,TWdlYEASi| I “Gone WitH the Wiod” All i:v^ XXXHI. No. 84 Published Monda^ and NORTH WILKBSBOEO, N. C.. THURSDAY, m THE STAl®-42.00 Cftlr OP Ttl» ■‘GomcpiTii ^ Ti«wn«)« »,« SECTION togii' F' WHAT rr FELT LIKE TO PLAY SCARLETT O’HARA 130 HORSES, 500 100 COWS PART OF ANIMAL KINGDOM SE^ IN R^ OII8i^ Bndo^ 1b “Gone Widi Ihe “WinlT AOnce-Iii-A-Lifetime Opportmuly By VIVIBN LKI«H i f (Appearing a» Scarlett O’Hara in "Gone With the Wind” at • the Liberty Theatre! A year has gone by since the night we stood watching the first scenes being made for ‘‘Gone With the Wind.” it was an awe some spectacle- whole blocks of sets being con.sumed by flames as ibiiildings in old Atlanta burned, ind I was a little confused by the grandeur of it and by what seem ed to be a frightening confusion. That was the night I met Mr. David O. Selznick. the man who was producing “Cone With the Wind,” and who had yet to select a Scarlett O’Hara for the film. In retrospect, it seems to me that the fantastic quality of that tremendous fire, the confusion I felt and the feeling of loneliness in the midst of hundreds of peo ple. was indicative of what was to come. I could not know then. Vivien Leigh of course, what lay ahiSa^-^-—Stfif if someone had ventured to pre dict it, I probably would have passed it off as nonsense. Objective View The unexpocted happened; it made me. for these months at least, and whether I wished it so or not. into the character known"dead as .-tcarlett O’Hara. N'ow the dif-jj-tairs before ns. that character ’ night, and day, month after month. Perhaps the hardest days I spent, hard that is from the point of actual physical exertion, were during the time we made the scene where Scarlett struggles through the populace as it evacu ates Atlanta. Seemed an Eternity Naturally this could not be done all in one continuous "take,” and so for what seemed an eter nity I dodged through the maze of traffic op Peachtree Street, timing myself to avoid galloping horses and thundering wagons. And .between each shot, the makeup man—he seemed to he everywhere at once—came run ning to wa.sh my face, then dirty it up again to just the right shade of Georgia clay dust. I think he washed my face about twenty times in one day. and dusted me over with red dust aft er each washing. Oddly enough, the scenes of physical strain were not so wear ing as the emotional ones. One night we worked at the studio un til about eleven o’clock, then went out to the country for a shot against the .sunrise, when Scar lett falls to her knees in the run down fields of 'Tara and vows she’ll never be hungry again. The sun rose shortly after two a. m. and I could not sleep, although I had a dressing room in a trailer. We made the shot and I arrived at home about 4:30 a. m., yet I do not recall that I was so ter ribly tired. Instead.'i think of the day that Scarlett shoots the deserter, and I recall that after that nerve- wracking episode, both Olivia de Havilland. the wonderful Melanie of the film, and myself were on the verge of hysterics—not alone from the tenseness of the scene, but from the too realistic fall as man went down the ficulty is to view objectively. That it was a great role for any actress was obvious, yet I can truthfully say that I looked on Mr Selzniek’s request that I take a test for Scarlett as .something of a joke. There were dozens of .girls testing, and I did not seriously consider the likeli hood of actually playing the part. Yet once it was decided upon I discovered that there was no jok ing about playing Scarlett. From theti on. 1 was swept along as though by a powerful wave—it WoiKleri'iil Exi>erieiiee Yet when the day came that meant the film was completed. I could not help feeling some little regret that our parts were done and that tlie ca-st and the crew— who were all so thoughtful and kind throughout—were breaking up. Clark Gable. Leslie Howard, Olivia de Havilland. Tom Mitch ell. harhara O’Neil- fine play ers all. We should see each other again, of course—b’ut never again would we have the experience of playing in "Gone With the was Scarlett. .Scarlett. Scarlett. IWind! CHEVROLE T P L Y W O U T H C H R Y S L E R FORD - D O D G E and OTHER- Reconditioned Cars That Will Be Witfi The ’Wind” i the instant you “step on the gas” . . . cars that are full of “spring i>ep” and energy . . . cars that are worth far more than the prices we ^ asking during this spring clearance ... and oars that you will be proud to own for several years to come. li’or several weeks we have been busy going over our used cars, getl^ them ready for this Sale, and now is surely the time to mvestigate what we have to offer. If you own, a car now we’ll be glad to laccopt it on a betteri used car, and arrenge terms you can afford, on easy monthly payments. If interested in any kind of Used Car, better see us quick. Chrysler, Plymouth Cars and G. M. C. Trucks Motor Service Sales Go. ninth STREET liMi NORTH WILKESBORO When writing casually of tlm animals that were pdrt^ef Um scene in "Gone 'yvith tbe ’Wind,” the filmiratlon of which opens Monday at the Liberty Theatre, Margaret Mitchell provided Hol lywood with' Us most spectacular problem In the field of four-foot ed .players. The film required twelve hun dred horses, five hundred mules, a hundred hogs, a hundred cows, and thousands of chickens, ducks, geese, pea fowl, pigeons and oth er barnyard stock, which were rented at rates ranging from fif ty cents a day up to $25 each. In addition there was a pack of some twenty Georgia hounds, long-eared and .spotted, a dozen sti.i.ggling Maltese and calico cats, some sheep and a few goats. Williai.' Clark, a former Ari zona ranclrirtUi: and stunt rider, was retained by Selznick Interna^ tional Studio to direct a staff of IfiO men in the task of caring'for the stock. Clark and his civilikri cavalry troop were on the job lor ten months. "We rationed half a bale of hay and a tenth of a sack of grain per day to the horses, mules and cattle,” Clark said. “That aver aged 90,000 pounds of hay each day and about 180,000 pounds of grain. That figure fails to include grain and feed lor hogs and poultry. "The .studio is responsible for the care and feeding of all stock when it reaches the lot. In ‘Gone with the Wind’ we had to use quite a tew head of thoroughbred horses, which came from various leading stables. Clark Gable, ’Vi vien Leigh, Leslie Howard, Thom as Mitchell and some of the other players all rode thoroughbreds. Every ranch in the Los Angeles territory pimvided stock of one species or another while scenes were being filmed over a period of a year. We had former caval rymen and cowboys in the outfit 10 train the mounts for military, work. The most difficult part of that job was to hold them down when we had to ride through fire i scenes with explosions blasting all I around us.” Mules were used almost ex clusively for plantation work in the Old .South. Horses drew the lighter vehicles and carried their masters. Clark was in charge of the ve hicles. as well as the livestock. The former included four hun dred and fifty carriages, buggies, carts and drays, along with army transports. A great deal of re search was required to locate some of the old models. The cart in which Clark Gable and Vivien Leigh rode through the Atlanta fire, drawn by an equally decrepit horse named Woebegone, was found by Kurtz in an old barn at High Shoals, Paulding County, Georgia. The cost of maintaining the animals and wages for their 160 attendants over a year was esti mated by Clark to be In excess of $75,000. “It is no exaggeration to say that the picture called for more livestock than any film In Holly wood history.” said the trainer.y, Three years in preparation and filming, "Gone with the Wind” was produced In Technicolor by David O. Selznick and directed by Victor Fleming, with Clark Gable, Vivien Leigh, Leslie Howard and Olivia de Havilland in the ftarr- ing roles, and a distinguished cast of players In support. The picture Is being released by Met ro-Gold wyn-Mayer. "‘He was kicked out of school for cheating!” "How come?” “He was caught counting his ribs in a physiology exam.” Use the advertising columns of this paper as your shopping anida THE FIRST GLAMOUR GIRL’S HEARTBRBIAKS OVER AT •LAST? From the park biench she has made her way to an Income enabling her to fight for custody, of her son. and Adela Rogers W. Johns, well-known writer, polftts out why mother love should i^n her the battle. Read this lltus- trated feature In The AmerWiS Weekly Magazine with next fiton- day’s Washington Tlmes-Herald, now on sale. * By OLARX OAKUB , (Appearing aa Rhatt Butler Ui "lOoM 'frith the Wlnd^’ at th« ^ Liberty Tke«tr«) I My reaction 'to "iihadDC: Rhatt > . Wtler is both trank'a;^ simple-. ^ ‘fTIhe oondemned man if a hear-1 f *’ ty meal.” Now don’t got me ■ * wrong. As an,actor I loved it. Aa Clark Gable a character, he waa terfific. As material for the^scirean, ^ho waa v that “once In’ a lifetime” op(por- j - tunlty. But aa Clark Gable, likes to pick his spots'ahd found himself trapped ibyr a. deriea • eC ciroamstanceg over which he'bad no control, I was ' This is no alibi.'r cii^tst bdi' honestly admit thgt eetnak. making of the pietitre lirak one oc,’’ the most thorougUy pleasant and satisfying experiences’' I have'jp'^fi ever known. During the filming; ^ I was on familiar ground. Once^^ in the atmosphere of the settings,- facing a cameia in costume, play-;|' ^L Ing scenes that were dramatical-* il ly realistic, I felt for the firrt time that I had an understanding, ' of Rhett. The long months I hadll '^L studied him and tried to know him as I know myself made me ' believe I was Rhett. These were thlng.s I could get my hands onJ' They were part of my job as an actor. It was those things f couldn’t get niy hands on that had me worried. Becaiiie a Fan, Too In the interest of truth. I be came a fan of Miss Mitchell’s with: the rest of .America after going half way through the book. It was good, too good in tact. Rhett was everything a character should- j A be and rarely is, clear, concise and'* very rettl-, He breathed in tlia pdg«‘1tf%V^oK. He was flaw less as a character study. He’ (Continued on page 4) For EBtertainment... 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