Worth 1,000 Words: JEAN HARLOW in KANSAS CITY

By Steve Crum
JEAN HARLOW, MGM’s “Blonde Bombshell,” poses with an unidentified Kansas City, Kansas neighborhood child (one of her grandmother’s neighbors) at Kansas City, Missouri’s Union Station in 1933. Harlow was preparing to board a train for her return trip to Los Angeles. (A couple of porters are barely visible at left in the background.) Feast your eyes, since this is a heretofore unpublished photo of the famous Harlow, who died far too young four years later at age 26. For more on Harlow’s visit, please scroll down a couple of stories or so. [from Steve Crum’s showbiz memorabilia collection]
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Thinking of memorable portrayals of alcoholics in films, several are recalled: Jack Lemmon and Lee Remick in The Days of Wine and Roses, Ray Milland (The Lost Weekend), Nicholas Cage (Leaving Las Vegas), Susan Hayward (I’ll Cry Tomorrow), and even Dudley Moore as a comedic lush in Arthur. Jeff Bridges is included in this group, not necessarily at the top of the group, but at the top of his acting game. On second and third thought, Bridges deserves to be placed at the top of the group as well. 77 years ago, Jean Harlow came home to KCK
LEGENDARY SCREEN SIREN JEAN HARLOW posed on her grandmother’s front steps with Kansas City, Kansas neighborhood children while visiting her grandmother in 1933. Behind Harlow are (from left) Bernadine Frances Martin, Betty June Lobb and Merle Kelly Arnold. Beside Harlow are Dorothy Rose Martin and (standing) Dorestine Martin. ~Photo courtesy of Merle Arnold.
NOTE: This article was originally published in The Kansas City Kansan newspaper on Aug. 21, 1998.
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By Steve Crum
“She came out wearing a white chiffon negligee with silver T-strapped high heels, no hose, and red nails,” Pretz said.
A written remembrance escaped from Bernadine Pretz after she left her lifelong autograph book out for friends to peruse at a gathering years ago. “After everyone left, I noticed that several pages of autographs had been torn out.” Among them was the 1933 Harlow signature. A Jean Harlow autograph fetches over two thousand dollars these days. Worth 1,000 Words: BOB STEELE, KEN MAYNARD & HOOT GIBSON

AS COWBOY HERO BOB STEELE (right) clobbers a bad hombre (GEORGE CHESEBRO), Steele’s pals HOOT GIBSON (left) and KEN MAYNARD observe with mixed feelings. This lobby card from ARIZONA WHIRLWIND (1944, Monogram) portrays the typical cowboy action one could find Saturdays at the local movie theater prior to the advent of TV. By then, Steele (Jan. 23 1907-Dec. 21, 1988), Maynard (July 21, 1895-March 23, 1973) and Gibson (Aug. 6, 1892-Aug. 23, 1962) were at the end of their respective sagebrush movie trails, having starred in dozens of B-Westerns since the days of silent films.





