Clark Gable, born on
February 1, 1901 in Cadiz, Ohio, died on November 16, 1960 in Los
Angeles, at the age of 59. Gable died at the Hollywood Presbyterian
Hospital in Los Angeles from a coronary thrombosis ten days after
suffering a severe heart attack.
On Saturday November 5th
Gable played around his ranch with his stepchildren and his hunting
dog. Later that day he decided to change a tire on his Jeep. As he
bent down to remove it from the vehicle, he suffered almost
unbearable chest pains. When the pains subsided, he staggered into
the house where his wife Kay Williams, suggested Clark to take an
early supper and go to bed. He did, only to awake later with a
splitting headache and what he believed to be indigestion. Kay gave
him some seltzer and an aspirin. He slept uneasily until 7:15 the
next morning, Sunday November 6th.
Clark Gable with first wife Josephine Dillon |
When he awoke and tried to
dress himself he collapsed, the vicious pain had returned. This time
he knew things were very serious. Kay called his doctor then the
Encino fire department for some emergency oxygen.
While he waited for the
ambulance Gable indicated that he didn’t want his three months
pregnant wife to upset herself over him. But she rode with him anyway
in the ambulance to the Hollywood Presbyterian Hospital. Tests
conducted there confirmed Gable had had a coronary. He was given
sedatives and anticoagulants and was observed by 24-hour nursing
staff. His wife took a bed in an adjoining room.
Clark Gable with second wife Maria "Ria" Franklin Prentiss Lucas Langham |
Extraordinarily in the
following ten days Gable appeared to be recovering. On the night of
Friday November 16th at 10-50pm Clark Gable was still leafing through
a magazine article when he laid his head back on his pillow and
slipped away.
Clark Gable with third wife Carole Lombard |
All the years of crash
dieting, drinking, daily smoking of three packs and a dozen cigars
had finally caught up with him. There were speculations that Gable's
physically demanding role in “The Misfits” contributed to his
sudden death soon after filming was completed. The long waiting
hours, the stunts and the crash diet he followed were some of the
rumours.
Clark Gable with fourth wife Sylvia Ashley |
On Saturday November 20th
Clark Gable’s private service was attended by 200 mourners in the
Church of the Recessional in Forest Lawn Memorial Park. Among the
mourners were Spencer Tracy, James Stewart, Robert Taylor, Norma
Shearer, Ann Sothern and Marion Davies, Frank Capra, Robert Stack,
Jack Oakie, Roy and Dale Rogers, Van Johnson, and Howard Strickling.
He was interred in the Sanctuary of Trust alongside the crypt of his
third wife, Carole Lombard who had died in a 1942 air crash.
Clar Gable with fifth wife Kay Williams |
Gable was most famous for
his role as Rhett Butler in the 1939 film “Gone with the Wind”,
in which he starred with Vivien Leigh. His performance earned him his
third nomination for the Academy Award for Best Actor; he won for “It
Happened One Night” (1934) and was also nominated for “Mutiny on
the Bounty” (1935). Later films included “Run Silent, Run Deep”
(1958), and his final film, “The Misfits” (1961), which paired
Gable with Marilyn Monroe, also in her last screen appearance.
Clark Gable with Vivien Leigh in “Gone with the Wind” (1939) |
Clark Gable was married 5
times:
- Josephine Dillon (1924–1930; divorced)
- Maria Franklin Prentiss Lucas Langham (1931–1939; divorced)
- Carole Lombard (1939–1942; her death)
- Sylvia Ashley (1949–1952; divorced)
- Kay Williams (1955–1960; his death)
Clark Gable with Marilyn Monroe in “The Misfits” (1960) |
- Judy Lewis (November 6, 1935 - November 25, 2011, affair with Loretta Young)
- John Gable (born March 20, 1961, four months after Gable's death, with 5th wife Kay Williams)
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