Monday, January 31, 2011

Margaret Mitchell: Media Maven

It’s official – I finished reading Gone With the Wind – the best epic novel ever written about Atlanta and by a Southern woman.
Together, Kindle and I read 19,296 locations of Margaret Mitchell’s masterpiece (or almost 1,000 pages).
Gone With the Wind is a vibrant, complex fairytale written by a woman raised on stories about the Civil War from the folks who survived the calamity.
The best storyline I read wasn’t until after Scarlett spoke her famous last words: “After all, tomorrow is another day.”
My favorite story about Gone With the Wind is Mitchell’s very own life story.
“Born in Atlanta on November 8, 1900, Margaret Mitchell spent her childhood listening to the war stories of Confederate veterans. They told her everything about the Civil War except that the South had lost. She found that out when she was 10 years old.
Before leaving for Smith College in 1918, Mitchell fell in love With Lieutenant Clifford Henry, a Harvard undergraduate training for active duty in World War I at Camp Gordon in Atlanta. In 1919, shortly after she learned Henry had been killed in action in France, her mother became ill and Margaret rushed home. She did not make it back in time to see her mother, and she stayed on to take care of her father and brother.
Mitchell had many suitors, but Red Upshaw and John Marsh came to the fore as serious potential husbands. She got a job as the first woman to cover hard news for The Atlanta Journal, and married Upshaw. The marriage was short – Upshaw was a bootlegger and alcoholic. John Marsh, her other serious suitor, returned. They married and remained so until her death.
Mitchell was forced to quit her job at The Atlanta Journal because of problems With her ankles and feet. Bedridden, she read voraciously and began work on what her friends called ‘the great American novel.’
She showed the finished manuscript, all 1,037 pages of it, to a visiting New York publisher, and on June 10, 1936, Gone With the Wind was published.
By October of that year, Gone With the Wind had sold one million copies, and David O. Selznick bought the rights for $50,000. At the time, it was the highest price ever paid by Hollywood for the rights to a first novel.          
Margaret Mitchell won the Pulitzer Prize in 1937. In 1939, Atlanta hosted the premier of one of the most popular movies of all time, Gone With the Wind, starring Clark Gable and Vivien Leigh.
On August 11, 1949, while crossing Peachtree and 13th streets close to her home, Margaret Mitchell was struck by an off-duty cab driver, and died five days later. She was buried in Atlanta’s Oakland Cemetery with the rest of her family.
Many years earlier, in an interview with her publisher, she was asked what  Gone With the Wind was about. She said ‘If the novel has a theme it is that of survival. What makes some people come through catastrophes and others, apparently, just as able, strong and brave go under?
“It happens in every upheaval. Some people survive – others don’t. What qualities are in those who fight their way thought triumphantly that are lacking in those that go under. I only know that survivors used to call that quality ‘gumption.’
“So I wrote about people who had gumption and people who didn’t.” (1936)
Gumption a.k.a. spirited initiative and resourcefulness. Much like her heroine, Scarlett O’Hara, Margaret Mitchell had gumption in spades.
 Margaret Mitchell is my new hero. Right up there with Kay Graham of The Washington Post(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Katharine_Graham).

A journalist, novelist, Pulitzer Prize winner and married to the love of her life. What more could a girl ask for?

1 comment:

  1. I've really enjoyed your GWTW posts! I first read the novel when I was 10 after visiting Oakland Cemetery on a 5th grade field trip and seeing Margaret Mitchell's grave. I was obsessed with GWTW (the novel and the movie) until about 10th or 11th grade. It's such a fantastic story, made even better by how awesome Mitchell was.

    ReplyDelete