Showing posts with label F Scott Fitzgerald. Show all posts
Showing posts with label F Scott Fitzgerald. Show all posts

Thursday, April 10, 2025

The Great Gatsby 100 -- April 10, 2025

Saint Louis Post-Dispatch, 25-April-1925

100 years ago today, F Scott Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby was published. I used to read it every year or two. Gatsby was neglected for years, and then people called it The Great American Novel.

Saint Louis Post-Dispatch, 25-April-1925

"THE GREAT GATSBY is vital, glamorous, ironical, compassionate. It is a living thing as spontaneous as THIS SIDE OF PARADISE, yet mature."

Baltimore Sun, 18-April-1925

Motion Picture Magazine, September, 1926

The first film adaption of Gatsby was a 1927 silent starring Warner Baxter as Jay Gatsby. The caption for this image from the September, 1926 Moving Picture Magazine says "The Great Gatsby has been a successful character.  He was a best seller when he made his first public appearance between the covers of the F. Scott Fitzgerald novel.  Then he made his stage debut and there was a continual line at the Broadway box-office.  And now he is to try his fortune on the screen.  Warner Baxter, judging from this photograph, will do well by Gatsby."  The movie is lost, but all accounts say that Baxter did not do well by Gatsby.


Motion Picture Magazine, February, 1927

Neil Hamilton, who later played Commissioner Gordon on the Batman television show, played Nick Carraway.  Lois Wilson played Daisy Buchanan.  Hale Hamilton played Tom Buchanan, Georgia Hale played Myrtle Wilson and William Powell played George Wilson. I find the latter hard to picture. 


Photoplay, February, 1927


listal.com

The second film adaption, made in 1949, starred Alan Ladd as Jay Gatsby.  I have never seen this version, but most of the stills that I have seen make it look like a film noir. 

Betty Field played Daisy Buchanan, Barry Sullivan played Tom Buchanan, Macdonald Carey played Nick Carraway, Shelley Winters played Myrtle Wilson, and Howard Da Silva played George Wilson. 

coverbrowser.com

The third theatrical film version of the story came out in 1974.  The 18-March-1974 cover of  Time Magazine featured Robert Redford as Jay Gatsby and Mia Farrow as Daisy Buchanan, and referred to the "supersell" of the movie.  I thought the movie was ok, but rather slow.

Sam Waterston played Nick Carraway and one of my favorites, Bruce Dern, played Tom Buchanan.  Karen Black was very good as Myrtle Wilson. Scott Wilson played George Wilson. 

listal.com

The fourth theatrical film version of the story came out in 2013.  Baz Luhrmann directed and Leonardo DiCaprio played Gatsby and Carey Mulligan played Daisy. The movie didn't do anything for me. 

Tobey Maguire played Nick Carraway and Joel Edgerton played Tom Buchanan.  Isla Fisher played  Myrtle Wilson. Jason Clarke played George Wilson. 

Friday, January 31, 2025

Kirk Douglas Heads Great Gatsby Play on the Family Hour -- January 31, 2025

Sioux City Journal, 01-January-1950

Family Hour of Stars was a CBS Radio program that ran from 1948 to 1950. It featured a repertory group of stars who played in "radio adaptions of great works of literature."

On 01-January-1950, Kirk Douglas starred in F Scott Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby. Douglas played Gatsby, so I imagine the character was more in the foreground than Gatsby is usually.

Wednesday, August 21, 2024

Oh, Margy! -- August 21, 2024

Birmingham Age-Herald, 17-August-1924

I found a Time-Life series of books about decades in the Anza Branch Library. The book about the 1920s was my favorite. I particularly liked the drawings done by John Held, Jr. He defined the appearance of flappers. This book was also where I learned about Clara Bow.

New York Herald, 24-September-1922

F Scott Fitzgerald engaged Held to illustrate the covers of several of his books. 




Friday, March 10, 2023

Zelda Sayre Fitzgerald 75 Years -- March 10, 2023

Washington Times, 11-March-1923

Zelda Sayre Fitzgerald, novelist, dancer, painter and playwright, died 75 years ago today, on 10-March-1945. She was the widow of novelist F Scott Fitzgerald. She had lived for some time in Highland Hospital, a psychiatric facility in Asheville, North Carolina, being treated for what may have been what we now call bipolar disorder. The building caught fire and nine patients, including Zelda Fitzgerald, died. Sometimes I think about her last moments, locked in a room on the fifth floor of a burning building. 

Washington Times, 11-March-1923

Nine Patients Die as Fire Sweeps
Mental Hospital at Asheville

Screaming Women Trapped on Upper Floors;
Scott Fitzgerald's Widow Among Victims

By the Associated Press

ASHEVILLE, N. C., Mar. 11. -- Nine women patients perished here early today in the blazing inferno of a mental hospital fire.

Seven of the victims were trapped helplessly on upper floors of the four-story central building of the Highland Hospital for Nervous Diseases, Dr. B. T. Bennett, medical director, reported.

Two others were evacuated by firemen who dashed into the fiery structure, but they died soon afterward.

The hospital released the following names of the dead:
Mrs. A. T. Hipps of Asheville, Mrs. W. B. Kennedy of Kinston, N. C.; Mrs. Ida Engel of Clayton, Mo.; Mrs. Julius Doering of Johnson City, Tenn.: Mrs. J. R. Borochoff of Rome, Ga.; Miss Marthina De Friece of Bristol, Tenn.; Mrs. F. Scott Fitzgerald of Montgomery, Ala., widow of the author; Mrs. Virginia Ward James of Atlanta, and Mrs. G. C. Womack of Friendsville, Tenn.

The fire, discovered about midnight, started in the kitchen of the hospital's central building. It quickly spread to an elevator shaft and was licking the building's roof when firemen arrived.

Screams of trapped women rang out above the roaring conflagration as doctors, nurses, firemen and police ran through the blazing structure, risking their lives in an effort to save the 20 patients in the building.

They quickly huddled the rescued patients into another building where some sat silently, and others yelled hysterically.

Police Capt. Harold Enloe was the first man to reach the building. "I could hear screaming on the third floor," he related. "Flames by then were lapping through the roof of the building."

Every available piece of the city's fire-fighting equipment was called out and off-duty firemen were rushed to the scene.

The flames, leaping high into the air, lit up a large section of this mountain resort city. About 1,000 spectators, many of them dressed in pajamas, milled helplessly around.

The hospital, housed in several buildings about 3 miles from the heart of Asheville, is a unit of Duke University Hospital in Durham.

It was operated for about a quarter of a century by Dr. Robert S. Carroll, a noted mental specialist whose clientele included members of prominent families throughout the Nation. Dr. Carroll gave the institution to Duke several years ago.

Thursday, January 26, 2023

Super Flappers! Running Wild With an Orgy of Gayety -- January 26, 2023

Birmingham Age-Herald, 14-January-1923

The Warner Brothers heavily promoted their adaption of F Scott Fitzgerald's second novel, The Beautiful and Damned. I need to read that again.

Marie Prevost played Gloria Gilbert and Kenneth Harlan played Anthony Patch. Prevost later married Harlan in real life.

Thursday, September 22, 2022

Tales of the Jazz Age 100 -- September 22, 2022

New York Herald, 24-September-1922

F Scott Fitzgerald's second collection of short stories, Tales of the Jazz Age, made its debut 100 years ago today, on 22-September-1922. The image in the ad is from John Held, Jr's design for the dust jacket. While several stories from his first collection, Flappers and Philosophers, had been made into movies, not as many stories from this collection were adapted for film or television.

In 1963, a now-lost BBC series called Teletale presented "The Camel's Back."  

"The Diamond as Big as the Ritz," which I always thought was a little clunky, was adapted by Kraft Theater a cheesy (sorry) anthology series on NBC in 1955. I also remember a radio adaption. 

listal.com

In 2008 "The Curious Case of Benjamin Button" was made into a feature film which I have not yet seen. It was directed by David Fincher. 

I find that I can't remember some of the stories in the collection at all. 

Moving Picture World, 23-September-1922

Warner Brothers promoted their planned adaption of Fitzgerald's second novel, The Beautiful and Damned. I need to read that again.

Tuesday, April 26, 2022

The Beautiful and Damned 100 -- April 26, 2022

New York Herald, 09-April-1922

F Scott Fitzgerald's second published novel, The Beautiful and Damned, made its debut 100 years ago this month. The is the Fitzgerald novel that I have probably read the fewest times.

Albuquerque Morning Journal, 10-April-1922

Reviewer P.G.H. enjoyed the book. I like his comment about "most unique." I do not know who Mark Sabre was. 

FITZGERALD
Produces His Second Good Novel

"The Beautiful and Damned." by F. Scott Fitzgerald. ($2.00.) Scribner's.

When I read Scott Fitzgerald's first novel I thought, In common with many others, that here was an author of fresh mind and amusing style whose talents would shortly be confined to the cheaply illustrated pages of a great national weekly; but when this same Mr. Fitzgerald wrote his second, and most recent book, "The Beautiful and Damned," I find, like Mr. Mencken, that "... Fitzgerald ceases to be a junkerkind (wonderkind? - JT) and begins to come into his maturity."

There is about the book that which takes all of the reader's intelligence for granted; no feeble strolling around giving gentle hints as to what it's all about. The author builds a very interesting story around Anthony Patch, a sensitive, lazy and charming young man who marries a creature of golden hair and silver intelligence. The story is essentially Anthony's, but the other characters respond quickly and naturally to their parts. It is very broad of Fitzgerald to have his hero a Harvard man this time. Amory Blaine was of Princeton, and more of an ape than Anthony Patch.

The war has a part in the book, but only that wretched part of the war which put men through camps here in America; thin-nosed lieutenants giving feeble orders and countermanding them; splendid generals eyeing captains with care; that sort of thing which is disgusting. Anthony is a private, and his itchy O. D. clothes probably made him look more like a Gotham barber than the grandson of $30,000,000 Adam Patch.

The married life of Anthony and Gloria is remarkably well reproduced. The first discoveries on the honeymoon, of mutual fancies and opposing traits of character; Gloria's carelessness and Anthony's nervous cowardice; Gloria's selfishness and Anthony's pride; all make the marriage not quite as perfect, thank God, as most seem to be in American fiction.

Fitzgerald still has the flapper monopoly In American letters. One meets Gloria as a flapper in chapter II, and she is still a flapper at the end of the book. Anthony, on the other hand, undergoes several stages of being. Through it all he remains more or less sensitive, even after he has drunk himself shabby.

The writing in the book is of rather uneven tenor. The bright spots are in the majority, but when the author descends to his one-act-play form of dialogue the result is not as good. He treads carefully in places, having become mired in words. There is far less grammatical carelessness in this later book. He says "most unique" on page 19, which is, at worst, a venial sin.

I am a little piqued at the last sentence in the book. It sounds horribly like "If winter comes:"

"I showed them," he was saying. "It was a hard fight, but I didn't give up and I came through!"

Perhaps the banality of the thing is deliberate. It may illustrate Anthony's feeble state of mind after his spell of madness. I hope Mr. Fitzgerald intended it thus. Otherwise, I should liken it to the mouthings or the almost senile Mark Sabre, a good-deed monster supposed to live In England. P. G. H.

Friday, September 24, 2021

F Scott Fitzgerald 125 -- September 24, 2021

listal.com

At least one source says that today would have been F Scott Fitzgerald's 125th birthday. He was born in Saint Paul, Minnesota. He has been a favorite writer since high school. He spent his last years in Hollywood writing screenplays. His marriage to Zelda Sayre was complicated. 

listal.com

listal.com

Three Comrades was the only movie that was released with a writing credit for Fitzgerald. His name is visible in tiny print on this poster. 

Thursday, January 14, 2021

F Scott Fitzgerald, John Dos Passos and AJ Cronin 125 -- January 14, 2021

listal.com

An unusual group of writers was born 125 years ago, on 14-January-1896. F Scott Fitzgerald was born in Saint Paul, Minnesota. He has been a favorite writer since high school. He spent his last years in Hollywood writing screenplays. 

listal.com

listal.com

Three Comrades was the only movie that was released with a writing credit for Fitzgerald. His name is visible in tiny print on this poseter. 

coverbrowser.com

John Dos Passos was born in Chicago. When I was in grammar school, I attended a summer acting class at Lone Mountain College. I remember seeing posters for a production based on U.S.A. by John Dos Passos.   I never saw the show, but I read the three-volume book one summer. It took a while. 

listal.com

The stage version of U.S.A. was made into a television movie. Dos Passos wrote the screenplay for The Devil is a Woman

listal.com

AJ Cronin was born in Scotland. He served as a doctor and became a novelist. An English teacher in high school was a big fan. He had us read The Citadel and The Keys of the Kingdom

listal.com

listal.com

Tuesday, July 21, 2020

One "Whom Gods Love" -- July 21, 2020

Motion Picture News, 31-July-1920
Metro, which was making a film based on his short story "Head and Shoulders," gave a brief biography of author F Scott Fitzgerald.


Wednesday, May 27, 2020

By a New Writer, F Scott Fitzgerald -- May 27, 2020

New York Tribune, 15-May-1920
"The Cut Glass-Bowl" was the story of a young married couple and a wedding present. 

Thursday, March 26, 2020

This Side Of Paradise 100 -- March 26, 2020

Philadelphia Evening Public Ledger, 27-March-1920
F  Scott Fitzgerald's  first published novel, This Side Of Paradise, made its debut 100 years ago today on 26-March-2020.  I haven't read it for many years.

New York Tribune, 11-April-1920
Heywood Broun was, among other things, a literary critic.  He did not like the book.  I remember his son Heywood Hale Broun announcing sporting events on CBS.  Daisy Ashford published her first novel at the age of nine. Miss Spence's School is a private high school for girls in New York City. 

Mr Fitzgerald a Cynical and Searching Philosopher at 23
Paradise and Princeton
An ex-College Man Questions the Authenticity of Youthful Author's Atmosphere
By Heywood Broun

WE HAVE just read F. Scott Fitzgerald's "This Side Of Paradise" (Scribner's) and it makes us feel very old. According to the announcement of his publishers Mr. Fitzgerald is only twenty-three, but there were times daring our progress through the book when we suspected that this was an overstatement. Daisy Ashford is hardly more naive. There is a certain confusion arising from the fact that in spite of the generally callow quality of the author's point of view he is intent on putting himself over as a cynical and searching philosopher. The resulting strain is sometimes terrific.

Of course, Mr. Fitzgerald is nearer to college memories than we are and, moreover, we have no intimate knowledge of Princeton, and yet we remain unconvinced as to the authenticity of the atmosphere which he creates. It seems to us inconceivable that the attitude toward life of a Princeton undergraduate, even a freshman, should be so curiously similar to that of a sophomore at Miss Spence's.

"Ever read any Oscar Wilde?" inquires d'Invilliers, the young poet, of Blaine Amory, our hero, who has been presented as a youngster of a somewhat literary turn. "No. Who wrote it?" answers Amory, and we refuse to believe that young Mr. Fitzgerald is not pulling our leg. Then, too, in spite of the bleak and jaded way in which the author sums up the content of college life, it is evident that he is by no means unimpressed with the sprightliness of conduct and conversation which he assigns to his undergraduate characters, though it is silly conversation and sillier conduct.

It is probably true that in some respects Fitzgerald has painted a faithful portrayal of the type of young man who nay be described as the male flapper, but our objection lies in the fact that to our mind the type is not interesting. After all, the reviewer who has been through several seasons of tales about sub-debs cannot view with anything but horror the prospect of being treated to exhaustive studies of her brother and first cousins.

In making himself responsible for the descriptions of college pranks and larks the author has undertaken a task of enormous difficulty. Things, done in a spirit of alcoholic exuberation (sic - JT) must of necessity sound flat and unprofitable to the mature and cold, sober reader. When Fitzgerald writes, "The donor of the party having remained sober, Kerry and Amory accidentally dropped him down two flights of stairs, and called, shamefaced and penitent, at the infirmary all the following week," he does scant justice to Kerry and Amory. After all, in the mood and at the moment it can hardly have seemed such a silly trick as it must appear to the reader in Fitzgerald's laconic statement.

The thing that puzzled us most was the author's description of the violent effect of the sex urge upon some of his young folk. On page 122, for instance, a chorus girl named Axia laid her blond head on Amory's shoulder and the youth immediately rushed away in a frenzy of terror and suffered from hallucinations for forty-eight hours. The explanation was hidden from us. It did not sound altogether characteristic of Princeton.

There are occasional thrusts of shrewd observation and a few well turned sentences and phrases in "This Side of Paradise." It Is only fair to add that the book has received enthusiastic praise from most American reviewers. Fitzgerald has been hailed as among the most promising of our own authors. And it may be so, but we dissent. We think he will go no great distance until he has grown much simpler in expression. It seems to us that his is a style larded with fine writing. When we read, "It was like weakness in a good woman, or blood on satin; one of those terrible incongruities that shake little things in the back of the brain," we cannot but feel that we are not yet grown out of the self-conscious stage which makes writing nothing more than a stunt.


New York Tribune, 22-April-1920
A fan of the book replied to Heywood Broun.  

"Writing of 'This Side of Paradise,'" says Mr. B., "you say that the man 'of that age' (i. e., between eighteen and twenty-five) 'usually understands himself so imperfectly that he is seldom qualified to describe himself.'

"It seems to me that men of that age are far more qualified to describe themselves than men of your own age, or older. After twenty-five one usually settles down into a groove, enters some kind of a rutted profession, gets married, has a Heywood 3d (perhaps), etc. In this state it is impossible to understand the feelings of those about you, even if you want to. You've become so settled or unsettled that the emotions and struggles of those about you seem vague and just a trifle unreal. As for understanding yourself, 'the older you get the less you know.'

"You say that the writing of 'This Side of Paradise' is self-conscious. There you defeat yourself, for self-conscious people come nearest to understanding themselves. The moment a man becomes unself-conscious he begins to stagnate. He is out of the picture of life. He is doomed.

"Too many American novelists are old fogies, that's why 'This Side of Paradise' is such an absorbing story. No wonder the fits of Fitzgerald make the Howells howl!"


As a matter of fact, we are not offering the theory that man becomes wiser and more important as he grows older. On the contrary, nothing which happens to anybody after the age of eight or nine matters very much. The rest is ornamentation and shingles. And yet we have no great desire to read the novels of eight and nine-year-olders, and we are even doubtful of the prowess of eighteen and twenty-three. A man knows a lot about himself at that age, to be sure. The only trouble is that most of it isn't so. We are enough, of a Freudian to believe that the important things in a man are the things of which he is unconscious. The self-conscious person makes it difficult to reach these unexplored depths. He is anxious to justify himself. He gives all sorts of explanations of his moods and his motives. Practically all of these are self-protective. They are designed to throw himself and everybody else off the trail. It is only when a man, or a character in a book, becomes easy and lets down his guard that he gives you the information which enables you to know him. None of Fitzgerald's characters even puts his hands down for a second There is too much footwork and too much feinting for anything solid and substantial being accomplished. You can't expect to have blood drawn in any such exhibition as that.


Somebody gave H.B. 3d a large doll the other day, much to our consternation. We were afraid it might develop maternal instinct and make him effeminate, but yesterday we discovered him joyfully pounding the head of the doll against the floor, so we feel that up to date his instinct toward the young is healthy and properly paternal.

New York Tribune, 25-April-1920
Publisher Charles Scribner's Sons noted Broun's disapproval in this ad.  

Wednesday, March 14, 2018

Booth Tarkington 150 -- March 14, 2018

Time, 31-December-1929
Indiana author Booth Tarkington was born 150 years ago, on 14-March-2018.  I don't think people read his stories and novels much today.  When I was a kid, the only thing I knew about him was that he wrote the novel that Orson Welles used as the basis for The Magnificent Ambersons.  I was already in college when I learned that F Scott Fitzgerald was a great admirer of Tarkington.  Inspired by this, I went to the Anza Branch Library and took out Penrod: His Complete Story, a collection of stories about a boy who grows up.

Seattle Star, 23-January-1915
Booth Tarkington and Harry Leon Wilson wrote a play called Cameo Kirby.  It has been filmed several times.  Dustin Farnum, who had played the role on stage, starred in the 1914 version.  John Gilbert played the part in a 1923 version directed by John Ford.  Irving Cummings directed a 1930 version which starred J Harold Murray.  I have never heard of him, either.


Motion Picture Magazine, February, 1922
As far as I can tell, 1922's Penrod, starring Wesley Barry and directed by Mickey Neilan, was the first movie based on a Penrod story.  Ben Alexander played Penrod in a 1923 adaption of Penrod and Sam, also directed by Mickey Neilan.  Ben Alexander played Jack Webb's first partner on the television version of Dragnet.

Billy Mauch played Penrod in three talkies, Penrod and Sam (1937), Penrod and His Twin Brother and Penrod's Double Trouble, both in 1938.

www.listal.com
Monsieur Beaucaire was a play by by Booth Tarkington and Evelyn Greenleaf Sutherland.  Rudolph Valentino and Bebe Daniels starred in a 1924 version.  Bob Hope and Joan Caulfield appeared in a 1946 adaption.

www.listal.com
In 1942 Orson Welles based his second feature film on The Magnificent Ambersons, but the movie got butchered by the studio after he left for another project.  There was also a television adaption in 2002.

Tuesday, September 3, 2013

Alan Ladd 100 -- September 3, 2013

People often made fun of Alan Ladd because he was short.  He made many good movies, including This Gun for Hire, The Glass Key and The Blue Dahlia.  I have never seen the version of F Scott Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby where he played Jay Gatsby.  I can't picture him playing Gatsby, but I can't picture anyone playing Gatsby. 

Friday, May 10, 2013

The Great Gatsby #5 -- May 10, 2013

Today the latest movie adaption of F Scott Fitzgerald's novel The Great Gatsby opened in theaters.  The first film adaption was a 1927 silent starring Warner Baxter as Jay Gatsby. Photoplay Magazine gave it a positive review in its February, 1927 issue.

"F. Scott Fitzgerald's novel of the great war's aftermath presented unusual film difficulties.  Herbert Brennon, the director, has managed to retain much of the feeling of the story.  Gatsby comes out of the war to achieve a fortune unscrupulously.  He falls, of course, in the end, finding that happiness can't be won that way.  Lois Wilson runs away with the film as the jazzy Daisy Buchanan, who flashes cocktails and silken you-know-she wears-'ems."

1927 Version (Warner Baxter as Gatsby)

Motion Picture Magazine Review of the 1927 Version

1949 Version (Alan Ladd as Gatsby)

1974 Version (Robert Redford as Gatsby) 

The Great Gatsby #4 -- May 10, 2013

Today the latest movie adaption of F Scott Fitzgerald's novel The Great Gatsby opened in theaters.  The first film adaption was a 1927 silent starring Warner Baxter as Jay Gatsby. EG, the reviewer in the February, 1927 issue of Motion Picture Magazine was not impressed.  EG gave the film a 75% score.

THE GREAT GATSBY -- Drama -- 75%

"Herbert Brennon has gone about misinterpreting F Scott Fitzgerald's novel to the very best of his ability.

"There is, it seems, a stratum of life that the movies cannot approach with any real understanding, and this must be it.  All the characters have been remolded into their movie counterparts, and the thing has become a conventional and not too deftly presented tale of a man who has the misfortune to love a woman outside of his sphere, and of this futile attempts to raise himself to a level from which she would at least be accessible.

"Warner Baxter at no point understands of interprets the pathetic and extraordinary character of Gatsby -- except in the most superficial and physical sense.

"And Lois Wilson's Daisy is equally inept.

"Every character, in fact, is distorted.  Mr. Brennon seems happiest in his moments of lavish display.  He has seized upon every opportunity the book gave for staing an orgy, and bathing girls abound.

"If, however, you didn't read Mr. Fitzgerals's book, and have no interest in the preservation of its finer points -- this is probably a very good picture, with a fair share of excitement and sex appeal.  -- Paramount.

"E.G."

1927 Version (Warner Baxter as Gatsby)

Photoplay Magazine Review of the 1927 Version

1949 Version (Alan Ladd as Gatsby)

1974 Version (Robert Redford as Gatsby) 

Thursday, May 9, 2013

The Great Gatsby #3 -- May 9, 2013

Tomorrow, 10-May-2013, the latest movie adaption of F Scott Fitzgerald's novel The Great Gatsby will open in theaters. The third theatrical film version of the story came out in 1974.  The 18-March-1974 cover of Time Magazine featured Robert Redford as Jay Gatsby and Mia Farrow as Daisy Buchanan, and referred to the "supersell" of the movie.  I thought the movie was ok, but rather slow.

Sam Waterston played Nick Buchanan and one of my favorites, Bruce Dern, played Tom Buchanan.  Karen Black was very good as Myrtle Wilson. Scott Wilson played George Wilson. 

1927 Version (Warner Baxter as Gatsby)

Motion Picture Magazine Review of the 1927 Version

Photoplay Magazine Review of the 1927 Version

1949 Version (Alan Ladd as Gatsby)