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Clark Gable unedited, 8th Air Force film stock

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Uploaded by on Jun 21, 2008

Clark Gable is just a two-bar Joe doing a job

By Andrew A. Rooney, Stars and Stripes staff writer June 7, 1943

Herewith a report on Capt. Clark Gable:

Last summer he quieted a rumor that he was going to accept a direct commission as a major by enlisting as a private in Los Angeles. On Oct. 28, after completing the air corps OCS at Miami. Fla., he was commissioned second lieutenant. He served at Tyndall Field, Fla., for a while, and later was shipped to a mid-West field. He came to England about seven weeks ago, has been on one raid, (Antwerp, May 4) and his job here is to make a training film for aerial gunners. He is 42 years old, six feet one inch tall, his hair is grey. He seems like an OK guy.

With the possible exception of the German Army, no one is having a tougher time trying to fight this war than Capt. Clark Gable.

They Want to Know

A few hundred thousand relatives of privates in the infantry who have been fighting in North Africa want to know why Clark Gable isn't a private in the infantry fighting in North Africa. The fathers and mothers, sisters and friends of the staff sergeants on combat crews of B17s and B24s want to know why he is a captain instead of a staff sergeant. And some of the boys wonder.

He is not a captain doing a staff sergeant's job. He is a captain doing a job that has been done by majors and better, and he went from a second lieutenant to a captain in less than six months, not because he had a direct pipeline to the commanding general, but because he is an intelligent man doing a good job for the Air Force.

Last Saturday a couple of carloads of newspapermen, most of whom were women, were taken to an Eighth Air Force field to watch the public relations office take the wraps off their man Gable. They were prepared to write cynical articles of the movie star playing a phoney part, but Gable fooled them. He was a very nice guy about it all, and his performance at the press conference left nothing to be cynical about.

He didn't try to act any part. He was Clark Gable in the Air Force, a little tired, but resigned to being looked at and talked to — and he looked like a very decent guy with no angle to his being where he was.

The conference was held around a B17, and there were several combat men from Gable's station hanging around. The captain was dressed in pinks, a leather jacket, cap and solid English shoes. He looked like what America thinks the boys in the air corps look like.

His mustache has acquired a slightly RAF look, his hair is a little long, and the collar of his leather jacket is turned up with that casual nonchalance which makes life look easy. The cap he wore looked just a little more like an air corps cap than most, and he pulled it just a little further over his right eye than the rest.

He is in England on the orders of Brig. Gen. Luther S. Smith, director of the Air Force training program. With him are 1/Lts. Andrew J. McIntyre, former MGM cameraman, and John Mahin, who wrote several of the scripts for Gable's pictures.

Together the three of them, with the help of several veteran gunners, are putting together a film they hope will be some help in the training program for aerial gunners. In the film, Gable interviews men, gets opinions and observations on equipment and combat problems. He appears in some of the scenes — does not appear in others.

He went on the Antwerp raid so that he could talk through something besides his hat about raids. One of the correspondents asked him if he was going on another.

"I'm going to do what I have to do to finish this job."

After Capt. Gable introduced T/Sgt. Kenneth Hulse and T/Sgt. Phil Hulse (not brothers) to the correspondents, and they told a brief story, it was decided that the newspapermen should hear what a cal. 50 machine-gun sounded like being fired by Capt. Gable. It sounded just like a cal. 50 being fired by anyone.

Phil Hulse, whose home is in Springfield. Mo., has worked with the captain quite a bit on the picture, and he is at the field with Gable.

"He is a regular man," Hulse says "He gets an awful lot of unfair criticism. He used to go out to the towns once in a while but the people won't let him alone, so he just doesn't go out any more."

Capt. Gable himself says that he has been to London once, and has been to some of the pubs in the small towns near his station several times. He hasn't seen a movie since he's been here. (GWTW still plays at the Ritz, in Leicester Square.)

Herewith ends the report on Capt. Clark Gable. For our money he is an OK Joe fighting a war, and, until he bites a dog or figures in a legitimate news story, just like any other Joe, The Stars and Stripes will leave the guy alone, as he would like to be left, for the duration.

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Uploader Comments (Bomberguy)

  • Is the writer of this piece, Andrew A. Rooney, the same Andy Rooney of 60 Minutes fame?

  • yes

Top Comments

  • When you think about it Gable didn't have to be there. He was into his 40s and more than old enough to quite honourably sit on the ground. A few other famous and younger names were quite happy to stay back in Hollywood. All credit to him for going over there and trying to do his bit.

  • So where in hell is our movie stars now? .... Not in Afghanistan, not fighting terrorists, just being assess

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All Comments (145)

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  • @martian76smiley Gable served out of a genuine sense of duty and he flew in real combat; he was over 40 and didn't have to do it.

    Gable was genuinely popular with the other officers and men; his peers said it best, not someone like you.

  • @ostrich67 What you're saying is true enough; officers, and even enlisted men who could afford it, would have tailors go over their regulation uniforms.

  • @liljgoneman Nor will you see politicians nor their children; Bush's daughters never went to do volunteer work in Iraq nor Afghanistan.

    In WWI, former Pres. Theodore Roosevelt's sons all fought; one was killed and another badly wounded.

    FDR's sons all fought in WWII.

    Kaiser Wilhelm's sons fought in WWI and a grandson was killed invading France in 1940.

  • @judgedredd123 Actually, there were many leftists in the US military in WWII; they were motivated to help Russia, not their own country; look at the John Garfield character in the movie "Air Force."

    The US military, for ideological reasons, tried to put as many men of this kind as they could into the China Burma India Theater so this would not come into play as they served.

    @NottheFacePlease

  • @nescon40 The US had 250,000 men dead in combat in WWII (400,000 overall; many in The Pacific Theatre died of malaria and yellow fever, in Europe pneumonia was the big killer).

    80,000 men died just as bomber crewmen in Europe alone which is nearly 1/3 of all US combat deaths; the British too, had big losses this way; nearly 60,000.

    Also, combined, Great Britain and The US lost TWENTY-ONE THOUSAND BOMBERS SHOT DOWN in missions over Europe; that's a lot of hardware.

  • Gable didn't have to join the military; he was forty when Pearl Harbor was bombed.

    Part of it was grief over the death of Carole Lombard, part of it was also the sense of duty that the country felt at the time; we could use some of that now; Gable made a good record for himself and he was popular with those he served with.

  • Your videos are very unique and interesting

  • @Scharfschutzen1 Fair enough.

  • @NottheFacePlease Dumkopf, no one put a gun to your pea brain and made u respond to my comments. Can't take the heat, get the F%@* out. Hypocrite. Deutschland Uber Alles.

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