Gone with the wind

1939 USA Color 222 / 238 Minutes


Photo of Vivien Leigh in her white/green dressPhoto of Scarlett in her green dress

Photo of Scarlett (Vivien Leigh) in her dress made of a curtainPhoto of Vivien Leigh in ger white dress

Photo of George Reeves + Vivien Leigh + Fred CranePhoto of Lesley Howard + Vivien LeighPhoto of Rand Brooks + Vivien Leigh

Photo of Vivien Leigh + Clark Gable

Photo of Clark Gable + Vivien LeighOlivia de Havilland + Vivien Leigh

Photo of Vivien Leigh in her red dressPhoto of Vivien Leigh + Butterfly McQueen + Harry Davenport

Photo of Vivien Leigh + Clark GablePhoto of Vivien LeighPhoto of Vivien Leigh + Clark Gable

Tara

Photo of Clark Gable + Vivien LeighPhoto of Vivien Leigh + Clark GablePhoto of Vivien Leigh + Clark Gable

Photo of Vivien Leigh + Olivia de Havilland + Ona MunsonPhoto of Olivia de Havilland + Vivien LeighPhoto of Vivien Leigh + Marcella Martin

Photo of Atlanta Burning in Gone with the wind

Photo of Vivien Leigh + Leslie Howard + Olivia de HavillandPhoto of Vivien Leigh + Thomas MitchellPhoto of Evelyn Keyes + Vivien Leigh

 

 

 

 

 


Photo of Clark Gable + Vivien Leigh in her white/green dress


Bio

Clark Gable

Clark Gable

Remarkable:

Clark has a star on Hollywood Boulevard (Vine street).
It’s located one block south of Hollywood Boulevard.

Born:

February 1, 1901

Born as:

William Clark Gable

Died:

November 16, 1960

Clark was born in Cadiz, Ohio. When he was 16 he dropped out of school and worked at many odd jobs before joining a traveling theater company. While he was in Hollywood he got extra work in White man (1924).

Gable's first big break came when he was cast in the lead of the Broadway play Machinal (1928). His Hollywood breakthrough came when he appeared as a gangster in the Joan Crawford vehicle Dance , Fools , Dance (1931). Gable's popularity continued to rise throughout the 30s with movies like Red dust (1932), It happened one night (1934) and Mutiny on the Bounty (1935). By the end of the decade he was known as the King.

Wary of period films after flopping in the costume drama Parnell (1937) Gable at first declined the role of Rhett Butler in the Margaret Mitchell best-seller, Gone with the Wind (1939).

When his wife died in 1942, Clark joined the airforce and received several medals for flying bombing missions over Germany. Gable returned to the screen in 1945 but he never regained the box-office standing he'd enjoyed before the war.

He gave a memorable performance in his last motion picture, The Misfits (1961) (also the final film for Marilyn Monroe) but by then he was exhausted on doing his own stunts and he died of a heart attack within a few days of the film's completion.

Academy awards:

1940 Nominated Best Actor for: Gone with the Wind (1939)
1936 Nominated Best Actor for: Mutiny on the Bounty (1935)
1935 Won Best Actor for: It Happened One Night (1934)

Selected Movies:

Books:

Gabe Essoe -> The Films of Clark Gable (1970)
Lyn Tornabene -> Long Live the King (1976)
Jane Ellen Wayne -> Clark Gable: Portrait of a Misfit (1993)