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  1. What I Think About Jean Harlow. By Clark Gable. As told to Mark Dowling. Hollywood magazine, July 1935. To me, Jean always seems to have rather a man’s attitude toward life. I don’t know just how to explain this, but I always feel it when I’m with her. You can talk to her so naturally. She understands and appreciates the things men are ...

  2. Red Dust is a 1932 American pre-Code romantic drama film directed by Victor Fleming, and starring Clark Gable, Jean Harlow, and Mary Astor. [2] It is based on the 1928 play of the same name by Wilson Collison, and was adapted for the screen by John Mahin. [2] [3] Red Dust is the second of six movies Gable and Harlow made together.

  3. 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.

  4. Wife vs. Secretary (or Wife Versus Secretary) is a 1936 American romantic comedy drama film starring Clark Gable, Myrna Loy and Jean Harlow. Directed and co-produced by Clarence Brown, it was the fifth of six collaborations between Gable and Harlow and the fourth of seven between Gable and Loy. The screenplay was based on the short story of the ...

  5. About Jean Harlow. Before the days of Madonna and Marilyn Monroe, the “Original Blonde Bombshell” made her mark on Hollywood and the world, leaving behind a new image of the Hollywood sex goddess. Harlean Carpenter, later known as Jean Harlow, was born on March 3, 1911 in Kansas City, Missouri. Although she would sadly only live to age 26 ...

  6. The Friendship Between Gable and Harlow. One of the greatest on-screen duos is between Clark Gable and Jean Harlow. With six films done together, their chemistry is still undeniable to this day. There was an easygoing spark that was unlike most screen duos at the time. The chemistry was so so strong that throughout classic Hollywood history ...

  7. Hold Your Man: Directed by Sam Wood. With Jean Harlow, Clark Gable, Stuart Erwin, Dorothy Burgess. A woman is sent to a reformatory when her con artist lover flees after killing a man during a botched blackmail scheme.

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