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8 Pregnancy Scandals That Rocked Hollywood

8 Pregnancy Scandals That Rocked Hollywood

And you thought today's drama was exciting

Celebrity Pregnancy

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Once upon a time in Hollywood, when you got pregnant at 20 or at whatever age, there wouldn't be many more options than to have your studio pressure you into getting an abortion. That's the narrative some of the following celebrities couldn't exclude themselves from, plus a few more pregnancy scandals that have become a part of industry legend.

The driving force behind most of these sad, sad stories is reputation—Bergman's vibe was "the good girl," which didn't allow for an affair with (also married) director Roberto Rossellini that resulted in the birth of daughter Pia. They married soon after, but her career tanked—until she and Rossellini divorced, Hollywood's memory proved Dory-esque, and she went on to win an Oscar.

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It just wouldn't be a scandal roundup without our girl, would it? In this one, Monroe's secret pregnancy was reportedly captured by photographer and friend Frieda Hull in 1960. Monroe would later lose the child, who was said to have been fathered by her Let's Make Lovecostar Yves Montand, and not her husband Arthur Miller.

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And now begins a mini saga that'll make you go, "F*ck that monster Clark Gable." (Re: heroes or even people you admire in the slightest, never meet them or Wikipedia them.) In 1931, Crawford became pregnant with what she believed was Clark Gable’s child. MGM head of publicity Howard Strickling arranged for an abortion, and Crawford told her estranged husband that she'd slipped on the deck of a ship while filming and lost the baby.

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Young was also impregnated by Gable, though her daughter-in-law alleges it was date-rape. A devout Catholic, Young refused an abortion, so the studio floated a rumor that she was ill until she gave birth at home in L.A. Then, in a complicated plot involving a nonexistent decoy second baby, she ended up adopting her own daughter.

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After she became pregnant in 1941, a promo tour in Hawaii was used as a cover for her abortion. The procedure took place without anesthesia, on her hotel bed, while Turner’s mother covered her mouth with her hand to stifle her daughter’s cries. The $500 for the abortion was then deducted from her paycheck, and a week later, she was back on set. Brutal.

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Because audiences loved her as a child, not a mother, as Vanity Fairput it, Garland was compelled to get an abortion—first when she became pregnant with her husband David Rose, then again as a result of an affair.

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Her director made her a star in Carmen Jones. Then he got her pregnant and refused to divorce his wife. The studio demanded she abort the baby, not just because a child would wreck her sultry image, but also because the director was white. (Though repealed years before, California's miscegenation laws were still unofficially in place.)

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When you think of Charlie Chaplin, you usually think of a mustache and slapstick, not underage girls. But it's true—he had a habit of marrying teenagers, which he did four times. Chaplin's second wife claimed that he only agreed to marry her after she got pregnant, then tried to coerce her into getting an abortion. Eventually, they divorced, and he moved on to two more young women, the latter of which he married when he was in his 50s and she was 18.

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From: Marie Claire

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