Vivien Leigh and Laurence Olivier
1:56
Vivien Leigh.
3:17
14 жыл бұрын
Behind the scenes of GWTW-part 4
1:21
Behind the scenes of GWTW-part 3
3:31
behind the scenes of GWTW-part 2
4:06
behind the scenes of GWTW-part 1
4:13
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@LaurenceDay-d2p
@LaurenceDay-d2p Ай бұрын
David O Selznick is said to have lived on benzedrine during the making of GWTW, working 48 hours at a stretch. He died at age 63 of a heart attack. No wonder.
@LaurenceDay-d2p
@LaurenceDay-d2p Ай бұрын
Shows how awkward and cumbersome the bulky old Technicolor camera was, but it made beautiful images. Alas, tri-strip Technicolor is no longer used. Its images did not fade, unlike the other color systems.
@LaurenceDay-d2p
@LaurenceDay-d2p Ай бұрын
Where's the narration? We can do without that silly background music.
@ocinSeven9
@ocinSeven9 2 ай бұрын
He didnt die in 1961
@KingOFuh
@KingOFuh 5 ай бұрын
By JANE ANN MORRISON, LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL, December 16, 2013 --The basics are well known to Las Vegans. Actress Carole Lombard died in a plane crash on Mount Potosi southwest of Las Vegas on Jan. 16, 1942, coming back from a trip selling war bonds just weeks after war broke out in the Pacific. But author Robert Matzen provides plenty of details and insights into why Lombard was on that plane when she shouldn’t have been and why she essentially died because of her fatal flaw - impatience. Before she left to raise money for the war effort, Lombard and her husband, Clark Gable, fought over his relationship with actress Lana Turner. After completing her commitment to raise money for the war, Lombard wanted to rush home to make up. Matzen does more than tell the story of how Lombard lived and died at 33; he researched the lives of the other 21 people who also died that night. He told the story of the people who struggled to rescue any survivors. And the grim story of recovering their remains. Matzen’s “Fireball: Carole Lombard and the Mystery of Flight 3” speculates about why the crash even occurred. No official cause was ever given; but after eliminating the other possibilities, such as sabotage, mechanical failure and pilot error, he offers a reasonable theory. I won’t blurt it out here, but it sounds plausible. This book should appeal to movie watchers (which I am) and to aviation experts (which I am not). “I tried to make this very much a story about Las Vegas and the really cool people who lived there. A story about the desert, about Goodsprings, about Blue Diamond. I went for that local flavor,” Matzen said in a phone interview Thursday from his home outside Pittsburgh. The recent cold spell made it easier to imagine how the rescue party, led by Lyle Van Gordon and Jack Moore, struggled to climb up Mount Potosi 30 miles southwest of Las Vegas, only to find pieces of bodies flung across the snow. Matzen’s descriptions were stomach-turning. “I went into that level of detail because I wanted to say this is what rescuers and responders saw,” he explained. Although it had been reported before, Matzen said he was able to get people to open up more about the fight between Lombard and Gable over Turner. The book is now available on Amazon; but just before it went to press, Matzen found a woman, one of four people bumped from Flight 3. She is 94 and lived in Albuquerque and was the only one still living and able to discuss what it was like to, by chance, live instead of die. In his prologue, Matzen described hiking up to the crash site and realizing “this wasn’t just Carole Lombard’s story. It was the pilot’s story and the co-pilot’s and the stewardess’. It was the story of 15 Army Air Corps personnel who died, men as young as 19 and as old as 28, and it was the story of three other civilians.” So Matzen wrote about all of them. One particularly poignant aspect is his listing all the things which, if they had happened differently, would have meant Lombard would have lived. Although warned by government officials to take the train, she took a flight from Indiana to Hollywood. She pushed her way onto a crowded flight by using her movie-star clout, bumping three men from the U.S. Army Air Corps, who ended up living as a result. She ignored her mother’s pleas to not fly, as well as MGM press official Otto Winkler. When she insisted, both died in the crash with her. She and Winkler flipped a coin about whether to fly or take the train. He lost.
@bobmello1063
@bobmello1063 5 ай бұрын
2:07
@kajgenell
@kajgenell 6 ай бұрын
Th epiano is outof tune
@MonicaRusso-n1p
@MonicaRusso-n1p 7 ай бұрын
Great video. Thank you very much for sharing the photos. They are incredible !! What a perfect romance they had . We all never know how long a romance lasts -- but they had the real deal for as long as it was ~ God Bless them both !!
@MTknitter22
@MTknitter22 7 ай бұрын
Gable - holy cow - what a man!
@MTknitter22
@MTknitter22 7 ай бұрын
Selznick, Victor Fleming, these men were masters of the craft.
@marialuizasaboiasaddi2160
@marialuizasaboiasaddi2160 11 ай бұрын
History
@johnpickford4222
@johnpickford4222 Жыл бұрын
Too bad that he was a better actor than husband and used her success to fund acting opportunities where could outshine her on purpose. He wasn’t a great human being and in the end dumped her. So much for in sickness and in health.
@gabrielletanner5339
@gabrielletanner5339 Жыл бұрын
Little did he know his grandson would die in his early thirties and his son would refuse to bury him near the family..so sad.
@soso8824
@soso8824 Жыл бұрын
After Lonbard's death, Joan Crawford stated that 'Clark never came back to us'. WOW 😢
@stephaniehale3379
@stephaniehale3379 Жыл бұрын
Poor Vivian she looks exhausted in nearly every picture
@LaurenceDay-d2p
@LaurenceDay-d2p Ай бұрын
She was.
@goombabear
@goombabear Жыл бұрын
If she weren't so pushy and didn't lie, she would have lived. She sold war bonds, but she was not in the military. I'm sure the lads who were kicked off the plane were grateful.
@cynthiawilliams737
@cynthiawilliams737 4 ай бұрын
You are a total idiot goombabear!!
@MicaRayan
@MicaRayan Жыл бұрын
A well-made video. Gone With The Wind is so alluring
@wallochdm1
@wallochdm1 Жыл бұрын
The truth is that Gable was sleeping with Lana Turner. These romanticized vignettes have no basis in reality. The marriage was a sham. Perhaps he regretted his actions after her death.
@mitch_the_-itch
@mitch_the_-itch Жыл бұрын
So Glamour means being marginally good looking then wearing expensive clothes? Glamour is dumb.
@liannapfister8255
@liannapfister8255 Жыл бұрын
Who is the child at 1:19 this is precious
@melaniemansfield3319
@melaniemansfield3319 Жыл бұрын
I have to give Kay a lot of respect. She too must have been quite a lady.
@j.w.3345
@j.w.3345 Жыл бұрын
Today’s “stars” don’t even come close.
@lisas525
@lisas525 Жыл бұрын
That platinum piece could have been for a scarf.
@Nigelsmom2136
@Nigelsmom2136 Жыл бұрын
He was never the same after she died. Part of him died with her.
@TC-qd1zw
@TC-qd1zw Жыл бұрын
Sadly she had a voice like the bottom of a sewer. But does not mean I wished her I’ll luck.
@julesr3827
@julesr3827 Жыл бұрын
So pleased to see
@sashek8451
@sashek8451 Жыл бұрын
God the costumes were all ridiculously divine and she looked transcendent in all of them
@LaurenceDay-d2p
@LaurenceDay-d2p Ай бұрын
Designed by the genius Walter Plunkett, who did many other classic films. His bio is on the internet.
@andrewtongue7084
@andrewtongue7084 Жыл бұрын
As you assert, Jessica, this was a rarity in the early Hollywood era; the sadness lies in the epithet, 'No good thing lasts forever...' & that is the cruel irony that beset this enigmatic, young couple...as a movie buff, I'm a huge fan of their film work. There aren't many actor couples that go the distance, but Spencer Tracy & Katherine Hepburn (whilst not married) remained extant for over twenty-five years, & notwithstanding Paul Newman & Joanne Woodward; clearly, they had the 'magic' formula.... beautifully presented - thank you !
@skyeslaton3435
@skyeslaton3435 Жыл бұрын
Clark and carole loved each other, they even called each other ma and pa, after carole was killed clark was never the same person he was depressed and suicidal and didn't care if he lived or not and it shows he loved the love of his life till the day he died in 1960 his final wish was to be entombed next to carole and they're together for all eternity
@jacquelinecorvin7386
@jacquelinecorvin7386 Жыл бұрын
Must have been hard filming in those days for crew & actors.
@kerryfry1857
@kerryfry1857 Жыл бұрын
Cable was a see you next Tuesday. User of his first wife. Left her for another, after she fixed his teeth.
@Leader-fq1dq
@Leader-fq1dq Жыл бұрын
And he raped Loretta Young. That's how he got the daughter he ignored. Finally came out after Judy Lewis(the daughter) died. Her mother didn't want her to know it was a rape
@lillieknight
@lillieknight Жыл бұрын
I didn’t know or had forgotten that her mother was with her. And 19 others. That is really tragic.
@rimahdhdh7122
@rimahdhdh7122 Жыл бұрын
Это шедевр
@rimahdhdh7122
@rimahdhdh7122 Жыл бұрын
Маленькая
@DavidJohnson-yq4nz
@DavidJohnson-yq4nz Жыл бұрын
Timelessness in all it’s iconic glory
@ninahurd2592
@ninahurd2592 Жыл бұрын
Clark Gable was heartbroken with his wife died in a plane crash he never got over it when he died in 1961 he was buried next to her now that it happened together they always be the king and queen of Hollywood that is a love story with always last a lifetime
@c.a-elo-4237
@c.a-elo-4237 2 жыл бұрын
Beutifull couple.i hope they're together in heaven 🙏 ❤
@pablocosta8738
@pablocosta8738 2 жыл бұрын
This Chopin nocture is very useful since the film itself has no soundtrack (let alone a remarkable one) 🙄
@ronaldalanperry4875
@ronaldalanperry4875 2 жыл бұрын
Carole and her mother were Bahá’ís. As a young girl, she wrote a letter to ‘Abdu’l-Bahá (son of Bahá’u’lláh, Founder of the Bahá’í Faith) asking him to pray that she might become a successful actress. I suppose God was listening! As a proud co-religionist, I find something endearing in Carole’s wild, authentic character. For all I’ve read about her strong temperament and stronger language, I’ve never read anything about her being petty-minded or inconsiderate toward anyone.
@lawrencesait3432
@lawrencesait3432 2 жыл бұрын
Great video, Vivien Leigh looks gorgeous in every shot .
@mariahenrich9602
@mariahenrich9602 2 жыл бұрын
Beautiful tribute. Loved the music.
@debbieking5171
@debbieking5171 2 жыл бұрын
Gable died in 1960 not 1961.
@rorycastillo8015
@rorycastillo8015 2 жыл бұрын
Like the black cast never existed wow
@beckyyoung725
@beckyyoung725 2 жыл бұрын
Wardrobe was just gorgeous back then!😮
@twhatty2537
@twhatty2537 2 жыл бұрын
Would have liked captions for these photos.
@ronniebishop2496
@ronniebishop2496 2 жыл бұрын
Some people actually arguing over a lady’s picture taken 80 years ago. And some people think a movie about slavery and the civil war is racist, hahahahaha hahahahaha I mean you can’t make this up that’s how stupid some people are. Yes slavery was racist duh.
@MicaRayan
@MicaRayan 2 жыл бұрын
What a beautiful 'behind-the-scenes' moment for Gone with the Wind! Back then, I'm not sure whether they realized that they were creating classics and setting high benchmark for movie industry! All of the aspects, the production, artistic skills and cast are such enjoyment to watch and out of all, it IS a literature adaptation which making it an epitome of art-literature genre too. Hard to top even years gone by. Great storyline and lessons to dug up!
@dianarey7679
@dianarey7679 2 жыл бұрын
стар
@レオのまま
@レオのまま 2 жыл бұрын
初めてGWTWを観たのはTVの放映でした。 当時は夢多き若い頃、スカーレットの住む豪邸やお庭、たくさんの素敵な衣装に憧れるとともに過酷な運命や彼女が望んでも叶わなかった恋やレットの恋などたくさん学ぶところがある映画でした。 当時は両親が元気に働いていてピアノを趣味としていた自分、今は私だけになってしまいました。 ショパンのノクターンを聴きながら映画の裏側を見ていくうちに涙が溢れてきました。 華やかな人生ではなかったけど大切な人がそばにいるのは幸せなことだと思えるのです。
@lindahaggard6416
@lindahaggard6416 2 жыл бұрын
Simply breathtaking!! Thank you for your efforts and research to bring us one of the most beautiful and sad love story! Bravo!
@asimaydin9130
@asimaydin9130 2 жыл бұрын
Yorumunuzu okuyomuyorum 💖 ben türkiye