Hollywood legend
Joan Crawford holds the distinction of having been Clark's most frequent
leading lady; they starred in eight films together. Joan was already one of
MGM's brightest stars when Clark was just starting out at the studio in
1931.
Joan recalled, "To know Clark, you had to know him B.M. not just A.M.
That's 'Before Mustache" not just 'After Mustache'."
Clark played a rather one-dimensional gangster villain in their first film
together, Dance Fools Dance, and the
movie is all Joan's. That didn't stop the sparks from flying. Joan claimed
their attraction was not only instant, but also mutual. "I adored him. Just
adored him. I don't believe any woman is telling the truth if she ever
worked with Gable and did not feel twinges of a sexual urge beyond belief. I
would call her a liar."
Soon after filming wrapped, Clark was brought in as a replacement for male
lead Johnny Mack Brown in Laughing Sinners,
thanks to Joan's suggestion. By the time they starred in the steamy pre-code
Possessed in 1931, their affair was in full
swing. Joan said that during the film, "We were madly in love. When the
scenes ended, the emotion didn't." Both arrived at the studio long before
their call for the day and left long after shooting. It was the worst kept
secret in Hollywood.
Clark's wife at the time, Ria, ignored the rumors and
held her head high. Refusing to discuss the rumors, she would even still see
Joan socially!
Joan's husband, Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., recalled, "I learned about [Joan's]
purported affair with Clark from same male friends of mine. They came to me
and said, 'We have something to tell you which is for your own
good.'...These so-called friends asked me if I knew that my wife was having
an affair with Clark Gable. No, I didn't. They said everyone knew. I hadn't.
I totally believed them. I was informed by those friends that my wife and
Gable had begun their affair in her dressing room...it had been my wedding
gift to her, which made it worse, and then, as they say, to add insult to
injury, I wasn't quite finished paying for it yet. It wasn't very long after
that we were divorced. Her idea."
MGM head honcho Louis B. Mayer was none too pleased that two of his married
stars were romping around like teenagers. He threatened both of them that he
would cancel their contracts if the affair continued. He removed Clark from
being Joan's leading man in her next picture,
Letty Lynton,
replacing him with Robert Montgomery. He also urged Clark to appear in
public more often with Ria to quiet the rumors. And so Ria and Clark made
the rounds of premieres and nightclubs. They also, incredibly, double dated
with Joan and Douglas, only to leave their spouses alone at the table while
they snuck off into a corner together. Writer Adela Rogers St. Johns called
it "the affair that nearly burned Hollywood down."
Since they were forced to stay apart, their trysts became less and less
frequent. By the time they appeared again in
Dancing Lady, Clark was seeing Elizabeth Allan and Joan had eyes for her
other costar, Franchot Tone, whom she married soon after. They starred
together in Chained,
Forsaking All Others and
Love on the Run in the following three
years. Joan claimed that their affair continued off and on during this time.
In 1937, Joan was suggested for the female lead in
Parnell. Clark personally pleaded with her to take the part. She hated
the script, found it boring and trite, and refused to play it. So Myrna Loy
was brought in, and Joan took Myrna's role in
The Last of Mrs. Cheyney.
Parnell was a giant flop--the biggest flop of
both Clark and Myrna's careers. After that Clark was rather distant to Joan.
She said, "I don't think he ever forgave me for that; I think he believed I
bailed on him."
In 1940, Joan was cast in the drama Strange
Cargo with Spencer Tracy as her costar. Joan insisted that Clark be her
costar instead.
Since their last pairing, Clark was at a career high, having starred in
Gone
with the Wind and hits such as Test Pilot, not to mention being half of one
of the most popular and romanticized marriages of the time. Joan, however,
was not doing so well. She had had a string of flops and after being labeled
"Box Office Poison", her film career wasn't looking too bright.
If Joan was looking for a rekindling of their romance, she was out of luck.
Clark was still deep in newlywed bliss with Carole
Lombard. Joan resented his lack of attention and it led to tension on
set. She would apparently whisper things to him between scenes and he
would stomp off angrily while she laughed.
All seemed to be forgiven after Carole's sudden death in 1942. Joan was one
of Clark's closet confidantes during that time. He would go over to her
house where she would lend an ear as he sobbed and drank heavily. Joan
volunteered to replace Carole in what would have been Carole's next starring
role, They All Kissed the
Bride. She donated her entire salary from the film to
the Red Cross in Carole's name and promptly fired her agent when he insisted
on taking his usual 10%.
A few months later, Joan reportedly proposed marriage to Clark, looking for
a father for her adopted children. Clark turned her down and soon after
joined the Army.
Clark, as expected, never spoke publicly about their relationship.
Joan only admitted to it after his death, saying, "We had an
affair--a glorious affair--and it lasted longer than anybody knows."
In 1968, Joan Crawford did a television interview with David Frost in which
she discussed Clark. Frost asked her who was the most exciting actor she had
worked with.
Joan replied, "Clark Gable, of course."
"Why Gable?"
asked Frost.
"Because he had balls." replied Joan.
One of Joan's daughters said that she thought Clark had been the love of her
life. Perhaps. Joan told a biographer late in her life, "I didn't think
Clark would make a good husband--a great lover, a fine friend, but I
imagined him an unfaithful husband. I didn't think he would be satisfied
with only one woman, even me, and he would face endless temptation. He never
had to ask. I don't know if he even knew how to. There was always an endless
supply of attractive young things, who knew quite well how to ask, throwing
themselves on him. I was also certain that he would prefer not having as a
wife an actress with a career on par with his, that he would prefer someone
who could be happy simply devoting herself entirely to him. I was wrong in
the way I judged him. I thought he liked to live in the moment, to be free
of responsibilities. Then along came Carole Lombard."
Joan worked in films and television through the 1950's and 60's. She died of
cancer in 1977.