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F. Scott Fitzgerald & The Great Gatsby

Explore the early life and literary career of F. Scott Fitzgerald, including his relationship with Zelda and the creation of The Great Gatsby.

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F. Scott Fitzgerald & The Great Gatsby

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  1. F. Scott Fitzgerald & The Great Gatsby

  2. Early Biography • Sept 24,1896: Francis Scott Key Fitzgerald born in St. Paul, MN • His parents were Mary McQuillan, the daughter of Irish immigrants, and Edward Fitzgerald, a salesman. Both were Catholic. • Attended the St. Paul Academy, then the Newman School, a Catholic prep school in New Jersey.

  3. Scott & Zelda Fitzgerald • On academic probation, Fitzgerald joined the army as a 2nd lieutenant in 1917. • June 1918: While on assignment in Montgomery, AL, he fell in love with Zelda Sayre, daughter of an Alabama Supreme Court judge. • She broke off their engagement in 1919 because she was unwilling to live on Scott’s small salary.

  4. Literary Career Beginnings • June 1919: Fitzgerald returns to St. Paul, MN to rewrite his novel, This Side of Paradise. • In the fall of that year, he begins writing stories in mass-circulation magazines. • He wrote many stories for the Saturday Evening Post describing the free-thinking flappers of the 1920’s.

  5. Overnight Fame • March 26, 1920: This Side of Paradise is published, making the 24 year-old Fitzgerald famous almost overnight. • One week later, he marries Zelda Sayre in New York.

  6. Extravagant Living • Scott & Zelda begin to live as young celebrities, socializing and drinking heavily. • They take their first trip to Europe in 1921. • October 1921: Their first and only child, Frances Scott (Scottie) Fitzgerald is born.

  7. Early Stumblings • Fall, 1922: The young family moves to Great Neck, NY, expecting to earn a lot of money from Scott’s play, The Vegetable. • 1923: The play bombs, and Scott has to write short stories to get out of debt. • Scott’s drinking increases. He and Zelda fight often.

  8. Gatsby is Born • Spring 1924: The Fitzgeralds go to France. • Summer 1924: Scott starts writing The GreatGatsby. Zelda has a relationship with a French pilot. • Winter 1924-25: The Fitzgeralds go to Rome where Scott revises Gatsby. • April 1925. Gatsby is published. Critical reviews are positive, but sales remain low.

  9. Fitzgerald and the Expatriates • During the mid 1920’s in Paris, Fitzgerald becomes part of the group of expatriate American writers which included Ernest Hemingway, Gertrude Stein, and Ezra Pound.

  10. Further Estrangement • During the 1920’s, Scott and Zelda’s relationship continues to be strained due to his drinking and her mental instability. They live in Paris, the Riviera, and a mansion near Wilmington, DE. • Even though Fitzgerald earns about $4,000 per story (equal to about $40,000 today), he and Zelda continue to run into debt.

  11. 1930’s • The Fitzgeralds rent a house in Montgomery, AL in 1931. Scott makes an unsuccessful trip to Hollywood; Zelda suffers a mental breakdown in 1932 and is hospitalized. • 1936-37: Scott drinks, gets into more debt, and lives in hotels near Asheville, NC. Zelda enters a nearby hospital.

  12. The Last Years • Summer 1937: Fitzgerald goes to Hollywood with a screenwriting contract earning $1,000/ week. • Despite earning $91,000 from MGM, he is unable to save any money. • 1938: He falls in love with Sheilah Graham, a movie columnist. • Dec 21, 1940: Fitzgerald dies of a heart attack in Graham’s apartment. • 1948: Zelda dies in a fire at Highland Hospital.

  13. Fitzgerald’s Death “On December 21, 1940 -- the Winter Solstice -- the author F. Scott Fitzgerald jolted to his feet from a green armchair, grasped hold of a marble mantlepiece, and fell down dead of a massive heart attack. He was forty-four years old. His woman companion of three-and-a half years ran out into the hallway and began knocking frantically on doors of their small Hollywood apartment building on Laurel Avenue, just south of Sunset Boulevard, crying desperately for help. She refused to accept that Scott was dead, even later when the ambulance came, and a fire engine also, and a fireman stood over the body and shook his head. The name of the woman was Sheilah Graham, Fitzgerald's last heroine -- a young, pretty Hollywood newspaper columnist.” --Robert Westbrook, son of Sheilah Graham

  14. Fitzgerald’s Legacy • Although Fitzgerald’s drinking gave him a reputation as an irresponsible writer, he was a painstaking reviser. • While he endured a lot of criticism just after his death, his reputation grew in the 1960’s. • Today, he is considered one of the great American novelists, and The Great Gatsby is considered his masterpiece.

  15. Enduring Associations • Fitzgerald has become identified with the extravagant living of the Jazz Age: “It was an age of miracles, it was an age of art, it was an age of excess, and it was an age of satire.” --F. Scott Fitzgerald • He felt that aspiration and idealism defined America and its people. • His writing style is known for being clear, lyrical, and witty.

  16. Sources: • www.sc.edu/fitzgerald/biography.html • www.orionmcs1.freeservers.com/Fitzgerald-1.html • www.rarebookonline.com/Fax_Jackets/thissideofparadise.jpg • www.born-today.com/Today/09-24.htm • www.zeldathemusical.com/fitzgeralds/index.asp • www.planetbunky.com/illustrations/zelda.html • www.ellisparkerbutler.info/epb/pic/v07/saturday_evening_post_1918_11_16_a.jpg • www.riverwalk.org/proglist/showpromo/1927_heart.htm

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