She Never Forgave Clark Gable For What Happened Behind The Set

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Page Of Wonder

Page Of Wonder

Күн бұрын

Tales From Behind The Scenes Of Gone with the Wind. Travel back to the glitz and glamor of the nineteen thirties, where "Gone With the Wind," a monumental American historical romance, clinched a jaw-dropping ten Oscars. Adapted from Margaret Mitchell's nineteen thirty six novel, the movie captivated audiences with its unforgettable performances and cinematic brilliance. Even after eighty years, its charm remains undiminished. Beyond its on-screen magic lies a web of untold stories from behind the scenes. Join us as we uncover these intriguing untold stories hidden from the public eye..
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Пікірлер: 234
@Pageofwonder-ms7gj
@Pageofwonder-ms7gj Ай бұрын
Thanks for visiting The Page OF Wonder Channel! I hope you enjoy the watch! 😍
@dancingfilly7355
@dancingfilly7355 Ай бұрын
I love the work you do and the videos you produce!! However, this AI voice is getting old and starting to grate on the nerves. Please consider using your own voice or choosing a better one. Thank you ❤
@Cheshyre.
@Cheshyre. 29 күн бұрын
We're here for "Clack Gable". Seriously, 10:29 Your AI is horrible.
@NuffinEdited
@NuffinEdited Ай бұрын
SPOILER ALERT....Total BS Clark was the only one who stood up for Hattie McDaniel. They were friends for life..
@nancyenright9562
@nancyenright9562 Ай бұрын
And that is what it states about how he stood by her so I don't get your comment?
@Sophiecjp
@Sophiecjp Ай бұрын
@@nancyenright9562 The title says “she never forgave Clark gable” and the thumbnail show him and Hattie McDaniel making you think she never forgave him. That is what this comment is about.
@cattycorner8
@cattycorner8 Ай бұрын
Thank you!
@tootsgirl976
@tootsgirl976 Ай бұрын
I agree!..I've read many stories about his kindness to Hattie..
@tc7486
@tc7486 Ай бұрын
I guess it can’t be a lie when you spell and pronounce his name wrong. Clack Gable wansn’t in GWTW.
@nanny287
@nanny287 Ай бұрын
The “clickbait” picture here is NOT Hattie McDaniel, who Clark Gable did nothing but advocate for in “Gone With The Wind.” He also made sure that she was able to attend the Academy Awards, where she won the award for Best Supporting Actress. She was the first black female actress to do so. I am tired of these sites getting film history wrong and having to correct their “clickbait” nonsense.
@jillp3761
@jillp3761 Ай бұрын
I loath 'click bait ' have the people who make the videos no confidence in their own abilities ?
@dancingfilly7355
@dancingfilly7355 Ай бұрын
She never forgave him for replacing her tea with whiskey! Not clickbait!!
@awakenyewhosleeprealityisn4860
@awakenyewhosleeprealityisn4860 Ай бұрын
These videos with the obvious robovoice are probably put out by China.
@kevinwilcoxon13
@kevinwilcoxon13 Ай бұрын
The pronunciation of names is ridiculous: Clack Gable??? This is such bs!!!
@nanny287
@nanny287 Ай бұрын
@@kevinwilcoxon13 I wholeheartedly agree. It is disrespectful to the actors. They should get it right or dump the use of AI narration.
@28105wsking
@28105wsking Ай бұрын
This is not true. Clark Gable helped Hattie McDaniels as much as he could. Don't slander him!
@NovemberReigne
@NovemberReigne 24 күн бұрын
This video is full of lies
@amberanthony883
@amberanthony883 Ай бұрын
Please use a human to read the copy. The mispronunciations are a joke.
@jaddison1112
@jaddison1112 28 күн бұрын
This must be an AI generated voice ...it's horrible !
@KateSannicksLerner
@KateSannicksLerner Ай бұрын
Why the hell do so many of these creators use horrible AI voices that can't pronounce the simplest of words? Not to mention this video has so many facts just WRONG.
@jacquiaba9132
@jacquiaba9132 Ай бұрын
So why does your title say she never forgave Clarke for something that happened off set when this is not doscussed in your narration!!! Total click bait.
@dancingfilly7355
@dancingfilly7355 Ай бұрын
He replaced her tea with whiskey. That’s what she never forgave him for.
@nancybarnes4340
@nancybarnes4340 Ай бұрын
She did forgive him, they were friends.
@Cheshyre.
@Cheshyre. 29 күн бұрын
Thumbs down hurts them much.
@YvonneNelson-yl8ub
@YvonneNelson-yl8ub 21 күн бұрын
Click bait for sure, got disappointed.
@nabuffum
@nabuffum Ай бұрын
The AI narration is really annoying. Hope the savings are worth it.
@lisasweeney8158
@lisasweeney8158 Ай бұрын
Can't pronounce Leigh. Jeez.
@dianemayer177
@dianemayer177 Ай бұрын
not only that, Clark was “Clack”. 🤣
@user-up3gp9ej1m
@user-up3gp9ej1m 24 күн бұрын
I believe most people are forgetting - this was just a Movie, made for Entertainment. Not a Biography of the Civil War South.
@elliedaniels2245
@elliedaniels2245 Ай бұрын
Scarlett's eyes were famously green. Vivien's eyes were blue. Not the other way around.
@geraldbostic4833
@geraldbostic4833 Ай бұрын
That picture is not of her in the first place! You guys play fast and loose with your facts !!!
@lindacosta3265
@lindacosta3265 Ай бұрын
My favourite Novel as an adolescent and my favourite movie for many years…
@cessaly100
@cessaly100 15 күн бұрын
Me too! Fall 1968 Washington DC
@Adasteia
@Adasteia Ай бұрын
Hey page of wonder,.I am wondering why you do not have Hattie Mc Daniel on your title page ?! WT !
@dafinker3443
@dafinker3443 Ай бұрын
Mammy was fabulous 🙏🏻✅👏
@user-gm4gq4li7k
@user-gm4gq4li7k Ай бұрын
A man can be strong and show emotion. It doesn't make a man less of a man. He can still be strong and brave by showing he cares.
@kathrynbriley4299
@kathrynbriley4299 Ай бұрын
Exactly! They had a great relationship! Hattie was brilliant! She was a great business woman & Clark supported her in all her adventures!! He didn't even want to go to the Hollywood academy award party. She insisted he go, even though she wasn't allowed to! She had a lot of class!
@ronald1685
@ronald1685 14 күн бұрын
Sho u rite
@mousemd
@mousemd Ай бұрын
Not to mention that the story basically revolved around Scarlett. And Rhett makes more money?
@TheMandingome
@TheMandingome 24 күн бұрын
Very thorough assessment. Very good.
@MargaretWalkerCellist
@MargaretWalkerCellist Ай бұрын
Vivian was paid $2500? Or $25,000? Your screen said the former, whereas the Narrator said the latter.
@finzenberger
@finzenberger Ай бұрын
shame on you for the clickbait 😵‍💫
@oshunfunmilayo
@oshunfunmilayo 29 күн бұрын
My understanding is that all the actors stood up for her at the Oscars. They wanted her there
@christinecallahan5512
@christinecallahan5512 Ай бұрын
One of the ALL TIME GREATEST movie...... l still love it and l will E V E R do.........
@sussie7460
@sussie7460 Ай бұрын
The thing I loved about the movie which I've only seen around 90xs and read the book probably 300xs. Yes indeed I love it so much my book was in pages. Anyway the book describes the characters and Rhett and Scarlet that was as if Margaret Mitchell was describing Vivian Leigh and Clark Gable. Also NO ONE could have played Mammy any better than Hattie McDaniel. She didn't play the part as a yes massa, no massa, she played Mammy with dignity and close to equality. As she accepted her Oscar she done the same. Those of color have Ms McDaniel to thank for opening the door for all of us. Thank you Ms McDaniel ❤. Agreeable to mispronounced names, not only is Clark Gables name mispronounced so is Vivian Leigh. AI said Lei not Leigh as in Lee.
@HBADGERBRAD
@HBADGERBRAD 29 күн бұрын
Aren’t we going to talk about the black rooster Scarlet killed for his black feathers and used it’s feet on her hat but they were dipped in gold. It’s my favorite part of her outfit because I always wondered how Scarlet made those rooster talons gold.
@victoriaolson8985
@victoriaolson8985 Ай бұрын
We’ll always remember Clack Gable as Rhett Butler.
@dpf5939
@dpf5939 24 күн бұрын
Bette Davis was friends with Hattie. They made a few movies together. Bette and John Garfield founded the Hollywood Canteen. Bette insisted that black soldiers be included and not segregated. Ive seen a couple pictures of Bette and Hattie with arms liked.
@user-gf7ox7xz8y
@user-gf7ox7xz8y Ай бұрын
inserting an "f" word doesn't add anything to a movie artistically.
@dtschuor459
@dtschuor459 27 күн бұрын
It does if the character is the type of person to whom that would be a natural vernacular.
@randyfitzpatrick8987
@randyfitzpatrick8987 27 күн бұрын
Absolutely Awesome Performance ❤ Great Movie Great Storyline Great Acting...And Above All Awesome Book❤ Period
@pbohearn
@pbohearn Ай бұрын
Groucho Marx as Rhett Butler?!? What was Margaret thinking?!
@a.leemorrisjr.9255
@a.leemorrisjr.9255 Ай бұрын
Groucho as Rhett? I like it😊!
@JudgeJulieLit
@JudgeJulieLit Ай бұрын
In the 1930s Groucho was virilely handsome ... if (in his farce comedy films) as a rake a bit sloucho, and great at amusingly baiting risque repartee with ladies. Not as brawny tall as Clark Gable, and not likely to play plausibly straight the part of a war crisis strongman hero, yet if cast he would have had to doff his spectacles, and trim and not beetle his eyebrows. He could dance a reel, and have pulled off the line, "has the war started?" But GWTW was a historical romance, not cynical comic satire. (For that, see a GWTW sequel penned a decade ago by a black authoress, told from the viewpoint of an O'Hara plantation young black woman slave, aptly entitled The Wind Done Went.)
@IvanRodriguez-hl4pg
@IvanRodriguez-hl4pg Ай бұрын
I found this piece very informative despite the mispronunciations of some of the names. Vivien Leigh (pronounced Lee) was so cute in this movie that I'm sure most red blooded American males wanted to Lay her. Gable SHOULD have boycotted that event in Georgia. Also, I'm trying to envision Rufus T. Firefly as Rhett Butler. Wow! Come to think of it, I don't think Groucho Marx ever played a serious character in his entire career. Correct me if I'm wrong. The Wizard of OZ may have done better at the Oscars if it had been released a year earlier of later. All in all, though, this piece makes me want to watch the movie again.
@claudiabailey5302
@claudiabailey5302 Ай бұрын
Whilst I understand how you find her attractive. Why couldn’t you just say that and leave it there you just had to lake it to a low and lack of self control trashy level
@shadowlouise
@shadowlouise Ай бұрын
Mitchell's suggestion that Groucho play Rhett was a JOKE. She didn't mean it at all.
@mikejohnson5837
@mikejohnson5837 8 күн бұрын
"Clack" Gable. LMAO
@dianemayer177
@dianemayer177 Ай бұрын
What a chicken shite article. This is down to fb standards. Utube raise your standards.
@kevinhealey6540
@kevinhealey6540 Ай бұрын
Hattie McDaniels caught a lot of flak for playing Mammie especially in recent years. But if you really take a good look at that film "Mammie," "Big Jim," and "Prissy" were the only decent people in the whole film. All of the main characters in the film were in full favor of slavery and helped the South get involved in a war that could not be won. Rhett Butler was a womanizer and war profiteer. He was having trouble in his marriage so he takes off to Paris and takes the couple's child with him. Not only that, when he's in Paris, he leaves the child with a stranger while he goes off and parties. At the end of the film, he left his wife when she was going crazy and in desparate need of him. Scarlett was an atrocious person and was a spoiled brat. She married someone out of spite and could care less that he got killed. She falls on hard times and then foreswears that she's going to do whatever it takes to get ahead, to include if need be, killing someone. She stayed true to that. She steals away her sisters fiancée. And she got her husband to go off and get himself killed. She married Rhett because he had cash. Wasn't much of a mother either. She let the child engage in behavior that was highly dangerous and the kid got killed because of it. Mammie knew right from wrong. She took it upon herself to raise Scarlett because she could see that the mother was incapable. Mammie also kept the family together. By Hattie McDaniel playing the part the way she did, it put a feeling in teenage girls after the watching the film that they wish they could know someone like that. Big Jim, in spite of being thrusted into slavery, risked his life to save Scarlett. Scarlett took it for granted, of course. Prissy was a loyal servant. She served the family. She nursed badly wounded soldiers which caused her to have a nervous break down. And her thanks for doing all that was Scarlett would take her aggression out on her by slapping her around.
@Adasteia
@Adasteia Ай бұрын
What did you expect, that Mitchell was going to write the book from the perspective of a northern yankee woman ?!
@JudgeJulieLit
@JudgeJulieLit Ай бұрын
Scarlett (as far as the drama tells) slapped Prissy in extreme frustration and despair just on the one occasion when (Melanie in sudden desperate need of a midwife, ill and not likely to survive her first childbirth, is about to give birth) Prissy after boasting that she had had "lots of times" experience midwiving babies, suddenly hysterically confesses that she doesn't "know nothing 'bout birthing babies," leaving the midwiving entirely to the inexperienced Scarlett. If you hold the race factor equal (e.g., if Prissy had been a white servant, or her boss and the patient had been black), can you see that (also given the then cultural norm of reflexive slapping or other overly emotional corporal punishment toward a non- or badly performing servant, e.g., coupled with the servant's misrepresentation of their abilities), Scarlett's slap (as earlier in the film, her slap of Ashley's face, and her hurl of an ashtray at Rhett) more bespoke her own trademark reflexive emotional volatility? that other GWTW characters in her proprietary social class (e.g., her genteel mother; and Ashley and Melanie and Charles Hamilton) did not share. You commented an astute point, that Prissy likely was having a nervous breakdown from all the sudden war-in-your-neighborhood trauma, and having valiantly nursed soldiers with awful wounds as from bayonets, guns and cannon. In sum, the scene was a crescendo of unprecedented crises, and neither Scarlett nor Prissy, both frazzled, acted ideally.
@JudgeJulieLit
@JudgeJulieLit Ай бұрын
​@@Adasteia A GWTW sequel (after "Scarlett") was published a decade ago by a black authoress, told from the viewpoint of an O'Hara plantation young black woman slave (possibly the child of Gerald and Mammy), aptly entitled The Wind Done Went. Fascinating premise and ingenious title.
@shadowlouise
@shadowlouise Ай бұрын
JudgeJulieLit, You are delusional. The book was written about a time in America when slavery DID really exist. The inspiration for the novel was the stories told by Mitchell's grandmother of the family's history. You didn't understand the story or history at all. She was only 16 when she married Charles. He was proud to go to war against the Yankees, but he wasn't killed in battle. He contracted measles which led to pneumonia, and he died. Big Sam wasn't "thrusted" into slavery. He was born a slave. You cared so much about him, you didn't bother with his name. You really do not understand at all.
@JudgeJulieLit
@JudgeJulieLit 29 күн бұрын
@@shadowlouise ​You hallucinate topics my comments did not discuss (whether slavery "DID exist"; Big Sam; and what inspired the novel) -- fool, I read GWTW and Anne Edwards' definitive biography of Margaret Mitchell. So like Don Quixote deludedly tilting at windmills (and Gerald O'Hara galloping off drunk, till he tumbles), you misdirect your reply and make preposterous straw arguments. I understand thoroughly the story and history; you failed to understand my comments, rude erroneous thing.
@debrataylor1719
@debrataylor1719 Ай бұрын
1939 was Hattie McDaniels OSCAR❤ not 1940 as it is stated in this video Mammie was smart as a whip loved her in this movie. And others ❤❤
@denicesanders4586
@denicesanders4586 Ай бұрын
The Oscar Awards were in 1940. It was implied.
@VelmaAmstutz-ud3pc
@VelmaAmstutz-ud3pc Ай бұрын
I like a man strong and brave and confident but also kind and gentle
@Pearlruby718
@Pearlruby718 23 күн бұрын
This is click bait fueled by the pictures of Gable and a woman who is not Hattie. It gives the appearance that Hattie wouldn't forgive him. When in fact they were life long friends and Gable bought her house for her in the all white neighborhood that refused to sell to her. It was Vivian Leigh who didn't get along with Gable. Click Bait🤦🏼‍♀️😡
@januk7725
@januk7725 Ай бұрын
Clack Gable??? jeeeezzzz lol
@yarclewinson
@yarclewinson 29 күн бұрын
She was not born to former slaves. Her parents worked and got paid. Indigenous American…not African American
@deloresbryant7867
@deloresbryant7867 24 күн бұрын
I wish someone will come up with gone with the story from frank I do not give Adam. Steve spilɓerg
@deloresbryant7867
@deloresbryant7867 24 күн бұрын
I things it will be great
@larissabrewington9065
@larissabrewington9065 Ай бұрын
Lay, Clack...tierless...
@IvanRodriguez-hl4pg
@IvanRodriguez-hl4pg Ай бұрын
My sentiments exactly, dear larissa.
@FrstAm
@FrstAm Ай бұрын
AI generated.
@lindamartin-dm3nt
@lindamartin-dm3nt 4 күн бұрын
I think the bs is that Scarlett had blue eyes. Where was that in the book? I remember it as her having green eyes which was why she felt green dresses flattered her. Is this some AI bs?
@DEAD-FROM-NY
@DEAD-FROM-NY 22 күн бұрын
I thought Hattie wasn't even permitted t be at the Ceremony and picked up her award ELSEWHERE?
@angeluvsvid
@angeluvsvid 11 күн бұрын
His Grandson was hosting the Show Cheaters awhile back
@dotsanto3929
@dotsanto3929 29 күн бұрын
Will always be best picture!
@carolfuller-tt7vo
@carolfuller-tt7vo Ай бұрын
The film makers did a vast disservice to Margaret Mitchells book. I read the book and thoroughly enjoyed it, the film left out half of the story thereby changing the book out of all proportions. It made Scarlet out to be just a totally spoilt and selfish person, yes she was these things, but she was also a very strong character and did what she did to keep her home and her dependants safe during a time of change and upheaval in Americas history. The film ends with Scarlet saying "After all, tomorrow is another day." As far as I can remember this was only said once, when it was a mantra uttered by Scarlet, throughout the book. People should read the book, or better yet make a mini series about it, keeping true to the story.
@jillp3761
@jillp3761 Ай бұрын
For that day and age the film was a masterpiece .... yes the left out a LOT but considering the length of the book and the fact the the movie was one of the longest of the time they did a fine job. They left out some characters but gave important lines to others. GWTW WAS THE FIRST BOOK I READ SFTER I CAME TO THE STATES I have read and reread it , love the movie and have watched many times. Each time I've read the book I understand the characters better Scarlett overcame her upbringing to deal with her changing world, and it cost her dearly. Nothing she had been brought to to believe was applicable in this new Era, that she was able to cope at all showed her strength of mind and spirit. Margaret Mitchell must also have been a strong and VERY aware to have given Scarlett such characteristics. ..
@sr2291
@sr2291 Ай бұрын
Books are usually better than the movies adapted from them.
@JudgeJulieLit
@JudgeJulieLit Ай бұрын
​@@jillp3761 For any age the film was a mega masterpiece. But true, it had to abridge the book. For example, in the novel Scarlett has a child with each husband: little Wade Hamilton, whom she raises after Charles dies in battle; Ella Kennedy, a "silly" little girl by Frank Kennedy; and Bonnie Blue Butler by Rhett Butler. And Mitchell more describes context ongoing Civil War and Reconstruction history scenes. The novel was over a thousand pages. Its omniscient narrative style itself was uniquely a literary masterpiece.
@JudgeJulieLit
@JudgeJulieLit Ай бұрын
@@sr2291 The two art forms have their separate felicities and limitations. I read GWTW before seeing the film (but having seen posters, did picture Leigh and Gable in the lead roles), and was blown away by both. Ditto The Great Gatsby. But at times (as with Love Story), the film can far surpass the originating novel.
@PatsyLara
@PatsyLara 24 күн бұрын
❤My most favorite movie no other can compare to this classic. Just my opinion..frankly my dear I don't give a damn❤❤❤❤
@anncain2432
@anncain2432 5 күн бұрын
You have to get up a great dealer earlier if you want to fool us! We're all fans of this movie.
@gochuckyourself-yf2rz
@gochuckyourself-yf2rz Ай бұрын
No she was a relatively unknown actress at the time so 25,000 in 1939 was a hell of a lot of money . We're in contrast Clark Gable was a well-known star and he was the box office and he was the hype of that movie even though Vivien Leigh went on to be a twice nominated and twice winning best actress . At the time of the production of this movie she was a relatively unknown actress in America . The success of gone with the wind made her a star .
@deliciaford4343
@deliciaford4343 26 күн бұрын
We losing men with masculinity these days!😢
@joyharmon1110
@joyharmon1110 26 күн бұрын
Clark, Clark, Clark, not Clack!
@dafinker3443
@dafinker3443 Ай бұрын
THE BEST MOVIE AND STARS E V E R 👏🙏🏻✅
@merribethbizzell4763
@merribethbizzell4763 Ай бұрын
“Her eyes were pale green without a touch of hazel, starred with bristly black lashes and slightly tilted at the ends.”
@robert44861
@robert44861 24 күн бұрын
A story as to why GEORGE CUKOR was fired as Director of "Gone With The Wind" is that CLARK GABLE had CUKOR fired. It seems that before CLARK became a STAR , he was a husler and had been hired by CUKOR and refused to let someone like CUKOR tell him how to be a man after all CUKOR was a woman's movie director so GABLE refused to let CUKOR direct him so he demanded a man's director or GABLE would quit film.
@omahaw1728
@omahaw1728 29 күн бұрын
Clark Gable andHattie McDaniel were friends and she invited him to her parties at her home.
@noneofurbusiness5223
@noneofurbusiness5223 Ай бұрын
@ 16:36 "Hattie & Gable shared a romance . . ." ?
@RossCompose
@RossCompose Ай бұрын
Leigh is perfection. She later did another southern belle in STREETCAR NAMED DESIRE.
@dap9387
@dap9387 Ай бұрын
Vivien Leigh had BLUE EYES and Scarlett's were GREEN! THAT was the color change challenge - not the other way around as reported here!
@mousemd
@mousemd Ай бұрын
You usually don't think about how close this film was to the Civil War. Only 80 years. (I initially thought 70. Whoops!)
@corinnecivish7673
@corinnecivish7673 29 күн бұрын
Vivien Leigh (pronounced LEE) had naturally grey eyes, not green. Her eye color was altered to look green in GWTW, to match the description of Scarlett's in the books. Please double check your "facts". Clack Gable? Vivien Lay or Layhe? If you guys need a script editor and/or a human voice-over that knows how to pronounce common words, famous names properly,or even less common and more obscure/exotic names, give me a wave. Whoever you have doing this now is something of a joke. Also, no thumbs up; for the clickbait title. Otherwise, I enjoyed the video.
@marymezick7262
@marymezick7262 Ай бұрын
I’m waiting for the movie to start come on…..!
@user-vs9qj7fd5f
@user-vs9qj7fd5f 25 күн бұрын
Oh pulhease! Going on and on and on about Selznick's substance abuse - so much overstatement. He was a control freak and very particular - but not a druggy. As for pronouncing Vivienne Leigh Vivienne Lay - excruciating to listen to.
@shnigglekayley
@shnigglekayley Ай бұрын
I’m his granddaughter Kayley and my grandfather was the only one who wouldn’t do the film if she wasn’t able to be mammy he loved that woman. He stood up for that woman. He’s the last person on earth who would’ve ever been racist so get your facts right you’re hearing it from the horses mouth Don’t try to spread lies just because you’re jealous
@denicesanders4586
@denicesanders4586 Ай бұрын
Who was your grandfather?
@marymcfarland3918
@marymcfarland3918 Ай бұрын
Best movie ever made.
@jamesdenny4734
@jamesdenny4734 22 күн бұрын
Hattie must've been paid around $3000 if Scarlett received $25,000!? 🤔 😮
@jilllangman9343
@jilllangman9343 Ай бұрын
I will not subscribe to clickbait.
@user-vq9kn2ix4n
@user-vq9kn2ix4n 27 күн бұрын
Pardon Me!!!! But the last time I checked, 1937+ 2 = 1939 U said: Three years later in 1939 which is incorrect.🙄
@sgttaylor5600
@sgttaylor5600 28 күн бұрын
He also took up for the black actors because of his heritage
@veronacoleman4604
@veronacoleman4604 22 күн бұрын
Ms McDaniels was not welcomed to the premier though.
@geraldbostic4833
@geraldbostic4833 Ай бұрын
Total BS! He is the one who championed her for the job in the first place!!
@paulamahaney9156
@paulamahaney9156 29 күн бұрын
Who are these ppl!! Printed on screen @10:30: " The casting of Clack Gable as Rhett Butler" Not only is the AI saying it wrong, it is in PRINT wrong! How insulting towards CLARK Gable
@jaddison1112
@jaddison1112 28 күн бұрын
Quite frankly I've never understood why a movie that told the story of the American "Civil War" from a southern point of view, was such a sensation. It speaks to the inability of many Americans to accept the truth of the terrible aspects of our history to this day. Many prefer the "fairy tales" of horrible events in America's past, not the reality. Only if a people can admit to the difficult past history tells, can any hope for moving forward to "A more perfect union", be achieved.
@cventura9048
@cventura9048 28 күн бұрын
Whats with the Pirates of Caribbean music? Can't get beyond time stamp 3:45 of your video.
@RayPointerChannel
@RayPointerChannel Ай бұрын
The main story that has been the most consistent in Cukor being removed from GWTW was that Clark Gable felt that the direction was too focused on the female roles and little towards him. There may have been some other issues going back to when they were both at MGM. Whether there was an assumed "homophobic" issue, there were some rumors of Gable having engaged in some "bisexual" experiences there may have been some knowledge on the part of Cukor that made Gable uncomfortable. Aside from wading through what is essentially a history of GWTW, the on-set, NOT "Behind the Set" prank was taken by Hattie McDaniel as a good-hearted joke. You imply that she held a grudge against him the rest of her life. That is nonsense as your narration supports. In fact, you establish the fact that Clark Gable and Hattie were good friends. So Gable knew he was in the position to put such a prank, and perhaps the use of real Whiskey added "realism" to the performance. But it is doubtful that the fist take with Hattie's reaction was used since you do not see that in the film, and there are several shots in that sequence that were separate takes. Nice try at Click Bait. And a real person narrating this might lend a little more credibility instead of the robot reading heard here.
@DEAD-FROM-NY
@DEAD-FROM-NY 22 күн бұрын
I read Gable referred to Cukor as that "F*g Director"
@surlif
@surlif 29 күн бұрын
WRONG about Scarlet/ Vivien's eyes. In the novel, Scarlet had GREEN eyes. Vivien had blue eyes. They used filters to make the character's eyes GREEN!!! If you are going to make a video and use strange click bait to lure people to watch it. GET it right!!!!!
@patrickwalker2357
@patrickwalker2357 Ай бұрын
The A I is crap
@marciawade8813
@marciawade8813 Ай бұрын
AI incompetence & displeasing cadence; many errors & mispronunciations... false promo... GWTW book specifically stated Scarlet with Black hair & green eyes... Leigh (pronounced LEE) was unknown to the US audience & studios and wasn't even cast until GWTW filming had already started; Scarlet's scenes in the Atlanta Burning were played by a stunt double & she was cut in after she was hired as Scarlet... PS. Gable was one of the highest paid male actors at that time; paid more than 100 times the average pay for his GWTW role.. When Gable was advised by black members of crew & actors of segregated facilities, toilets, etc., he interrupted his work, walked off & notified he wouldn't return until corrected...
@pbrucpaul
@pbrucpaul 6 күн бұрын
Groucho Marx as Rhett Butler? LOL!!!! Just imagine: "Remember Scarlett I fight for your Honor, which is Certainly more than you've ever done!"
@jls4382
@jls4382 29 күн бұрын
Thumbs down for too many AI errors.
@bgochicoa
@bgochicoa 25 күн бұрын
"Clack" Gable? IA BS.
@calvinnewborn8452
@calvinnewborn8452 9 күн бұрын
Superman was in the movie.
@gwyneth-yv7vn
@gwyneth-yv7vn Ай бұрын
I just wish you could pronounce the famous names
@dorianlelong
@dorianlelong Ай бұрын
The last bit of the video ends in a ridiculous woke anecdote, comparing Leigh's and Gable's salaries. Gable made 75K from the film, and Leigh only 25K, a reflection not of the sex difference, but of the comparative box office draw of the two actors. Leigh was not a star in American films at all before 1939. There was no reason to pay her the same as Gable, a top box office draw. Other great female box office stars were making fabulous salaries in the 1930's, as much as the men.
@davidsavage6227
@davidsavage6227 29 күн бұрын
The AI voiceover gets so many word pronunciations completely wrong, to the point of distraction. Definitely need to update your software and start using other male voices that aren’t so annoying.
@dolinaj1
@dolinaj1 Ай бұрын
Absurd reading of the narration, AI.
@user-fj4mo9xz1c
@user-fj4mo9xz1c Ай бұрын
Groucho Marx as Rhett Butler..
@calvinnewborn8452
@calvinnewborn8452 9 күн бұрын
They all came from another country.
@jonihopkins7302
@jonihopkins7302 28 күн бұрын
😂 Clack Gable
@joecascone2189
@joecascone2189 Ай бұрын
Nice graphics and good use of the film's footage to make your points, but VERY flawed, too. Content issues aside (and there are many!), the pronunciation problems here are maddening and unforgivable!... The original director's name (George Cukor) is pronounced KEW-core (not caw-CORE!). And Vivien Leigh's surname is pronounced "Lee", not "Lay" nor "Lay-hee". Simple word pronunciations, too... "tireless" is not "teer-less" and "biases" is not pronounced "bee-asses". Too many others to list. Astounding, frankly!
@VickieannOglesby
@VickieannOglesby 27 күн бұрын
My god..what is ....
@Echo-tk8pz
@Echo-tk8pz Ай бұрын
I love the way this is read❤
@mermaidgirl9232
@mermaidgirl9232 Ай бұрын
Click bait
@eddierascalhaskell4954
@eddierascalhaskell4954 25 күн бұрын
Isnt Clark Gable rumored to be black?
@calvinnewborn8452
@calvinnewborn8452 9 күн бұрын
Clack Gable?
@jstsayn9133
@jstsayn9133 16 күн бұрын
Title of this video doesn't match the reality. IA narration needs work.
@AnimeBloodyMuffin
@AnimeBloodyMuffin Ай бұрын
Is this AI cause what is up with the pronunciation of some of the words in this? Also mistakes likes “Clack Gable” 😂
@nancyenright9562
@nancyenright9562 Ай бұрын
The mispronounciation of words is so common among narrators. Very annoying
@ritapitman7184
@ritapitman7184 Ай бұрын
This is total bullshit. Sick of you click-baiters!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
@annewollstein3511
@annewollstein3511 Ай бұрын
Bored. 😢
@HBADGERBRAD
@HBADGERBRAD 29 күн бұрын
Who the HELL is “CLACK GABLE” ? LOL 😝
@rm5201
@rm5201 25 күн бұрын
'Greater artistic expression" = Porn.
@Music-yq2yz
@Music-yq2yz Ай бұрын
Clack Gable.
@nancyhammons3594
@nancyhammons3594 28 күн бұрын
Please, if you are going to spend half an hour talking about one our favorite films at least PRONOUCE THE NAME OF THE ACTORS CORRECTLY.
@dianehenkel9088
@dianehenkel9088 Ай бұрын
There wasn’t a problem with Clark Gable and Hattie McDaniel. They were friends for life. Who makes up this crap? Waste of your time.
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