Featured in Screen Guide magazine in November 1936, here is one of
those wacky articles that could only come from the 1930’s–a psychic
tells you what will become of Hollywood’s great couples!
“The Future of Ten Hollywood Romances as Predicted by Wanda, One of Hollywood’s Most Famous Seers”
The ten blazingest Hollywood romances! How will the end? Marriage? Split up? This story tells.
In presenting this remarkable set of predictions, I have kept in mind
that my readers’ interest in the stars is no fleeting thing. You will
be amazed as time goes on, to note the accuracy of Wanda’s readings. She
has built for herself a tremendous following among the Hollywood
famous. I suggest that you keep this article–refer to it in the future
and see how right she has been this time. It’ll be fun!
Yes, let’s see just how right this “remarkable” Wanda was, shall we?
Rose Joan Blondell and Richard Ewing Powell (Joan Blondell and Dick Powell)
There is no if, and or but about this romance. Joan and
Dick (if they’re not married by the time you read this) will be married
shortly after her divorce from George Barnes becomes final….[Dick] is a
charming boy and he and Joan will get along beautifully…She and Dick
have many tastes in common and she will always be interested in anything
that Dick likes. They will have a child within a year or so after their
marriage.
Well, she wasn’t totally wrong here. Joan and Dick were indeed
married by the time this magazine hit news stands, tying the knot on
September 19, 1936. They did have a child in 1938, a daughter named
Ellen. Wanda couldn’t predict, I suppose, that in 1944 Dick’s head
would be turned by a younger blonde actress, June Allyson, and he would
subsequently leave Joan for her.
Arlington Brugh and Ruby Stevens (Robert Taylor and Barbara Stanwyck)
For his own good Robert Taylor should not marry for many
years. I say this because he is an extremely restless personality. He
likes action–lots of it–and hates monotony. He never sits still and
never is. He is like a wild horse who hates a halter…He will come under a
marriage aspect next year, but if he should marry then it will not
last…As far as his “romance” with Barbara Stanwyck is concerned, this is
really a glorified friendship. Barbara is very intuitive and psychic;
she understands Bob’s spirit perfectly…She will have a proposal of
marriage in 1937–and perhaps from Bob, but neither should she marry
during that year. It would be what we call an “inevitable marriage”—one
which she would have no control.
Her timeline is off, but she’s not completely wrong. Bob and Barbara
were married on May 14, 1939, after three years of dating and being
called out for “acting like they are married but they aren’t” in the same magazine article that called out Clark and Carole.
Bob was indeed not a man who could be tamed, so to speak. After years
of him cheating on her, Barbara finally filed for divorce in 1951. He
went on to marry actress Ursula Theiss and have two children; Barbara
never remarried and missed him the rest of her life.
William Powell and Harlean Carpentier (William Powell and Jean Harlow)
Jean Harlow is two distinct personalities, and she is
another person who cannot be restricted. That is why she changed her
hair to a brownish shade when she found that its platinum color
interfered with her independence. Instead of being its slave she decided
to let it be hers…Regardless of what people think, she is very timid
and has a strong mother complex. She is also of a restless disposition
and enjoys changes. 1937 will prove to be a better year for her than
1936. My advice to her would be to wait a little longer for another
marriage.
William Powell was born a genius. He is very proud and disdainful
person but loves children and dogs…Bill wants a great deal of love and
affection and he wants a wife to be always at his beck and call. That’s
why there will be a disturbing element in any marriage he enters into
with a busy actress. A woman must role his home as well as his heart.
“1937 will be a better year for her than 1936″?? There is an
appalling prediction! Jean Harlow died at the age of 26 in 1937. Bill
and Jean were still together at the time of her death and he was
devastated. Married and divorced twice before the Jean romance (his
second marriage being to Carole Lombard), Bill eventually married
actress Diana “Mousie” Lewis in 1940 and they were married until his
death in 1984.
Raymond Guion and Jeanette MacDonald (Gene Raymond and Jeanette MacDonald)
Because Jeanette MacDonald is a Gemini and Gemini women
usually marry men of a different nationality or religion, I have long
been expecting this Jeanette MacDonald-Gene Raymond engagement…The
marriage aspects are better for her than for Gene. His best marriage
year is really 1938. Still a partnership with Jeanette will turn out
happily for him as well as for her so long as he is careful about
disagreements and separations…Gene is almost as much wrapped up in music
as Jeanette is, and you’ll hear a lot more about him as a composer as
time goes on. But my advice to them is to wait awhile, until Gene passes
through his present aspects. He had one big love affair last year–he’ll
know whom I mean–from which he hasn’t yet recovered.
Jeanette and Gene were indeed married, although sooner than the great
Wanda wanted–making it official on June 16, 1937. They remained married
until her death in 1965, however revelations from friends and
discoveries of personal letters and diaries in the past decade or so
have provided clear evidence that this marriage of theirs was a cover-up
because Gene was gay and Jeanette was being kept away from her ongoing
love affair with Nelson Eddy.
James Stewart and Eleanor Powell
This is a nice friendship but has very little marriage
possibilities. Eleanor will make a better friend than a marriage partner
in this case…I doubt if either of them would learn the lesson of give
and take. James Stewart will have two or more marriages.
Again she is kind of right. Jimmy and Eleanor starred in together in
Born to Dance
that year and were briefly coupled. Eleanor went on to marry actor
Glenn Ford in 1943, her only marriage, which ended in divorce in 1959.
Wanda is wrong about Jimmy though, he was one of the very few of the
golden age of Hollywood’s leading men who held out for the right woman
and stayed once he found her. He married Gloria Hatrick in 1949 and they
were happily married until her death in 1994.
George Brent and Greta Gustafson (George Brent and Greta Garbo)
It is quite likely that this one will be at an end
shortly. George Brent is the burnt child who dreads fire. The memory of
his marriage to Ruth Chatterton has never been erased–its happiness and
its grief both come back to haunt him…He likes to “putter” and as a
matter of fact, he is very fussy and old-maidish. Greta, on the other
hand, is just the opposite. An introvert who lives completely in
herself. The state of things about her makes very little difference.
I don’t think this relationship was ever anything at all. Greta
certainly never seemed ready for marriage–she left a brokenhearted John
Gilbert at the altar in the late 1920’s and never married. George was
ultimately married five times. After this article, he married actress
Constance Worth in 1937 and they were divorced less than a year later.
He also had a short-lived marriage to actress Ann Sheridan. He had two
children with his fifth wife, model Janet Michaels.
David Niven and Estelle Merle O’Brien Thompson (David Niven and Merle Oberon)
This romance is destined to follow a rocky path. Like
“water” which is their symbol, they are too easily ruffled and
changeable with the tide. Their sign is Pisces, which is two fish
swimming in opposite directions. David likes to stand on his own two
feet and doesn’t like to be bossed. And the compelling Merle Oberon has
to be boss! …She is no back-seat driver.
Correct, Wanda. This one didn’t work out. Merle dated Clark before
Carole was on the scene and one of the reasons Clark lost interest was
apparently Merle’s tendency to be controlling and jealous. Merle
married British producer Alexander Korda in 1939, the first of four
husbands. David married a British socialite named Primmie in 1940. She
died tragically in an accident in 1946. He then married a Swedish
fashion model in 1948 and although it was rather a tumultuous union,
they stayed married until his death in 1983.
Cesar Romero and Virginia Briggs (Cesar Romero and Virginia Bruce)
These two are well suited to each other–both are “air”
people and therefore could find happiness together. Virginia comes under
a very strong marriage vibration after October of this year, and Cesar,
too, begins a new cycle in February…Virginia will always attract men
who will be constantly telling her how much they admire her, and any man
who marries her will have to keep ahead of the others. Even when she is
a very old lady there will always be a man waiting for her just around
the corner–she can’t help it; hers is just that fatal attraction. But
Cesar worships beauty as much as any man and will always respect and
revere it. He also senses that she is an adorable mother and he has a
strong inclination for a home and family. And if they marry the first of
next year there will be a child before October, 1939.
No marriage for these two. Virginia, who was previously married to
John Gilbert and had his daughter, married director J. Walter Ruben in
1937. They had one child before his death in 1942. Her third marriage
lasted from 1946-1964, ending in divorce. Cesar, who dated Carole
Lombard before Clark came on the scene, never married and was rumored to
be gay.
And last but not least:
Clark Gable and Jane Peters (Clark Gable and Carole Lombard)
Clark Gable doesn’t come into another strong marriage
vibration until the year 1938, and if he marries then, the only thing I
can say to him is that he should keep his suitcase packed. I feel that
this warning is necessary because he is individual and independent, and
people of his type always marry on impulse. Yet in other respects, and a
strange contradiction, he plays life like a game of chess, or like an
actor who plays a part and watches himself go by. Few people “get this”
about Gable, but it’s true. Another thing about him is that he can’t be
bossed. This may have had something to do with the failure of his first
two marriages. He is very aggressive and likes to do as he pleases. He
will always want much more love and affection than he will give out.
There s little doubt about the fact that Clark Gable and Carole
Lombard do get along beautifully, but because she doesn’t come under a
strong marriage vibration until 1939 I cannot see a happy immediate
marriage. There is, however, always that matter of Gable’s impulsiveness
to be reckoned with. Many people point out that Clark and Carole have
so much in common–that they both like sports, for example. However, they
like them in a different way. Carole likes smart sports–smart tennis on
a smart court in a smart pair of shorts. Clark likes backwoods
“roughing it” sports. Their ideas are really quite far apart in this
connection. Also Clark is content to live in plain, homey surroundings,
while Carole’s artistic expression demands something more elaborate and
“interior decorated.” She’s really amazingly artistic and when her film
career over she can always find a lucrative livelihood as a painter, a
landscape gardener, or an interior decorator. Also she is very rhythmic
and if she would devote time and study to her voice, she might easily
become a successful singer–even an opera singer. She is what we would
call extravagant, yet her extravagances are really necessary to her. She
hates miserliness in any form and there is nothing stingy about her,
nor will she tolerate it in others around her. She has a very real
humanitarian outlook and is abnormally patient with everything and
everybody. She will put up with things for a long time, but, as is
typical of such people, when she finally does get around to putting her
foot down, she puts it down irrevocably. Carole is so interested in
other people and other things that she neglects herself, and therefore I
would advise her to marry someone who would take an interest in her…her
health and her welfare–a physician or a surgeon preferably.
Well, well! There are a couple of things wrong about this: Carole did
get into Clark’s kind of sport, and she wasn’t the type to scoff at
wearing hunting gear and waders and getting dirty. I don’t think Carole
would have made much of an opera singer! Really! If you have seen her
film Swing High, Swing Low,
you can hear that Carole was not exactly an opera singer! Carole was
more extravagant with Clark, but she wasn’t stupid with her money, and I
don’t think she minded Clark’s tendency to be a penny pincher too much,
as they both pretty much spent their own money as they pleased. I can’t
see Carole being some surgeon’s wife…sounds like she’d get bored. I
can’t argue that Clark was the type to marry on impulse—he’d done it
before then and he’d do it again. Also he did like to do just what he
pleased and I would say that him wanting more love and affection than
he’d be willing to give out is fairly accurate. And of course, they did
get married in 1939–when Carole was having a “strong marriage
vibration.”