The Life And Death Of Jean Harlow, The First Blonde Bombshell
Before Marilyn Monroe and Jayne Mansfield, Jean Harlow was the original "blonde bombshell" — and these iconic photos show why.
Jean Harlow in a publicity still for Blonde Bombshell in 1932.Bettmann/Contributor/Getty Images As the original "blonde bombshell," Jean Harlow inspired future Hollywood stars like Marilyn Monroe.Bettmann/Getty Images Jean Harlow posing in a car. Circa 1930.John Kobal Foundation/Getty Images Jean Harlow at age 12. Bettmann/Getty Images Jean Harlow, before her platinum days. General Photographic Agency/Getty Images Born Harlean Harlow Carpenter, she would later sign up for auditions under her mother's maiden name as Jean Harlow. It became her screen name, and later, her legal name.John Springer Collection/CORBIS/Corbis via Getty Images Captured with a daydream gaze in 1931. Bettmann/Getty Images In 1931, Jean Harlow's career began to take off when she was cast in a variety of movies, including The Public Enemy and The Secret Six.Hulton Archive/Getty Images Jean Harlow, pictured in the summer of 1932.Clarence Sinclair Bull/John Kobal Foundation/Getty Images Jean Harlow captivated audiences in the 1930s with her signature curves and comedic wit. Photo taken circa 1933. Bettmann/Getty Images Jean Harlow appears in the MGM film Hold Your Man in 1933. Evening Standard/Hulton Archive/Getty Images By the swimming pool. Circa 1934.ullstein bild/ullstein bild via Getty Images Jean Harlow enjoying a breakfast with her parents in San Francisco.Bettmann/Getty Images Clark Gable and Jean Harlow chatting between scenes for Hold Your Man.Keystone-France/Gamma-Keystone via Getty Images Jean Harlow, Clark Gable, Paul Hurst, and Mary Carlisle playing cards in a scene from The Secret Six.John Kobal Foundation/Getty Images Jean Harlow's trademark blonde hair color required a concoction of peroxide, ammonia, Clorox, and Lux flakes.Keystone-France/Gamma-Keystone via Getty Images Jean Harlow's style is repeatedly reinvented by today’s designers and make-up artists. Silver Screen Collection/Getty Images Louis B. Mayer and Jean Harlow. Circa 1933. Bettmann/Getty Images Jean Harlow was one of the biggest stars of her time, but she originally wanted to be a writer instead of an actress.George Hurrell/John Kobal Foundation/Getty Images Jean Harlow during the shooting of the film Red-Headed Woman. Hulton Archive/Getty Images Jean Harlow signing marriage papers with her second husband, MGM studio executive Paul Bern, in 1932.Bettmann/Getty Images Jean Harlow wearing aviator goggles and posing with Italian airman Tito Falcone.Bettmann/Getty Images Jean Harlow with a book of autographed fingerprints (which included those of Joan Crawford and Clark Gable). Circa 1934.Virgil Apger/John Kobal Foundation/Getty Images Howard Hughes and Jean Harlow, pictured a few years after they made Hell's Angels. 1934.Bettmann/Getty Images Jean Harlow with boxer Max Baer, whom she had a brief affair with after her second husband's death. Circa 1933.u/defactosithlord via r/OldSchoolCool Jean Harlow made an impression on audiences with her suggestive outfits and lines, like this one from Hell's Angels: “Would you be shocked if I put on something more comfortable?"Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images Jean Harlow with her parents a few hours after her 1933 wedding to cinematographer Harold Rosson, her third husband. Bettmann/Contributor/Getty Images With a furry friend. Circa 1933. ullstein bild/ullstein bild via Getty Images Jean Harlow making a guest appearance with actress and gossip columnist Louella Parsons on a nationwide broadcast, during which Harlow presents a scene from her film China Seas. 1934. Virgil Apger/Hulton Archive/Getty Images Jean Harlow teeing off on the Agua Caliente golf course. Circa 1933.Bettmann/Getty Images Jean Harlow, pictured with her third husband Harold Rosson, Johnny Weissmuller, and Weissmuller's wife in Hollywood.Screen Archives/Getty Images Jean Harlow and Marlene Dietrich at Trocadero Cafe in Hollywood.Bettmann/Getty Images At the National Air Races in California. John Kobal Foundation/Getty Images "She didn’t want to be famous. She wanted to be happy," Clark Gable once reportedly said of Jean Harlow.Keystone-France/Gamma-Keystone via Getty Images
She was a renowned actress, comedienne, and the reason why peroxide sales skyrocketed in the 1930s. Jean Harlow only embraced Hollywood because her mother yearned for the spotlight. But fate insisted that the sultry star leave a significant mark on pop culture — before leaving too soon.
As a movie star, Harlow was at the forefront of a trend. "Sound came in 1929. Jean Harlow was the very first blonde bombshell who spoke and made sound on screen," notes Jean Harlow expert and collector Darrell Rooney.
Harlow's captivating career included 36 films over just 10 years. Her iconic look was marked by the platinum hairstyle created by beautician Mr. Max Factor, which caused him to coin the very phrase "blonde bombshell."
A big-screen vixen, Jean Harlow carved out a niche in Old Hollywood that many other hopefuls would set out to emulate. However, only a select few would reach or surpass the status that she provided the benchmark for.
One star who managed to do so was the legendary Marilyn Monroe, who idolized Jean Harlow growing up. In fact, some say Monroe modeled her winsome onscreen persona after Jean Harlow's real personality.
See some of the most iconic images of Jean Harlow in the photo gallery above, then learn more about her life and death below.
The Early Life And Career Of Jean Harlow

John Kobal Foundation/Getty ImagesA photo of young Jean Harlow, before her "blonde bombshell" days.
Born on March 3, 1911, in Kansas City, Missouri, Harlean Harlow Carpenter had simple childhood dreams and hoped to become a writer. It was her mother who wanted her to become the star that she never was.
As Harlean's mother got divorced, relocated, attempted to break into the movie industry, and eventually remarried, the young girl suffered from numerous childhood illnesses, including meningitis and scarlet fever.
By the time Harlean was 16 years old, she had eloped with a wealthy young man named Charles McGrew and relocated to Beverly Hills. There, she was noticed by movie executives and began to receive offers to appear in films. Much to the delight of Harlean's mother, she decided to give acting a try.
Harlean and McGrew soon divorced, as he didn't support her pursuing a career in Hollywood. But Harlean, who started using her mother's maiden name as Jean Harlow, was about to start an exciting new chapter.
According to HISTORY, Jean Harlow initially worked with producer Hal Roach, appearing in the movies Double Whoopee and The Saturday Night Kid in 1929. But it was only when she started working with Howard Hughes that she got her big break in 1930, with the film Hell's Angels.
From there, her fame grew to epic proportions and her talent continued to shine. But in the midst of her success, she'd also endure heartbreak.
Love And Tragedy For A Hollywood Icon

Keystone-France/Gamma-Keystone via Getty ImagesJean Harlow with her last romantic partner William Powell. 1935.
As Jean Harlow continued to delight movie audiences in films like Red-Headed Woman and Red Dust, she found love again. She married her second husband, producer Paul Bern, in 1932. But in a tragic turn of events, Bern unexpectedly died just two months into the couple's union, while Harlow was spending a night at her mother's house.
Since Bern had reportedly been found dead in the couple's house with a gunshot wound to the head and a gun in his hand, the police ruled his death a suicide. But according to SFGATE, not everyone believes that Bern killed himself — especially since MGM fixers had apparently been to the home hours before police showed up and may have altered the death scene.
And MGM also had a story prepared to explain why Bern had committed suicide — one that Harlow publicly disagreed with.
"They said, 'Paul Bern killed himself because he was impotent and couldn't satisfy his younger, glamorous wife,'" collector Darrell Rooney told Fox News. "This is incredibly salacious in 1932 and this is playing around the world... But the thing about Jean Harlow that's interesting is that she didn't go along with what MGM said. She said, 'There was nothing wrong with my marriage.' She kept insisting on it. She defied the studio, and she stood by her husband."
Some believed that Bern was murdered by his first wife Dorothy Millette (who he may have still been married to when he wed Harlow). Shockingly, Millette herself was found dead by suicide shortly after Bern's death.
Following the tragic incident, Harlow began an affair with boxer Max Baer. Shortly thereafter, she married her third husband, cinematographer Harold Rosson. This marriage lasted less than a year, and some believe the union may have been arranged by MGM because they didn't want Harlow to be associated with the drama between Baer and his estranged wife.
Jean Harlow eventually found the love of her life in actor William Powell. But while the two entered a serious romantic relationship, the couple would never marry. And tragically, Harlow soon fell seriously ill.
The Death Of Jean Harlow

Evening Standard/Getty ImagesA photo of legendary actress Jean Harlow in 1933.
During the 1937 filming of Jean Harlow's last movie, Saratoga, she was visibly sick and weak, worrying the cast and crew. According to LAist, she eventually collapsed right on the set of the film and had to be taken to the hospital.
At first, it was thought that Harlow was merely dealing with a severe case of influenza. But that was just one health issue she had — her kidneys were also failing. And at the hospital, she was diagnosed with uremic poisoning.
Jean Harlow died just a few days later on June 7, 1937. She was only 26 years old at the time, and the world was shocked by her untimely demise.
Before long, rumors began to spread regarding her death. Some wondered whether she had been poisoned or badly beaten by one of her ex-husbands, or if her mother forbade her from using modern medicine that could have saved her. Some even speculated that her hair dye killed her, that she drank herself to death, or that she suffered from a botched abortion.
In reality, the most likely explanation is that Jean Harlow's past experiences with childhood illnesses — especially scarlet fever — had irreversibly damaged her kidneys. They then slowly failed, sending her to an early grave.
Tragically, if something like this happened today, doctors could have potentially saved her. But in 1937, there was no way to treat kidney failure.
Louis B. Mayer of MGM organized Harlow's funeral in Hollywood, and William Powell paid for his love's body to be laid to rest in Forest Lawn Memorial Park, in Glendale, California. Her gravestone bears the words "Our Baby."
Today, Harlow is remembered as a talented and beautiful actress whose star would have likely continued to shine brightly for decades onward. Though she died tragically young, there's no question that she paved the way for countless other young comediennes to follow in her footsteps.
After looking through these iconic photos of Jean Harlow, read about Rita Hayworth, the 1940s sex symbol with a tragic life story. Then, find out the details behind Marilyn Monroe's untimely death.
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