Each month on the second Wednesday, I will post a movie clip and link back to previous movie scene articles here on the blog.
This is the criteria by which I’m choosing movie scenes:
• In a non-musical
movie, the dance scene is important to the storyline and not just visual and
auditory filler.
• In a
musical drama, the characters in the dance scene don’t sing to each other.
• In a
musical drama, the dance scene is important to the storyline and not just
visual and auditory filler.
• The
historical cut-off is 1960, because that date works for me. ;-)
Side note: The article “Classic Literature is Not Necessarily Historical Fiction” on the BookRiot website offers an interesting explanation on what constitutes historical fiction and where various historical date lines are drawn. https://bookriot.com/what-makes-a-book-historical-fiction/
Movies to this point:
January – Cat
Ballou
February – The
King and I
March – Easy
Virtue
April – Shakespeare
in Love
May – Chocolat
June – Beauty
and the Beast
July – Dirty
Dancing
August – Cinderella
September – The
Mask of Zorro
Name of Movie: Gone with the Wind
Historical Time Period: American Civil War
Location: Atlanta, Georgia c. 1862
Occasion/Purpose: Confederate bazaar hospital benefit dance
Types of Dances: Polka, Virginia Reel, Waltz
Set-up to the scene:
Long before this hospital benefit bazaar, Scarlett O’Hara
has married and been widowed. She is currently in mourning, as you can see from
her black dress. She is beside herself with boredom at having to play the role
of the widow for a man she didn’t love, and for whom she’s not a bit unhappy
that he died. What she’s distressed about most is not being able to dance and
be happy and flirtatious and be the 16-year-old girl who had no worries or
responsibilities. She is no longer the bell of the ball, and she’s about to
burst at the seams.
Rhett Butler knows this about her. In fact, he knows her better than she knows herself. They are more alike than different, and he’s told her that. She pshaws him.
Rhett and Scarlett’s banter leading up to the dance is
sharp, witty, and hints of things to come.
This scene is Rhett’s way of liberating Scarlett (aka Mrs. Hamilton) from her widows weeds and to get her out from under the thumbs of the gatekeeping biddies who judge her and who also hold the key to her societal freedom from widowhood. Melanie Hamilton Wilkes is held in such high social esteem that because she approved the dance auction, the biddies have no choice but to approve.
We see the love mutually denied love growing between Rhett and Scarlett in this scene. We can tell this from Rhett’s bid for Scarlett to dance with him. He also holds sway in this society, because of his blockade running escapades. He is a scoundrel, but in her own way, so is Scarlett. The difference is, he’s a man in a male-dominated society, and she is a female who is also a young widow. She has virtually no societal sway. Rhett understands that all too well. His bid to dance with her is his way of bestowing social power on her, and Scarlett is no dummy. She takes it.
As he watches her come to him, his satisfied smile is also a smile of admiration with a tinge of love. He asks for one thing in return: for her to say the words he heard her say to Ashley Wilkes—I love you.
While Scarlett appreciates what he’s done to get her out of her widow’s trap, she covers her feelings with sarcasm and snark, and says, “That’s something you will never hear from me, Captain Butler, as long as you live.”
Rhett smiles, completely undaunted, because he knows she will eventually say she loves him.
At 4:14 in the clip, Rhett says one of the best lines ever
written or spoken. “With enough courage, you can do without a reputation.” This
is a moment of foreshadowing, because both of them will throw their reputations
to the wind and find courage deep down inside that they didn’t know existed.
Movie Trivia: According to Olivia de Havilland, who played Melanie Wilkes, Vivien Leigh couldn’t dance, so the distance shots were a body double.
Image Note: The movie poster is a 1939 MGM promotional poster that is in Public Domain in the United States, because it was published in the United States between 1928 and 1977, inclusive, without a copyright notice.
Until next time,
Kaye Spencer
Lasterday Stories
writing through history one romance upon a time
www.kayespencer.com
Oh, such a classic one. I wondered when you'd get to this one. It's so pivotal to the whole romance.
ReplyDeleteI agree. This scene is critically important to the entire movie. It shows in a just a few minutes that Scarlett and Rhett have a relationship waiting on the sidelines for them to find. We also realize that relationship will be challenging.
DeleteSIGH....SIGH....and SIGH again. I loved this scene, both in the book and in the movie. It was wonderful in both cases. And it always makes me laugh when Rhett returns the rings and writes that sweet note to Melanie and the "oh by the way, I returned your ring also" to Scarlett. This scene is so memorable for so many reasons, and I love how you've enumerated them because I love to just dissect them and think about them and all the things that come afterward, and of course the little flirtations that lead up to this momentous occasion as well. I am really loving this series, Kaye. You've done a great job with it.
ReplyDeletePowerful scene, Kaye. Love the romantic tension between Rhett and Scarlett. Interesting note about Vivien Leigh. Thanks so much for this series.
ReplyDeleteGreat scene. I think I may be one of the few people who didn't like this film. But then I don't like chocolate either. LOL Doris
ReplyDelete