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In the Galleries: A discarded happy ending for “Gone With The Wind”

October 23, 2014 By Gabrielle Inhofe

In the Galleries: A discarded happy ending for “Gone With The Wind”

Gone With The Wind’s scriptwriter Sidney Howard had the difficult task of converting the 1,000-page novel into a film script that was not too long, without sacrificing key elements of the novel. One of producer David O. Selznick’s concerns was that all problems be caught before filming started, because cutting scenes out would be more expensive than having an appropriately long script written in the first place. To help Howard, Selznick and his story editor Val Lewton employed the skills of other scriptwriters and authors.

 

In October 1938, Selznick sent the script to two top MGM scriptwriters, Lawrence Stallings and Bradbury Foote, for help editing. The men, under confidentiality, had eight days to make their suggestions.

 

Foote’s editing gave the film a happy ending, destroying one of the novel’s most emotionally powerful scenes. In Foote’s rewrite, Rhett does indeed leave, but Mammy thrashes the famous “Tomorrow is another day!” speech, telling Scarlett, “Never you mind tomorrow, honey. This here is today! There goes your man!” The scene dissolves to a shot of a railroad station. Scarlett corners Rhett in the car of a train, entreating, “Oh, Rhett! Life is just beginning for us! Can’t you see it is? We’ve both been blind, stupid fools! But we’re still young! We can make up for those wasted years! Oh, Rhett—let me make them up to you! Please! Please!” He kisses her hands, and the scene fades out. Selznick considered this rewrite “awful.”

 

Selznick employed a host of other writers to help find creative ways of combining scenes from the novel, and almost all of the writers who worked on the script did so after filming had commenced. Writers F. Scott Fitzgerald, Ben Hecht, John Van Druten, John Balderston, Ronald Brown, and Edwin Justus Mayer briefly worked on the script. In a memo from Fitzgerald to Selznick, Fitzgerald proposes that Scarlett’s miscarriage be cut. The death of Bonnie, Scarlett’s miscarriage, and Melanie’s death in childbirth, all in rapid succession, would be too much for the audience to endure. Fitzgerald mentions that the miscarriage seems less sorrowful in the book because Scarlett already had three children. He writes, “There is something about three gloomy things that is infinitely worse than two, and I do not believe that people are grateful for being harrowed in this way.”

 

Pages from various drafts of the screenplay are on view through January 4 in the Ransom Center’s current exhibition The Making of Gone With The Wind. A fully illustrated exhibition catalog of the same title is available.  Co-published by the Harry Ransom Center and University of Texas Press, the catalog includes a foreword written by Turner Classic Movies (TCM) host and film historian Robert Osborne.

 

Related content:

View other Gone With The Wind blog content

 

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Please click on thumbnails to view larger images.

Bradbury Foote's happy ending to "Gone With The Wind."
Bradbury Foote’s happy ending to “Gone With The Wind.”
Bradbury Foote's happy ending to "Gone With The Wind."
Bradbury Foote’s happy ending to “Gone With The Wind.”

Filed Under: Books + Manuscripts, Exhibitions + Events, Film, Gone With The Wind Tagged With: alternate ending, Ben Hecht, Bradbury Foote, David O. Selznick, Edwin Justus Mayer, exhibition, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Film, Gone with the Wind, In the Galleries, John Balderston, John Van Druten, Lawrence Stallings, Ronald Brown, screenwriting, script, Sidney Howard, The Making of Gone With The Wind

About Gabrielle Inhofe

Inhofe was an undergraduate intern who majored in Plan II and International Relations and Global Studies.

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Deborah Sluss says

    December 2, 2014 at 5:54 pm

    A happy ending would have been ideal, but life is not ideal. The ending it has leaves our mind to make our own ending.

  2. Mike Rosoft says

    January 1, 2015 at 8:46 pm

    It’s possible to argue the other way round. I already know that in the real world not everything ends well. That’s why I read (or watch) fiction.

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