Typed Letter Signed

FITZGERALD, F Scott

Erscheinungsdatum: 1939
Gebraucht Soft cover

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F. Scott Fitzgerald Typed Letter Signed with handwritten addendum, December 26th, 1939, one year almost to the day before his death. F. Scott Fitzgerald, cash-strapped near the end of his life, pleads with his landlord "with somewhat bowed shoulders" for a reduction in rent, expressing hope that a Hollywood studio will employ him soon. "Things look a little brighter. My health is better and I really think I am going to work at the studios within a week. All this illness has, however, put me in debt and it may be some months before I am straightened out." In 1920, three days after publication, the entire first printing of F Scott Fitzgerald's This Side of Paradise, all 3000 copies, sold. Riding the crest of his brisk sales and enthusiastic reviews, Fitzgerald propelled himself further into the financial and cultural elite with The Beautiful and the Damned (1922), and achieved immortality with The Great Gatsby (1925). His private life with his wife Zelda captivated his engrossed readers as much as his novels. This period of success and fame lasted until the end of the 20s. In the 1930's, Fitzgerald began to drink heavily, and Zelda had two mental breakdowns, the latter from which she never fully recovered. By 1937, however, he had emerged as a scriptwriter with a six-month Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer screenwriting contract at $1,000 a week. He received his only screen credit for adapting Three Comrades (1938), and his contract was renewed for a year at $1,250 a week. While the $91,000 he earned from MGM was impressive money during the late Depression years, he was unable to save and seemed always in need of money. MGM dropped his option at the end of 1938, putting him in grave fiscal difficulty. By November 1939, Fitzgerald was very much strapped for cash, later writing to landlord Isabel Horton, wife of actor Edward Everett Horton, " …Things are still difficult here and you are very kind to let me pay this month's rent by degrees. The check enclosed makes 3/4 of the month's rent…Am making a deal for a serial novel in the East which I hope will shortly lift my worries from off my somewhat bowed shoulders…." This outstanding letter to Isabel Horton, simultaneously expressing hope that he will soon be employed by a major Hollywood studio and pleading poverty to gain better terms for his rent, offers a rare glimpse into Scott Fitzgerald's sad life one year before he died. Fitzgerald letters have become increasingly uncommon. In fine condition. Book #v1456. $10,000. We specialize in Rare Ayn Rand, and other legends and landmarks. Bestandsnummer des Verkäufers v1456

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Bibliografische Details

Titel: Typed Letter Signed
Erscheinungsdatum: 1939
Einband: Soft cover
Zustand: Fine
Signiert: Signed by Author(s)
Auflage: 1st Edition

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Fitzgerald, F. Scott
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No Binding. Zustand: Very Good. ("Will H. Hays"), 1 page, New York City, November 3, 1926 on Motion Picture Producers & Distributors of America, Inc. letterhead to studio executive, producer Jesse L. Lasky at Famous Players-Lasky Corporation. 11" x 8 1/2". Very good (three file holes/short tears top edge). The silent film of "The Great Gatsby" was released by Lasky's company in New York City on 21 November, 1926. On August 27th, 1926, it had previously been shown in Portugal. No prints of the film are known to survive. The cast included Lois Wilson, Warner Baxter, and Neil Hamilton. See Fitzgerald's 1926 letter to his classmate Ludlow Fowler wherein he writes that he received $50,000 (less one third) when he sold Gatsby and that there would be a winter showing of the film in Chicago (Correspondence pages 199, 200). Hays (1879-1954) was head of the MPPDA 1922-1945. The Hays Code for film censorship was named for him. Signed by Author(s). Bestandsnummer des Verkäufers 2221355

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FITZGERALD, F. Scott.
Verlag: Encino and New York,, 1940
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Anbieter: Jeffrey H. Marks, Rare Books, ABAA, Rochester, NY, USA

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4 pp. Various sizes. Light creasing where folded; staple holes; otherwise fine. Fitzgerald, in writing to Swanson, denies that he is ill as had been reported second hand through his daughter and Mrs. Ober. "Far from being sick, I've done twenty Esquire stories and six chapters of a novel beside the picture job I am now doing.". Bestandsnummer des Verkäufers 69875

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FITZGERALD, F. Scott.
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Seldes gave Tender Is the Night a rave review in the New York Evening Journal on the day of publication, 12 April 1934. Fitzgerald writes two weeks later to thank him: ". I never had any doubt after the weeks and months of half-sleepless work on the thing that it had some special merit and value but it is so nice to see an appreciation of it so early embodied - especially at the present moment when it can do so much good. On the whole the press has been very good except for one blank, in the case of the New York Times by some student who didn't seem to know what the thing was all about, so they carried it in a small block on the third page - the only tragedy of that to me is that it is the reference journal of the old maid librarians of the Great West. However, your review, more than any other, has given me the most satisfaction. As ever, venomously, and even subtly, Scott." Fitzgerald adds a double postscript, containing a vignette concocted in a rococo style of an imaginary alternate reality, in which Gilbert dies and Fitzgerald marries his wife, the intellectual and bohemian Alice Wadhams Hall (Seldes always called her Amanda, thinking "Alice" too ordinary a name for her), and culminating in a ménage à trois between him, Amanda, and his friend the American poet, John Peale Bishop. Not in the M. J. Bruccoli or A. Turnbull edition of Fitzgerald letters and apparently unpublished. 2 1/8 pages (280 x 215 mm). Double-spaced on three sheets of beige paper, with two postscripts comprising about half of the letter signed "S." in ink, two small ink stains from corrections, a marginal note by Seldes on the first page. Lightly toned and a few small blemishes, else very good. Bestandsnummer des Verkäufers 124321

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No Binding. Zustand: Fine. Typed Letter Signed ("F. Scott Fitzgerald"), 1 p, 4to, "La Paix," Towson, Maryland, July 18, 1933, to Lester Roberts of New York City, folded in sixths, with some toning and mild wrinkling in lower quarter. Matted and framed. "SORRY. HAVEN'T HAD A PHOTOGRAPH TAKEN FOR FIVE YEARS." Apparently in response to a fan letter, Fitzgerald thanks one Lester Roberts for writing and apologizes for not having responded sooner: "My excuse for the long delay in answering is that a pile of letters were side tracked into an answered file just before I moved from one house to another." Fitzgerald semi-facetiously declines Roberts' request for a photograph of him: "Sorry. Haven't had a photograph taken for five years. Again thank you for the interest that inspired your letter." This letter was sent from "La Paix," the Baltimore-area estate near the Phipps Clinic at Johns Hopkins where Fitzgerald's wife, Zelda, was famously hospitalized for schizophrenia. At the time Fitzgerald was completing Tender is the Night (published in 1934), his long-awaited follow-up novel to The Great Gatsby. Bestandsnummer des Verkäufers ABE-1689223890649

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FITZGERALD, F. Scott.
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A fine and longish letter in which Fitzgerald discusses Seldes's edition of Ring Lardner, a possible evening of one-act plays, and reviews of Tender Is the Night: "Just read the Lardner collection [First and Last]. At first I was disappointed because I had expected there would be enough stuff for an omnibus and I still feel that it could have stood more weight. However, looking over those syndicate articles I realize what you were up against - even many of those which you were compelled to use are rather definitely dated and I think you did the best you could with the material at hand. Anyhow, I've had a further hunch on the matter which is this: the short-one-act plays at the end do stand up but they would not play in any conventional sense because so much of the nonsense is embodied in the stage directions, but if they were done, as I believe one was, for the Authors' League Fete or the Dutch Treat Club with [Robert] Benchley and [Donald Ogden] Stewart clowning the whole business I believe they would play very well. "Now doping along on the subject, it seems to me an evening of five nonsense plays would be monotonous no matter how funny they were, but just suppose taking over the technique of the Grand Guignol, two of those plays were alternated with something macabre. When the Grand Guignol failed in N.Y. it seems to me that I remember that all the plays were plays of horror and the minute the novelty wore off it closed up shop.mightn't some enterprising producer be interested in a thoroughly balanced program if we could get the material together? I don't know whether there are any good horror one-acters in America but we might pick up a couple of the Grand Guignol hits very cheaply or get somebody to dredge something out of Edgar Allen [sic] Poe. What do you think of this idea? I am terribly tied up in work and also not being on the spot could not efficiently go into it. I hand you the suggestion for what it is worth and I wish you would let me know what you think of it. "My novel [Tender Is the Night, published on 12 April] seems to go pretty well. I haven't been able to make up my mind entirely how good it is because most of the reviewers have been so entirely cuckoo in their effect of saying in one line that the thing comes off entirely because it is technically so well done and others say it comes off in spite of all its technical faults. No two reviewers - and I am speaking only of the big shots - agree who was the leading character. Malcolm Cowley in the New Republic seems to be chiefly impressed by a man who only appears once in the whole picture - in any case my total impression is that a whole lot of people just skimmed through the book for the story and it simply cannot be read that way. In any case, your review [in the New York Evening Journal] and Mabel Dodge Luhan's enthusiasm [in a letter to the editor of the New York Herald-Tribune of 6 May praising the novel] made it all worthwhile to me." Tender Is the Night received mixed reviews and Fitzgerald was disappointed by this critical response and by what he saw as lacklustre sales, although the novel made the bestseller lists for that April and May. Printed in Letters, ed. A. Turnbull, pp. 512-13. 3 pages (280 x 215 mm), double-spaced on three sheets of beige paper, a one-word pencilled revision and two typographical corrections by Fitzgerald, some slight marginal creasing. Bestandsnummer des Verkäufers 44748

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