Stats Born January 26, 1884 in Denver, Colorado.
One of six children (one brother and four sisters) born to Henry Clay and
Florence Hood Dillon.
5'5, brunette, brown-eyed
Quotes "What went on in Clark's mind that did not concern
acting, I do not know, have never known, and will never know--now. What did
I think about when we were not talking about his acting, or his career? He
never knew, and I have never known whether he ever wondered or cared. As for
myself, I put in very little time resenting his silences, or in suspicions
of possible other women--but I was often very lonely. Perhaps he was too."
"Clark Gable had the furrowed forehead of a man who was overworked and under
nourished. He had the straight lipped, set mouth of the do it or die
character. He had the narrow, slit-eyed expression of the man who has had to
fight things through alone, and who tells nothing."
"[The marriage] was not fun to watch and not fun to live through."
Before Clark The Dillon family
moved to Long Beach, California in 1889 and then to Los Angeles in 1906.
Josephine (called "Joe" by her family) was a dedicated student and graduated
from Stanford University in 1908, one of the few women to be admitted at
that time, let alone graduate. She decided she wanted to be an actress and
had a few promising parts in plays but was repeatedly told she didn't have
the "star power" to be a successful actress. So, she decided to turn to
drama coaching. She went to Europe and studied teaching, then to New York,
where she met a singing coach and followed her to Portland in 1923 to set up
a studio.
How They Met One story is that they met when Clark, then a
telephone lineman in Portland, went to her office to fix her phone.
Another is that he enrolled in her theatre coaching class in Portland and
became her star pupil. Either way, Josephine took an instant liking to the
ambitious young actor and began to groom Clark for
stardom.
Wedding Day
After mutually deciding that marriage was
the only way the two of them could move to Hollywood together, Josephine and
Clark were married on December 13, 1924. He was 23, she was 41. One of her
friends threw them a party afterward, which Clark spent dancing with a
wealthy buxom blonde while Josephine fumed. After the party, they walked
home together in silence and when they reached home, Clark tipped his hat to
her, said good night and went to bed, alone.
Married Life Clark and Josephine scraped by on just a
few cents a week. Any excess after rent and food was given to Clark so he
could go to the movies. If enough was left over, Josephine might accompany
him. Through her connections, she got him parts in plays and bit parts in
movies. It seemed with the introduction of any attractive new costar, he started staying away longer and longer, not coming home for days at
a time and offering no explanation when he did return. After a few bit
parts, Clark decided to join a stock company in Houston. He soon grew
embarrassed of his matronly wife, who sat front and center at all his
performances and would go back to his dressing room to critique him between
scenes. She was also very jealous and possessive. He finally told her to
stop coming and stopped speaking to her altogether. This frustrated
Josephine--she tried to attend one of his play rehearsals and was turned
away at the door. Afterward, she claims, "He phoned me and said to keep out
of his life and that he was through with me. I told him I was going back to
California and that he’d better become the best actor he could because he
would never be a man." Josephine and Clark both say the marriage was never
consummated and was always intended to be in name only. A few people close
to Josephine however, say that she was in love with him and carried a torch
for him all her life. She even kept a trunk filled with pictures and
newspaper clippings of him. Divorce Josephine
grew increasingly bitter when Clark was being escorted around town by rich
socialite Ria Langham. Ria was doing far more for him than Josephine could:
throwing money at him, buying him clothes, paying to have his crooked teeth
fixed, introducing her to her rich friends. Ria was insisting on marriage so
Clark wanted Josephine to go to Mexico for a quickie divorce. She refused.
She instead filed for divorce in California, citing "desertion", knowing
full well that the year-long wait period would frustrate Clark and Ria. The
divorce became final on April 1, 1930. In August of 1931, after Clark had
married Ria and he was quickly becoming a rising star at MGM, Josephine sent
a letter to Louis B. Mayer and said that Clark was "an ungrateful chiseler"
who used her to become a star and then deserted her. She said that he left
her in financial ruins and unless MGM provided some financial assistance,
she would write the story of their marriage and auction it off to the
newspapers and magazines. Without consulting Clark, Mayer set up to have
$200 a month taken out of Clark's paycheck and sent directly to Josephine.
This infuriated Clark and caused the first of many rifts in his relationship
with Mayer.
Life After Clark
Josephine spent the remainder of
her life as a poor drama coach. Late in her life, she wrote a (still
unpublished) manuscript detailing her marriage to Clark, calling him "Mark"
and herself "Julia", but it was obvious whom the characters were meant to be.When the mood struck her, she would sell her
story to a tabloid complete with pictures of her living in her ramshackle
converted barn. She spoke very bitterly about Clark (see
The Article Archive--"The Wife Clark Gable
Forgot") and declared that Clark had abandoned her and was ungrateful
and selfish. One detail the articles failed to mention was that Clark owned
the house she lived in and let her live there rent-free for all of her life.
He left the house to her in his will. There were no provisions for any of
his other ex-wives.
Josephine died of pneumonia on November 10, 1971. She
is buried in New Calvary Catholic Cemetery in Los Angeles. She is in the
Dillon family plot and does not have an individual marker.
For
more pictures, check out the Josephine Dillon section in thegallery.
As far as I know no pictures exist of
Josephine and Clark together.