Jean Harlow and the love of her life, William Powell in 1936, months before her death. |
The great love of her life, actor
William Powell, found Jean Harlow desperately ill after she collapsed
into Clark Gable’s arms on the
set of the MGM film Saratoga
on May 20, 1937. He had been called to her side from a near-by sound stage where he was
working. He took her to her home in his car, arranged for medical attention including doctors and attending
nurses. He called his fiancĂ©’s
domineering mother, also named Jean
who was away on a vacation lavishly
spending her daughter’s money.
Harlow’s health had deteriorated rapidly while shooting the film, alarming
her close friend and co-star Myrna Loy who noted how bloated, listless, and ashen colored
she had become. Her traditional cheerful demeanor on the set, which made her among the most beloved of all stars by the crews with whom she worked, was
replaced by exhausted languor and uncharacteristic snappishness.
As her condition worsened, mother Jean restricted her visits to those closest to her—herself, Powell, and
Gable who considered himself her best
friend and big brother. Although she
was getting the best medical care
available, her mother turned back
the MGM staff doctor who she
suspected of trying to hurry her back to
work with quack remedies—something quite
common at the studio under Louis B.
Mayer. The miffed doctor later told reporters that he had been barred by her mother because she was a Christian Scientist starting an unfounded legend that would be repeated many times.
At home doctors tried to figure out
what was happening to her. Everything
from influenza to a gall bladder attack, alcohol induced cirrhosis of the Liver to poisoning
from the bleach she used on her
famous hair was considered. It wasn’t
until Gable leaned over to kiss her
on a visit and smelled urine on her
breath that the doctors realized she was suffering from renal
failure. Her kidneys were shutting down and her bloated body was literally sweating urine.
Given the state of medicine at the time—before antibiotics to treat
infection, dialysis, or transplant—there was nothing to be done to
save her.
Powell, who had only recently finally agreed to marry Harlow after a tempestuous two year red-hot romance,
visited her daily, emerging from her room after hours at her bedside with his face contorted with grief and wet with tears.
When he arrived on June 6 to visit
her, she sent word by a nurse that
she could not see him. Alarmed, Powell called an ambulance which took her to Good
Samaritan Hospital. She fell into a coma and died on June 7. She was only 26
years old.
The whole of Hollywood—and much of the
nation that idolized her—reacted with shock. MGM writer Harry Ruskin recalled, “The day the Baby died there wasn’t one sound in the commissary for three
hours... not one goddamn sound.”
Powell paid $25,000 for a private room of multicolored marble in
the Great Mausoleum at Forest Lawn Memorial Park. Gable, beside himself with grief, managed to hold up as one of her pall bearers. She was laid
to rest in one of her signature
white satin gowns from the Libeled Lady, a film she co-starred in with Powell, Loy, and another close pal,
Spencer Tracy. Before the coffin lid was closed Powell slipped
a white gardenia in her folded hands
with the handwritten note,
“Goodnight, my dearest Darling.” The inscription on the wall reads simply Our Baby.
Room was left for Mother Jean and Powell. Her mother died exactly 21 years to the day
of her daughter in the same hospital and finally joined Jean. Powell spent
the rest of his life grieving over Harlow, but remarried in 1940 and when
he died in in 1984 was cremated and
his ashes scattered near Palm Springs.
Although only two-thirds of the principle shooting of Saratoga had been finished when Harlow was taken ill, Mayer determined to finish the film. He ordered Gable back to work. Using over-the-shoulder
shots, body doubles, and dubbed dialogue the film was finished and released. Gable compared
holding a body double to “embracing a
ghost.” Eager to see Harlow one last
time, fans turned out in droves. It became the studio’s second-highest grossing picture of 1937. Even critics
who had often been harsh to the blonde sex pot called it the best performance of her career.
There is nothing like an early, tragic death, to create a cultural
icon. But Jean Harlow might well have
become one even if she had died in bed at 90.
The stunning beauty had
created a new persona embraced by the
public, lusted after by men, and
admired for her heart and spunk by women. Her signature look—the blindingly blonde hair which studio
publicists dubbed platinum—had
millions of women reaching for the
bleach bottle. Her voluptuous body, made to be swathed in clinging white satin, ended once and for all the fad of the flat chested Flapper. Her persona as a street-smart tart and temptress
was tempered by an unexpected gift for comedy and the classic “heart of gold”
made even respectable women adore her.
She was born Harlean Harlow Carpenter on March 3, 1911 in Kansas City, Missouri where
her father earned a comfortable living as a dentist and her mother was the pampered daughter of a wealthy real estate
developer with a taste for high
living, adventure, and a yearning to go on stage. From the beginning her family called her
simply The Baby, a nickname that stuck through the rest of
her life. She later claimed she did not
know her real name was Harlean until she was registered for high school.
Her parent’s marriage, orchestrated
and supported by her paternal grandfather, was unhappy. Mother Jean turned to her daughter for love and support. It was a bond,
strained by the mother’s ambitions and domination, which would be the center of most of her daughter’s life.
After her parents divorced in 1922,
Jean moved with her daughter to Hollywood
the next year in search of film stardom. But she quickly discovered that even
beautiful women of 34 were too old
to become leading ladies in a town
where teenagers were “discovered” and turned into stars every week.
The grandfather ordered the return of his daughter and her child to Kansas City in
1925 by threatening to disinherit
them. They spent two unhappy years back
home. One year the grandfather sent
Harlean to a Michigan summer camp
where she came down with Scarlet Fever—the
disease which probably originally damaged her kidneys.
Jean and Jean--Harlow with her dominating mother who drove her to an acting career she never really wanted. |
In 1927 she was enrolled at the toney
private Ferry Hall School in Lake Forest, Illinois so that her
mother could be near her boyfriend, Marino Bello in Chicago. Later that year
mother Jean married her suitor without
her daughter being present. Hurt and bewildered, the girl eloped at age 16 with Charles “Chuck” McGrew, the older brother of a wealthy classmate. It set
the stage for a repeating pattern
for the young girl who wanted more than
anything to be a loving housewife and raise
children in a stable, happy home.
When McGrew got an inherited fortune when he turned 21 the
young couple moved to Los Angeles where for a while Harlean happily played the role of a rich young
married in a fashionable home. Leading the life of idle socialites caused both of them to drink. And McGrew drank exceptionally heavily.
On
a lark Harlean offered a ride to a friend who was seeking an audition at the Fox
Studios. She was spotted there and encouraged to audition herself.
She had no interest and refused for several days until she gave into a dare. She was accepted
at Central Casting registering under
her mother’s maiden name, Jean Harlow. Publicity
stills were taken and circulated and soon she was receiving calls for parts—all of which
she firmly turned down, until her
mother and Belo showed up in town
and pressed her to accept.
After one un-credited appearance in a bit
part, she found herself on call for small
parts with billing. That led to a $100 a week contract with the Hal Roach Studio which co-starred her in three Laurel and Hardy two reel comedies in
1928 and ’29. But she didn’t need the money and her husband
was resentful of his wife’s new career. When she complained
to Roach that the work was “ruining my
marriage” the producer willingly
tore up her contract.
But the marriage was doomed anyway by McGrew’s jealousy and heavy drinking.
The couple divorced in 1929 and Harlow moved in with her mother and step-father, who encouraged her to go
back to work. She got her first speaking role in a Clara Bow film, The Saturday Night Kid. Bow was the quintessential flapper/vamp, just the kind of sex symbol Harlow was on the verge of rendering obsolete.
Playboy
inventor and director Howard Hughes was re-shooting
his silent aviation epic Hell’s
Angels as a talkie. Almost by fluke he was introduced to
Harlow by an actor who had spotted her on another set. Hughes cast her as the blonde heroine, replacing a Danish
actress with a heavy accent. As was
usual, Hughes romanced his leading lady. The film was a smash hit thanks to Hughes’s daring aerial photography and Harlow’s stunning looks.
Although derided by critics she was a hit
with audiences and suddenly a star.
But not too big a star for her next role to an un-credited bit in Charles Chaplin’s City Lights. Under contract
to Hughes, who was not a prolific film
maker, she was leant to other
studios to work in mostly undistinguished
films. But one of them was The
Secret Six which paired her
for the first time with another rising
star, Gable. Another was a small,
but memorable role in James Cagney’s classic Public
Enemy. Most of the others were
just double bill fodder.
Howard Hughes "discovered" Harlow and, of course, romanced her. Like all of the other men in her life, she thought he was serious about her. |
Then Hughes put her back to work in
a film starring one of the hottest
leading ladies in the business, Loretta
Young. Harlow was cast as a scheming rival for her husband’s attention. But after previews, Hughes changed the
name of the film to Platinum Blond and got his publicity department working overtime to hype Harlow’s hair. It worked.
Everybody forgot that Young
was the real star.
In 1932, once again on loan, Harlow
got her first starring role in Columbia’s Three Wise Girls with Mae
Clark. MGM, where she was already seeing a producer, Paul Bern snapped her up to co-star
with Walter Houston in a grim crime drama Beast of the City. Although consigned
to the bottom half of a double bill
by Mayer, who felt its violence and
the sexy siren that lures a young man to
destruction ran against the studio’s image as a maker of wholesome films,
Bern took Harlow on an east coast barnstorming
publicity tour of theaters showing the film. She shocked
studio executives when fans turned
out in droves to see her.
Although Mayer still balked at signing the unwholesome star, Bern convinced studio
head of production Irving Thalberg to
buy Harlow’s contract from Hughes. Then Thalberg went into high gear finding her
better roles showcasing her unique
talents. The deal was completed on
Harlow’s birthday.
It was Thalberg who discovered her gift for comedy when he cast aside her signature look and
starred her in Red-Headed Woman, a romantic
farce in which the heroine breaks up a marriage, has multiple affairs and pre-marital sex, and attempts to kill a man to advance in society. It was a huge hit.
But the film, and others which
followed, cemented Harlow’s reputation
as a lower class sex pot on the make.
The persona was entirely counter
to Harlow, who came from a privileged
background and yearned more than
anything for a home and family. Not
that she was a prude. She was comfortable
with her sexuality and proud of her
body. She posed nude several times both before and after achieving stardom, most famously an ecstatic series of shots taken outdoors with her draped in a diaphanous scarf. But she was not a tramp who slept around loosely. She sought out a stable, monogamous relationship which she dreamed would be forever. Her tragedy
was that these relationships failed.
Clark Gable and Harlow sizzled in Red Dust. Her frequent co-star considered her his best pal and little sister. |
Back at MGM her career was white hot when she was re-united with Gable in the
classic Red Dust. He became her most enduring co-star and they were
paired four more times, including
the ill-fated Saratoga.
During the making of the film Harlow
married Bern. Their union seemed happy but after just three
months he was found dead in their home—a
suicide by gunshot to the head. Harlow was suspected in the press, but she had been visiting her mother’s house, perhaps after an argument. Bern left a cryptic suicide note, “Dearest
dear, Unfortunately this is the only way to make good the frightful wrong I
have done you and wipe out my abject humiliation. I love you. Paul. You
understand last night was only a comedy.”
It turned out Bern had been visited that night by his mentally ill ex-common-law wife, Dorothy Milette who may have tried to extort him. She was found three days later, a drowning suicide. Stunned
and grieving, Harlow paid off her
husband’s many debts, mostly to gamblers,
and even paid for Milette’s funeral and
headstone. Traumatized, she refused to
speak about her husband or what happened to anyone else for the rest of her
life.
On the re-bound, Harlow turned to an
indiscreet affair with boxer Max Baer, whose wife threatened to sue for alienation of affections. To hush
up potential ruinous publicity in the wake of the Bern suicide, Mayer ordered studio executives to pay off the
bereaved wife and arranged a
marriage of convenience with one of Harlow’s many devoted friends from the sets, cinematographer
Harold Rossen. The platonic marriage ended quietly after seven months.
Whatever her personal tragedies and scandals,
the audience loved her. Never more so
than in her scene stealing comedic tour de force in the classic Dinner
at Eight opposite Wallace Beery.
And the same year, 1933 she satirized
her own life, and that of former It
Girl Clara Bow in the comedy Bombshell as the Hollywood sex goddess seeking respectability even in the face
of her rapacious and eccentric family. It is said that Mother Jean never recognized that she was parodied in
the movie.
Box office hit after hit followed
repairing her with Gable, twice each with Tracy and Powell, and with rising
stars like Franchot Tone and Robert Taylor. Female pals like Loy, with whom she was exceptionally close, and Una Merkle also shared the screen with
her.
By 1935 she was MGM’s biggest, most bankable female star, eclipsing the fading stars Greta Garbo,
Norma Schearer (Mrs. Irving Thalberg), and Joan Crawford. She also began
her love affair with middle-aged
Powell, recently divorced from the
studio’s other big time blonde, Carole Lombard.
Studio boss Mayer was dead set against the romance and Harlow
told pals that “he would never let us
marry.” They often had to sneak around, as they did one weekend when they went to Palm Springs with Powell’s Thin
Man co-star Loy. The hotel
clerk imagined that Powell and Loy were married in real life.
Despite evident passion and mutual
devotion, the relationship was sometimes strained. Harlow wanted
marriage and children. Powell was gun shy about marriage after the painful break-up with Lombard and was adamant that he was too old to become a
father. When Harlow became pregnant with his child, her
mother pressured her into an abortion which left her incapable of having a child of her own. She was heartbroken,
but never told Powell what had
happened. Powell is said to have finally
proposed officially just weeks before she fell ill. No
announcement had been made to the press.
After Harlow died the legend mill ginned up. The death of Marilyn Monroe, another tragic blonde bombshell, re-ignited interest in Harlow and set off a small industry. Several
biographies, some salacious and fast
and loose with the facts, climbed best
seller charts. Two commercial films, both titled Harlow
were released in 1965 staring Carol
Lynley and Carol Baker. Both re-interpreted
her in the light of Monroe as hyper-sexed,
troubled, and alcoholic.
In truth, although she could belt drinks side by side with Gable and
other pals, she was not a drunk or a
substance abuser. Nor was she a tramp or for all of the travail in her life particularly troubled. Her many
friends found her constantly warm,
amusing, and engaging. People on
Monroe sets often loathed to work with
the troubled and temperamental
actress. People on Harlow’s sets
adored her and admired her work ethic.
After one particularly salacious book was printed in the Sixties an exasperated
Loy told reporters, “It makes me
wild when I think about the rubbish that is printed.” Powell was terser, “She wasn’t like that at
all.”
Very tragic.
ReplyDelete