Book contents
- Frontmatter
- 1 Introduction: Scott, Zelda, and the culture of celebrity
- 2 F. Scott Fitzgerald, age consciousness, and the rise of American youth culture
- 3 The question of vocation in This Side of Paradise and The Beautiful and Damned
- 4 The short stories of F. Scott Fitzgerald
- 5 The Great Gatsby and the twenties
- 6 Tender is the Night and American history
- 7 Fitzgerald’s expatriate years and the European stories
- 8 Women in Fitzgerald’s fiction
- 9 Fitzgerald’s nonfiction
- 10 Fitzgerald and Hollywood
- 11 The critical reputation of F. Scott Fitzgerald
- Bibliography
- Index
10 - Fitzgerald and Hollywood
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 May 2006
- Frontmatter
- 1 Introduction: Scott, Zelda, and the culture of celebrity
- 2 F. Scott Fitzgerald, age consciousness, and the rise of American youth culture
- 3 The question of vocation in This Side of Paradise and The Beautiful and Damned
- 4 The short stories of F. Scott Fitzgerald
- 5 The Great Gatsby and the twenties
- 6 Tender is the Night and American history
- 7 Fitzgerald’s expatriate years and the European stories
- 8 Women in Fitzgerald’s fiction
- 9 Fitzgerald’s nonfiction
- 10 Fitzgerald and Hollywood
- 11 The critical reputation of F. Scott Fitzgerald
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
While Fitzgerald's experiences in Hollywood during the last years of the 1930s contributed heavily to the planning and writing of The Love of the Last Tycoon: A Western, a glimpse at the novelist's earlier life and work suggests that this novel was almost foreordained. Fitzgerald had been interested in, maybe fascinated by, movie-making from a very early period in his life. He wrote film treatments and scripts and, in addition, used what he knew about Hollywood in several of his short stories as well as in The Beautiful and Damned and later in Tender is the Night. He had mixed feelings about film as an art form during these years, and yet was convinced of its power over its audience. With the advent of talking pictures, he mulled over the possibility - and felt sorrow - that someday it might replace the novel. In 1936, he wrote: “I saw that the novel, which at my maturity was the strongest and supplest medium for conveying thought and emotion from one human being to another, was becoming subordinated to a mechanical and communal art that, whether in the hands of Hollywood merchants or Russian idealists, was capable of only the tritest thought, the most obvious emotion” (Crack-Up, 78).
This gloominess reflected the beliefs of Oswald Spengler in his Decline of the West, a work Fitzgerald referred to a number of times in his writing. In addition, Fitzgerald’s statement was written during a period of despondency. His writing during his last years in Hollywood suggests, however, that his pessimism about the future of film may have been wavering. Even though he planned to kill off movie man Monroe Stahr at the end of The Last Tycoon, he portrayed Stahr as a man who did not totally believe in “the tritest thought” and “the most obvious emotion.”
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- Information
- The Cambridge Companion to F. Scott Fitzgerald , pp. 189 - 208Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2001
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