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Typed Letter Signed ["Margaret Mitchell Marsh"] on Gone With the Wind by MITCHELL, MARGARET - 1937

by MITCHELL, MARGARET

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Typed Letter Signed ["Margaret Mitchell Marsh"] on Gone With the Wind by MITCHELL, MARGARET - 1937

Typed Letter Signed ["Margaret Mitchell Marsh"] on Gone With the Wind

by MITCHELL, MARGARET

  • Used
  • very good
  • Signed
  • first
Atlanta: np, 1937. first edition. letter, custom presentation folder. Very Good. MARGARET MITCHELL DENIES KNOWING THE FATE OF RHETT AND SCARLETT AND WRITES EARNESTLY ABOUT THE UPCOMING MOVIE AND NEWFOUND FAME. Penned only a year after the release of Margaret Mitchell's sweeping and quintessentially Southern novel Gone with the Wind to public and critical claim, this letter considers its unresolved and intriguing ending-a subject that was a great matter of speculation by international and national audiences alike. Mitchell herself was unprepared for the colossal success of this novel (it was a record-breaker in sales and a 1937 recipient of the Pulitzer Prize), writing here that "my life, since the publication of my novel a year ago, has been lived in the middle of a tornado."

Mitchell in this letter also address the forthcoming release of a movie based on her book. Despite the fact that Mitchell had distanced herself from the project, David Selznick's 1939 film won ten Academy Award nominations and ten Oscars, including best picture, which all but "guaranteed the novel's immortality" ( American National Biography ). While plans for the film were underway at the time this letter was written, the highly publicized 'search for Scarlett' had not yet begun; production only took off when Clark Gable was released from his MGM contract. Walter Connolly, in fact, did not play Gerald O'Hara, as Mitchell indicates in this note: that part was ultimately filled by Irish-American actor Thomas Mitchell.

Dated July 27, 1937 and addressed to English fan Mrs. Blanche Maidwell, the letter, typed on Mitchell's letterhead, reads in full:

My dear Mrs. Maidwell:

Thank you so much for your letter about "Gone With the Wind." I never thought when I was writing it that Scarlett and Rhett would find friends in England and this knowledge makes me very happy.

No, I do not contemplate writing a sequel to the "Gone With the Wind." To tell the truth, I do not know what happened to this obstinate couple after the end of the book. Answering your questions -- I have never written any other book and I am not working on any book now. Even if I had the urge to write another book, I do not know where I would find the time for my life, since the publication of my novel a year ago, has been lived in the middle of a tornado. Yes, "Gone with the Wind" will be made into a film sometime next year. At present only of the cast has been chosen,- Walter Connolly will play the part of Gerald O'Hara. I have no connection whatever with the film production and do not intend to go to Hollywood or to have anything to do with the matter.

I am enclosing a pamphlet printed by my publishers which I hope will be of interest to you.

With many thanks for your letter,

Cordially,

[signed] Margaret Mitchell Marsh
[typed] Margaret Mitchell Marsh
(Mrs. John R. Marsh)

Atlanta, GA: 27 July 1937. One sheet (approx. 7x11 inches), with printed heading "Margaret Mitchell" in blue. With original typed envelope with original stamp and postage and Mitchell's return address in Atlanta printed on back. Usual folds (with small closed tears at extreme edges of folds); envelope torn at opening and soiled. Signature exceptionally strong. Housed in beautiful custom presentation folder.

A RARE LETTER WITH MITCHELL SPEAKING SO CANDIDLY ABOUT HER MASTERPIECE, GONE WITH THE WIND.
  • Seller The Manhattan Rare Book Company US (US)
  • Format/Binding Letter, custom presentation folder
  • Book Condition Used - Very Good
  • Quantity Available 1
  • Edition first edition
  • Publisher np
  • Place of Publication Atlanta
  • Date Published 1937
  • Keywords Gone with the Wind, Margaret Mitchell, autograph, letter, signed, first edition, film, movie, Rhett Butler, Scarlett O'Hara

We have 6 copies available starting at $2,500.00.

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Typed Letter Signed

by Mitchell, Margaret

  • Used
  • very good
  • Signed
  • first
Condition
Used - Very Good
Edition
First Edition
Quantity Available
1
Seller
New York, New York, United States
Seller rating:
This seller has earned a 5 of 5 Stars rating from Biblio customers.
Item Price
$2,500.00

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1941 Atlanta, George: August 2, 1941. From author Margaret Mitchell to Marion County Circuit Judge Leonard H. McMahan. One page, signed "Margaret Mitchell Marsh." Very good letter, with normal tri-fold, some tiny holes and some light surface wear to top edge of letter, and a tiny bit of dampstaining to recto. Overall, a unique and inspiring letter. In this letter, Margaret Mitchell, author of Gone with the Wind (1936), thanks McMahan for sending her a book on Crater Lake and "The Brimfield Heroine Letter," which is a 66-year-old woman's account of her journey on the Oregon Trail. The latter item sparks an inspiring paragraph from Mitchell, in which she writes: "When we read such records of courage and endurance how can we doubt the future of our country and our people? I do not hold with the prevalent idea that we have become soft or frightened. Endurance and courage are still in our bones. The trouble nowadays is that most people have not been bred up to expect… Read More
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$2,500.00
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TYPED LETTER, SIGNED

by Mitchell, Margaret

  • Used
  • near fine
Condition
Used - Near Fine
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1
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Westport, Connecticut, United States
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Near Fine. 1947. Ephemera. Probably Mitchell's most interesting letter. To the editor of the San Antonio Light, San Antonio, Texas: "Dear Sir: I am Mrs. John R. Marsh (Margaret Mitchell) of Atlanta, Georgia, author of 'Gone With the Wind'. I am writing you about an item published in your newspaper on August 5, 1947, stating that 'Mrs. John R. Marsh (Margaret Mitchell) , nationally known author had just arrived in San Antonio from Mexico City. With this item you published a photograph with the caption 'Margaret Mitchell Back to Hollywood'. I have learned that this woman also autographed copies of my novel 'Gone With the Wind' and in other ways created the impression she was me. This has caused me great embarrassment and I must ask you to publish a correction. I was not in San Antonio on August 5 and I have never been in your city, much to my regret. I have never been in Mexico City, where you said I had been, and I have never been in Dallas or… Read More
Item Price
$5,700.00
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Typed Letter Signed

by MITCHELL, Margaret

  • Used
  • Paperback
  • Signed
Condition
Used
Edition
F
Binding
Paperback
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1
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Palm Springs, California, United States
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("Margaret") in black fountain pen ink, on personal letterhead, Atlanta, May 3, 1939. 4to, 3 separate pages. To Mable and Edwin [Granberry]: " We have been in one of our hurricanes. It all started when Selznick at last announced Miss Vivien Leigh and things are just now quieting down." She then goes on to ponder an invitation to Long Beach, New York. On page two she comments on that year’s Pulitzer Prize-winner: "Of course, you know about Marjorie Rawlings getting the Pulitzer award. There never was much doubt that she would get it if there was any justice anywhere.I do not know whether the award will keep her too busy to make this trip. The members of the Atlanta Women’s Press Club have asked me to give a party for her should she come, as they are all anxious to meet her." Mitchell closes with mention of the book which made her famous: "I was interested in your remarks about finding a GWTW mention in an article written by a Chinese. I did not see the… Read More
Item Price
$7,500.00
Typed Letter, signed (Peggy Mitchell Marsh), to George Cukor, thanking him for a gift of perfume,...

Typed Letter, signed ("Peggy Mitchell Marsh"), to George Cukor, thanking him for a gift of perfume, and discussing the reception of a performance by Tallulah Bankhead

by Mitchell, Margaret

  • Used
Condition
Used - light creasing and toning, esle fine
Quantity Available
1
Seller
New York, New York, United States
Seller rating:
This seller has earned a 5 of 5 Stars rating from Biblio customers.
Item Price
$7,500.00

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Atlanta, Georgia, 1937. One page, on personal letterhead. 4to. light creasing and toning, esle fine. One page, on personal letterhead. 4to. To Cukor on "old mimosa groves" - "bees demented in the blossoms" -- and Tallulah. Mitchell thanks Cukor for the gift of Mary Chess perfumes, and especially the "mimosa": "I had tried someone's brand of mimosa many years ago, but it was heavy enough to be used as an anesthetic for a major operation. This brand is so sweet and faint and the lovliest part about it is that it reminds me of old mimosa groves far in the back country on a still, hot day with the bees demented in the blossoms." She then goes on to discuss Tallulah Bankhead's recent performance in Atlanta, which she unfortunately missed: 'Of course I was eager to go, but the show opened the night after the Pulitzer Award arrived. The Vice President of The Macmillan Company was in town and he gave me a party that night. I hoped to see her the following night, but the house was so filled with friends… Read More
Item Price
$7,500.00
Typed letter signed

Typed letter signed

by MITCHELL Margaret

  • Used
  • Signed
Condition
Used
Quantity Available
1
Seller
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States
Seller rating:
This seller has earned a 5 of 5 Stars rating from Biblio customers.
Item Price
$7,800.00

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Description:
1939. Signed. MITCHELL, Margaret. Typed letter signed. Atlanta, Georgia, February 23, 1939. Three sheets of unlined Margaret Mitchell letterhead, each measuring 7 by 11 inches; pp. 3, with original mailing envelope. $7800.Lengthy original typed letter, dated 1939, from Margaret Mitchell to Franklin M. Garrett, the Vice President of the Atlanta Historical Society, in which Mitchell informs Garrett that she has become aware of Atlanta historical tours claiming to show tourists locations from Gone With the Wind and then asks Garrett to stop ""identifying"" such locations from the novel as she purposely made them entirely fictional, boldly signed by Mitchell.This typed signed letter, dated ""Atlanta, Georgia. February 23, 1939,"" implores the Vice President of the Atlanta Historical Society, Franklin M. Garrett, to cease offering the specific locations of houses in Gone With the Wind, as he evidently gave those alleged locations to the Atlanta Convention Bureau,… Read More
Item Price
$7,800.00
Typed letter signed

Typed letter signed

by MITCHELL Margaret

  • Used
  • Signed
Condition
Used
Quantity Available
1
Seller
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States
Seller rating:
This seller has earned a 5 of 5 Stars rating from Biblio customers.
Item Price
$7,800.00

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Description:
1947. Signed. MITCHELL, Margaret. Typed letter signed. Atlanta, Georgia, July 23, 1947. Two sheets of unlined Margaret Mitchell letterhead, each measuring 7 by 11 inches; pp. 2, with original mailing envelope. $7800.Original typed two-page letter, dated 1947, from Margaret Mitchell to Mrs. George W. Johnson of Mississippi's Johnson Printing Company, advising Mrs. Johnson on the process of selling film rights; explaining the necessity of selling a book prior to selling the rights; and enclosing a list of literary agents published in the Saturday Review of Literature, boldly signed by Mitchell.This typed signed letter, dated ""Atlanta 5, Georgia. July 23, 1947,"" was written from Margaret Mitchell to a Mississippi reader (and aspiring author) offering advice on book publication and selling film rights. Here, Mitchell explains the reasons for why publication traditionally precedes the selling of rights; offers insight into the unusual process between the selling of film rights… Read More
Item Price
$7,800.00