugged individualism and frontier perils, grossing moderately but praised for its scale and Gable's authoritative presence. Subsequent projects included The King and Four Queens (1956), a low-budget Western comedy that Gable co-produced through his own company, portraying con artist Patrick "Paddy" Brown seeking hidden gold amid four widows; and Band of Angels (1957), another Walsh-directed drama where Gable starred as a Kentucky slave trader entangled in Civil War intrigue with characters played by Yvonne De Carlo and Sidney Poitier, drawing mixed reviews for its handling of slavery themes but benefiting from Gable's commanding performance.[57][58] By the late 1950s, Gable diversified into war and comedy genres, starring opposite Burt Lancaster in Run Silent, Run Deep (1958), a submarine thriller directed by Robert Wise and adapted from Commander Edward L. Beach's novel, where Gable's vengeful Captain P.J. Richardson clashes with executive officer Jim Bledsoe (Lancaster) during Pacific Theater patrols against Japanese destroyers. Shot using scale models and practical effects to simulate underwater combat, the film highlighted naval tactics and internal command tensions, earning acclaim for its tension and Gable's intense portrayal despite his age straining physical demands. That year, he also appeared in the romantic comedy Teacher's Pet, directed by George Seaton, as a cynical newspaper editor romanced by a journalism professor (Doris Day), which received positive notices for its witty dialogue and box-office success. Gable followed with But Not for Me (1959), playing an aging Broadway producer rejuvenated by a young assistant (Lilli Palmer), and It Started in Naples (1960), a light Italian-set romance with Sophia Loren as a Neapolitan singer, filmed partly on location and noted for its escapist charm amid Gable's evident fatigue.[59][60][61] Gable's final project, The Misfits (1961), was filmed in the Nevada desert from July to November 1960 under director John Huston, with a screenplay by Arthur Miller tailored for then-wife Marilyn Monroe, featuring Gable as aging cowboy Guido Racanelli who bonds with divorcée Roslyn Taber (Monroe) and disillusioned ranch hands (Montgomery Clift, Eli Wallach) during a mustang roundup. At age 59 and post-heart attack recovery, Gable insisted on performing grueling stunts, including lassoing and wrestling wild horses without doubles, contributing to physical exhaustion that exacerbated his coronary issues; production delays from Monroe's health struggles and on-set tensions further intensified the strain. Released posthumously after Gable's death from a heart attack on November 16, 1960—mere days after principal photography wrapped—the film recouped its $4 million budget marginally but critically divided audiences with its stark portrayal of obsolescence and failed ideals, later gaining cult status for the stars' raw performances.[62][63][64]Personal Life
Marriages and Romantic Partnerships
Gable's first marriage was to Josephine Dillon, a theater director and acting coach 17 years his senior, on December 13, 1924, in Los Angeles; Dillon had mentored Gable's early career, funding their move to Hollywood and refining his appearance and diction.[65] [66] The union lasted until their divorce in 1930, with Dillon later claiming it was largely unconsummated and focused on professional advancement rather than romance.[66] His second wife was Maria "Ria" Franklin Langham, a twice-widowed socialite 14 years older, whom he married on June 19, 1931, in California; Langham brought financial stability and social connections during Gable's rising stardom, though they separated in 1935 amid his growing fame.[67] [68] The marriage ended in divorce on March 7, 1939, in Reno, Nevada, after Langham cited irreconcilable differences.[69] Gable wed actress Carole Lombard, his co-star from the 1932 film No Man of Her Own, on March 29, 1939, in Kingman, Arizona, shortly after his prior divorce; their relationship, marked by mutual irreverence and shared love of hunting and ranch life, represented Gable's happiest partnership until Lombard's death in a 1942 plane crash near Table Rock Mountain, Nevada.[70] [71] In 1949, Gable married Sylvia Ashley, a British socialite and widow of Douglas Fairbanks Sr., on December 20 in a private Phoenix ceremony; the union, his fourth, dissolved after three years amid reports of incompatibility and Ashley's extravagant lifestyle clashing with Gable's post-war introspection, with divorce finalized in 1952.[2] [72] Gable's final marriage was to Kathleen "Kay" Williams Spreckels, a former model and actress previously wed to sugar heir Adolph Spreckels II, on July 20, 1955, at his Encino ranch; they welcomed a son, John Clark Gable, posthumously on March 20, 1960, four months after Gable's death from a heart attack.[73] [74]Extramarital Affairs and Hidden Fatherhood
Gable's reputation for extramarital liaisons was well-established in Hollywood circles, spanning multiple marriages and involving several co-stars. While married to his second wife, Ria Franklin Prentiss Lucas, from 1931 to 1939, he initiated a long-term affair with Joan Crawford around 1931 during the filming of Dance, Fools, Dance.[75] [76] This relationship, characterized by mutual attraction and professional proximity in films such as Possessed (1931) and Strange Cargo (1940), persisted intermittently for over two decades despite both parties' subsequent marriages.[77] [78] Crawford later described it as "a glorious affair–and it lasted longer than any of my marriages," though Gable never commented publicly during his lifetime.[79] Similar infidelities occurred during his 1939–1942 marriage to Carole Lombard, including rumored dalliances with other actresses, reflecting a pattern of serial unfaithfulness common among male stars of the era but rarely acknowledged in contemporary press due to studio control.[80] The most consequential extramarital affair for Gable involved Loretta Young during the 1934 production of The Call of the Wild, filmed on location in Washington state. Gable, then 33 and married to Lucas, pursued Young, 22, leading to a brief liaison that resulted in her pregnancy.[81] [82] Young, a devout Catholic, concealed the pregnancy by retreating from public view in late 1934, giving birth to daughter Judith Lewis on November 6, 1935, at a private residence in Venice, California.[83] To avoid scandal, Young publicly announced the child as an adopted orphan in 1936, fabricating a story of discovering the baby during a European trip, a deception maintained for decades under studio and personal pressure.[84] [85] Gable, advised by Young to deny involvement, never publicly acknowledged Judy as his daughter, prioritizing his career and image over paternal responsibility; private meetings were limited, with one reported visit during her teenage years.[82] The secret emerged in 1994 through Judy's memoir Uncommon Knowledge, corroborated by Young's deathbed confirmation in 2000 via taped interviews, where she framed the conception as a seduction amid alcohol-fueled advances but expressed remorse over the cover-up.[81] [86] Later accounts, including Judy's, alleged coercive elements akin to date rape, citing Young's private descriptions of Gable's aggressive persistence after a cast party.[87] No other illegitimate children have been verifiably attributed to Gable, distinguishing this episode as his sole documented case of hidden fatherhood.[88]Political Conservatism and Patriotism
Clark Gable maintained a conservative Republican affiliation throughout his adult life, though he generally avoided public discussions of politics to preserve his broad appeal in Hollywood.[89][90] In 1944, shortly after his discharge from military service, Gable became an early member of the Motion Picture Alliance for the Preservation of American Ideals, a group founded to oppose communist infiltration and propaganda in the film industry, emphasizing the protection of constitutional freedoms against totalitarian ideologies.[91][92] His third wife, Carole Lombard, initially leaned toward support for Franklin D. Roosevelt's New Deal policies and urged Gable in that direction during their marriage from 1939 to 1942, yet Gable's core conservatism persisted.[90] Gable's anti-communist convictions manifested in his professional choices, including his enthusiasm for the 1955 film Soldier of Fortune, which he pursued despite concerns about his age for the role because its themes echoed his right-wing opposition to communist expansionism. In a rare public political appearance, Gable spoke at a rally for Republican presidential candidate Dwight D. Eisenhower on February 8, 1952, at Madison Square Garden, demonstrating support for the general's campaign against Democratic incumbent Harry S. Truman.[93][94] This conservatism intertwined with patriotism, as Gable viewed resistance to communism not merely as ideological but as a defense of American sovereignty and individual liberties amid Cold War threats, aligning with the Alliance's pledge to safeguard the nation's democratic principles from subversive elements.[91] His restrained yet firm stance contrasted with more vocal Hollywood contemporaries, reflecting a pragmatic commitment to national integrity over partisan spectacle.[92]Health Issues and Death
In the months leading up to his death, Gable exhibited signs of physical strain exacerbated by his demanding role in The Misfits (1961), where he performed strenuous activities including wrestling and roping wild mustangs in the Nevada desert despite being 59 years old and carrying excess weight.[95] He had quit smoking briefly for the film but resumed afterward, and his history of heavy cigarette use—estimated at three packs per day—along with alcohol consumption and hypertension, represented significant cardiovascular risk factors that medical analyses later identified as precursors to his fatal condition.[96][97] Filming wrapped on November 4, 1960, after which Gable suffered an acute myocardial infarction on November 6 while at his Encino ranch, prompting immediate hospitalization at Hollywood Presbyterian Medical Center.[98] Initially, his condition stabilized, allowing him to sit up in bed and converse with visitors, but on November 16— the tenth day of his hospital stay—he experienced a sudden second infarction and died at 10 p.m. Pacific Time, with no resuscitation attempted due to the rapid deterioration and his advanced age.[99][100] The official cause was coronary thrombosis, a blood clot obstructing arterial flow to the heart, consistent with his untreated risk profile in an era before widespread statins or aggressive lipid management.[101] Gable's passing at age 59 shocked Hollywood, as contemporaries noted his robust self-image often masked underlying vulnerabilities from decades of high-stress work and lifestyle habits.[98]Public Image and Legacy
Embodiment of Traditional Masculinity
Clark Gable exemplified traditional masculinity through his rugged physicality, assertive screen personas, and off-screen pursuits that emphasized self-reliance and virility. Standing at 6 feet 1 inch with a broad-shouldered build honed by manual labor in his youth, Gable projected an image of unyielding strength that contrasted with the era's more effete leading men.[102] His signature mustache, first grown for a 1930 stage role as a French gigolo in Love, Honor and Betray, evolved into a hallmark of masculine glamour, enhancing his rakish charm and distinguishing him as Hollywood's "King."[103] MGM capitalized on this by promoting him as a "lumberjack in evening wear," blending raw physicality with tailored sophistication.[102] In films, Gable's roles often featured dominant, aggressive male archetypes that defined American ideals of manhood, such as the tough prospector in Red Dust (1932) or the unapologetically authoritative Rhett Butler in Gone with the Wind (1939).[104] These portrayals emphasized traits like decisiveness and physical prowess, as seen in Call of the Wild (1935), where he displayed rugged endurance in Alaskan wilderness settings.[105] A pivotal moment came in It Happened One Night (1934), when Gable's character removes his shirt to reveal a bare chest sans undershirt—a practical directorial choice that became legendarily linked to a sharp drop in men's undershirt sales, as audiences emulated the bare, confident torso as a symbol of modern masculinity.[106] Though the exact sales impact remains anecdotal without precise data, the scene underscored Gable's influence on male self-presentation, shifting norms toward less layered, more direct expressions of form.[107] Beyond cinema, Gable's personal life reinforced this archetype through hands-on activities like auto mechanics—skills insisted upon by his oil-worker father—and aviation enthusiasm, including piloting his own planes.[108] His enthusiasm for hunting and ranching, evident in outings with wife Carole Lombard, portrayed him as a man attuned to primal, outdoor vigor rather than urban refinement alone.[109] This holistic image of Gable as the "original macho man" endured, positioning him as a virile counterpoint to softer contemporary ideals and influencing perceptions of male strength for decades.[109][110]
Acting Technique and Critical Assessments
Gable's acting technique centered on a naturalistic approach that leveraged his inherent charisma, physicality, and understated delivery, rather than the psychological immersion of method acting that gained prominence post-World War II.[111][112] He often portrayed variations of a rugged, self-assured masculine archetype, drawing from his own personality traits such as confidence and humor, which directors like John Lee Mahin credited for his effectiveness in reactive comedy: "Gable was funniest when he reacted."[113] This style, honed through early theater training under Josephine Dillon, emphasized broad physical gestures and vocal projection suited to pre-sound cinema, evolving into a more intimate screen presence by the 1930s.[114] Gable himself described movie acting as "the easiest job in the world," reflecting his low-key preparation process that avoided dramatic self-analysis.[114] Critics frequently praised Gable's ability to command the screen through sheer presence and believability in romantic and adventurous roles, as seen in his Academy Award-winning performance as Peter Warne in It Happened One Night (1934), where his comic timing and chemistry with Claudette Colbert earned widespread acclaim for natural rapport.[115] In Gone with the Wind (1939), his portrayal of Rhett Butler showcased restrained intensity, particularly in the understated delivery of the line "Frankly, my dear, I don’t give a damn," which film historians regard as a pinnacle of his subtle emotional range.[113][115] However, assessments often highlighted limitations in versatility; actor and biographer Simon Callow observed that "his acting was limited, but true; his powers of transformation negligible," noting Gable's reliance on typecasting as a "he-man lover" rather than chameleon-like adaptability.[113] Director Frank Capra echoed this, contrasting Gable's on-screen bravado with his real-life "down-to-earth" demeanor, suggesting the persona constrained deeper explorations of vulnerability.[113] Later evaluations positioned Gable as emblematic of classical Hollywood's star-driven system, where charisma trumped technical depth, enabling him to hold his own against method-trained co-stars like Montgomery Clift and Eli Wallach in The Misfits (1961) despite physical exhaustion from performing his own stunts.[116] Rankings such as 42nd greatest actor by film archivists underscore his 1930s dominance—spanning three Best Picture winners—with only 15 "archiveable" films overall, critiquing a post-1939 decline attributed to formulaic roles and resistance to flawed characterizations.[115] Contemporary reviews, including those in The New York Times, acknowledged he was "not the most skillful and subtle in the way of technique" but admired his universal appeal as a durable, intense performer who conveyed authenticity without artifice.[117] This consensus affirms Gable's efficacy within his era's conventions, where empirical box-office success—evidenced by leading 60 films from 1930 to 1961—validated his intuitive method over analytical rigor.[118]Awards, Honors, and Career Milestones
Gable won the Academy Award for Best Actor for his portrayal of Peter Warne in It Happened One Night (1934) at the 7th Academy Awards ceremony on February 27, 1935.[119] The film achieved a historic sweep, securing Oscars for Best Picture, Best Director, Best Actress, and Best Adapted Screenplay as well.[119] He received Best Actor nominations for Mutiny on the Bounty (1935) at the 8th Academy Awards in 1936 and for Gone with the Wind (1939) at the 12th Academy Awards in 1940, though he did not win either.[120][121] In addition to his Oscar achievements, Gable earned Golden Globe nominations for Best Actor in a Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy for But Not for Me (1959) and Best Performance by an Actor in a Motion Picture – Drama for an earlier role, reflecting late-career recognition.[122] During World War II service with the U.S. Army Air Forces from 1942 to 1944, Gable flew five combat missions as an aerial gunner and photographer with the Eighth Air Force, earning the Distinguished Flying Cross and Air Medal in October 1943 for valor over Germany.[123][124] He also received the American Campaign Medal, European-African-Middle Eastern Campaign Medal, and World War II Victory Medal.[47] Key career milestones include signing a seven-year contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer in December 1930, which elevated him from supporting roles to leading man status.[11] His performance in It Happened One Night marked a box-office turning point, propelling him to top stardom and contributing to the film's status as one of the era's highest-grossing pictures.[125] Gone with the Wind (1939) became the highest-grossing film of all time until 1960, adjusted for inflation, solidifying his legacy.[38] Gable received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 1960.[126]| Award/Honor | Year | Details |
|---|---|---|
| Academy Award for Best Actor | 1935 | It Happened One Night[119] |
| Academy Award Nomination, Best Actor | 1936 | Mutiny on the Bounty |
| Academy Award Nomination, Best Actor | 1940 | Gone with the Wind[121] |
| Distinguished Flying Cross | 1943 | WWII combat missions[123] |
| Air Medal | 1943 | WWII service as gunner/photographer[124] |