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Jean Harlow: The Original Platinum Blonde

cheguevara101

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Would you share pictures of your Harlow movie collection? It would be good for the thread.
My DVD collection is DVD disc only, housed in 3 Amaray multi-cases 6 discs apiece. So, I'm sorry, there are no individual cases. Each disc has some printed artwork, some negligible. The picture quality on 4 of the films is outstanding, the rest acceptable. I ordered them all from various suppliers on eBay. I'm going to design covers for each of the 3 Amaray cases, reflecting the films within, respectfully and affectionately so. For now, I've written out in longhand the contents for each of the covers.
Would you share pictures of your Harlow movie collection? It would be good for the thread.
 

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Harlow with actor William Powell, the man many believe was the greatest love of her life. They appeared in RECKLESS (1935) and LIBELED LADY (1936) together, and carried on a passionate love affair.

Harlow was very much in love with Powell, but he apparently refused to marry her. Powell had been married to actress Carole Lombard in the early-'30s, and after that relationship on bad terms, he was dead-set against marrying another actress. Even so, he gave Harlow a large ring sometime late 1936, which you could see her wearing in her publicity stills and in her final completed movie PERSONAL PROPERTY (1937). The two were never to wed, but their romance continued until Harlow's death.​

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As a little tidbit of information, William Powell later had a supporting role in HOW TO MARRY A MILLIONAIRE, a 1953 comedy starring Marilyn Monroe, Betty Grable, and Lauren Bacall as three gold-diggers trying to land wealthy husbands. Powell played an older suitor who falls for Bacall's character, although the two ultimately decided to break off their engagement because of their age difference.

What's interesting about this is that Monroe often spoke of her admiration for Harlow in interviews. She spoke frequently of her desire to play Harlow in a big-screen biopic. Monroe had been contracted with Fox in 1962 to star in a Harlow biopic as apart of a new deal with the studio, but her death in August of that year prevented that project from happening. Carroll Baker later took on the role Monroe herself had longed for, and the 1965 version of HARLOW was greeted with a lukewarm reception from audiences and critics. It is a largely fictionalized account of Harlow's life.​
 

cheguevara101

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I'd heard Monroe wanted to film a biopic of her idol but rejected the script. Then the project went ahead with Carroll Baker. Another biopic with Carol Lynley was released the same year. I believe both films were unsuccessful. If a Jean Harlow biopic were made today, who in the heck would play her? One thing I know for sure, is that Jean Harlow's films should be restored and shown at a Jean Harlow or 30's film Festival/retrospective. She deserves a much higher profile. I've been head over heels since seeing Red Dust - a grand gal.
 

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I'd heard Monroe wanted to film a biopic of her idol but rejected the script. Then the project went ahead with Carroll Baker. Another biopic with Carol Lynley was released the same year. I believe both films were unsuccessful.
I've heard tell that Monroe was offered a script about Harlow sometime in the mid-to-late-'50s when Fox was trying to lure away from the Actors Studio and "get her in line" by offering her the role she had always wanted to play. She turned that offer down flat because the script was bad. In 1962, at the time when she was renegotiating her contract with Fox. She had agreed to return and complete the troubled SOMETHING'S GOT TO GIVE (which was eventually rebranded as MOVE OVER, DARLING in 1963 with Doris Day in the lead), and her next project would've been WHAT A WAY TO GO! (which was made in 1964 with Shirley MacLaine). Also tabled as future projects for Monroe was a biopic on Harlow, a WWI-themed musical with Gene Kelly, a loan out to United Artists to make KISS ME, STUPID (which was made with Kim Novak in 1964), and a remake of A TREE GROWS IN BROOKLYN.

The Harlow script then made its way to Paramount, where Carroll Baker was given the title role. She got the part based off of her performance in THE CARPETBAGGERS, where she played a fictional '30s screen star, and because she was something of a successor to Monroe being she was a attractive, popular, blonde-haired film star. HARLOW, as the movie was ultimately called, came out in 1965 to disappointing reviews and poor box office. Around the same time, the lower-budget studio Magna put out their own HARLOW (using the same title as the Paramount version) starring Carol Lynley. The latter was more historically accurate, but another box office flop. Lynley was closer to Harlow's real age, but the film's poor production value hindered its success.​
If a Jean Harlow biopic were made today, who in the heck would play her?
I honestly don't know who I'd see playing Harlow today. Singer-actress Gwen Stefani played her briefly in THE AVIATOR, the early-2000s biopic on Howard Hughes, the multimillionaire that "discovered" Harlow for HELL'S ANGELS in 1930. There was a big hoopla for a while that Stefani should play Harlow in a full-length biopic, if not for the big screen, but maybe for something like HBO. I was never quite on board with that idea, and there's absolutely no one else I could see playing Harlow today.​
One thing I know for sure, is that Jean Harlow's films should be restored and shown at a Jean Harlow or 30's film Festival/retrospective. She deserves a much higher profile. I've been head over heels since seeing Red Dust - a grand gal.
A Harlow-themed festival (or a '30s one in general) would be fantastic.
 

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The following is a transcription from a film magazine, which may interest you:

Jean & Myrna

In the spring of 1934, Jean I Harlow, 23, was riding high as Hollywood's sex symbol, having starred in Platinum Blonde (1931) and Bombshell (1933), and was one of MGM's biggest stars. Myrna Loy, 29, while relatively new at MGM, had a long career behind her - in silent films she'd regularly played the exotic femme fatale and was in danger of being typecast. All that changed when, after playing opposite William Powell in Manhattan Melodrama (1934), the pair were teamed up in The Thin Man (1934) as man and wife detectives. Powell and Loy would star in a further five Thin Man films together, and Loy would go on to be known in Hollywood as The Perfect Wife.

While The Thin Man would help resurrect Loy's career, it would also help forge one of her dearest friendships. While performing scenes from the film for gossip columnist Louella Parson's radio show, Powell introduced Loy to Harlow, who he was dating. They immediately liked each other and could recognise their similar predicaments. Loy was dating producer Arthur Hornblower Jr. who was still married - she wanted to be his wife but he was comfortable with the status quo. Harlow was married for the third time but keen to marry Powell - recently divorced from Carole Lombard (his second wife), he was wary and reluctant to marry again. Loving in Hollywood was complicated. Harlow and Loy didn't get to work together until 1936, where
they first starred in Wife vs Secretary, in which Myrna plays the wife who becomes jealous of her husband's secretary (Jean). It gave Loy the chance to get to know the real Harlow. "Jean was beautiful, but far from the raucous sexpot of her films. As a matter of fact, she began to shake that image in Wife vs Secretary. She'd begged for a role that didn't require spouting slang and modelling lingerie. She even convinced them to darken her hair a shade, in hopes of toning down that brash image. It worked."

The same year the pair starred in Libeled Lady. This was a fun film to make-alongside co-stars Spencer Tracy and William Powell, the actresses would hang out together during breaks and soon discovered they had a lot in common, including their sense of humour.

Their friendship really had a chance to cement itself during the filming of After the Thin Man (1936). Much of filming was shot on location in San Francisco, and when co-stars Powell and Loy, accompanied by Harlow, all arrived at the St Francis Hotel, it became clear there was a booking error. So convincing was Powell and Loy's portrayal of a married couple in their films together, the hotel clerk had thought they were married

in real life too and assigned them one suite. The only other room available was a small bedroom. Despite the press rumours at the time that Powell and Harlow were due to marry soon, no-one wanted a scandal. In her memoir, Loy later recalled Harlow taking charge, saying: "There's nothing for you to do... We'll just have to put Bill downstairs."

Loy delightfully recalled: "That mix-up brought me one of my most cherished friendships. You would have thought Jean and I were in boarding school we had so much fun. We'd stay up half the night talking and sipping gin, sometimes laughing, sometimes discussing more serious things..."

Loy was shy, reserved and a good listener she was a very private person and a good confidante. Harlow was warm, funny and down to earth. They treasured the support they provided each other. Loy recalled: "Jean was always very cheerful, full of fun, but she also happened to be a sensitive woman with a great deal of self-respect. All that other stuff - that was all put on. She wasn't like that at all. She just happened to be a good actress who created a lively characterisation that exuded sex appeal."

In 1937, Harlow, who was at last engaged to Powell, was filming Saratoga with buddy Clark Gable, the sixth and final film they would make together. Loy meanwhile was co-starring with Powell in Double Wedding, their seventh pairing.

In May, Harlow felt unwell while filming - during this time Loy noticed Harlow looking grey and that her face was beginning to swell. On May 29, Harlow was playing a scene where her character had a fever - she didn't need to act as by this time she was out of breath and covered in sweat. "I feel terrible," she told Clark Gable. "Get me back to my dressing-room." Powell came and requested a doctor, and Harlow was sent home with her mother and a team of nurses to look after her.

Unbeknownst to all, even Harlow, she had been suffering from kidney failure since her teens. On June 7 she died, with Powell and her mother at her side. Harlow, who had been the embodiment of youthful exuberance, was just 26. Her mother had the words 'our baby' inscribed on her tomb. Loy, meanwhile, had lost a dear, cherished friend: "Oh, it was horrible, an awful blow; I loved Jean, deeply."

"I felt a sickening mixture of grief, guilt and frustration because I hadn't been able to do what might have saved her; get her away from her mother for an examination." - Loy on Harlow's death. Harlow's mother was a Christian Scientist and a rumour started that she had refused to take Harlow to hospital.
 

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It's nice to know that Harlow and Loy were friendly. We hear so often about how this doesn't like that one or those two didn't get along that's it's nice to know that two of the biggest female movie stars of the '30s had a healthy relationship.

They made two movies together: WIFE VS. SECRETARY, co-starring Clark Gable, and LIBELED LADY, co-starring William Powell and Spencer Tracy. Both movies were released in 1936, with the latter being one of MGM's biggest hits of the year.

Harlow had originally wanted to play Connie Allenbury in LIBELED LADY because her character would've ended up with William Powell at the end, the man who was her real-life boyfriend at the time. MGM wanted the movie to be another Powell-Loy vehicle, however, and they cast Loy as Connie. Since Harlow had already been touted to star in the film, she was cast as Gladys instead, Tracy's on-screen fiancée who he gets to fake a marriage to Powell. LIBELED LADY was one of the biggest box office hits of Harlow's short-lived career. It grossed over $1 million at the box office in 1936. The youngest of the four on-screen leads, Harlow received top billing.

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She spoke frequently of her desire to play Harlow in a big-screen biopic. Monroe had been contracted with Fox in 1962 to star in a Harlow biopic as apart of a new deal with the studio

That had been kicking around since at least 1956, but I'm pretty sure Marilyn rejected the script well before 1962. Maybe she was in renewed talks at the end but considering how dismal the two Harlow biopics turned out, I suspect Marilyn never would have agreed. I recall a quote of hers, talking about how bad the script was ... "I hope they don't do that to me when I'm gone." (If only she knew ...)

As a little tidbit of information, William Powell later had a supporting role in HOW TO MARRY A MILLIONAIRE, a 1953 comedy starring Marilyn Monroe

Since Powell mostly shared screen time with Bacall, I don't know how much he was on the set with Marilyn; but I've often wondered if she asked him about Jean. It would have been an obvious opportunity to learn about her idol, but I'm not sure if she was tactless enough to ask a man about his deceased fiancé.
 

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Harlow married MGM executive Paul Bern in 1932. The pair had met two years before when Bern escorted Harlow to the premiere of HELL'S ANGELS, her star-making vehicle. Bern never lost interest in Harlow, and he was influential in urging Louis B. Mayer to buy Harlow's contract from Howard Hughes and bring her over to MGM. Mayer was initially weary of Harlow, fearing she wasn't the "leading lady material" he typically liked to promote. By comparison, Mayer was a big fan of Jeannette Macdonald, best-known for her carefree musicals with Nelson Eddy.

It took some convincing, but Bern eventually got Mayer to buy out Harlow's contract, and she officially set-up house on the MGM lot. Harlow's first picture at the studio was RED-HEADED WOMAN, a racy 1932 about a manipulative secretary who climbs the social ladder by romancing wealthy suitors. The film caused Harlow to loose her most famous trademark (she dyed her hair red for the part), but was ultimately one of the biggest successes of the year. Although some protested the immoral corners of the plot, it made Harlow a household name.

In the meantime, Harlow and Bern became linked romantically. Bern was 42 while Harlow was just 21. They announced their engagement in June 1932, and they were married on July 2, 1932. The marriage was not necessarily a happy one: Harlow later confided in friends that Bern was a cold individual with no apparent interest whatsoever in relations, but who could spend the entire evening in dead silence reading books. Many wondered why Bern, a successful executive, would want to marry Harlow, a famous sex symbol, but not have any interest in romantic relationships.

Two months after the marriage, Bern was found dead on September 5, 1932 at the couples' home in Beverly Hills, California. There was an apparent suicide letter found at Bern's side. Harlow was at her mother's home and Bern's death was ruled suicide. Almost immediately stories began to circulate about Bern's death. Many questioned the apparent suicide letter, while others debated whether or not it was Harlow that drove him to suicide. Louis B. Mayer, Irving Thalberg, and David O. Selznick were phoned in to do "damage control" at the scene of Bern's death, and it was apparently those three men that sent Harlow to her mother's home, where she was instructed to react frantically when informed of her husband's death. A old common-law wife was involved, by name of Dorothy Millette, but Bern's death was still clouded by scandal.

Even so, Jean Harlow is regularly regarded as the first mainstream Hollywood star to overcome such a scandal.

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Three years later, Harlow was cast in the movie RECKLESS (1935), where she portrayed fictional stage actress Mona Leslie, whose husband (played by Franchot Tone) commits suicide shortly after they've married. It was a dramatized and exploited big-screen representation of Harlow's real-life personal tragedy.

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Harlow married MGM executive Paul Bern in 1932. The pair had met two years before when Bern escorted Harlow to the premiere of HELL'S ANGELS, her star-making vehicle. Bern never lost interest in Harlow, and he was influential in urging Louis B. Mayer to buy Harlow's contract from Howard Hughes and bring her over to MGM. Mayer was initially weary of Harlow, fearing she wasn't the "leading lady material" he typically liked to promote. By comparison, Mayer was a big fan of Jeannette Macdonald, best-known for her carefree musicals with Nelson Eddy.

It took some convincing, but Bern eventually got Mayer to buy out Harlow's contract, and she officially set-up house on the MGM lot. Harlow's first picture at the studio was RED-HEADED WOMAN, a racy 1932 about a manipulative secretary who climbs the social ladder by romancing wealthy suitors. The film caused Harlow to loose her most famous trademark (she dyed her hair red for the part), but was ultimately one of the biggest successes of the year. Although some protested the immoral corners of the plot, it made Harlow a household name.

In the meantime, Harlow and Bern became linked romantically. Bern was 42 while Harlow was just 21. They announced their engagement in June 1932, and they were married on July 2, 1932. The marriage was not necessarily a happy one: Harlow later confided in friends that Bern was a cold individual with no apparent interest whatsoever in relations, but who could spend the entire evening in dead silence reading books. Many wondered why Bern, a successful executive, would want to marry Harlow, a famous sex symbol, but not have any interest in romantic relationships.

Two months after the marriage, Bern was found dead on September 5, 1932 at the couples' home in Beverly Hills, California. There was an apparent suicide letter found at Bern's side. Harlow was at her mother's home and Bern's death was ruled suicide. Almost immediately stories began to circulate about Bern's death. Many questioned the apparent suicide letter, while others debated whether or not it was Harlow that drove him to suicide. Louis B. Mayer, Irving Thalberg, and David O. Selznick were phoned in to do "damage control" at the scene of Bern's death, and it was apparently those three men that sent Harlow to her mother's home, where she was instructed to react frantically when informed of her husband's death. A old common-law wife was involved, by name of Dorothy Millette, but Bern's death was still clouded by scandal.

Even so, Jean Harlow is regularly regarded as the first mainstream Hollywood star to overcome such a scandal.

View attachment 28944

Three years later, Harlow was cast in the movie RECKLESS (1935), where she portrayed fictional stage actress Mona Leslie, whose husband (played by Franchot Tone) commits suicide shortly after they've married. It was a dramatized and exploited big-screen representation of Harlow's real-life personal tragedy.

View attachment 28946
Here's a transcription of info I found. And just in case anyone missed it, here it is:

Jean & Clark

At the 3rd Academy Awards ceremony, MGM's hugely successful prison drama The Big House (1930) earned writer Frances Marion an Oscar for Best Writing. Hoping that she would be inspired to repeat that accomplishment, Irving Thalberg, head of production at Metro, sent Marion to Chicago, Illinois to research story ideas. While flicking through the pages of The Saturday Evening Post, she found an article revealing that, in a city where people distrusted the police, a small group of leading citizens met in secret to arrange their own justice for criminals. Marion took inspiration from that story and wrote The Secret Six (1931), in which Wallace Beery and Lewis Stone, stars of The Big House, play two mobsters prosecuted by a half a dozen vigilantes.

Thalberg was pleased with the leading roles Marion wrote for Beery and Stone, but asked if she could also fill out one of the minor leads for Clark Gable, a tall, dark and handsome 30-year-old actor whom Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer had recently signed. At the same time, producer Paul Bern convinced Thalberg to give the female lead to Jean Harlow, a 20-year-old «platinum blonde» who had just turned into a worldwide sensation after her appearance in Howard Hughes's World War I blockbuster Hell's Angels (1930). The Secret Six would become the first of six successful films to pair Clark Gable and Jean Harlow.


Jean and Clark as Anne and Carl in The Secret Six
By all accounts, Harlow was «sweet, passive, and totally uninhibited, seemingly unconscious of the effect her stunning looks had on all around her.» The cast and crew working on The Secret Six adored Harlow, but Beery took an instant dislike to her, as he did to almost anyone with the potential to steal a scene from him. He criticized her constantly in front of everyone on the set, treating her like the amateur she in truth still was. Jean turned to Gable for reassurance, but he was also a newcomer and could not provide much consolation. «Neither of us knew much about the business,» Gable later recalled. «At the end of every scene she would ask me, 'How'm I doing?' And I would ask her the same.» Although initially they were both shy, Jean and Clark eventually became close friends during filming, a bond that lasted for the rest of her life.

The following year, after MGM purchased Harlow's contract from Hughes's Caddo Company, they were cast in Victor Fleming's risqué romantic drama Red Dust (1932). In this adaptation of Wilson Collison's 1928 play of the same name, Harlow played Vantine, a wise-cracking prostitute on the run from the Saigon police, while Gable appeared as Dennis Carson, a rugged rubber plantation manager in French Indochina, who offers Vantine shelter until the next boat to civilization. Although he is initially indifferent to her charms, a mutual attraction eventually develops between them, but their romance is complicated with the arrival of Barbara Willis (Mary Astor), the classy, ladylike wife of the plantation's new surveyor, Gary Willis (Gene Raymond).


As Dennis and Vantine in Red Dust
While Jean and Clark had not struck any sparks in The Secret Six, they «burned up celluloid» in Red Dust. Like Norma Shearer, his co-star in A Free Soul (1931), Harlow preferred the «non-bra look» under her slinky gowns, but she went one step farther by rubbing ice over her nipples before stepping in front of the cameras. Although he had contested Shearer's warbrobe, Gable voiced no objections regarding Harlow's fashion decisions. Their sexual chemistry on-screen was so intense that everyone assumed they were involved in real life. Astor later recalled that their behavior together was very physical, that they «seemed to be wresting all the time. He was holding on to her or Jean or hanging on to Clark, pulling, tugging or romping, always touching each other.» However, Clarence Sinclair Bull, MGM's renowned still photographer, observed that «They'd kid around and wrestle until I'd say 'lets heat up the negative.' And they burned it clear through. I've never seen two actors make love so convincingly without being in love.»
The relationship between Jean and Clark was never anything other than platonic. Both the only children in the Midwest families, each was the sibling the other never had; he always referred to her as his «kid sister» and nicknamed her «sis.» With neither of them very convinced of their acting skills at this stage in their careers, they figured that kidding around and playing pranks on each other could help them forget their insecurities and boost their confidence. Although Harlow gained recognition as a woman of «blazing sexuality,» she, like Gable, had become tired of being treated as a sexual object. He treated her like a human being and his attitude towards her was always protective.


On the set of Hold Your Man
After Red Dust exploded at the box-office, MGM immediately conceived a follow-up vehicle to build up on Gable and Harlow's electrifying chemistry. Directed by Sam Wood from a script by Anita Loos, Hold Your Man (1933) featured Gable as Eddie Hall, a small-time con man who barges into the apartment belonging to Ruby Adams (Harlow), a seasoned manipulator of men, while running away from the police. They are immeditaly attracted to each other and soon become lovers, but when Eddie accidentally kills a drunk who was grabbing Ruby, he runs away and she ends up in reform school.

Both Gable and Harlow had a happy time shooting Hold Your Man, creating a playroom-like atmosphere on the set. Harlow would bring her Victrola out of her dressing room, as she usually did on a set, and played jazz records. In addition, she bought a giant jigsaw puzzle, which she set up in a corner, and she and Gable worked on it between takes, much to the enjoyment of the crew, who either helped or kept stealing pieces. They also amused themselves by making fun of each and playing pranks on whoever would happen to be passing by. In her article for a 1933 issue of Photoplay magazine, Loos described a typical exchange of «hot shot» between the two.

One morning, when Jean was late in coming to set, Clark genuinely worried that she might be sick. He said to Loos how much he admired his co-star. When he glimpsed Jean «tiptoeing towards us [...] forefinger to her lips,» Clark showed no indication that he was aware of her presence and continued the conversation in a «louder tone,» slandering her name. At that point, Jean confronted her «traducer» and said, «My pal!» Feigning suprise, Clark jumped to his feet: «Well, well, how's my little chromium blonde this morning? I was worried about you being late.» «You big Ohio hillbilly!» Jean responded. «I heard what you said being my back!» «Well, did you ever hear that old crack about eavesdroppers never hearing any good of themselves?» Clark asked. According to Loos, «The he-man of the films dodged just in time to miss Jean's beach slipper as he fled.»


In a publicity still for China Seas
Two years after the release of Hold Your Man, they were paired in Tay Garnett's China Seas (1935), based on Crosbie Garstin's 1930 novel of the same name. In this blend of romantic melodrama and sea-faring adventure, which saw them reunited with Wallace Beery, Harlow once again played a lady of dubious reputation, Dolly Portland, nicknamed «China Doll,» who is madly in love with a hard-bitten ship captain named Alan Gaskell (Gable). When Dolly founds out that Gaskell has rejected her in favor of a sophisticated socialite, Sybil Barclay (Rosalind Russell), she helps the villainous Jamesy McArdle (Beery) in his plot to seize the ship.

As usual, Jean and Clark managed to turn work into play while filming China Seas. Once again, he was her accomplice in one of her favorite pastimes: «puncturing stuffiness.» The target this time was the abrasive Wallace Beery, whom they both loathed ever since working together in The Secret Six. During Beery's on-the-set birthday party, Harlow and Gable were the leaders in a prank that saw him presented with a fully decorated wooden cake, which was appreciated not one bit. To apologize, they asked the prop department to make a cotton-wool cake. Needless to say, Beery was not amused.
Their fifth screen pairing was Wife vs. Secretary (1936), based on novel by Faith Baldwin called Office Wife. Directed by Clarence Brown, the film concerns the life of magazine publisher Van Stanhope (Gable), whose jealous wife, Linda (Myrna Loy), is led to believe by her mother-in-law (May Robson) that he is having an affair with his beautiful personal assistant, Helen «Whitey» Wilson (Harlow). Van is not having any affair, but her suspicious nearly destroy their marriage until Whitey confronts Linda personally and makes her realize how close she is to losing everything.


With Loy in a publicity still for Wife vs. Secretary
The Wife vs. Secretary set was a happy one. Clark was in the unique position of working with two women who were his close friends, but with whom he had no romantic ties. Harlow and Loy were quite good friends as well, despite having met only a short time before when Jean had accompanied her lover William Powell while he and Myrna appeared on the Louella Parsons radio show. Both Midwesterners, the two women discovered they had much in common, including their sense of humor, and Harlow was thrilled to be working with Loy at last. With Powell and Carole Lombard, Gable's future wife, dropping by to visit between scenes, the production of Wife vs. Secretary was probably the best time Gable and Harlow ever had on any set.
Gable and Harlow were scheduled to start shooting their sixth picture together, Jack Conway's Saratoga (1937), in March 1937. Written by Anita Loos, this horse-racing drama told the story of Carol Clayton (Harlow), the daughter of an incorrigible gambler (Jonathan Hale) who loses the family's lucrative horse farm to his good friend and bookie, Duke Bradley (Gable). When Carol tries to win money on the racetrack to buy the house back, she meets Duke and the sexual tension between the two quickly develops into a mutual attraction.


As Carol and Duke in Saratoga
Production on Saratoga was delayed, however, when Jean began complaining of severe toothache. Her dentist recommended she have all four of her wisdom teeth removed, but the procedure was complicated and she had to be hospitalized for 18 days. When she returned to the set, several of the crew noticed her grey complexion, fatigue and weight gain. Near the end of filming, Harlow collapsed on the set and was escorted home, where Dr. Ernest Fishbaugh diagnosed her with a «several cold» and a «stomach ailment.» A few days later, she complained of abdominal pain, vomitted and seemed to become delirious, which led her doctor to believe she was suffering from cholecystitis (inflammation of the gall bladder). Clark went to visit her the next day and found her «bloated to twice her normal size and when he bent forward to kiss her he smelled urine on her breath.»
Over the next several days, as it became clear that Jean was not improving, a new doctor was called in to examine her. Reviewed her records, especially the blood chemistry tests done by Fishbaugh, Dr. Leland Chapman discovered that what Jean had was not gall bladder inflammation, but actually chronic progressive disease of the kidneys that had reached the point where her kidney function was «insufficient to maintain life.» Chapman immediately administered new medicine, but it was already too late. By this time, Jean's blood was «loaded with accumulating waste products of protein metabolism, mainly urea, and she had a condition known as uremia or uremic poisoning.» In the evening of June 6, 1937, Jean was rushed to the hospital, placed in an oxygen tent and given blood transfusions. The next morning, her major organs, the heart and respiratory systems all failed. At 11:37 a.m., following unsuccessful attempts to ventilate her artificially, Jean died at the age of 26.
Gable was shaken by Harlow's sudden death and was outraged, as were her fans, to learn that MGM wanted to reshoot Saratoga with a different actress. Harlow's unfinished scenes were then filmed using body and voice doubles and fans, eager for a last glimpse of the fallen young star, flocked to see Saratoga, when it was quickly completed and rushed into release. Premiering not quite seven weeks after her death, the film the second highest grossing picture of 1937 and the biggest moneymaker of Harlow's career. Only a few minutes before Jean collapsed while doing a scene in which her character had a fever, the script required Clark to bend over and say, «Hey, you've got a fever. You all right? You had me scared there for a minute.» If only he knew.
 

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Harlow with actor William Powell, the man many believe was the greatest love of her life. They appeared in RECKLESS (1935) and LIBELED LADY (1936) together, and carried on a passionate love affair.

Harlow was very much in love with Powell, but he apparently refused to marry her. Powell had been married to actress Carole Lombard in the early-'30s, and after that relationship on bad terms, he was dead-set against marrying another actress. Even so, he gave Harlow a large ring sometime late 1936, which you could see her wearing in her publicity stills and in her final completed movie PERSONAL PROPERTY (1937). The two were never to wed, but their romance continued until Harlow's death.​

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As a little tidbit of information, William Powell later had a supporting role in HOW TO MARRY A MILLIONAIRE, a 1953 comedy starring Marilyn Monroe, Betty Grable, and Lauren Bacall as three gold-diggers trying to land wealthy husbands. Powell played an older suitor who falls for Bacall's character, although the two ultimately decided to break off their engagement because of their age difference.

What's interesting about this is that Monroe often spoke of her admiration for Harlow in interviews. She spoke frequently of her desire to play Harlow in a big-screen biopic. Monroe had been contracted with Fox in 1962 to star in a Harlow biopic as apart of a new deal with the studio, but her death in August of that year prevented that project from happening. Carroll Baker later took on the role Monroe herself had longed for, and the 1965 version of HARLOW was greeted with a lukewarm reception from audiences and critics. It is a largely fictionalized account of Harlow's life.​
I've been watching the Saturday night kid and enjoyed it immensely, Clara Bow is very charismatic. I could, in some scenes, see Jean Harlow quite clearly. However, there was a scene at a table, where there was a blonde with her back to the camera. I think it was Jean, am I correct?
 

ClassyCo

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I've been watching the Saturday night kid and enjoyed it immensely, Clara Bow is very charismatic. I could, in some scenes, see Jean Harlow quite clearly. However, there was a scene at a table, where there was a blonde with her back to the camera. I think it was Jean, am I correct?
Yes that is Jean with her back to the camera.
 

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I've watched both Harlow biopics. Both a real drag. No Jean beauty or charisma. I would've thought they'd get her hair right!
I both HARLOW movies on DVD once that I bought from one of those no-name websites. They were in a bundle together for real cheap. I seem to recall watching both of them, although I remember preferring the lower-budgeted Carol Lynley version over the glossier Carroll Baker version.

Both are pretty bad though.​
 

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I both HARLOW movies on DVD once that I bought from one of those no-name websites. They were in a bundle together for real cheap. I seem to recall watching both of them, although I remember preferring the lower-budgeted Carol Lynley version over the glossier Carroll Baker version.

Both are pretty bad though.​
I thought the opening scenes of the Carroll Baker version carried merit with its portrayal of the silent comedies, including a scene which looked lifted directly from Jean's film 'Suzy'. A similar scene was repeated about halfway through. Then the Paul Bern story took flight only to nosedive. Then Jean's character takes to the bottle, sleeps around and then passes out on the beach, is taken to hospital and dies from pneumonia age 26. They got her age right but never her hair. The Carol Lynley version presented Jean as quite a cold fish, I think, and thoroughly dislikeable. Yet, it was fairly respectable to the facts. It took me quite a while, though, to figure that the Efrem Zimbalist character of William Mansfield was really meant to be William Powell. And I think Jean's death scene went someway in respecting the truth. I think Jean, as Spencer Tracy put it, was a grand gal. Neither of these productions presented Jean this way. They left me cold, and Jean's films never leave me feeling that way. She breathes new life into me in a warm and positive way. Delightful!

On a similar topic,
I've read online that, Mischa Barton is set to play Jean in the biopic By Love Reclaimed.

The former OC star will portray Jean in the upcoming film, which is being written by Adrian Finkelstein.

The drama, which will also be co-produced by Adrian, will focus on the 1932 scandal in which MGM producer and Jean's husband Paul Bern was found shot dead in their home in Benedict Canyon - two months after they got married.

Suicide or Murder? The scandalous death of Paul Bern is exposed as something very different than the cover-up suicide scripted by MGM.

It looked like old news until I discovered it was in PRE-PRODUCTION. Expected April 10, 2022. I would like to think Jean will be depicted fairly, well studied, and bring to Jean and her films a fresh abundance of fans.
 

J. R.'s Piece

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There's got to be some Jean Harlow fans here on Soap Chat. Don't hold out on me. Come on in and join the discussion! :)

I’ve got a few Jean Harlow films. Including Red Headed Woman, Hells’ Angels, Dinner At Eight, China Seas, Libeled Lady, The Girl from Missouri, Goldie, The Beast of the City, Iron Man, The Public Enemy, Three Wise Girls, Hold Your Man, Wife Versus Secretary, Reckless, Platinum Blonde, Suzy, Riffraff, Double Whoopee, The Secret Six, Bombshell, Red Dust, Personal Property and Saratoga. Plus a few books and documentaries and movies on her. And a few hundred stills have fallen into my possession. I consider myself a casual viewer.
 

cheguevara101

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I’ve got a few Jean Harlow films. Including Red Headed Woman, Hells’ Angels, Dinner At Eight, China Seas, Libeled Lady, The Girl from Missouri, Goldie, The Beast of the City, Iron Man, The Public Enemy, Three Wise Girls, Hold Your Man, Wife Versus Secretary, Reckless, Platinum Blonde, Suzy, Riffraff, Double Whoopee, The Secret Six, Bombshell, Red Dust, Personal Property and Saratoga. Plus a few books and documentaries and movies on her. And a few hundred stills have fallen into my possession. I consider myself a casual viewer.
I think I have almost as many titles as you, mainly devoted to Jean's starring and supporting roles. They were not hard to find on physical media, they are also available for online streaming, which I'm sure you know. I wasn't going to get The Secret 6, but I decided to go ahead, and I'm glad I did, good quality too. I've ordered a couple of books, I'm looking forward to receiving. I think I've seen all the documentaries, Discovering Jean Harlow being my favourite, since it gave a fair account. I've watched the two Harlow biopics, which imo leave a great deal to be desired. My interest began with a desire to watch Red Dust, after seeing it's remake Mogambo, so I was fascinated with seeing the original, and was blown away by Jean's performance. How did your interest develop?
 

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I think I have almost as many titles as you, mainly devoted to Jean's starring and supporting roles. They were not hard to find on physical media, they are also available for online streaming, which I'm sure you know. I wasn't going to get The Secret 6, but I decided to go ahead, and I'm glad I did, good quality too. I've ordered a couple of books, I'm looking forward to receiving. I think I've seen all the documentaries, Discovering Jean Harlow being my favourite, since it gave a fair account. I've watched the two Harlow biopics, which imo leave a great deal to be desired. My interest began with a desire to watch Red Dust, after seeing it's remake Mogambo, so I was fascinated with seeing the original, and was blown away by Jean's performance. How did your interest develop?
I tried to recall this but I honestly don’t remember. Whether I read a biography before seeing films or not. I know I saw Red-Headed Woman early on. But the sequence of events eludes me. Whereas with say, Carole Lombard, I know I read about her at school, then saw her as Irene Bullock in My Man Godfrey, Hazel in Nothing Sacred and as Lily Garland in Twentieth Century.
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I've always had immense interest in film, particularly classic Hollywood, but Jean Harlow is the only one who has given me a new lease of life. It's only been a few months, but I really had see Red Dust, and the love affair began. So unexpected and captivating. And in consideration of the star power in Dinner at Eight I'd wondered whether Jean could match such greatness, but oh yes, she is much more than capable, and exceeded my expectations. Pairing Clark Gable in their six outings together says it all, she is up there with the greatest. And so the legend lives on. Great Jean stills you included in your post. I enjoy taking a tour of various Jean online galleries. Sometimes the colourizing enhances the still, but I think monochrome works best.
 
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