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Gone with the Wind (film)

 
Gone With the Wind (film)

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Gone with the Wind (film)



 
 
Gone with the Wind is a 1939
1939 in film

The year 1939 in film involved some significant events....
 American
Cinema of the United States

United States cinema has had a profound effect on cinema across the world since the early 20th century. Its history is sometimes separated into four main periods: the silent film era, Classical Hollywood cinema, New Hollywood, and the contemporary period ....
 drama
Drama film

A drama film is a film genre that depends mostly on in-depth characterization of realistic characters dealing with emotional themes. Dramatic themes such as alcoholism, drug addiction, racial prejudice, religious intolerance, poverty, crime and corruption put the characters in conflict with themselves, others, society and even natural phenome...
-romance
Romance film

While most films have some aspect of Romantic love between characters a romance film can be loosely defined as any film in which the central Plot revolves around the romantic involvement of the story's protagonists....
-film adapted from Margaret Mitchell
Margaret Mitchell

Margaret Munnerlyn Mitchell Marsh , popularly known as Margaret Mitchell, was an United States of America author, who won the Pulitzer Prize in 1937 for her novel Gone with the Wind....
's 1936
1936 in literature

The year 1936 in literature involved some significant events and new books....
 novel of the same name
Gone with the Wind

Gone with the Wind is a romantic drama and the only novel by Margaret Mitchell. The story follows Scarlett O'Hara, the daughter of a plantation owner in Georgia during and after the Civil War....
 and directed by Victor Fleming
Victor Fleming

Victor Fleming was an Academy Award-winning United States film director....
 (Fleming replaced George Cukor
George Cukor

'George Cukor' was an Academy Award-winning United States film director. His career flourished at RKO and later MGM, where he directed a string of impressive films including What Price Hollywood? , A Bill of Divorcement , Dinner at Eight , Little Women , Personal History, Adventures, Experience, and Observation of David Copp...
). The epic film
Epic film

An epic is a genre of film which places emphasis on human drama on a grand scale. They are more ambitious in scope than other genres which helps to differentiate them from similar genres such as the period piece or adventure film....
, set in the American South in and around the time of the Civil War
American Civil War

The American Civil War , also known as the War Between the States and several Naming the American Civil War, was a civil war in the United States....
, stars Clark Gable
Clark Gable

Clark Gable was an Cinema of the United States, nicknamed "The King of Hollywood" in his heyday. In , the American Film Institute named Gable seventh among the AFI's 100 Years......
, Vivien Leigh
Vivien Leigh

Vivien Leigh, Lady Olivier , was an English actress. She won two Academy Awards for playing "southern belles": Scarlett O'Hara in Gone with the Wind and Blanche DuBois in the film version of A Streetcar Named Desire , a role she had also played on stage in London's West End Theatre....
, Leslie Howard
Leslie Howard (actor)

Leslie Howard was an English people Academy Award-nominated Stage and film actor, director, and Theatrical producer. He is best known by international audiences as Ashley Wilkes in the film Gone with the Wind ....
, and Olivia de Havilland
Olivia de Havilland

Olivia Mary de Havilland is a two-time Academy Awards-winning actor. She is the older sister of actress Joan Fontaine, also an Academy Award winner....
, and tells a story of the Civil War and its aftermath from a white Southern viewpoint.

It received ten Academy Awards, a record that stood for twenty years. In the American Film Institute
American Film Institute

The American Film Institute is an independent non-profit organization created by the National Endowment for the Arts, which was established in 1967 when President Lyndon B....
's inaugural Top 100 American Films of All Time
AFI's 100 Years... 100 Movies

The first of the AFI 100 Years... series of cinematic milestones, AFI's 100 Years... 100 Movies is a list of the 100 best American movies, as determined by the American Film Institute from a poll of more than 1,500 artists and leaders in the film industry who chose from a list of 400 nominated movies....
 list of 1998, it was ranked number four, although in the 2007 10th Anniversary edition of that list
AFI's 100 Years... 100 Movies (10th Anniversary Edition)

AFI?s 100 Years...100 Movies ? 10th Anniversary Edition was the 2007 updated version of AFI's 100 Years 100 Movies. The original list was first unveiled in 1998....
, it was dropped two places, to number six.






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Encyclopedia


Gone with the Wind is a 1939
1939 in film

The year 1939 in film involved some significant events....
 American
Cinema of the United States

United States cinema has had a profound effect on cinema across the world since the early 20th century. Its history is sometimes separated into four main periods: the silent film era, Classical Hollywood cinema, New Hollywood, and the contemporary period ....
 drama
Drama film

A drama film is a film genre that depends mostly on in-depth characterization of realistic characters dealing with emotional themes. Dramatic themes such as alcoholism, drug addiction, racial prejudice, religious intolerance, poverty, crime and corruption put the characters in conflict with themselves, others, society and even natural phenome...
-romance
Romance film

While most films have some aspect of Romantic love between characters a romance film can be loosely defined as any film in which the central Plot revolves around the romantic involvement of the story's protagonists....
-film adapted from Margaret Mitchell
Margaret Mitchell

Margaret Munnerlyn Mitchell Marsh , popularly known as Margaret Mitchell, was an United States of America author, who won the Pulitzer Prize in 1937 for her novel Gone with the Wind....
's 1936
1936 in literature

The year 1936 in literature involved some significant events and new books....
 novel of the same name
Gone with the Wind

Gone with the Wind is a romantic drama and the only novel by Margaret Mitchell. The story follows Scarlett O'Hara, the daughter of a plantation owner in Georgia during and after the Civil War....
 and directed by Victor Fleming
Victor Fleming

Victor Fleming was an Academy Award-winning United States film director....
 (Fleming replaced George Cukor
George Cukor

'George Cukor' was an Academy Award-winning United States film director. His career flourished at RKO and later MGM, where he directed a string of impressive films including What Price Hollywood? , A Bill of Divorcement , Dinner at Eight , Little Women , Personal History, Adventures, Experience, and Observation of David Copp...
). The epic film
Epic film

An epic is a genre of film which places emphasis on human drama on a grand scale. They are more ambitious in scope than other genres which helps to differentiate them from similar genres such as the period piece or adventure film....
, set in the American South in and around the time of the Civil War
American Civil War

The American Civil War , also known as the War Between the States and several Naming the American Civil War, was a civil war in the United States....
, stars Clark Gable
Clark Gable

Clark Gable was an Cinema of the United States, nicknamed "The King of Hollywood" in his heyday. In , the American Film Institute named Gable seventh among the AFI's 100 Years......
, Vivien Leigh
Vivien Leigh

Vivien Leigh, Lady Olivier , was an English actress. She won two Academy Awards for playing "southern belles": Scarlett O'Hara in Gone with the Wind and Blanche DuBois in the film version of A Streetcar Named Desire , a role she had also played on stage in London's West End Theatre....
, Leslie Howard
Leslie Howard (actor)

Leslie Howard was an English people Academy Award-nominated Stage and film actor, director, and Theatrical producer. He is best known by international audiences as Ashley Wilkes in the film Gone with the Wind ....
, and Olivia de Havilland
Olivia de Havilland

Olivia Mary de Havilland is a two-time Academy Awards-winning actor. She is the older sister of actress Joan Fontaine, also an Academy Award winner....
, and tells a story of the Civil War and its aftermath from a white Southern viewpoint.

It received ten Academy Awards, a record that stood for twenty years. In the American Film Institute
American Film Institute

The American Film Institute is an independent non-profit organization created by the National Endowment for the Arts, which was established in 1967 when President Lyndon B....
's inaugural Top 100 American Films of All Time
AFI's 100 Years... 100 Movies

The first of the AFI 100 Years... series of cinematic milestones, AFI's 100 Years... 100 Movies is a list of the 100 best American movies, as determined by the American Film Institute from a poll of more than 1,500 artists and leaders in the film industry who chose from a list of 400 nominated movies....
 list of 1998, it was ranked number four, although in the 2007 10th Anniversary edition of that list
AFI's 100 Years... 100 Movies (10th Anniversary Edition)

AFI?s 100 Years...100 Movies ? 10th Anniversary Edition was the 2007 updated version of AFI's 100 Years 100 Movies. The original list was first unveiled in 1998....
, it was dropped two places, to number six. In June 2008, AFI revealed its 10 top 10
AFI's 10 Top 10

AFI's 10 Top 10 honors the ten greatest United States films in ten classic film genres. Presented by the American Film Institute , the lists were unveiled on a television special broadcast by CBS on June 17, 2008....
 — the best ten films in ten American film genres—after polling over 1,500 persons from the creative community. Gone with the Wind was acknowledged as the fourth best film in the Epic genre. It has sold more tickets in the U.S. than any other film in history, and is considered a prototype of a Hollywood blockbuster. It is also the first film with true to life color. Today, it is considered one of the greatest and most popular films of all time and one of the most enduring symbols of the golden age
Cinema of the United States

United States cinema has had a profound effect on cinema across the world since the early 20th century. Its history is sometimes separated into four main periods: the silent film era, Classical Hollywood cinema, New Hollywood, and the contemporary period ....
 of Hollywood
Hollywood, Los Angeles, California

Hollywood is a district in Los Angeles, California, situated west-northwest of Downtown Los Angeles. Due to its fame and cultural identity as the historical center of movie studios and movie stars, the word "Hollywood" is often used as a metonym of cinema of the United States....
. When adjusted for inflation, Gone with the Wind is the highest-grossing film of all time.

Plot

The film opens on a large cotton plantation
Plantation

A plantation is usually a large farm or Estate , especially in a tropical or semitropical country, like Brazil or Nicaragua on which cotton, tobacco, lice coffee, sugar cane and the like are cultivated, usually by resident laborers....
 called Tara
Tara Plantation

Tara, the fictional plantation found in Margaret Mitchell's 1936 novel Gone with the Wind, was located near Jonesborough , Georgia . As the locale of the final, decisive defeat of the Confederate States of America defenders in the Battle of Jonesborough, Jonesboro, with its surrounding farmland, is a location of historical significance....
 in rural Georgia
Georgia (U.S. state)

Georgia is a U.S. state in the United States and was one of the original Thirteen Colonies that revolted against United Kingdom rule in the American Revolution....
 in 1861, on the eve of the American Civil War
American Civil War

The American Civil War , also known as the War Between the States and several Naming the American Civil War, was a civil war in the United States....
 where Scarlett O'Hara
Scarlett O'Hara

Scarlett O'Hara is the protagonist in Margaret Mitchell's 1936 novel Gone with the Wind and in the later Gone with the Wind . She also is the main character in the 1970 musical Scarlett and the 1991 book Scarlett , a sequel to Gone with the Wind that was written by Alexandra Ripley and adapted for a television mini-series in...
 (Vivien Leigh
Vivien Leigh

Vivien Leigh, Lady Olivier , was an English actress. She won two Academy Awards for playing "southern belles": Scarlett O'Hara in Gone with the Wind and Blanche DuBois in the film version of A Streetcar Named Desire , a role she had also played on stage in London's West End Theatre....
) is flirting with the two Tarleton twins Brent (Fred Crane
Fred Crane (actor)

Herman Frederick Crane , better known as Fred Crane was an United States film and television actor and radio announcer. He is probably best known for his role as Brent Tarleton in the 1939 in film film, Gone with the Wind ....
) and Stuart (George Reeves
George Reeves

George Reeves was an United States actor, best known for his role as Superman in the 1950s television program Adventures of Superman and his death by a self-inflicted gunshot wound at the age of 45....
). Scarlett, Suellen, and Careen are the three daughters of Irish
Ireland

Ireland is the List of islands by area in Europe, and the twentieth-largest island in the world. It lies to the north-west of continental Europe and is surrounded by hundreds of islands and islet....
 immigrant Gerald O’Hara (Thomas Mitchell
Thomas Mitchell (actor)

Thomas Mitchell was an United States actor, playwright and screenwriter. Among his most famous roles in a long career are those of the father of Scarlet O'Hara in Gone with the Wind and Uncle Billy in It's a Wonderful Life....
) and his wife, Ellen O'Hara (Barbara O'Neil
Barbara O'Neil

Barbara O'Neil was an United States actress.O'Neil was born in St. Louis, Missouri. She began her acting career in summer stock. In July 1931 Bretaigne Windust, Charles Leatherbee , and Joshua Logan, the three directors of the University Players, a three-year old summer stock company at West Falmouth on Cape Code, were looking for a leadi...
). The twins share a secret with Scarlett that one of her county beaus, whom she secretly loves, Ashley Wilkes
Ashley Wilkes

George Ashley Wilkes is a fictional character in the Margaret Mitchell's 1936 novel Gone with the Wind and the later Gone with the Wind . The character also appears in the 1991 book Scarlett , a sequel to Gone with the Wind written by Alexandra Ripley, and in Rhett Butler's People by Donald McCaig....
 (Leslie Howard
Leslie Howard (actor)

Leslie Howard was an English people Academy Award-nominated Stage and film actor, director, and Theatrical producer. He is best known by international audiences as Ashley Wilkes in the film Gone with the Wind ....
) is to marry his cousin Melanie Hamilton (Olivia de Havilland
Olivia de Havilland

Olivia Mary de Havilland is a two-time Academy Awards-winning actor. She is the older sister of actress Joan Fontaine, also an Academy Award winner....
) and the engagement is to be announced the next day at a barbecue at Ashley's home, the nearby plantation Twelve Oaks
Twelve Oaks

In Margaret Mitchell's novel Gone with the Wind, Twelve Oaks is the plantation of the Wilkes family in Clayton County, Georgia. John Wilkes is the elderly widowed patriarch of the family which includes his son, Ashley, and two unwed daughters, India and Honey....
.

At Twelve Oaks
Twelve Oaks

In Margaret Mitchell's novel Gone with the Wind, Twelve Oaks is the plantation of the Wilkes family in Clayton County, Georgia. John Wilkes is the elderly widowed patriarch of the family which includes his son, Ashley, and two unwed daughters, India and Honey....
, she notices that she is being admired by a handsome but roguish
Rogue

Rogue may refer to:In sociology:* Rogue In jargon:* Volunteer , a plant that is of a different type from the rest of the crop...
 visitor, Rhett Butler
Rhett Butler

Rhett Butler is a fictional character, and one of the main protagonists of Gone with the Wind by Margaret Mitchell....
 (Clark Gable
Clark Gable

Clark Gable was an Cinema of the United States, nicknamed "The King of Hollywood" in his heyday. In , the American Film Institute named Gable seventh among the AFI's 100 Years......
), who had been disowned by his Charleston
Charleston, South Carolina

Charleston is a city in Charleston County, South Carolina in the U.S. state of South Carolina. It is the largest city and county seat of Charleston County....
 family. Rhett finds himself in further disfavor among the male guests when, during a discussion of the probability of war, he states that the South has no chance against the superior numbers and industrial might of the North.

When Scarlett sneaks out of her afternoon nap to be alone with Ashley in the library, she confesses her love for him. He admits he finds Scarlett attractive, and that he has always secretly loved her back, but says that he and the sweet Melanie are more alike. She accuses Ashley of misleading her to think that he did love her and slaps him in anger. Ashley silently exits and her anger continues when she realizes that Rhett was taking an afternoon nap on the couch in the library, and has overheard the whole conversation. "Sir, you are no gentleman!" she protests, to which he replies, "And you, miss, are no lady!" Before the conversation is over Rhett promises that her guilty secret is safe with him.

Scarlett leaves the library in haste and the barbecue is disrupted by the announcement that war has broken out, so the men rush to enlist, and all the ladies are awakened from their naps. As Scarlett watches Ashley kiss Melanie goodbye from the upstairs window, Melanie’s shy young brother Charles Hamilton, with whom Scarlett had been innocently flirting, asks for her hand in marriage before he goes. She consents, they are married, and she is quickly widowed just months after the wedding when Charles dies not in battle, but of pneumonia and the measles.

Scarlett's mother sends her to the Hamilton home in Atlanta
Atlanta, Georgia

Atlanta is the Capital and most populous city in Georgia , as well as the 33rd largest city in the United States of America with a population of 519,145....
 to cheer her up, although the O’Hara's outspoken housemaid Mammy (Hattie McDaniel
Hattie McDaniel

Hattie McDaniel was an United States actress and the first black performer to win an Academy Awards. She won the award for Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress for her role of Mammy in Gone with the Wind ....
) tells Scarlett she knows she is going there only to wait for Ashley’s return. Scarlett and Melanie attend a charity bazaar in Atlanta; Scarlett, who should be buried in deep mourning, is turned against and whispered about. Rhett, now a heroic blockade runner
Blockade runner

A blockade runner is a term applied to ships used to evade a naval blockade of a harbor or strait, as opposed to confronting the blockaders to break the blockade....
 for the Confederacy
Confederate States of America

The Confederate States of America formed as the government set up from 1861 to 1865 by eleven Southern United States U.S. state of the United States of America that had declared their secession from the U.S....
, makes a surprise appearance. Scarlett shocks Atlanta society even more by accepting Rhett's large bid for a dance. While they dance, Rhett tells her of his intention to win her, which she says will never happen, as long as she lives.

The tide of war turns against the Confederacy after the Battle of Gettysburg
Battle of Gettysburg

The Battle of Gettysburg , fought in and around the town of Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, as part of the Gettysburg Campaign, was the battle with the largest number of casualties in the American Civil War and is frequently cited as the war's Turning point of the American Civil War....
 and many county friends and beaux of Scarlett were killed. Scarlett makes another unsuccessful appeal to Ashley’s heart while he is visiting on Christmas furlough
Furlough

A furlough is a temporary leave of absence, especially from duty in the armed services or from a prison term. In these cases, a furlough is a vacation....
, although they do share a private and passionate kiss while in the parlor on Christmas Day, just before he leaves for the war.

Eight months later, as the city is besieged by the Union Army
Union Army

The Union Army was the army that fought for the Union during the American Civil War. It was also known as the Federal Army, the U.S....
 in the Atlanta Campaign
Atlanta Campaign

The Atlanta Campaign was a series of battles fought in the Western Theater of the American Civil War throughout northwest Georgia and the area around Atlanta, Georgia, during the summer of 1864, leading to the eventual fall of Atlanta and hastening the end of the American Civil War....
, Melanie goes into a premature and difficult labor. Scarlett must deliver the child by herself with the help of a house servant Prissy. Scarlett calls upon Rhett to bring her home to Tara immediately with Melanie, Prissy, and the baby. He appears with a horse and wagon to take them out of the city on a perilous journey through the burning depot and warehouse district. He leaves her with a nearly dead horse, helplessly sick Melanie, her baby, and tearful Prissy, and with a passionate kiss on the road leading to Tara. She repays him rudely with a slap, to his bemusement, as he goes off to fight with the Confederate Army
Army of Tennessee

The Army of Tennessee was the principal Confederate States Army operating between the Appalachian Mountains and the Mississippi River during the American Civil War....
.

On her journey back home, Scarlett finds Twelve Oaks burned out, deserted and ruined. She is relieved to find Tara still standing, but learns that her mother has just died of typhoid fever
Typhoid fever

Typhoid fever, also known as enteric fever, or commonly just typhoid, is an illness caused by the bacterium Salmonella typhi. Common worldwide, it is transmitted by the ingestion of food or water contaminated with feces from an infected person....
 and her father's mind has begun to crumble under the strain. With Tara pillaged by Union troops, and the fields untended, Scarlett vows she will do anything for the survival of her family and herself: "As God is my witness, I'll never be hungry again!"

Intermission


Scarlett sets her family and servants to picking the cotton fields. She also kills a Union deserter who threatens her during a burglary, and finds gold coins in his haversack, enough to sustain her family and servants for a short time. With the defeat of the Confederacy and war's end, Ashley returns from being a prisoner of war. Mammy restrains Scarlett from running to him when he reunites with Melanie. The dispirited Ashley finds he is of little help to Tara, and when Scarlett begs him to run away with her, he confesses his desire for her and kisses her passionately, but says he cannot leave Melanie.

Gerald O'Hara dies after he is thrown from his horse in an attempt to chase from his property a Yankee carpetbagger
Carpetbagger

In United States history, carpetbaggers was the term southerners gave to northerners who moved to the South during the Reconstruction era of the United States, between 1865 and 1877....
, the former overseer of his plantation who now wants to buy Tara. Scarlett is left to support the family, and realizes she cannot pay the rising taxes on Tara. Knowing that Rhett is in Atlanta and believing he is still rich, she has Mammy make an elaborate gown for her from her mother’s drapes still hanging in the parlor. However, upon her visit, Rhett tells her his foreign bank accounts have been blocked, and that her attempt to get his money has been in vain. However, as she departs, she encounters her sister’s fiancé, the middle-aged Frank Kennedy, who now owns a successful general store
General store

The general store or general merchandise store is a store that carries a general line of merchandise.In Australia, Canada and the United States, a store named or subtitled "general store" is traditionally a retailer located in a small town or in a rural area....
 and lumber mill.

Scarlett lies saying Suellen is tired of waiting and married another beau. After becoming Mrs. Frank Kennedy, Scarlett takes over his business too and with the profits, buys a sawmill which becomes very profitable during the rebuilding of Atlanta — in part because she is willing to trade with the despised Yankee carpetbaggers and use convict laborers in her mill. When Ashley is about to take a job offer with a bank in the north, Scarlett preys on his weakness by weeping that she needs him to help run the mill; pressured by the sympathetic Melanie, he relents. One day, after Scarlett is attacked while driving alone through a nearby shantytown, Frank, Ashley, and others make a night raid on the shantytown. Ashley is wounded in a melee with Union troops, and Frank is killed.

With Frank’s funeral barely over, Rhett visits Scarlett, who has been drinking, and proposes marriage. Scarlett is aghast at his poor taste, but takes him up on his offer, partially for his money. He kisses her passionately and tells her that he will win her love one day because they are both the same. After a honeymoon in New Orleans
New Orleans, Louisiana

New Orleans is a major United States port city and the largest city in Louisiana. New Orleans is the center of the New Orleans metropolitan area metropolitan area, the largest metro area in the state....
, Rhett promises to restore Tara to its former grandeur, while Scarlett builds the biggest and most crassly opulent mansion in Atlanta. The two have a daughter, Bonnie Blue Butler. Rhett adores her as a symbol of the spirited but not grasping girl Scarlett was before the war. He does everything to win the good opinion of Atlanta society for his daughter’s sake. Scarlett, still pining for Ashley and chagrined at the perceived ruin of her figure (her waist has gone from eighteen inches to twenty), lets Rhett know that she wants no more children and that they will no longer share a bed. In anger, he kicks open the door that separates their bedrooms to show her that he will decide that.

When visiting the mill one day, Scarlett listens to a nostalgic Ashley wish for the simpler days of old that are now gone, and when she consoles him with an embrace, they are spied by two gossips including Ashley's sister India, who has always held a grudge against Scarlett. They eagerly spread the rumor and Scarlett’s reputation is again sullied. Later that night, Rhett, having heard the rumors, forces Scarlett out of bed and to attend a birthday party for Ashley in her most flamboyant dress alone. Incapable of believing anything bad of her beloved sister-in-law, Melanie stands by Scarlett's side so that all know that she believes the gossip to be false.

At home later that night, while trying to sneak a drink for herself, Scarlett finds Rhett downstairs drunk. Blind with jealousy, he tells Scarlett that he could kill her if he thought it would make her forget Ashley. Picking her up, he carries her up the stairs in his arms, telling her, "This is one night you're not turning me out." She awakens the next morning with a look of guilty pleasure, but Rhett returns to apologize for his behavior and offers a divorce, which Scarlett rejects saying it would be a disgrace. Rhett decides to take Bonnie on an extended trip to London.

Rhett returns with Bonnie, and Scarlett is delighted to see him, but he rebuffs her attempts at reconciliation. He remarks at how she looks different and she tells him that she is pregnant again. Rhett asks who the father is and Scarlett tells him he knows the baby is his and that she doesn't even want it. Hurt, Rhett tells her "Cheer up. Maybe you'll have an accident." Enraged, Scarlett lunges at him, falls down the stairs and suffers a miscarriage. Rhett, frantic with guilt, cries to Melanie about his jealousy, yet refrains from telling Melanie about Scarlett's true feelings for Ashley.

As Scarlett is recovering, little Bonnie, as impulsive as her grandfather, dies in a fall while attempting to jump a fence with her pony. Scarlett blames Rhett, and Rhett blames himself. Melanie visits the home to comfort them, and convinces Rhett to allow Bonnie to be laid to rest, but then collapses during a second pregnancy she was warned could kill her. On her deathbed, she asks Scarlett to look after Ashley for her, as Scarlett had looked after her for Ashley. With her dying breath, Melanie also tells Scarlett to be kind to Rhett, that he loves her. Outside, Ashley collapses in tears, helpless without his wife. Only then does Scarlett realize that she never could have meant anything to him, and that she had loved something that never really existed.

She runs home to find Rhett packing to leave her, she begs him not to leave, telling him she realizes now that she had loved him all along, that she never really loved Ashley.

As Rhett walks out the door, she pleads, "Rhett, if you go, where shall I go? What shall I do?" He answers, and walks away into the fog. She sits on her stairs and weeps in despair, "What is there that matters?" She then recalls the voices of Gerald, Ashley and Rhett, all of whom remind her that her strength comes from Tara itself. Hope lights Scarlett's face: "Tara! Home. I'll go home, and I'll think of some way to get him back! After all, tomorrow is another day!" In the finale, Scarlett stands once more, resolute, before Tara.

Cast

  • Vivien Leigh
    Vivien Leigh

    Vivien Leigh, Lady Olivier , was an English actress. She won two Academy Awards for playing "southern belles": Scarlett O'Hara in Gone with the Wind and Blanche DuBois in the film version of A Streetcar Named Desire , a role she had also played on stage in London's West End Theatre....
     as Scarlett O'Hara
    Scarlett O'Hara

    Scarlett O'Hara is the protagonist in Margaret Mitchell's 1936 novel Gone with the Wind and in the later Gone with the Wind . She also is the main character in the 1970 musical Scarlett and the 1991 book Scarlett , a sequel to Gone with the Wind that was written by Alexandra Ripley and adapted for a television mini-series in...
  • Clark Gable
    Clark Gable

    Clark Gable was an Cinema of the United States, nicknamed "The King of Hollywood" in his heyday. In , the American Film Institute named Gable seventh among the AFI's 100 Years......
     as Rhett Butler
    Rhett Butler

    Rhett Butler is a fictional character, and one of the main protagonists of Gone with the Wind by Margaret Mitchell....
  • Leslie Howard
    Leslie Howard (actor)

    Leslie Howard was an English people Academy Award-nominated Stage and film actor, director, and Theatrical producer. He is best known by international audiences as Ashley Wilkes in the film Gone with the Wind ....
     as Ashley Wilkes
    Ashley Wilkes

    George Ashley Wilkes is a fictional character in the Margaret Mitchell's 1936 novel Gone with the Wind and the later Gone with the Wind . The character also appears in the 1991 book Scarlett , a sequel to Gone with the Wind written by Alexandra Ripley, and in Rhett Butler's People by Donald McCaig....
  • Olivia de Havilland
    Olivia de Havilland

    Olivia Mary de Havilland is a two-time Academy Awards-winning actor. She is the older sister of actress Joan Fontaine, also an Academy Award winner....
     as Melanie Hamilton
  • Hattie McDaniel
    Hattie McDaniel

    Hattie McDaniel was an United States actress and the first black performer to win an Academy Awards. She won the award for Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress for her role of Mammy in Gone with the Wind ....
     as Mammy
  • Oscar Polk
    Oscar Polk

    Oscar Polk was an African American actor, best known for his portrayal as the servant "Pork" in the 1939 film Gone with the Wind .His Broadway theatre credits include:...
     as Pork
  • Butterfly McQueen
    Butterfly McQueen

    Butterfly McQueen was an American actress.Originally a dancer, McQueen entered films in 1939 with roles in The Women and Gone with the Wind in which she played Prissy, Scarlett O'Hara's maid....
     as Prissy
  • George Reeves
    George Reeves

    George Reeves was an United States actor, best known for his role as Superman in the 1950s television program Adventures of Superman and his death by a self-inflicted gunshot wound at the age of 45....
     as Stuart Tarleton (miscredited as Brent Tarleton)
  • Fred Crane
    Fred Crane (actor)

    Herman Frederick Crane , better known as Fred Crane was an United States film and television actor and radio announcer. He is probably best known for his role as Brent Tarleton in the 1939 in film film, Gone with the Wind ....
     as Brent Tarleton (miscredited as Stuart Tarleton)
  • Thomas Mitchell
    Thomas Mitchell (actor)

    Thomas Mitchell was an United States actor, playwright and screenwriter. Among his most famous roles in a long career are those of the father of Scarlet O'Hara in Gone with the Wind and Uncle Billy in It's a Wonderful Life....
     as Gerald O'Hara
  • Barbara O'Neil
    Barbara O'Neil

    Barbara O'Neil was an United States actress.O'Neil was born in St. Louis, Missouri. She began her acting career in summer stock. In July 1931 Bretaigne Windust, Charles Leatherbee , and Joshua Logan, the three directors of the University Players, a three-year old summer stock company at West Falmouth on Cape Code, were looking for a leadi...
     as Ellen O'Hara
  • Ward Bond
    Ward Bond

    Wardell Edwin Bond was an United States film actor whose rugged appearance and easygoing charm led to featured roles in numerous classic films....
     as Tom - Yankee Captain
  • Evelyn Keyes
    Evelyn Keyes

    Evelyn Keyes was an American film actor....
     as Suellen O'Hara
  • Ann Rutherford
    Ann Rutherford

    Therese Ann Rutherford is a Canada-United States actress in film, radio, and television. She has had a long career starring and co-starring in films, playing Polly Benedict on the big screen of the 1930s and 1940s, and on The Bob Newhart Show as Newhart's character's mother-in-law....
     as Carreen O'Hara
  • Howard Hickman
    Howard C. Hickman

    Howard C. Hickman was an accomplished stage leading man, who entered films through the auspices of producer Thomas H. Ince. He co-starred with his wife, actress Bessie Barriscale, in several productions before returning to the theatre....
     as John Wilkes
  • Alicia Rhett
    Alicia Rhett

    Alicia Rhett is an United States portrait Painting and actress who is best remembered for her role as India Wilkes in the 1939 film Gone with the Wind ....
     as India Wilkes
    India Wilkes

    India Wilkes is the sister of Ashley Wilkes and the rival of Scarlett O'Hara in the novel and film Gone with the Wind. She's a jealous character who despises Scarlett because Scarlett stole the attention of Stuart Tarleton, who courted India previously....
  • Rand Brooks as Charles Hamilton
  • Carroll Nye
    Carroll Nye

    Carroll Nye was an American film actor. He appeared in 58 films between 1925 in film and 1944 in film.He was born in Akron, Ohio and died in Hollywood, California from a myocardial infarction and renal failure....
     as Frank Kennedy
  • Victor Jory
    Victor Jory

    Victor Jory was a Canada actor.He was born in Dawson City, Yukon, Yukon, Canada. He was the boxing and wrestling champion of the Coast Guard during his military service, and he kept his burly physique....
     as Jonas Wilkerson
  • Everett Brown as Big Sam
  • Harry Davenport
    Harry Davenport

    Harold George Bryant Davenport was an American film and stage actor who appeared in a number of roles in many famous films of the early 1900s. He was best known for playing grandfathers, judges, doctors, and ministers....
     as Dr. Meade
  • Cammie King
    Cammie King

    Eleanore Cammack "Cammie" King is best known for her portrayal of Bonnie Blue Butler in the film Gone with the Wind . She then voiced the young doe Faline in Bambi ....
     as Bonnie blue Butler
  • Cliff Edwards
    Cliff Edwards

    Cliff Edwards , also known as "Ukelele Ike", was an American singer and musician who enjoyed considerable popularity in the 1920s and early 1930s, specializing in jazzy renditions of pop standards and novelty tunes....
     as Reminiscent Soldier
  • Ona Munson
    Ona Munson

    Ona Munson was an United States actress perhaps best known for her portrayal of prostitute Belle Watling in Gone with the Wind ....
     as Belle Watling


Screenplay

Of original screenplay writer Sidney Howard
Sidney Howard

Sidney Coe Howard was an American playwright and screenwriter. He received the Pulitzer Prize for Drama in 1925 and a posthumous Academy Awards in 1940 for the screenplay for Gone with the Wind ....
, film historian Joanne Yeck writes, "reducing the intricacies of Gone with the Winds epic dimensions was a herculean task...and Howard's first submission was far too long, and would have required at least six hours of film; ... [producer] Selznick wanted Howard to remain on the set to make revisions...but Howard refused to leave New England [and] as a result, revisions were handled by a host of local writers, including Ben Hecht
Ben Hecht

Ben Hecht , , was an United States screenwriter, director, producer, playwright, and novelist. Called "the Shakespeare of Hollywood", he received screen credits, alone or in collaboration, for the stories or screenplays of some 70 films and as a prolific storyteller, authored 35 books and created some of the most entertaining screenplays or p...
..."

Producer David O. Selznick
David O. Selznick

David O. Selznick, born David Selznick , was one of the iconic Hollywood film producer of the Golden Age. He is best known for producing the epic blockbuster Gone with the Wind which earned him an Academy Awards for Best Picture....
 replaced the film's director three weeks into filming and then had the script rewritten. He sought out director Victor Fleming
Victor Fleming

Victor Fleming was an Academy Award-winning United States film director....
, who, at the time, was directing
The Wizard of Oz
The Wizard of Oz (1939 film)

The Wizard of Oz is a 1939 in film Cinema of the United States musical film-fantasy film mainly directed by Victor Fleming and based on the 1900 Children's literature novel The Wonderful Wizard of Oz by L....
. Fleming was dissatisfied with the script, so Selznick brought in famed writer Ben Hecht to rewrite the entire screenplay within five days." The popular play
Moonlight and Magnolias by playwright Ron Hutchinson
Ron Hutchinson

Ron Hutchinson is a retired Canadian professional wrestler, trainer and promoter who competed for Canadian independent promotions such as Grand Prix Wrestling and Maple Leaf Wrestling as well as a brief stint in the World Wrestling Entertainment during the mid-1980s....
, is about this dramatic episode when "Selznick literally locked himself, Fleming and screenwriter Ben Hecht in a room for five days to completely redo the script."

By the time of the film's release in 1939, there was some question as to who should receive screen credit," writes Yeck. "But despite the number of writers and changes, the final script was remarkably close to Howard's version. The fact that Howard's name alone appears on the credits may have been as much a gesture to his memory as to his writing, for in 1939 Sidney Howard died tragically at age forty-eight in a farm-tractor accident, and before the movie's premiere."

David O. Selznick, in a memo written in October 1939, discussed the movie's writing credits:
"[Y]ou can say frankly that of the comparatively small amount of material in the picture which is not from the book, most is my own personally, and the only original lines of dialog which are not my own are a few from Sidney Howard and a few from Ben Hecht and a couple more from John Van Druten. Offhand I doubt that there are ten original words of [Oliver] Garrett's in the whole script. As to construction, this is about eighty per cent my own, and the rest divided between Jo Swerling and Sidney Howard, with Hecht having contributed materially to the construction of one sequence."


According to Hecht biographer, William MacAdams, "At dawn on Sunday, February 20, 1939, David Selznick ... and director Victor Fleming shook Hecht awake to inform him he was on loan from MGM and must come with them immediately and go to work on
Gone with the Wind, which Selznick had begun shooting five weeks before. It was costing Selznick $50,000 each day the film was on hold waiting for a final screenplay rewrite and time was of the essence.

Hecht was in the middle of working on the film
At the Circus
At the Circus

At the Circus is a 1939 in film Marx Brothers comedy film in which they save a Circus from bankruptcy. It is notable for Groucho Marx's classic rendition of "Lydia the Tattooed Lady." and co-stars include Margaret Dumont, Eve Arden, and Kenny Baker ....
for the Marx brothers. " Recalling the episode in a letter to screenwriter friend Gene Fowler
Gene Fowler

Gene Fowler was an American journalist, author and dramatist.He was born in Denver, Colorado. When his mother remarried, young Gene took his stepfather's name to become Gene Fowler....
, he said he hadn't read the novel but Selznick and director Fleming could not wait for him to read it. They would act out scenes based on Sidney Howard's original script which needed to be rewritten in a hurry. Hecht wrote, "After each scene had been performed and discussed, I sat down at the typewriter and wrote it out. Selznick and Fleming, eager to continue with their acting, kept hurrying me. We worked in this fashion for seven days, putting in eighteen to twenty hours a day. Selznick refused to let us each lunch, arguing that food would slow us up. He provided bananas and salted peanuts....thus on the seventh day I had completed, unscathed, the first nine reels of the Civil War epic."

MacAdams writes, "It is impossible to determine exactly how much Hecht scripted...In the official credits filed with the Screen Writers' Guild, Sidney Howard was of course awarded the sole screen credit, but four other writers were appended ... Jo Swerling for contributing to the treatment, Oliver H. P. Garrett and Barbara Keon to screenplay construction, and Hecht, to dialogue, so it would appear Hecht's influence was not insubstantial."

Production

Producer David O. Selznick
David O. Selznick

David O. Selznick, born David Selznick , was one of the iconic Hollywood film producer of the Golden Age. He is best known for producing the epic blockbuster Gone with the Wind which earned him an Academy Awards for Best Picture....
, head of Selznick International Pictures
Selznick International Pictures

Selznick International Pictures was a Hollywood motion picture studio....
, decided that he wanted to create a film based on the novel after his story editor Kay Brown read a pre-publication copy in May 1936 and urged him to buy the film rights. A month after the book's publication in June 1936
1936 in film

The year 1936 in film involved some significant events....
, Selznick bought the rights for $50,000, a record amount at the time. Major financing for the film was provided by Selznick business partner John Hay Whitney
John Hay Whitney

John Hay Whitney , colloquially known as "Jock" Whitney, was U.S. Ambassador to the United Kingdom, publisher of the New York Herald Tribune, and a member of the Whitney family....
, a financier who later went on to become a U.S. ambassador.

The casting of the two lead roles became a complex, two-year endeavor. Many famous or soon-to-be-famous actresses were either screen-tested, auditioned, or considered for the role of Scarlett, including Jean Arthur
Jean Arthur

Jean Arthur was an Cinema of the United States actress and a major film star of the 1930s and 1940s. She remains arguably the epitome of the female screwball comedy actress....
, Lucille Ball
Lucille Ball

Lucille Ball was an United States comedian, film, television, stage and radio actress, model , film industry, and star of the landmark sitcoms I Love Lucy, The Lucy-Desi Comedy Hour, The Lucy Show and Here's Lucy....
, Tallulah Bankhead
Tallulah Bankhead

Tallulah Brockman Bankhead was an United States actress, talk-show host and wikt:bon vivant....
, Joan Bennett
Joan Bennett

Joan Geraldine Bennett was an Cinema of the United States stage, film and television actress. Besides acting on the theatre, Bennett appeared in more than 70 film from the era of silent film through half a century of the sound film....
, Joan Crawford
Joan Crawford

Joan Crawford After an absence of nearly two years from the screen, Crawford staged a comeback by starring in Mildred Pierce , for which she won the Academy Award for Academy Award for Best Actress....
, Bette Davis
Bette Davis

Ruth Elizabeth "Bette" Davis was an American actress of film, television and theatre. Noted for her willingness to play unsympathetic characters, she was highly regarded for her performances in a range of film genres; from contemporary crime films to historical film and period piece and occasional comedy, though her greatest successes were h...
, Frances Dee
Frances Dee

Frances Marion Dee was an United States actress. She starred opposite Maurice Chevalier in the early talkie musical, The Playboy of Paris ....
, Olivia de Havilland
Olivia de Havilland

Olivia Mary de Havilland is a two-time Academy Awards-winning actor. She is the older sister of actress Joan Fontaine, also an Academy Award winner....
, Irene Dunne
Irene Dunne

Irene Dunne was an American film actor and singer of the 1930s and 1940s. Dunne was nominated for five-time Academy Award for Best Actress for her performances in Cimarron , Theodora Goes Wild , The Awful Truth , Love Affair and I Remember Mama ....
, Joan Fontaine
Joan Fontaine

Joan Fontaine is an Academy Awards-winning United Kingdom actress in American films. She became an American citizen in April 1943. She is the younger sister of actress Olivia de Havilland, also an Academy Award winner....
, Greer Garson
Greer Garson

'Eileen Evelyn Greer Garson', Order of the British Empire was a United Kingdom-born actor who was very popular during the years of World War II. As one of MGM's major stars of the 1940s, Garson received seven Academy Award nominations, winning the Academy Award for Best Actress award for Mrs....
, Paulette Goddard
Paulette Goddard

Paulette Goddard was an American film and theatre actress. A former child Model and in several Broadway theatre productions as Ziegfeld Follies, she was a major star of the Paramount Studio in the 1940s....
, Susan Hayward
Susan Hayward

Susan Hayward was an American actress.After working as a fashion model in New York, Hayward travelled to Hollywood in 1937 in the hope of playing the role of Scarlett O'Hara in Gone With the Wind ....
, Katharine Hepburn
Katharine Hepburn

Katharine Houghton Hepburn was an United States actress of film, television and stage.Acclaimed throughout her 73-year career, Hepburn holds the record for the most Academy Award for Best Actress Academy Awards wins with four, from 12 nominations....
, Miriam Hopkins
Miriam Hopkins

Ellen Miriam Hopkins was an Academy Award-nominated American actress....
, Carole Lombard
Carole Lombard

Carole Lombard , born Jane Alice Peters in Fort Wayne, Indiana, was an Oscar-nominated United States Actor. She was particularly noted for her comedic roles in several classic films of the 1930s, most notably in the 1936 film My Man Godfrey....
, Ida Lupino
Ida Lupino

Ida Lupino was an Anglo-American film actor, film director, and a pioneer among women filmmakers. In her forty-eight year career, she appeared in fifty-nine films, and directed nine others....
, Merle Oberon
Merle Oberon

Merle Oberon , born Estelle Merle O'Brien Thompson, was an Academy Award-nominated British film actor....
, Norma Shearer
Norma Shearer

Edith Norma Shearer was an Academy Awards Canadian-American actor....
, Barbara Stanwyck
Barbara Stanwyck

Barbara Stanwyck was an United States actor, a star of film and television, known during her 60-year career as a consummate and versatile professional with a strong screen presence, and a favorite of directors such as Cecil B....
, Margaret Sullavan
Margaret Sullavan

Margaret Brooke Sullavan . Margaret Sullavan was an American stage and film actress. Sullavan started her career on the stage in 1929. She was especially known for her effortless acting and her distinctive throaty voice....
, Lana Turner
Lana Turner

Lana Turner was an Academy Awards-nominated American film and occasionally television actress. On-screen, she was well-known for the glamour and sensuality she brought to almost all her movie roles....
 and Loretta Young
Loretta Young

Loretta Young was an Academy Award, three time Emmy and two-time Golden Globe-winning American actress....
.

Four actresses, including Jean Arthur
Jean Arthur

Jean Arthur was an Cinema of the United States actress and a major film star of the 1930s and 1940s. She remains arguably the epitome of the female screwball comedy actress....
 and Joan Bennett
Joan Bennett

Joan Geraldine Bennett was an Cinema of the United States stage, film and television actress. Besides acting on the theatre, Bennett appeared in more than 70 film from the era of silent film through half a century of the sound film....
, were still under consideration by December 1938. But only two finalists, Paulette Goddard
Paulette Goddard

Paulette Goddard was an American film and theatre actress. A former child Model and in several Broadway theatre productions as Ziegfeld Follies, she was a major star of the Paramount Studio in the 1940s....
 and Vivien Leigh
Vivien Leigh

Vivien Leigh, Lady Olivier , was an English actress. She won two Academy Awards for playing "southern belles": Scarlett O'Hara in Gone with the Wind and Blanche DuBois in the film version of A Streetcar Named Desire , a role she had also played on stage in London's West End Theatre....
, were tested in Technicolor
Technicolor

Technicolor is the trademark for a series of Color film processes pioneered by Technicolor Motion Picture Corporation , now a division of Thomson SA....
, both on December 20. Selznick had been quietly considering Vivien Leigh, a young English actress little known in America, for the role of Scarlett since February 1938, when Selznick saw her in
Fire Over England
Fire Over England

Fire Over England is a 1937 in film London Film Productions film drama, notable for providing the first pairing of Laurence Olivier and Vivien Leigh....
and A Yank at Oxford
A Yank at Oxford

A Yank at Oxford is a British 1938 in film film comedy produced by the British branch of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. It was film director by Jack Conway from a screenplay by John Monk Saunders and Leon Gordon....
. Leigh's American agent was the London representative of the Myron Selznick
Myron Selznick

Myron Selznick was an United States film producer and Casting Agent.Born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, he was the son of film executive Lewis J....
 talent agency (headed by David Selznick's brother, one of the owners of Selznick International), and she had requested in February that her name be submitted for consideration as Scarlett. By summer of 1938, the Selznicks were negotiating with Alexander Korda
Alexander Korda

Sir Alexander Korda was a Hungarian-born film director and film producer. He was a leading figure in the British film industry, the founder of London Films and the owner of British Lion, a film distributing company....
, to whom Leigh was under contract, for her services later that year. But for publicity reasons David arranged to meet her for the first time on the night of December 10, 1938, when the burning of the Atlanta Depot was filmed. The story was invented for the press that Leigh and Laurence Olivier were just visiting the studio as guests of Myron Selznick, who was also Olivier's agent, and that Leigh was in Hollywood hoping for a part in Olivier's current movie,
Wuthering Heights
Wuthering Heights (1939 film)

Wuthering Heights is a film, directed by William Wyler and produced by Samuel Goldwyn. It is based on the celebrated novel, Wuthering Heights by Emily Bront?, although the film only depicts sixteen of the novel's thirty-four chapters....
. In a letter to his wife two days later, Selznick admitted that Leigh was "the Scarlett dark horse", and after a series of screen tests, her casting was announced on January 13, 1939. Just before the shooting of the film, Selznick informed Ed Sullivan
Ed Sullivan

Edward Vincent "Ed" Sullivan was an United States entertainment writer and television host, best known as the presenter of a popular TV variety show called The Ed Sullivan Show that was at its height of popularity in the 1950s and 1960s....
: "Scarlett O'Hara's parents were French and Irish. Identically, Miss Leigh's parents are French and Irish."

For the role of Rhett Butler, Clark Gable
Clark Gable

Clark Gable was an Cinema of the United States, nicknamed "The King of Hollywood" in his heyday. In , the American Film Institute named Gable seventh among the AFI's 100 Years......
 was an almost immediate favorite for both the public and Selznick. Nevertheless, as Selznick had no male stars under long-term contract, he needed to go through the process of negotiating to borrow an actor from another studio. Gary Cooper
Gary Cooper

Frank James ?Gary? Cooper was an Cinema of the United States film actor and iconic star. He was renowned for his quiet, understated acting style and his stoic, individualistic, emotionally restrained, but at times intense screen persona, which was particularly well suited to the many Western movie he made....
 was Selznick's first choice, because Cooper's contract with Samuel Goldwyn
Samuel Goldwyn

Samuel Goldwyn was an American film producer, and founding contributor executive of several motion picture studios....
 involved a common distribution company, United Artists
United Artists

United Artists Entertainment LLC is an United States film studio. The current United Artists was formed in November 2006 under a partnership between producer/actor Tom Cruise and his production partner, Paula Wagner, and Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios Inc., an MGM company....
, with which Selznick had an eight-picture deal. However, Goldwyn remained noncommittal in negotiations. Warner Bros. offered a package of Bette Davis
Bette Davis

Ruth Elizabeth "Bette" Davis was an American actress of film, television and theatre. Noted for her willingness to play unsympathetic characters, she was highly regarded for her performances in a range of film genres; from contemporary crime films to historical film and period piece and occasional comedy, though her greatest successes were h...
, Errol Flynn
Errol Flynn

Errol Leslie Flynn was an Australian-born film actor, known for his romantic swashbuckler roles in Hollywood films and his flamboyant lifestyle....
, and Olivia de Havilland
Olivia de Havilland

Olivia Mary de Havilland is a two-time Academy Awards-winning actor. She is the older sister of actress Joan Fontaine, also an Academy Award winner....
 for the lead roles in return for the distribution rights. But by then Selznick was determined to get Clark Gable, and eventually found a way to borrow him from Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Selznick's father-in-law, MGM chief Louis B. Mayer, offered in May 1938 to fund half of the movie's budget in return for a powerful package: 50% of the profits would go to MGM, the movie's distribution would be credited to MGM's parent company, Loew's, Inc., and Loew's would receive 15 percent of the movie's gross income
Gross income

Gross income is commonly defined as the amount of a company's or a person's income before all deductions or any taxpayer?s income, except that which is specifically excluded by the Internal Revenue Code, before taking deductions or taxes into account....
. Selznick accepted this offer in August, and Gable was cast. Nevertheless, the arrangement to release through MGM meant delaying the start of production until Selznick International completed its eight-picture contract with United Artists.

Principal photography began January 26, 1939, and ended on June 27, 1939, with post-production work (including a fifth version of the opening scene) going to November 11, 1939. Director George Cukor
George Cukor

'George Cukor' was an Academy Award-winning United States film director. His career flourished at RKO and later MGM, where he directed a string of impressive films including What Price Hollywood? , A Bill of Divorcement , Dinner at Eight , Little Women , Personal History, Adventures, Experience, and Observation of David Copp...
, with whom Selznick had a long working relationship, and who had spent almost two years in preproduction on
Gone with the Wind, was replaced after less than three weeks of shooting. Olivia de Havilland said that she learned of George Cukor's firing from Vivien Leigh on the day the Atlanta bazaar scene was filmed. The pair went to Selznick's office in full costume and begged him to change his mind. Selznick apologized, but refused. Victor Fleming
Victor Fleming

Victor Fleming was an Academy Award-winning United States film director....
, who was directing
The Wizard of Oz
The Wizard of Oz (1939 film)

The Wizard of Oz is a 1939 in film Cinema of the United States musical film-fantasy film mainly directed by Victor Fleming and based on the 1900 Children's literature novel The Wonderful Wizard of Oz by L....
, was called in from MGM to complete the picture, although Cukor continued privately to coach Leigh and De Havilland. Another MGM director, Sam Wood
Sam Wood

Samuel Grosvenor Wood was a prolific Hollywood director, he also did some production, writing, and to a lesser extent, acting work.Born in Philadelphia, Wood worked for Cecil B....
, worked for two weeks in May when Fleming temporarily left the production due to exhaustion.

Cinematographer Lee Garmes
Lee Garmes

Lee Garmes, A.S.C. was an award-winning United States cinematographer. During his career, he worked with directors Howard Hawks, Max Ophuls, Josef von Sternberg, Alfred Hitchcock, King Vidor, Nicholas Ray and Henry Hathaway, whom he had met as a young man when the two first came to Hollywood in the silent film....
 began the production, but after a month of shooting what Selznick and his associates thought was "too dark" footage, was replaced with Ernest Haller
Ernest Haller

Ernest Haller, A.S.C. also credited as Ernie B. Haller, , was an USA cinematographer.Born in Los Angeles, California, Haller joined Biograph Studios as an actor in 1914, then began to freelance as a cinematographer....
, working with Technicolor cinematographer Ray Rennahan
Ray Rennahan

Ray Rennahan, A.S.C. was a movie cinematographer.For his work in movies, he became one of the only six cinematographers to have a "Star" on the Hollywood Walk of Fame....
. Most of the filming was done on "the back forty"
RKO Forty Acres

Forty Acres was a film studio backlot that belonged to RKO Pictures and later Desilu Productions, located in Culver City, California. Best known as Forty Acres, or "the back forty", it had other names such as "Desilu Culver", the "RKO backlot" and "Path? 40 Acre Ranch" depending on which studio owned the property at the time....
 of Selznick International
Selznick International Pictures

Selznick International Pictures was a Hollywood motion picture studio....
 with all the location scenes being photographed in California, mostly in Los Angeles County
Los Angeles County, California

Los Angeles County is a County in California, and is by far, the most List of the most populous counties in the United States in the United States....
 or neighboring Ventura County
Ventura County, California

Ventura County is a Counties of the United States in the southern part of the U.S. state of California . It is located on California's Pacific Ocean coast, and forms the northwestern part of the Greater Los Angeles Area....
. Estimated production costs were $3.9 million; only
Ben-Hur
Ben-Hur (1925 film)

Ben-Hur was a 1925 in film silent film directed by Fred Niblo. It was a blockbuster hit for newly merged Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. This was the second film based on the novel Ben-Hur by Lew Wallace....
(1925
1925 in film

Events...
) and
Hell's Angels
Hell's Angels (film)

Hell's Angels is a Cinema of the United States epic film war film, directed by Howard Hughes and starring Jean Harlow, Ben Lyon, and James Hall ....
(1930) had cost more.

Although legend persists that the Hays Office
Production Code

File:Code hays, cover.gifThe Production Code was the set of industry censorship guidelines, and the office enforcing them, which governed the production of Cinema of the United States from 1930 to 1968....
 fined Selznick $5,000 for using the word "damn" in Butler's exit line, in fact the Motion Picture Association
Motion Picture Association of America

The Motion Picture Association of America was since 1922, originally the Motion Picture Producers and Distributors of America , is a non-profit business and trade association based in the United States, which was formed to advance the business interests of movie studios....
 board passed an amendment to the Production Code
Production Code

File:Code hays, cover.gifThe Production Code was the set of industry censorship guidelines, and the office enforcing them, which governed the production of Cinema of the United States from 1930 to 1968....
 on November 1, 1939, that forbade use of the words "hell" or "damn" except when their use "shall be essential and required for portrayal, in proper historical context, of any scene or dialogue based upon historical fact or folklore … or a quotation from a literary work, provided that no such use shall be permitted which is intrinsically objectionable or offends good taste." With that amendment, the Production Code Administration had no further objection to Rhett's closing line.

First public preview

When David O. Selznick was asked by the press in early September how he felt about the film, he said: "At noon I think it's divine, at midnight I think it's lousy. Sometimes I think it's the greatest picture ever made. But if it's only a great picture, I'll still be satisfied."

On September 9, 1939, Selznick, his wife Irene Mayer Selznick, investor Jock Whitney, and film editor Hal Kern drove out to Riverside, California
Riverside, California

Riverside is a large city located in the Inland Empire in Southern California. It is also the county seat of Riverside County, California, California, United States....
 with all of the film reels to preview it before an audience. The film was still unfinished at this stage, missing many optical effects and most of Max Steiner
Max Steiner

Max Steiner was an Academy Award-winning Austrian-United States composer of music for theatre productions and films. He probably is known best for the Film score he composed for the classic Gone with the Wind and for the score and hugely popular theme song for the film A Summer Place ....
's music score. They arrived at the Fox Theatre, which was playing a double feature of
Hawaiian Nights and Beau Geste
Beau Geste (1939 film)

Beau Geste is a 1939 in film film made by Paramount Pictures based on the Beau Geste by P. C. Wren. It was directed and produced by William A....
. Kern called for the manager and explained that they had selected his theatre for the first public screening of Gone with the Wind. He was told that after Hawaiian Nights had finished, he could make an announcement of the preview, but was forbidden to say what the film was. People were permitted to leave, but the theatre would thereafter be sealed with no re-admissions and no phone calls out. The manager was reluctant, but finally agreed. His only request was to call his wife to come to the theatre immediately. Kern stood by him as he made the call to make sure he did not reveal the name of the film to her.

When the film began, there was a buzz in the audience when Selznick's name appeared, for they had been reading about the making of the film for over two years. In an interview years later, Kern described the exact moment the audience realized what was happening:

When Margaret Mitchell's name came on the screen, you never heard such a sound in your life. They just yelled, they stood up on the seats...I had the [manually-operated sound] box. And I had that music wide open and you couldn't hear a thing. Mrs. Selznick was crying like a baby and so was David and so was I. Oh, what a thrill! And when "Gone with the Wind" came on the screen, it was thunderous!

In his seminal biography of Selznick, David Thomson
David Thomson (film critic)

David Thomson is a film critic based in the United States and the author of more than 20 books, including The New Biographical Dictionary of Film, lauded as one of the best reference works on the cinema....
 wrote that the audience's response before the story had even started "was the greatest moment of his life, the greatest victory and redemption of all his failings."

After the film, there was a huge ovation. In the preview cards filled out after the screening, two-thirds of the audience had rated it excellent, an unusually high rating. Most of the audience begged that the film not be cut shorter and many suggested that instead they eliminate the newsreels, shorts and B-movie feature, which is eventually how
Gone with the Wind was screened and would soon become the norm in movie theatres around the world.

1939 response

The film premiered in Atlanta, Georgia
Atlanta, Georgia

Atlanta is the Capital and most populous city in Georgia , as well as the 33rd largest city in the United States of America with a population of 519,145....
, on December 15, 1939 as the climax of three days of festivities hosted by the mayor which consisted of a parade of limousines featuring stars from the film, receptions, thousands of Confederate flags, false antebellum
Antebellum

"Antebellum" is an expression derived from Latin that means "before war" .In United States history and historiography, "antebellum" is commonly used, in lieu of "pre-Civil War," in reference to the period of increasing sectionalism that led up to the American Civil War....
 fronts on stores and homes, and a costume ball. The governor of Georgia declared December 15 a state holiday. President Jimmy Carter
Jimmy Carter

James Earl "Jimmy" Carter, Jr. served as the List of Presidents of the United States President of the United States from 1977 to 1981 and was the recipient of the 2002 Nobel Peace Prize....
 would later recall it as "the biggest event to happen in the South in my lifetime."

Hattie McDaniel, as well as the other black actors from the film, were prevented from attending the premiere due to Georgia's Jim Crow
Jim Crow

Jim Crow may refer to:* Jim Crow laws, laws regarding racial segregation; enforced in the U.S. from the 1870's-1964.* Jump Jim Crow, the song for which Jim Crow laws were named...
 laws, which would have kept them from sitting with the white members of the cast. Upon learning that McDaniel had been barred from the premiere, Clark Gable threatened to boycott the event. McDaniel convinced him to attend.

From December 1939 to June 1940, the film played only advance-ticket road show
Roadshow theatrical release

The roadshow theatrical release is a practice in which a film opens in a special limited number of theaters in large cities like Los Angeles, New York, Chicago and San Francisco for a specific period of time before it spreads to nationwide release , and is shown only once or twice a day, usually with an intermission halfway or two-thirds of...
 engagements at a limited number of theaters, before it went into general release in 1941.

It was a sensational hit during the Blitz
The Blitz

The Blitz was the sustained bombing of United Kingdom by Nazi Germany between 7 September 1940 and 10 May 1941, in World War II. While the "Blitz" hit many towns and cities across the country, it began with the bombing of London for 57 consecutive nights ....
 in London, opening in April 1940 and playing continuously for four years.

Legacy

In an attempt to draw upon his company's profits, but to pay capital gain
Capital gain

A capital gain is a profit that results from investments into a capital asset, such as stocks, bonds or real estate, which exceeds the purchase price....
 tax rather than a much higher personal income tax, David O. Selznick and his business partners liquidated
Liquidation

In law, liquidation refers to the process by which a company is brought to an end, and the assets and property of the company redistributed. Liquidation can also be referred to as winding-up or dissolution , although dissolution technically refers to the last stage of liquidation....
 Selznick International Pictures over a three-year period in the early 1940s. As part of the liquidation, Selznick sold his rights in
Gone with the Wind to Jock Whitney
John Hay Whitney

John Hay Whitney , colloquially known as "Jock" Whitney, was U.S. Ambassador to the United Kingdom, publisher of the New York Herald Tribune, and a member of the Whitney family....
 and his sister, who in turn sold it to Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer in 1944. Today it is owned by Turner Entertainment
Turner Entertainment

Turner Entertainment Company, Inc. is an American media company founded by Ted Turner. Now owned by Time Warner, the company is largely responsible for overseeing its library for worldwide distribution....
, whose parent company Turner Broadcasting acquired MGM's film library in 1986. Turner itself is currently a subsidiary of Time Warner
Time Warner

Time Warner Inc. is the world's third largest media and entertainment Conglomerate by market capitalization , headquartered in the Time Warner Center in New York City....
, which is the current parent company of Warner Bros. Entertainment
Warner Bros.

Warner Bros. Entertainment, Inc. is one of the world's largest film producer of film and television.It is a subsidiary of Time Warner, with its headquarters in Burbank, California and New York City....
. Incidentally,
Gone with the Wind is the favorite movie of TBS founder Ted Turner
Ted Turner

Robert Edward "Ted" Turner III is an United States media proprietor. As a businessman, he is known as founder of the cable television network CNN, the first dedicated 24-hour cable news channel....
, himself an Atlanta resident.

Gone with the Wind was given theatrical re-releases in 1947, 1954, 1961, 1967 (in a 70 mm version), 1971, 1989, and 1998. The 1954 release was the first time the studio issued the film in widescreen
Widescreen

A widescreen image is a film, computer or television image with a wider and shorter aspect ratio than the standard Academy frame developed during the classical Hollywood cinema era....
, compromising the original Academy ratio
Academy ratio

The Academy ratio of 1.375:1 is an aspect ratio of a frame of 35mm film when used with negative pulldown. It was standardized by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences as the standard film aspect ratio in 1932, although it was used as early as 1928....
 and cropping the top and bottom to an aspect ratio of 1.75:1. In doing so, a number of shots were optically re-framed and cut into the three-strip camera negatives, forever altering five shots in the film The 70 mm re-issue of the film cropped the film further, to a very narrow ratio of 2.20:1.

The film made its television debut on the HBO cable network in June 1976, and its broadcast debut the following November on the NBC network, where it became at that time the highest-rated television program
List of most-watched television episodes

The following is a list of most-watched television broadcasts, organized by country and based on various criteria....
 ever presented on a single network, watched by 47.5 percent of the households sampled in America, and 65 percent of television viewers. Ironically, it was surpassed the following year by the mini-series
Roots
Roots (TV miniseries)

Roots is a 1977 in television American television miniseries based on Alex Haley's work Roots: The Saga of an American Family.Roots received 37 Emmy Award nominations....
, a saga about slavery in America.

Rumors of Hollywood producing a sequel to this film persisted for decades until 1994, when a sequel was finally produced for television, based upon Alexandra Ripley
Alexandra Ripley

Alexandra Ripley, n?e Braid was an United States writer best known as the author of Scarlett , the sequel to Gone with the Wind. Her first novel was Who's the Lady in the President's Bed? ....
's novel,
Scarlett
Scarlett (novel)

Scarlett is a novel written in 1991 by Alexandra Ripley as a sequel to Margaret Mitchell's Gone with the Wind. It was adapted as a television mini-series of Scarlett in 1994 starring Timothy Dalton as Rhett Butler and Joanne Whalley-Kilmer as Scarlett O'Hara....
, itself a sequel to Mitchell's original. Both the book and mini-series were met with mixed reviews. In the TV version, British
United Kingdom

The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, commonly known as the United Kingdom , the UK or Britain,is a sovereign state located off the northwestern coast of continental Europe....
 actors played both key roles: Welsh
Wales

native_name = Cymru|conventional_long_name = Wales|common_name = Wales|image_flag = Flag of Wales 2.svg|national_motto = ...
-born actor Timothy Dalton
Timothy Dalton

Timothy Peter Dalton is a Wales actor. He is best known for portraying James Bond in The Living Daylights and Licence to Kill and for his roles in William Shakespeare films and plays....
 played Rhett while Manchester
Manchester

Manchester is a city and metropolitan borough of Greater Manchester, England. Manchester was granted City status in the United Kingdom in 1853....
-born Joanne Whalley
Joanne Whalley

Joanne Whalley is an England actress.Brought up in Stockport, Whalley initially appeared in How We Used To Live and bit parts in soap operas, especially Coronation Street and Emmerdale....
 played Scarlett. Original plans were used for the reconstruction of a replica of the original Tara set in Charleston, South Carolina for the filming.

In 1989,
Gone with the Wind was selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry
National Film Registry

The National Film Registry is the registry of films selected by the United States National Film Preservation Board for preservation in the Library of Congress....
 by the Library of Congress
Library of Congress

The Library of Congress is the de facto national library of the United States and the research arm of the United States Congress. Located in three buildings in Washington, D.C., it is the largest library in the world by shelf space and holds the largest number of books....
 as being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant". In 1998
1998 in film

The year 1998 in film involved some significant events....
, the American Film Institute
American Film Institute

The American Film Institute is an independent non-profit organization created by the National Endowment for the Arts, which was established in 1967 when President Lyndon B....
 ranked it #4 on its "100 Greatest Movies
AFI's 100 Years... 100 Movies

The first of the AFI 100 Years... series of cinematic milestones, AFI's 100 Years... 100 Movies is a list of the 100 best American movies, as determined by the American Film Institute from a poll of more than 1,500 artists and leaders in the film industry who chose from a list of 400 nominated movies....
" list.

Rhett Butler's infamous farewell line to Scarlett O'Hara, "Frankly, my dear, I don't give a damn
Frankly, my dear, I don't give a damn

"Frankly, my dear, I don't give a damn." is a line from the 1939 film Gone with the Wind starring Clark Gable and Vivien Leigh.It was spoken by Gable, as Rhett Butler, in his last words to Scarlett O'Hara....
", was voted in a poll by the American Film Institute
American Film Institute

The American Film Institute is an independent non-profit organization created by the National Endowment for the Arts, which was established in 1967 when President Lyndon B....
 in 2005 as the most memorable line in cinema history.

In 2005, the AFI ranked Max Steiner
Max Steiner

Max Steiner was an Academy Award-winning Austrian-United States composer of music for theatre productions and films. He probably is known best for the Film score he composed for the classic Gone with the Wind and for the score and hugely popular theme song for the film A Summer Place ....
's score for the film the second greatest of all time. The AFI also ranked the film #2 in their list of the greatest romances of all time (100 Years... 100 Passions).

After filming concluded, the set of Tara sat on the back lot of the former Selznick Studios as the Forty Acres back lot reverted to RKO Pictures
RKO Pictures

RKO Pictures is an United States film production and distribution company. As Radio Pictures Inc. and then RKO Radio Pictures Inc., it was one of the so-called studio system major film studio of Hollywood Cinema of the United States#Golden Age of Hollywood....
 and then was sold to Desilu Productions
Desilu Productions

'Desilu Productions' was a Los Angeles, California-based company jointly owned by couple and TV actors Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz.Desilu Studios was home to I Love Lucy, and additionally, such hit television series as Star Trek: The Original Series, The Andy Griffith Show, Mission: Impossible, The Untouchables , Mannix'...
. In 1959, Southern Attractions, Inc. purchased the façade of Tara, which was dismantled and shipped to Georgia with plans to relocate it to the Atlanta area as a tourist attraction. David O. Selznick commented at the time,
Nothing in Hollywood is permanent. Once photographed, life here is ended. It is almost symbolic of Hollywood. Tara had no rooms inside. It was just a façade. So much of Hollywood is a façade.


However, the Margaret Mitchell estate refused to license the novel's commercial use in connection with the façade, citing Mitchell's dismay at how little it resembled her description. In 1979 the dismantled plywood and papier-mâché
Papier-mâché

Papier-m?ch? , sometimes called paper-m?ch?, is a construction material that consists of pieces of paper, sometimes reinforced with textiles, stuck together using a wet paste ....
 set, reportedly in "terrible" condition, was purchased for $5,000 by Betty Talmadge, the ex-wife of former Georgia governor and U.S. senator Herman Talmadge
Herman Talmadge

Herman Eugene Talmadge was an Politics of the United States from the U.S. state of Georgia . He served as governor of Georgia briefly in 1947 and again from 1948 to 1955....
. She lent the front door of Tara's set to the Margaret Mitchell House and Museum in downtown Atlanta, Georgia where it is on permanent display, featured in the Gone with the Wind film museum. Other items from the movie, such as from the set of Scarlett and Rhett's Atlanta mansion, are still stored at The Culver Studios (formerly Selznick International) including the stained glass window from the top of the staircase which was actually a painting. The famous painting of Scarlett in her blue dress, which hung in Rhett's bedroom, hung for years at the Margaret Mitchell Elementary School in Atlanta, but is now on permanent loan to the Margaret Mitchell Museum, complete with stains from the glass of sherry that Rhett Butler threw at it in anger.

Music

  • Overture - MGM Studio Orchestra
  • Main Title - "Tara's Theme"
  • "(I Wish I Was in) Dixie's Land" (1860) (uncredited)
Written by Daniel Decatur Emmett
  • "Katie Belle" (uncredited)
Written by Stephen Foster
Stephen Foster

Stephen Collins Foster , known as the "father of American music," was the pre-eminent songwriter in the United States of the 19th century. His songs, such as "Oh! Susanna", "Camptown Races", "Old Folks at Home" , "My Old Kentucky Home", "Old Black Joe", and "Beautiful Dreamer" remain popular over 150 years after their composition....
  • "Under the Willow She's Sleeping" (1860 (uncredited)
Written by Stephen Foster
  • "Lou'siana Belle" (1847) (uncredited)
Written by Stephen Foster
  • "Dolly Day" (1850) (uncredited)
Written by Stephen Foster
  • "Ring de Banjo" (1851) (uncredited)
Written by Stephen Foster
  • "Sweet and Low" (1865) (uncredited)
Music by Joseph Barnby
Joseph Barnby

Sir Joseph Barnby , England musical composer and Conductor , son of Thomas Barnby, an organist, was born at York on the 12 August 1838. He was a choir at York Minster from the age of seven, was educated at the Royal Academy of Music under Cipriani Potter and Charles Lucas, and was appointed in 1862 organist of St....
  • "Ye Cavaliers of Dixie" (uncredited)
Composer unknown
  • "Taps
    Taps

    Taps is a famous musical piece, sounded by the United States armed forces during flag ceremony and military funerals, generally on Bugle or trumpet....
    " (1862) (uncredited)
Written by General Daniel Butterfield
Daniel Butterfield

Daniel Adams Butterfield was a New York businessman, a Union army General officer in the American Civil War, and Assistant U.S. Treasurer in New York....
  • "Massa's in de Cold Ground" (1852) (uncredited)
Written by Stephen Foster
  • "Maryland, My Maryland
    Maryland, My Maryland

    "Maryland, My Maryland" is the official state song of Maryland. The song is set to the tune of "Lauriger Horatius" and the lyrics are from a nine-stanza poem written by James Ryder Randall....
    " (1861) (uncredited)
Based on traditional German Christmas carol "O Tannenbaum
O Tannenbaum

"O Tannenbaum", or, in its English language version, "O Christmas Tree", is a Christmas carol of Germany origin.A Tannenbaum is a fir tree or Christmas tree ....
"
  • "Irish Washerwoman" (uncredited)
Traditional Irish Jig
  • "Garryowen
    Garryowen

    Garryowen, also known as Garyowen, Garry Owen and Gary Owens, is an Ireland tune for a quickstep dance....
    " (uncredited)
Traditional
  • "When Johnny Comes Marching Home" (1863) (uncredited)
Written by Louis Lambert
Louis Lambert

Louis Joseph Lambert, Jr. , is a Louisiana Lawyer, businessman, former member and chairman of the Louisiana Public Service Commission, and a former Louisiana State Legislature....
 (Patrick Sarsfield Gilmore)
  • "Weeping, Sad and Lonely (When This Cruel War Is Over)" (1862)
Music by Henry Tucker
Henry Tucker

Henry Tucker is the name of*Sir Henry Tucker , first Premier of Bermuda*Henry St. George Tucker, Sr. , U.S. Representative from Virginia *Henry St....
 (uncredited)
  • "The Bonnie Blue Flag
    The Bonnie Blue Flag

    "The Bonnie Blue Flag", also known as "We Are a Band of Brothers", is an 1861 marching song associated with the Confederate States of America....
    " (1861) (uncredited)
Written and arranged by Harry McCarthy
Harry McCarthy

Harry McCarthy was born in 1834 in Brussels, Belgium, where he became a variety entertainer and comedian in the mid 19th century. In 1861 he wrote the song "The Bonnie Blue Flag," about the unofficial first Flags of the Confederate States of America, using the tune from "The Irish Jaunting Car." The song was extremely popular, rivaling "Dixi...
  • "Hark! the Herald Angels Sing
    Hark! The Herald Angels Sing

    "Hark! The Herald Angels Sing" is a Christmas hymn or Christmas carol written by Charles Wesley, the brother of John Wesley. It first appeared in Hymns and Sacred Poems in 1739....
    " (pub. 1856) (uncredited)
Music by Felix Mendelssohn-Bartholdy (1840)
  • "Tramp! Tramp! Tramp! (The Boys Are Marching)" (1864) (uncredited)
Music and Lyrics by George Frederick Root
George Frederick Root

George Frederick Root was an American songwriter, who found particular fame during the American Civil War.He was born at Sheffield, Massachusetts, and was named after the German-born British composer George Frideric Handel....
  • "The Old Folks at Home (Swanee River)" (1851) (uncredited)
Written by Stephen Foster
  • "Go Down Moses (Let My People Go)" (uncredited)
Traditional Negro spiritual
  • "My Old Kentucky Home
    My Old Kentucky Home

    "My Old Kentucky Home" is the List of U.S. state songs of Kentucky. It was published by Stephen Foster in 1853 and was adopted by the Kentucky General Assembly as the official state song on March 19, 1928....
    " (1853) (uncredited)
Music and Lyrics by Stephen Foster
Sung a cappella by Butterfly McQueen
Butterfly McQueen

Butterfly McQueen was an American actress.Originally a dancer, McQueen entered films in 1939 with roles in The Women and Gone with the Wind in which she played Prissy, Scarlett O'Hara's maid....
  • "Marching Through Georgia" (1865) (uncredited)
Written by Henry Clay Work
Henry Clay Work

Henry Clay Work was an United States composer and songwriter. Very little is known about him. He was born in Middletown, Connecticut, Connecticut, the son of a prominent opponent of slavery, and he too was also an active abolitionist and Union supporter....
  • "Battle Hymn of the Republic" (circa 1856) (uncredited)
Music by William Steffe
William Steffe

William Steffe collected and edited a camp-meeting song with the traditional "Glory Hallelujah" refrain, in about 1856. It opened with "Say, brothers, will you meet us / on Canaan's happy shore?" The tune became widely known....
  • "Beautiful Dreamer
    Beautiful Dreamer

    "Beautiful Dreamer" is a popular United States song, the last known song written by Stephen Foster. It was published posthumously in 1864, the year Foster died....
    " (1862) (uncredited)
Music by Stephen Foster
Played during the intermission
  • "Jeanie with the Light Brown Hair
    Jeanie with the Light Brown Hair

    "Jeanie with the Light Brown Hair" is an 1854 song by the United States songwriter Stephen Foster. It was written for his wife, Jane McDowall, who would end up leaving him as his life declined in later years....
    " (1854) (uncredited)
Music by Stephen Foster
Played during the intermission
  • "Yankee Doodle
    Yankee Doodle

    "Yankee Doodle" is a well-known Music of the United Kingdom the origin of which dates back to the Seven Years War. It has been widely adopted in the United States and is often sung patriotically today....
    " (ca. 1755) (uncredited)
Traditional music of English origin
  • "Stars of the Summer Night" (1856) (uncredited)
Music by Isaac Baker Woodbury
  • "Bridal Chorus
    Bridal Chorus

    The "Bridal Chorus" from the opera Lohengrin , by Germany composer Richard Wagner, is the standard march played for the bride's entrance at some formal weddings throughout the Western world....
     (Here Comes the Bride)" (1850) (uncredited)
from "Lohengrin" Written by Richard Wagner
Richard Wagner

Wilhelm Richard Wagner was a German composer, Conducting, theatre director and essayist, primarily known for his operas . Unlike most other great opera composers, Wagner wrote both the scenario and libretto for his works....
  • "Deep River" (uncredited)
Traditional
  • "For He's a Jolly Good Fellow
    For He's a Jolly Good Fellow

    "For He/She's A Jolly Good Fellow" is a song which is sung to congratulate a person on a significant event, such as a retirement, a birthday, the birth of a child, or the winning of a championship sporting event....
    " (uncredited)
Traditional
  • "London Bridge Is Falling Down
    London Bridge is Falling Down

    "London Bridge Is Falling Down" is a well-known traditional nursery rhyme which is found in different versions all over the world.The main verse is:...
    " (uncredited)
Traditional children's song
  • "Ben Bolt (Oh Don't You Remember)" (1848) (uncredited)
Music by Nelson Kneass
Poem by Thomas Dunn English
Thomas Dunn English

Thomas Dunn English was an United States Democratic Party politician from New Jersey who represented the state's New Jersey's 6th congressional district in the United States House of Representatives from 1891 to 1895....
 (1842)
Sung a cappella by Vivien Leigh
Vivien Leigh

Vivien Leigh, Lady Olivier , was an English actress. She won two Academy Awards for playing "southern belles": Scarlett O'Hara in Gone with the Wind and Blanche DuBois in the film version of A Streetcar Named Desire , a role she had also played on stage in London's West End Theatre....


Awards and honors


Academy Awards

Gone with the Wind was the first film to get more than six Academy Awards nominations. Of the 17 competitive awards which given at the time, Gone with the Wind had 13 nominations.

It was the Winner of 10 Academy Awards. (8 regular, 1 honorary, 1 technical)
Award Won Nomination Winner
Outstanding Production
Academy Award for Best Picture

The Academy Award for Best Motion Picture is one of the Academy Award presented annually by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences to artists working in the film industry....
Selznick International Pictures
Selznick International Pictures

Selznick International Pictures was a Hollywood motion picture studio....
 (David O. Selznick
David O. Selznick

David O. Selznick, born David Selznick , was one of the iconic Hollywood film producer of the Golden Age. He is best known for producing the epic blockbuster Gone with the Wind which earned him an Academy Awards for Best Picture....
, Producer)
Best Director Victor Fleming
Victor Fleming

Victor Fleming was an Academy Award-winning United States film director....
Best Actor
Academy Award for Best Actor

Performance by an Actor in a Leading Role is one of the Academy Award presented annually by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences to recognize an actor who has delivered an outstanding performance while working within the film industry....
Clark Gable
Clark Gable

Clark Gable was an Cinema of the United States, nicknamed "The King of Hollywood" in his heyday. In , the American Film Institute named Gable seventh among the AFI's 100 Years......
 
Winner was Robert Donat
Robert Donat

Friedrich Robert Donat , was an England Academy Award-winning film and stage actor.Donat was born in Withington, Manchester, England, to Ernst Emil Donat and his wife Rose Alice nee Green who married at Withington St Paul in 1895....
 - Goodbye, Mr. Chips
Goodbye, Mr. Chips (1939 film)

Goodbye, Mr. Chips is a Cinema of the United Kingdom based on Goodbye, Mr. Chips by James Hilton. It was directed by Sam Wood, and starred Robert Donat, Greer Garson, Terry Kilburn, John Mills and Paul Henreid....
Best Actress
Academy Award for Best Actress

Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role is one of the Academy Award presented annually by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences to recognize an actor who has delivered an outstanding performance while working within the film industry....
Vivien Leigh
Vivien Leigh

Vivien Leigh, Lady Olivier , was an English actress. She won two Academy Awards for playing "southern belles": Scarlett O'Hara in Gone with the Wind and Blanche DuBois in the film version of A Streetcar Named Desire , a role she had also played on stage in London's West End Theatre....
Best Writing, Screenplay
Academy Award for Writing Adapted Screenplay

The Academy Award for Writing Adapted Screenplay is one of the Academy Awards, the most prominent film awards in the United States. It is awarded each year to the screenwriter of a Adapted_screenplay from another source ....
Sidney Howard
Sidney Howard

Sidney Coe Howard was an American playwright and screenwriter. He received the Pulitzer Prize for Drama in 1925 and a posthumous Academy Awards in 1940 for the screenplay for Gone with the Wind ....
 
Awarded posthumously
List of posthumous Academy Award winners and nominees

This is a list of posthumous Academy Award winners and nominees. The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences annually presents Academy Awards in both competitive and honorary categories....
Best Supporting Actress
Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress

Performance by an Actress in a Supporting Role is one of the Academy Award presented annually by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences to recognize an actor who has delivered an outstanding performance while working within the film industry....
Hattie McDaniel
Hattie McDaniel

Hattie McDaniel was an United States actress and the first black performer to win an Academy Awards. She won the award for Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress for her role of Mammy in Gone with the Wind ....
 
Received a miniature "Oscar" statuette on a plaque
Best Supporting Actress
Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress

Performance by an Actress in a Supporting Role is one of the Academy Award presented annually by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences to recognize an actor who has delivered an outstanding performance while working within the film industry....
Olivia de Havilland
Olivia de Havilland

Olivia Mary de Havilland is a two-time Academy Awards-winning actor. She is the older sister of actress Joan Fontaine, also an Academy Award winner....
 
Winner was Hattie McDaniel
Hattie McDaniel

Hattie McDaniel was an United States actress and the first black performer to win an Academy Awards. She won the award for Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress for her role of Mammy in Gone with the Wind ....
 - Gone with the Wind
Best Cinematography, Color
Academy Award for Best Cinematography

The Academy Award for Best Cinematography is an Academy Award awarded each year to a cinematographer for work in one particular motion picture....
Ernest Haller
Ernest Haller

Ernest Haller, A.S.C. also credited as Ernie B. Haller, , was an USA cinematographer.Born in Los Angeles, California, Haller joined Biograph Studios as an actor in 1914, then began to freelance as a cinematographer....
 and Ray Rennahan
Ray Rennahan

Ray Rennahan, A.S.C. was a movie cinematographer.For his work in movies, he became one of the only six cinematographers to have a "Star" on the Hollywood Walk of Fame....
 
This received the "Oscar" statuette
Best Film Editing
Academy Award for Film Editing

The Academy Award for Film Editing was first given for films issued in 1934. The name of this award is occasionally changed; in 2008, it was listed as the Academy Award for Achievement in Film Editing....
Hal C. Kern and James E. Newcom
Received a miniature "Oscar" statuette on a plaque, replaced with a regular statuette in 1962
Best Interior Decoration
Academy Award for Best Art Direction

The Academy Awards are the oldest awards ceremony for achievements in film. The Academy Award for Best Art Direction recognizes achievement in art director#Film on a film....
Lyle Wheeler
Lyle R. Wheeler

Lyle Reynolds Wheeler, , was an Academy Award-winning United States motion picture art director.Wheeler studied at the University of Southern California, then worked as a magazine artist and industrial designer....
Best Special Effects
Academy Award for Visual Effects

The Academy Award for Visual Effects is an Academy Awards given to one film each year that shows highest achievement in visual effects.The category was called Best Special Effects when it was created in 1939....
Fred Albin (Sound), Jack Cosgrove (Photographic), and Arthur Johns (Sound)
Winners were Fred Sersen
Fred Sersen

Fred Sersen was a Czechoslovak/American painter and cinema Special effect artist working mainly at 20th Century Fox Studios from the 1930's to the 1950's with credits in over 200 movies....
 (Photographic) and E. H. Hansen (Sound) - The Rains Came
The Rains Came

The Rains Came is the title of novel by Louis Bromfield, published in 1937 in literature, as well as the 1939 in film 20th Century Fox film version which followed it....
Best Music, Original Score
Academy Award for Original Music Score

The Academy Award for Original Music Score is presented to the best substantial body of music in the form of Film score written specifically for the film by the submitting composer....
Max Steiner
Max Steiner

Max Steiner was an Academy Award-winning Austrian-United States composer of music for theatre productions and films. He probably is known best for the Film score he composed for the classic Gone with the Wind and for the score and hugely popular theme song for the film A Summer Place ....
 
Winner was Herbert Stothart
Herbert Stothart

Herbert Stothart was a song writer, arranger, and composer. He was also nominated for nine Oscars, winning for his background music for The Wizard of Oz ....
 - The Wizard of Oz
The Wizard of Oz (1939 film)

The Wizard of Oz is a 1939 in film Cinema of the United States musical film-fantasy film mainly directed by Victor Fleming and based on the 1900 Children's literature novel The Wonderful Wizard of Oz by L....
Best Sound Recording
Academy Award for Sound

The Academy Award for Sound Mixing is an Academy Awards that recognizes the finest or most euphonic Audio mixing or recording, and is generally awarded to the production sound mixers and re-recording mixers of the winning film....
Thomas T. Moulton (Samuel Goldwyn Studio Sound Department)
Winner was Bernard B. Brown (Universal Studio Sound Department) - When Tomorrow Comes


Award Recipient
Irving G. Thalberg Award David O. Selznick
David O. Selznick

David O. Selznick, born David Selznick , was one of the iconic Hollywood film producer of the Golden Age. He is best known for producing the epic blockbuster Gone with the Wind which earned him an Academy Awards for Best Picture....
 
For his career achievements as a producer.
Honorary Award
Academy Honorary Award

The Academy Honorary Award, instituted in 1948 in film for the 21st Academy Awards , is given by the discretion of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences#Current administration of the Academy of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences to celebrate motion picture achievements that are not covered by existing Academy Awards....
William Cameron Menzies
William Cameron Menzies

William Cameron Menzies was an Academy Award-winning United States film production designer and art director who also worked as a Film director, Film producer, and screenwriter during a career spanning five decades....
 (Miniature "Oscar" statuette on a plaque)
For outstanding achievement in the use of color for the enhancement of dramatic mood in the production of Gone with the Wind.
Technical Achievement Award
Academy Award for Technical Achievement

The Technical Achievement Award is a kind of Academy Scientific and Technical Award given by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences to those whose particular technical accomplishments have contributed to the progress of the film industry and who are given a certificate, which describes their achievements and lists the names of everyo...
Don Musgrave and Selznick International Pictures
Selznick International Pictures

Selznick International Pictures was a Hollywood motion picture studio....
 (Certificate)
For pioneering in the use of coordinated equipment in the production Gone with the Wind.


American Film Institute
American Film Institute

The American Film Institute is an independent non-profit organization created by the National Endowment for the Arts, which was established in 1967 when President Lyndon B....
 recognition
  • 1998 AFI's 100 Years... 100 Movies
    AFI's 100 Years... 100 Movies

    The first of the AFI 100 Years... series of cinematic milestones, AFI's 100 Years... 100 Movies is a list of the 100 best American movies, as determined by the American Film Institute from a poll of more than 1,500 artists and leaders in the film industry who chose from a list of 400 nominated movies....
     #4
  • 2002 AFI's 100 Years... 100 Passions
    AFI's 100 Years... 100 Passions

    Part of the AFI 100 Years... series, AFI's 100 Years... 100 Passions is a list of the top 100 Romantic film in American cinema. The list was unveiled by the American Film Institute on June 11, 2002 in a CBS television special hosted by American film/TV actress Candice Bergen....
     #2
  • 2005 AFI's 100 Years... 100 Movie Quotes
    AFI's 100 Years... 100 Movie Quotes

    Part of the AFI 100 Years... series, AFI's 100 Years... 100 Movie Quotes is a list of the top 100 movie quotations in American cinema. The American Film Institute revealed the list in June of 2005 in a three-hour television program on CBS....
    :
    • "Frankly, my dear, I don't give a damn
      Frankly, my dear, I don't give a damn

      "Frankly, my dear, I don't give a damn." is a line from the 1939 film Gone with the Wind starring Clark Gable and Vivien Leigh.It was spoken by Gable, as Rhett Butler, in his last words to Scarlett O'Hara....
      " #1
    • "After all, tomorrow is another day" #31
    • "As God as my witness, I'll never be hungry again!" #59
  • 2005 AFI's 100 Years of Film Scores
    AFI's 100 Years of Film Scores

    Part of the AFI 100 Years... series, AFI's 100 Years of Film Scores is a list of the top 25 film scores in American cinema. The list was unveiled by the American Film Institute in 2005....
     #2
  • 2006 AFI's 100 Years... 100 Cheers
    AFI's 100 Years... 100 Cheers

    100 Years... 100 Cheers: America's Most Inspiring Movies is a list of the most inspiring movies as determined by the American Film Institute....
     #43
  • 2007 AFI's 100 Years... 100 Movies (10th Anniversary Edition)
    AFI's 100 Years... 100 Movies (10th Anniversary Edition)

    AFI?s 100 Years...100 Movies ? 10th Anniversary Edition was the 2007 updated version of AFI's 100 Years 100 Movies. The original list was first unveiled in 1998....
     #6
  • 2008 AFI's 10 Top 10
    AFI's 10 Top 10

    AFI's 10 Top 10 honors the ten greatest United States films in ten classic film genres. Presented by the American Film Institute , the lists were unveiled on a television special broadcast by CBS on June 17, 2008....
     #4 Epic film
    Epic film

    An epic is a genre of film which places emphasis on human drama on a grand scale. They are more ambitious in scope than other genres which helps to differentiate them from similar genres such as the period piece or adventure film....


Further reading

  • Bridges, Herb (1998). The Filming of Gone with the Wind. Mercer University Press. ISBN 0-86554-621-5.
  • Bridges, Herb (1999). Gone with the Wind: The Three-Day Premiere in Atlanta. Mercer University Press. ISBN 0-86554-672-X.
  • Cameron, Judy, & Paul J. Christman (1989). The Art of Gone with the Wind: The Making of a Legend. Prentice Hall. ISBN 0-13-046740-5.
  • Harmetz, Aljean (1996). On the Road to Tara: The Making of Gone with the Wind. New York: Harry N. Abrams. ISBN 0-8109-3684-4.
  • Myrick, Susan (1982). White Columns in Hollywood: Reports from the GWTW Sets. Mercer University Press. ISBN 0-865542457.
  • Pratt, William. (1977). Scarlett Fever: The Ultimate Pictorial Treasury of Gone with the Wind. Macmillan. ISBN 0-020125100.
  • Vertrees, Alan David (1997). Selznick's Vision: Gone with the Wind and Hollywood Filmmaking. University of Texas Press. ISBN 0-292787294.


External links