In 1937,
Violet Norton, a cockney British woman, was brought into court for
trying to "obtain money from Clark Gable under fraudulent pretenses
and promises."
According to Mrs. Norton, the mother
of four illegitimate children, she had a brief fling in 1922 with a
man named Frank Billings which resulted in the birth of a daughter,
Gwendolyn Edith. She claims Frank deserted her upon learning she
was pregnant.
In
1935, Violet saw
It Happened One Night and, lo and
behold, according to her, there was Frank Billings on the screen
wooing Claudette Colbert. Violet promptly wrote to Clark, advising
him of his paternity of Gwen and asking him to do right by her.
Clark said, "The letter was so fantastic, I threw it away."
Undaunted, Mrs. Norton and Gwen set
out for Canada, in order to press their claim on Clark from a closer
vicinity. Violet advertised in fan magazines for a father for "Clark
Gable's child", wrote to Mae West (randomly!) to enlist her support
and tried to sell her story to many newspapers. She finally earned
enough money selling her fictional tale to get to California where
she hired a private detective to put the squeeze on MGM and Clark.
The studio promptly notified the district attorney's office and
Violet was brought to trial on April 22, 1937.
The courtroom was a circus. Fans
prodded and grabbed at Clark on his way into the courtroom, ripping
his clothes and mussing his hair. Vendors sold peanuts and
photographs of Clark outside the courthouse.
Mrs. Norton, red-faced, gray-haired
and looking much older than her age of 47, introduced as proof a
photograph of Frank Billings in a British Army uniform.
She said in her cockney accent, "He is arrant fraud!
He's Frank Billings, that's who he is! I could tell
by the way he makes love to Joan Crawford!"
Clark was the first witness
for his defense. His testimony was short and to
the point: Q: Were you ever in England?A: No. Q:
Were you ever known as Frank Billings? A: No. Q:
Do you know Mrs. Norton? A: No. Q: Are you the
father of her daughter, Gwendolyn? A: No.
To Clark's defense came people from
his early life--friends, employers, family--to vouch for Clark's
whereabouts during that fateful year of 1922. The star witness was
Franz Doerfler, Clark's former sweetheart, who gave a Clark a
perfect alibi by testifying that in the autumn of 1922 (when Gwendoline was conceived) Clark was a guest of her father's ranch in
Oregon. She concluded her tale stating that Clark had even proposed
marriage and even though she did not accept, she was still Clark's
number one fan. Clark gallantly led his former sweetheart to and
from the witness stand, kissing her on the cheek.
A surprise witness for Clark was
Harry Billings, brother of the phantom father of Gwen, who testified
that Clark was not his brother. The final proof was that Clark had
never even been issued a passport to leave the United States so it
was not fathomable that he could have been in Britain to father a
child in 1922.
Undeterred by any of this evidence, Violet pointed
to Clark and screamed, "He is the father of my
child!" in the middle of the court. The jury of
twelve men reached their verdict after an hour and
fifty five minutes--Guilty! Violet
was convicted of using the mail to defraud and was sentenced to five
years in prison or a $10,000 fine. Her attorney,
Maurice Levine, appealed for a probationary
sentence, which permitted Mrs. Norton to leave the
United States immediately and never return. She was
not heard from again.