Gone With The Wind
This week, Paul Gambaccini remembers how, as war raged in Europe, Gone With the Wind collected 9 statues for one of the movies鈥 eternal classics
It鈥檚 amongst Tinseltown鈥檚 curious ironies that in February 1940, as war raged across Europe, a turbulent love story, played out against America鈥檚 national tragedy of the Civil War, carried all before at the 12th Academy Awards ceremony, winning nine statuettes for Gone With the Wind.
This week, Paul Gambaccini tells the story of 鈥楪WTW鈥, one of cinema鈥檚 most famous creations and in which British acting talent was surprisingly prominent. For this quintessentially American story of the Old South, English heartthrob Leslie Howard turned in a rather stiff performance as Ashley Wilkes, husband to Olivia de Havilland鈥檚 somewhat milk-and-water Melanie Hamilton. But it was, of course, the dashing Vivien Leigh, as the coquettish, headstrong Scarlett O鈥橦ara, who took the Best Actress Oscar 鈥 a part she landed after almost all Hollywood鈥檚 leading actresses had screentested for the coveted part. 鈥淪shh, she鈥檚 the Scarlett dark horse鈥 David O Selznick, GWTW鈥檚 producer wrote to his wife.
With film historians David Thomson and Toby Miller, Clark Gable鈥檚 biographer Chrystopher Spicer and critic Larushka Ivan-Zadeh, as well as archival contributions from Olivia de Havilland, co-star Evelyn Keyes and the film鈥檚 Academy Award winner for Best Editing, Hal Kern.
Producer: Simon Elmes