Gable is Van, “Jake”, or “V.S.” Stanhope, a publishing
executive happily married to the elegant Linda (Loy). Tongues start
wagging about Van and his beautiful secretary, Helen “Whitey” Wilson
(Harlow), whom
he considers a close friend and confidante, but nothing more. While trying
to secretly buy rights to a magazine from a rival publisher, he sneaks
around town with Whitey, finalizing the deal. As his stories become
inconsistent, Linda begins to suspect him and Whitey are having an affair.
So does Whitey’s patient fiancé, Dave (a youthful Stewart). Dave grows
irritated that Whitey refuses to quit her job, telling her that it isn’t
natural for a woman not to want to stay home and be married and have
children. She breaks up with him after he insinuates her relationship with
Van is indecent. Linda’s suspicions finally bubble over when Van refuses to
take her along on a business trip to Havana. An emergency occurs and Van
calls Whitey to Havana to help him close the deal. When Whitey answers Van’s
hotel room phone at 2:00am after a long night, Linda feels she needs no
further evidence and begins divorce proceedings when Van returns to New
York, refusing to believe his explanations. Whitey is starting to have
feelings for Van but knows that his heart belongs to Linda. She meets Linda
on her cruise ship just as she is about to leave and tells her that she is a
fool to let him go. In the end, Linda and Van are reunited, as are Whitey
and Dave.
Watch the trailer
Quote-able Gable
"Come in! Simpson, you're late!" first line
“Don’t you ever ask me to go whale fishing!”
“What’s to prevent me from thinking of you all day?”
“There’s an old Chinese proverb that says if you want to keep a man honest,
never call him a liar!”
“You know, Linda, sometimes I just sit in the office and think about us. I
try to be very fair about it and I am too. And I say to myself: who are you
to think you are entitled to Linda? Are you good enough for her? And I say
to myself: No. Then I say to myself: Well who is entitled to her? Is anyone
good enough for her? And I say to myself: No. Then I say to myself: You’re
as little entitled to her as anybody else so you hold right on. And I’m
holding.”
“You probably think I’m drunk, don’t you? Well you should, because I am!”
“No woman ever has enough clothes.”
“Linda!” final line
Behind the Scenes This was Gable's third movie in 1936. It was rushed into
production because MGM was anxious to reteam Gable and Harlow after the
success of China Seas. Throwing Myrna Loy into the mix was an extra bonus, since she was having a
career boom thanks to the success of The Thin Man.
During production on the film, Gable finally
separated from his second wife, Ria, and moved into the Beverly Wilshire
Hotel.
Gable and Loy became close friends on the set. She
said he brought her coffee every morning and would read her Shakespeare and
poetry in her trailer between takes.
Carole Lombard and William Powell (who was close
friends with Loy and was dating Harlow) were frequent visitors to the set.