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A first edition of “Gone With the Wind” from 1936 is signed by author Margaret Mitchell to Atlanta native and history teacher Meta Barker, who lived until 1978. It’s valued at $1,500 to ...
The Jerusalem Cinematheque will celebrate its 50th anniversary with an exhibition of restored sketches and designs from 'Gone with the Wind', opening April 1 with a film screening.
A first edition of “Gone with the Wind” from 1936 is signed by author Margaret Mitchell to Atlanta native and history teacher Meta Barker, who lived until 1978. It’s valued at $1,500 to $2,500.
A first edition of “Gone with the Wind” from 1936 is signed by author Margaret Mitchell to Atlanta native and history teacher Meta Barker, who lived until 1978. It’s valued at $1,500 to $2,500.
In a scene that didn’t make the final cut of 1939’s Gone With the Wind, Rhett Butler sits alone in his bedroom, drinking and fondling a gun. A knock at his door interrupts him from his dark ...
"Gone with the Wind," an award-winning book that was adapted into a legendary Hollywood film, was published on this day in history, June 30, 1936.
“Gone With the Wind” was adapted from the 1936 epic novel, set in pre- and post-war Georgia and centering on belle Scarlett O’Hara, that sold nearly 30 million copies.
Gone With The Wind was released more than 80 years ago but remains popular enough to draw thousands of visitors to the museum. To stream WFAA on your phone, you need the WFAA app.
Gone with the Wind though restrictive in its focus is not a racist book, championing racial superiority. Thomas Dixon Jr’s The Clansman: A Romance of the Ku Klux Klan (1905) most certainly is.
The exhibit describes “Gone With the Wind” as a version of the reality for someone born in 1900 in Atlanta and raised by people who had lived through the Civil War on the Confederate side.