Jean Harlow(1911-1937)
- Actress
- Soundtrack
Harlean Carpenter, who later became Jean Harlow, was born in Kansas
City, Missouri, on March 3, 1911. She was the daughter of a successful
dentist and his wife. In 1927, at the age of 16, she ran away from home
to marry a young businessman named Charles McGrew, who was 23. The
couple pulled up stakes and moved to Los Angeles, not long after they
were married, and it was there Jean found work as an extra in films,
landing a bit part in
Moran of the Marines (1928).
From that point on she would go to casting calls whenever she could. In
1929 she had bit parts in no less than 11 movies, playing everything
from a passing woman on the street to a winged ballerina. Her marriage
to McGrew turned out to be a disaster--it lasted barely two years--and
they divorced. The divorce enabled her to put more of her efforts into
finding roles in the movie business. Although she was having trouble
finding roles in feature movies, she had more luck in film shorts. She
had a fairly prominent role in Hal Roach's
Double Whoopee (1929). Her big
break came in 1930, when she landed a role in
Howard Hughes' World War I epic
Hell's Angels (1930), which turned
out to be a smash hit. Not long after the film's debut, Hughes sold her
contract to MGM for $60,000, and it was there where her career shot to
unprecedented heights. Her appearance in
Platinum Blonde (1931) cemented
her role as America's new sex symbol. The next year saw her paired with
Clark Gable in
John Ford's
Red Dust (1932), the second of six films
she would make with Gable. It was while filming this picture (which
took 44 days to complete at a cost of $408,000) that she received word
that her new husband, MGM producer Paul Bern,
had committed suicide. His death threatened to halt production of the
film, and MGM chief Louis B. Mayer had
even contacted Tallulah Bankhead to
replace Harlow if she were unable to continue, a step that proved to be
unnecessary. The film was released late in 1932 and was an instant hit.
She was becoming a superstar. In MGM's glittering all-star
Dinner at Eight (1933) Jean was
at her comedic best as the wife of a ruthless tycoon
(Wallace Beery) trying to take over
another man's (Lionel Barrymore)
failing business. Later that year she played the part of Lola Burns in
director Victor Fleming's hit
Bombshell (1933). It was a Hollywood
parody loosely based on Clara Bow's
and Harlow's real-life experiences, right down to the latter's greedy
stepfather, nine-room Georgian-style home with mostly-white interiors,
her numerous pet dogs - right down to having her re-shoot scenes from
the Gable and Harlow hit,
Red Dust (1932) here! In 1933 Jean
married cinematographer Harold Rosson, a
union that would only last eight months. In 1935 she was again teamed with Gable
in another rugged adventure,
China Seas (1935) (her remaining two
pictures with Gable would be
Wife vs. Secretary (1936) and
Saratoga (1937)). It was her films with
Gable that created her lasting legacy in the film world. Unfortunately,
during the filming of Saratoga (1937),
she was hospitalized with uremic poisoning. On June 7, 1937, she died
from the ailment. She was only 26. The film had to be finished by long
angle shots using a double. Gable said he felt like he was in the arms
of a ghost during the final touches of the film. Because of her death,
the film was a hit. Record numbers of fans poured into America's movie
theaters to see the film. Other sex symbols/blonde bombshells have
followed, but it is Jean Harlow who all others are measured against.