Luxe Beat Magazine DECEMBER 2014 | Page 147

Literature choir, dressed in slave clothes and singing spirituals during the threeday premiere celebrations. In the front row is a 10-year-old boy in a white hat. It is Martin Luther King, Jr. Wow, I thought, wow, so much history and so many personalities woven into the story of this movie and the novel from which it was created. It’s a story that seems to go on and on. In 1991, writer Alexandra Ripley penned Scarlett, a sequel authorized by the Mitchell estate – and earned scathing reviews (plus plenty of money) for her efforts. In 2007, Donald McCaig turned out Rhett Butler’s People (also authorized); while light years better than Scarlett, it isn’t nearly as engaging as Mitchell’s work. This past fall, Turner Classic Movies sponsored 75th anniversary screenings of GWTW in more than 650 theaters nationwide, released a special anniversary Blu-Ray/DVD edition of the movie and offered a special televised presentation hosted by film historian Robert Osborne. But wait, there’s more. Coming soon, this time a prequel to GWTW: Donald McCaig’s version of Mammy’s life, entitled Ruth’s Journey. No doubt there will be even more. At this very moment, Peter Bonner is working to restore the iconic façade of the Tara movie set, which he acquired from the son of the late Betty Talmadge (it’s a long story). He hopes to make the set part of his GWTW tours and believes that if he builds it, the tourists will come. Stay tuned. On the set of Gone with the Wind Clark Gable (left) on the set of Gone with the Wind Vivian Leigh and Clark Gable on the set of Gone with the Wind another $50,000 after the film’s spectacular success. The museum houses Mitchell’s family photographs and correspondence. They illuminate a woman who was the daughter of a suffragette, the first woman to cover hard news for the Atlanta Journal and a tireless volunteer. Mitchell funded black and white emergency clinics at Grady Hospital, sponsored the medical school education of some 50 black Morehouse College graduates and gave money to many other causes. It’s possible that Mitchell herself, along with her Fitzgerald grandmother, was the model for Scarlett. The museum also has a collection of movie memorabilia, newsreels and photos surrounding the movie’s opening at the Loew’s Grand Theatre on Atlanta’s Peachtree Street. I was drawn to a small historic photograph of the Ebenezer Baptist Church 147