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  1. Find a Grave Memorial ID: 8995. Source citation. Drama Coach, Actress. The first wife of Clark Gable. The daughter of prominent attorney Henry Clay Dillon, she was born in Denver and raised in Long Beach, California. After graduating from Stanford University in 1908, she pursued an unremarkable stage career and then set up an acting studio in ...

  2. Josephine Dillon (26 de janeiro de 1884 [1] [2] – 11 de novembro de 1971) foi uma atriz americana de teatro e cinema e professora de atuação. Ela foi patrona de Clark Gable , treinadora de atuação e primeira esposa.

  3. 3 de nov. de 2022 · Gable was born in Ohio in 1901. After dropping out of school at sixteen, he saw his first theatrical production and set his heart on becoming an actor. At 21, he moved to Portland. There, he met his first wife, acting coach Josephine Dillon. After sharpening her new husband’s acting talents, Dillon took Gable to Hollywood.

  4. The stage-struck lad landed a $10-a-week job with a touring theatre company, was stranded in Butte, Montana, on a sub-zero night, hopped a freight to Portland, Oregon, and found work as a telephone lineman. It was when he arrived to repair a wire in a little theatre that he met the stage director, Josephine Dillon.

  5. Josephine Dillon es un/una self conocido por: Clark Gable: The King of Hollywood

  6. www.elisarolle.com › queerplaces › ch-d-equeerplaces - Clark Gable

    Josephine Dillon was “a woman of ambiguous sexuality.” She presented Gable to Hollywood agents in the early 1920s. Although Gable and Dillon were married shortly after their arrival in Hollywood, it was a marriage of convenience, in which Dillon ignored Gable’s affairs while serving as his sugar momma. Oatman Hotel

  7. Josephine Dillon (1924-1930) Maria "Ria" Franklin Printiss Lucas Langham (1931-1939) Carole Lombard (1939-1942) Sylvia Ashley (1949-1952) Kay Williams (1955-1960) Clark Gable (February 1, 1901 - November 16, 1960) was an iconic American actor , voted King of Hollywood by an adoring public throughout the 1930s and 1940s— Hollywood's Golden Age.