Jean Harlow
(Harlean Carpenter; Kansas City, 1911-Hollywood, 1937) American film actress.At sixteen, she eloped with a businessman and settled in Los Angeles, where she found work as a film extra.Already by then he adopted the stage name of Jean Harlow, under which he appeared in the credits of various feature films and, prominently, of comic shorts.Divorced in 1929, she was hired as the lead in Hell's Angels (1930), a film that the eccentric billionaire and filmmaker Howard Hughes was transferring to the new sound format.
Jean Harlow
His first steps with other studios were not brilliant.He was a target of the press and his performances were called mediocre, but the public began to respond to his somewhat vulgar charm.The great opportunity came in 1932, when he signed a contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer: now he had a studio behind him, interested in promoting it and boosting his career.
Within a few months, the ostentatious erotic symbol morphed into a subtle actress, quickly gaining star status.On the contrary, the private life of the sex-symbol was miserable.Jean Harlow fell ill during the filming of Saratoga (1937), in which he co-starred with Clark Gable, and died of cerebral edema at the age of twenty-six.Other films of his were The Public Enemy (1931, by William Wellman), The Golden Cage (1931, by Frank Capra), Land of Passion (1932, by Victor Fleming), Dinner at eight (1934, by George Cukor), China Seas (1935) and Suzy (1936).
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