Gone with the Wind

  • Films,  Gone with the Wednesday,  Gone with the Wind

    Gone with the Wednesday: “Gone with the Wind Indeed!”

    This week, featured is another article from the archive, Gone with the Wind Indeed!, Photoplay magazine, March 1937. This article is all about the pressing issue of casting the great civil war epic: Time was when you could call a man a rat in Hollywood and get yourself a stiff poke in the nose. But now what you get is–”Rhett? Rhett Butler? Well–I don’t know about that ‘profile like an old coin’ stuff, but I’ve been told I am rather masterful and–” Yes and there was a day when you could call a woman scarlet in this town and find yourself looking into the business end of a male relative’s…

  • Films,  Gone with the Wednesday,  Gone with the Wind

    Gone with the Wednesday: Clark Gable and the Dreaded Technicolor Tests

    Clark Gable hated anything that he felt was frivoulous about film making. He wanted to just show up, read his lines and go home. He didn’t like taking promotional stills or messing with endless wardrobe fittings. It was part of the job, but he didn’t have to like it. The costumes in Gone with the Wind were a sore spot with Clark. When he first showed up to film, despite endless fittings, his costumes didn’t fit right. He already disliked wearing period garb and his long hair was annoying to him as well. I think you can tell from these stills taken from wardrobe and Technicolor tests for that he…

  • Films,  Gone with the Wednesday,  Gone with the Wind

    Gone with the Wednesday: Clark Gable Reflects Back on Rhett Butler

    Clark Gable didn’t want to play Rhett Butler–mainly because everyone else wanted him to. He often described how, even before he himself had read the book, people would call him “Rhett” and ask him when he was signing on for the film. He thought it was a great role, certainly, but the pressure was too great. In the end, it wasn’t really his decision, as he was traded like cattle to Selznick for MGM to have the distribution rights. Clark remained nonchalant about the film for years afterward. He had done his work, gotten his paycheck, that was the end of it to him. I’ve had people say to me at…

  • Films,  Gone with the Wind,  Nutshell Reviews

    Nutshell Review: Gone with the Wind (1939)

    In a Nutshell: Gone with the Wind (1939) Directed by: Victor Fleming (and George Cukor and Sam Wood) Co-stars: Vivien Leigh, Olivia de Havilland, Leslie Howard, Hattie McDaniel Synopsis: Still seventy five years later heralded “the greatest movie ever made”, Gone with the Wind singlehandedly guaranteed Gable’s immortality to movie goers for decades to come.  He is the dashing and ruthless Rhett Butler, a blockade runner from Charleston, who falls in love with headstrong southern belle Scarlett O’Hara (Leigh) at first sight. Scarlett only has eyes for her childhood crush, Ashley Wilkes (Howard) despite that he is engaged to his cousin, Melanie Hamilton (De Havilland).Through the Civil War and Sherman’s march…

  • Films,  Gone with the Wednesday,  Gone with the Wind

    Gone with the Wednesday: Is This Scarlett?

    Last month, we posted Photoplay magazine’s sketch of Clark Gable as Rhett, from 1937. The following month, Photoplay upped the ante by publishing a sketch of Clark as Rhett with a woman that represented what they thought Scarlett should look like. Think Vivien Leigh fit the bill? Is This Scarlett? Again Vincentini scores–with this picture of Scarlett, as Photoplay conceived her. The prime requisite was, we told him, that Scarlett must be in Gable’s arms, for you see we still insist on Clark as Rhett. For the rest, she must have the fire of Paulette Goddard; the acting ability of Shearer; the voice of Alicia Rhett, Southern girl candidate, whose name…

  • Films,  Gone with the Wednesday,  Gone with the Wind

    Gone with the Wednesday: “Here’s Rhett–You Asked For Him!”

    Here is another article featured in the archive about Gone with the Wind: Here’s Rhett–You Asked For Him! from Modern Screen magazine, March 1940. It has some interesting quotes from Clark Gable about playing Rhett Butler: “One critic’s going to cause me trouble. I feel it in my bones. He said I ought to retire because I could never top my performance as Rhett. I like to be patted on the back as well as the next guy, but, boy, that pat has the makings of a knockout blow. I don’t want people getting the idea that, from here on, I’ll be slipping. God forbid. And I don’t want people…

  • Films,  Gone with the Wednesday,  Gone with the Wind

    Gone with the Wednesday: Clark Gives the Latest News on Gone with the Wind

    On December 10, 1939, Clark Gable appeared on The Silver Theater radio show, in a performance called “For Richer, For Richer.” At the end of his performance, the host asked him for the latest news on Gone with the Wind. Clark talks about how he is flying down to Atlanta to be there for the premiere on Friday. Listen here! GWTWSilverTheater121039    

  • Films,  Gone with the Wednesday,  Gone with the Wind

    Gone with the Wednesday: Leslie Howard Speaks Scarlett

    In my years of vintage magazine collecting, I haven’t come across many interviews with Leslie Howard, but here’s one! In the July 1939 issue of Hollywood magazine, Leslie discusses Scarlett and Gone with the Wind, in an interview conducted at Busch Gardens in Pasadena, while on location filming the Twelve Oaks barbecue scene. Here’s Howard’s take on Scarlett: “…what people seem to overlook is that Scarlett was so modern! Scarlett O’Hara was a new-fashioned girl in an old-fashioned setting She was a 1939 sub-deb…in hoopskirts.” “Possibly my idea of Scarlett differs from that of some people. But I’ve studied her carefully. I think I’m right. She was fascinating, even more for…