Zelda Fitzgerald
Template:Short description Template:Use American English Script error: No such module "Unsubst". Script error: No such module "Infobox".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Zelda Fitzgerald (née Sayre; July 24, 1900 – March 10, 1948) was an American novelist, painter, writer, and socialite.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Born in Montgomery, Alabama, to a wealthy Southern family, she became locally famous for her beauty and high spirits.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". In 1920, she married writer F. Scott Fitzgerald after the popular success of his debut novel, This Side of Paradise. The novel catapulted the young couple into the public eye, and she became known in the national press as the first American flapper.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Because of their wild antics and incessant partying, she and her husband became regarded in the newspapers as the enfants terribles of the Jazz Age.[1]Template:Sfnm Alleged infidelity and bitter recriminations soon undermined their marriage. After Zelda traveled abroad to Europe, her mental health deteriorated, and she had suicidal and homicidal tendencies, which required psychiatric care.Template:EfnTemplate:Sfnm[2] Her doctors diagnosed her with schizophrenia,[3][4] although later posthumous diagnoses posit bipolar disorder.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
While institutionalized at Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore, Maryland, she authored the 1932 novel Save Me the Waltz, a semi-autobiographical account of her early life in the American South during the Jim Crow era and her marriage to F. Scott Fitzgerald.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Upon its publication by Scribner's, the novel garnered mostly negative reviews and experienced poor sales.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". The critical and commercial failure of Save Me the Waltz disappointed Zelda and led her to pursue her other interests as a playwright and a painter.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". In the fall of 1932, she completed a stage play titled Scandalabra,Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". but Broadway producers unanimously declined to produce it.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Disheartened, Zelda next attempted to paint watercolors, but, when her husband arranged their exhibition in 1934, the critical response proved equally disappointing.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".[5]
While the two lived apart, Scott died of occlusive coronary arteriosclerosis in December 1940.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". After her husband's death, she attempted to write a second novel, Caesar's Things, but her recurrent voluntary institutionalization for mental illness interrupted her writing, and she failed to complete the work.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". By this time, she had undergone over ten years of electroshock therapy and insulin shock treatments,[6][7] and she suffered from severe memory loss.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". In March 1948, while sedated and locked in a room on the fifth floor of Highland Hospital in Asheville, North Carolina, she died in a fire.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Her body was identified by her dental records and one of her slippers.Template:Sfnm A follow-up investigation raised the possibility that the fire had been a work of arson by a disgruntled or mentally disturbed hospital employee.[8]Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
A 1970 biography by Nancy Milford was a finalist for the National Book Award.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". After the success of Milford's biography, scholars viewed Zelda's artistic output in a new light.Template:Sfnm Her novel Save Me the Waltz became the focus of literary studies exploring different facets of the work: how her novel contrasted with Scott's depiction of their marriage in Tender Is the NightScript error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". and how 1920s consumer culture placed mental stress on modern women.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Concurrently, renewed interest began in Zelda's artwork, and her paintings were posthumously exhibited in the United States and Europe.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". In 1992, she was inducted into the Alabama Women's Hall of Fame.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
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Early life and family background
Script error: No such module "Multiple image". Zelda Sayre was born in Montgomery, Alabama, on July 24, 1900, the youngest of six children.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Her parents were Episcopalians.Template:Sfnm Her mother, Minerva Buckner "Minnie" Machen, named her daughter after the Roma heroine in a novel, presumably Jane Howard's "Zelda: A Tale of the Massachusetts Colony" (1866) or Robert Edward Francillon's "Zelda's Fortune" (1874).Template:Sfnm Zelda was a spoiled child; her mother doted upon her daughter's every whim, but her father, Alabama politician Anthony Dickinson Sayre, was a strict and remote man whom Zelda described as a "living fortress."Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".Template:Sfnm Sayre was a state legislator in the post-Reconstruction era who authored the landmark 1893 Sayre Act, which disenfranchised black Alabamians for seventy years and ushered in the racially segregated Jim Crow period in the state.Template:SfnmTemplate:Sfnm Based on later writings, there is scholarly speculation regarding whether Anthony Sayre sexually abused Zelda as a child,Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".[9] but there is no evidence confirming that Zelda was a victim of incest.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
At the time of Zelda's birth, her family was a prominent and influential Southern clan who had been slave-holders before the Civil War.Template:SfnmTemplate:SfnmScript error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". According to biographer Nancy Milford, "if there was a Confederate establishment in the Deep South, Zelda Sayre came from the heart of it".Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Zelda's maternal grandfather was Willis Benson Machen, a Confederate Senator and later a U.S. Senator from Kentucky.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Her father's uncle was John Tyler Morgan,Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". a Confederate general and the second Grand Dragon of the Ku Klux Klan in Alabama.Template:SfnmTemplate:Sfnm An outspoken advocate of lynching who served six terms in the United States Senate, Morgan played a key role in laying the foundation for the Jim Crow era in the American South.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". In addition to wielding considerable influence in national politics, Zelda's family built the home later used by Jefferson Davis for the First White House of the Confederacy.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".Template:Sfnm According to biographer Sally Cline, "in Zelda's girlhood, ghosts of the late Confederacy drifted through the sleepy oak-lined streets,"Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". and Zelda claimed that she drew her strength from Montgomery's Confederate past.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
During her idle youth in Montgomery, Zelda's affluent Southern family employed half a dozen domestic servants, many of whom were African-American.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Consequently, Zelda was unaccustomed to domestic labor or responsibilities of any kind.Template:Sfnm[10] As the privileged child of wealthy parents,Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". she danced, took ballet lessons, and enjoyed the outdoors.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". In her youth, the family spent summers in Saluda, North Carolina, a village that would appear in her artwork decades later.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". In 1914, Zelda began attending Sidney Lanier High School.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". She was bright, but uninterested in her lessons. During high school, she continued her interest in ballet. She also drank gin, smoked cigarettes, and spent much of her time flirting with boys.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". A newspaper article about one of her dance performances quoted her as saying that she cared only about "boys and swimming".Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
She developed an appetite for attention, actively seeking to flout convention, whether by dancing or by wearing a tight, flesh-colored bathing suit to fuel rumors that she swam nude.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Her father's reputation was something of a safety net, preventing her social ruin.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Southern women of the time were expected to be delicate and docile, and Zelda's antics shocked the local community. Along with her childhood friend and future Hollywood star Tallulah Bankhead, she became a mainstay of Montgomery gossip.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Her ethos was encapsulated beneath her graduation photo at Sidney Lanier High School in Montgomery: "Why should all life be work, when we all can borrow? Let's think only of today, and not worry about tomorrow."Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". In her final year of high school, she was voted "prettiest" and "most attractive" in her graduating class.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
Courtship by F. Scott Fitzgerald
Script error: No such module "Labelled list hatnote".
In July 1918, Zelda Sayre first met aspiring novelist F. Scott Fitzgerald at the Montgomery Country Club.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". At the time, Fitzgerald had been freshly rejected by his first love, Chicago socialite and heiress Ginevra King, due to his lack of financial prospects.Template:Sfnm Heartbroken by this rejection, Scott had dropped out of Princeton University and volunteered for the United States Army amid World War I.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".[11] While awaiting deployment to the Western front,[11] he was stationed at Camp Sheridan, outside Montgomery.Template:Sfnm
While writing to Ginevra King and begging her to resume their relationship,Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". a lonely Fitzgerald began courting Montgomery women, including Zelda, who reminded him of Ginevra.[12]Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Scott called Zelda daily, and he visited Montgomery on his free days.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". He often spoke of his ambition to become a famous novelist, and he sent her a chapter of a book he was writing.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". At the time, Zelda dismissed Fitzgerald's remarks as mere boastfulness, and she concluded that he would never become a famous writer.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Infatuated with Zelda, Scott redrafted the character of Rosalind Connage in his unpublished manuscript The Romantic Egotist to resemble her,Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". and he told Zelda that "the heroine does resemble you in more ways than four."Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
In addition to inspiring the character of Rosalind Connage, Scott used a quote from Zelda's letters for a soliloquy by the narrator at the conclusion of The Romantic Egotist, later retitled and published as This Side of Paradise.Template:Sfnm Zelda wrote Scott a letter eulogizing the Confederate dead who perished during the American Civil War. "I've spent today in the graveyard... Isn't it funny how, out of a row of Confederate soldiers, two or three will make you think of dead lovers and dead loves—when they're exactly like the others, even to the yellowish moss," she wrote to Scott.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". In the final pages of his novel, Fitzgerald altered Zelda's sentiments to refer to Union soldiers instead of Confederates.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
During the early months of their courtship, Zelda and Scott strolled through the Confederate Cemetery at Oakwood Cemetery.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".[13] While walking past the headstones, Scott ostensibly failed to show sufficient reverence, and Zelda informed Scott that he would never understand how she felt about the Confederate dead.[14][13] Scott drew upon Zelda's intense feelings about the Confederacy and the Old South in his 1920 short story The Ice Palace about a Southern girl who becomes lost in an ice maze while visiting a northern town.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
While dating Zelda and other women in Montgomery, Scott received a letter from Ginevra King informing him of her impending arranged marriage to polo player William "Bill" Mitchell.Template:Sfnm Three days after Ginevra King married Bill Mitchell on September 4, 1918, Scott professed his affections for Zelda.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". In his ledger, Scott wrote that he had fallen in love on September 7, 1918.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". His love for Zelda increased as time passed, and he wrote to his friend Isabelle Amorous: "I love her and that's the beginning and end of everything. You're still a Catholic, but Zelda's the only God I have left now."Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Ultimately, Zelda fell in love as well.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Her biographer Nancy Milford wrote, "Scott had appealed to something in Zelda which no one before him had perceived: a romantic sense of self-importance which was kindred to his own."Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
Their courtship was interrupted in October when he was summoned north. He expected to be sent to France, but he was instead assigned to Camp Mills, Long Island. While he was there, the Allied Powers signed an armistice with Imperial Germany. He then returned to the base near Montgomery.Template:Sfnm Together again, Zelda and Scott now engaged in what he later described as sexual recklessness, and by December 1918, they had consummated their relationship.Template:Sfnm Although this was the first time they were sexually intimate, both Zelda and Scott had other sexual partners prior to their first meeting and courtship.[15][16][17] Initially, Fitzgerald did not intend to marry Zelda,[18] but the couple gradually viewed themselves as informally engaged, although Zelda declined to marry him until he proved financially successful.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".[19]
On February 14, 1919, he was discharged from the military and went north to establish himself in New York City.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". During this time, Zelda mistakenly feared she was pregnant.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Scott mailed her pills to induce an abortion, but Zelda refused to take them and replied in a letter: "I simply can't and won't take those awful pills... I'd rather have a whole family than sacrifice my self-respect... I'd feel like a damn whore if I took even one."Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". They wrote frequently, and by March 1920, Scott had sent Zelda his mother's ring, and the two had become engaged.Template:Sfnm However, when Scott's attempts to become a published author faltered during the next four months, Zelda became convinced that he could not support her accustomed lifestyle, and she broke off the engagement during the Red Summer of 1919.[20][21] Having been rejected by both Zelda and Ginevra during the past year due to his lack of financial prospects, Scott suffered from intense despair,Template:Sfnm and he carried a revolver daily while contemplating suicide.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
Soon after, in July 1919, Scott returned to St. Paul.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Having returned to his hometown as a failure, Scott became a social recluse and lived on the top floor of his parents' home at 599 Summit Avenue, on Cathedral Hill.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". He decided to make one last attempt to become a novelist and to stake everything on the success of a book.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Abstaining from alcohol and parties,Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". he worked day and night to revise The Romantic Egotist as This Side of Paradise—an autobiographical account of his Princeton years and his romances with Ginevra, Zelda, and others.Template:Sfnm At the time, Scott's feelings for Zelda were at an all-time low, and he remarked to a friend, "I wouldn't care if she died, but I couldn't stand to have anybody else marry her."Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
Marriage and celebrity
By September 1919, Scott completed his first novel, This Side of Paradise, and editor Maxwell Perkins of Charles Scribner's Sons accepted the manuscript for publication.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Scott requested an accelerated release to renew Zelda's faith in him: "I have so many things dependent on its success—including of course a girl."Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". After Scott informed Zelda of his novel's upcoming publication, a shocked Zelda replied apologetically: "I hate to say this, but I don't think I had much confidence in you at first.... It's so nice to know you really can do things—anything—and I love to feel that maybe I can help just a little."Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
Zelda agreed to marry Scott once Scribner's published the novel;Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". in turn, Fitzgerald promised to bring her to New York with "all the iridescence of the beginning of the world."Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Scribner's published This Side of Paradise on March 26, 1920, and Zelda arrived in New York on March 30. A few days later, on April 3, 1920, they married in a small ceremony at St. Patrick's Cathedral.Template:Sfnm
At the time of their wedding, Fitzgerald later claimed neither he nor Zelda still loved each other,[22][23] and the early years of their marriage in New York City proved to be a disappointment.[24][25]Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". According to biographer Andrew Turnbull, "victory was sweet, though not as sweet as it would have been six months earlier before Zelda had rejected him. Fitzgerald couldn't recapture the thrill of their first love".Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". As the affections between Zelda and Scott cooled, Scott continued to obsess over the loss of his first love, Ginevra King, and, for the remainder of their marriage, he could not think of Ginevra "without tears coming to his eyes."[26]Template:Sfnm
Despite the cooling of their affections, Scott and Zelda quickly became celebrities of New York, as much for their wild behavior as for the success of This Side of Paradise. They were ordered to leave both the Biltmore Hotel and the Commodore Hotel for disturbing other guests.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Their daily lives consisted of outrageous pranks and drunken escapades.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". While fully dressed, they jumped into the water fountain in front of the Plaza Hotel in New York.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". They frequently hired taxicabs and rode on the hood.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". One evening, while inebriated, they decided to visit the county morgue, where they inspected unidentified corpses; and, on another evening, Zelda insisted on sleeping in a dog kennel.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Alcohol increasingly fueled their nightly escapades. Publicly, this meant little more than napping when they arrived at parties; but privately, it increasingly led to bitter arguments.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". To their mutual delight, New York newspapers depicted Zelda and Scott as cautionary examples of youth and excess—the enfants terribles of the hedonistic Jazz Age.[1]Template:Sfnm Script error: No such module "Multiple image". After a month of hotel evictions,Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". the Fitzgeralds moved to a cottage in Westport, Connecticut, where Scott worked on drafts of his second novel.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Because of her privileged upbringing with many African-American servants, Zelda could not perform household responsibilities at Westport.Template:Sfnm During the early months of their marriage, Scott's unwashed clothes began disappearing.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". One day, he opened a closet and discovered his dirty clothes piled to the ceiling.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Uncertain of what to do with unwashed clothes, Zelda had never sent them out for cleaning: she had simply tossed everything into the closet.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
Soon after, Scott employed two maids and a laundress.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Zelda's complete dependence upon servants became the comedic focus of magazine articles.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". When Harper & Brothers asked Zelda to contribute her favorite recipes in an article, she wrote: "See if there is any bacon, and if there is, ask the cook which pan to fry it in. Then ask if there are any eggs, and if so try and persuade the cook to poach two of them. It is better not to attempt toast, as it burns very easily. Also, in the case of bacon, do not turn the fire too high, or you will have to get out of the house for a week. Serve preferably on china plates, though gold or wood will do if handy."Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
While Scott attempted to write his next novel at their home in Westport, Zelda announced that she was homesick for the Deep South.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". In particular, she missed eating Southern cuisine such as peaches and biscuits for breakfast.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". She suggested that they travel to Montgomery, Alabama.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". On July 15, 1920, the couple traveled in a touring car—which Scott derogatorily nicknamed "the rolling junk"—to her parents' home in Montgomery.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". After visiting Zelda's family for several weeks, they abandoned the unreliable vehicle and returned via train to Westport, Connecticut.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Zelda's parents visited their Westport cottage soon after, but her father Judge Anthony Sayre took a dim view of the couples' constant partying and scandalous lifestyle.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Following this visit, the Fitzgeralds relocated to an apartment at 38 West 59th Street in New York City.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
Pregnancy and Scottie
Script error: No such module "Multiple image". In February 1921, while Scott labored on drafts of his inchoate second novel, The Beautiful and Damned, Zelda discovered she was pregnant.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". She requested that the child be born on Southern soil in Alabama, but Fitzgerald adamantly refused.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Zelda wrote despondently to a friend: "Scott's changed... He used... to say he loved the South, but now he wants to get as far away from it as he can."Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". To Zelda's chagrin, her husband insisted upon having the baby at his northern home in Saint Paul, Minnesota.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". On October 26, 1921, she gave birth to Frances "Scottie" Fitzgerald. As she emerged from anesthesia, Scott recorded Zelda saying, "Oh, God, goofo I'm drunk. Mark Twain. Isn't she smart—she has the hiccups. I hope it's beautiful and a fool—a beautiful little fool."Template:Sfnm Many of her words found their way into Scott's novels: in The Great Gatsby, the character Daisy Buchanan expresses a similar hope for her daughter.Template:Sfnm
While writing The Beautiful and Damned, Scott drew upon "bits and pieces" of Zelda's diary and letters.Template:EfnScript error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". He modeled the character Anthony Patch on himself and the character Gloria Patch on—in his words—the chill-mindedness and selfishness of Zelda.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Prior to publication, Zelda proofread the drafts, and she urged her husband to cut the cerebral ending, which focused on the main characters' lost idealism.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Upon its publication, Burton Rascoe, the newly appointed literary editor of the New York Tribune, approached Zelda for an opportunity to entice readers with a satirical review of Scott's latest work as a publicity stunt.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
Although Zelda had carefully proofread drafts of the novel,Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". she pretended in her review to read the novel for the very first time, and she wrote partly in jest that "on one page I recognized a portion of an old diary of mine... and, also, scraps of letters which, though considerably edited, sound to me vaguely familiar. In fact, Mr. Fitzgerald—I believe that is how he spells his name—seems to believe that plagiarism begins at home."Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".[27] In the same review, Zelda joked that she hoped her husband's novel would become a commercial success as "there is the cutest cloth of gold dress for only $300 in a store on Forty-second Street".Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
The satirical review led to Zelda receiving offers from other magazines to write stories and articles. According to their daughter, Scott "spent many hours editing the short stories she sold to College Humor and to Scribner's Magazine".Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". In June 1922, Metropolitan Magazine published an essay by Zelda Fitzgerald titled "Eulogy on the Flapper".Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". At the time flappers were typically young, modern women who bobbed their hair and wore short skirts.[28]Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". They also drank alcohol and had premarital sex.[29][30] Though ostensibly a piece about the decline of the flapper lifestyle after its heyday in the early 1920s, Zelda's biographer Nancy Milford wrote that Zelda's essay served as "a defense of her own code of existence."Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". In the article, Zelda described the ephemeral phenomenon of the flapper:
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The Flapper awoke from her lethargy of sub-deb-ism, bobbed her hair, put on her choicest pair of earrings and a great deal of audacity and rouge and went into the battle. She flirted because it was fun to flirt and wore a one-piece bathing suit because she had a good figure ... she was conscious that the things she did were the things she had always wanted to do. Mothers disapproved of their sons taking the Flapper to dances, to teas, to swim and most of all to heart.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
After the publication of The Beautiful and Damned in March 1922, the Fitzgeralds traveled to either New York or St. Paul in order for Zelda to procure an abortion.Template:Sfnm Ultimately, Zelda would have three abortions during their marriage, and her sister Rosalind later questioned whether Zelda's later mental deterioration was due to health side-effects of these unsafe procedures.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Zelda's thoughts on terminating her second pregnancy are unknown, but in the first draft of The Beautiful and Damned, Scott wrote a scene in which Gloria Gilbert believes she is pregnant and Anthony Patch suggests she "talk to some woman and find out what's best to be done. Most of them fix it some way."Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Anthony's suggestion was removed from the final version, and this significant alteration shifted the focus from a moral dilemma about the act of abortion to Gloria's superficial concern that a baby would ruin her figure.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
Following the financial failure of Scott's play The Vegetable,Template:Sfnm the Fitzgeralds found themselves mired in debt. Although Scott wrote short stories furiously to pay the bills, he became burned out and depressed.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". During this period, while Scott wrote short stories at home, the New York Police Department detained Zelda near the Queensboro Bridge on the suspicion of her being the "Bobbed Haired Bandit," an infamous spree-robber later identified as Celia Cooney.Template:Sfnm Following this incident, the couple departed in April 1924 for Paris, France, in the hope of living a more frugal existence abroad in Europe.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
Expatriation to Europe
After arriving in Paris, the couple soon relocated to Antibes on the French Riviera.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". While Scott labored on drafts of The Great Gatsby, Zelda became infatuated with a French naval aviator, Edouard Jozan.Template:Sfnm The exact details of the supposed romance are unverifiable and contradictory,Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".[31] and Jozan himself claimed that the Fitzgeralds invented the entire incident.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". According to conflicting accounts, Zelda spent afternoons swimming at the beach and evenings dancing at the casinos with Jozan. After several weeks, she asked Scott for a divorce.Template:Sfnm Scott purportedly challenged Jozan to duel and locked Zelda in their villa until he could kill him.[32] Before any fatal confrontation could occur, Jozan—who had no intention of marrying Zelda—fled the Riviera, and the Fitzgeralds never saw him again.Template:Sfnm Soon after, Zelda possibly overdosed on sleeping pills.[2]
On his part, Jozan dismissed the entire story as pure fabrication and claimed that no romance with Zelda had ever occurred: "They both had a need of drama, they made it up and perhaps they were the victims of their own unsettled and a little unhealthy imagination."Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".[33] In later retellings, both Zelda and Scott embellished the story, and Zelda later falsely told Ernest Hemingway and his wife Hadley Richardson that the affair ended when Jozan committed suicide.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". In fact, Jozan had been transferred by the French military to Indochina.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
Regardless of whether any extramarital affair with Jozan occurred,Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". the episode led to a breach of trust in their marriage,Template:Sfnm and Fitzgerald wrote in his notebook, "I knew something had happened that could never be repaired."Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". The incident likely influenced Fitzgerald's writing of The Great Gatsby, and he drew upon many elements of his tempestuous relationship with Zelda, including the loss of certainty in her love.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". In August, he wrote to his friend Ludlow Fowler: "I feel old too, this summer ... the whole burden of this novel—the loss of those illusions that give such color to the world that you don't care whether things are true or false as long as they partake of the magical glory."Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
Scott finalized The Great Gatsby in October 1924.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". The couple attempted to celebrate with travel to Rome and Capri, but both were unhappy and unhealthy. When he received the galleys for his novel, Scott fretted over the best title: Trimalchio in West Egg, just Trimalchio or Gatsby, Gold-hatted Gatsby, or The High-bouncing Lover. Disliking Fitzgerald's chosen title of Trimalchio in West Egg, editor Max Perkins persuaded him that the reference was too obscure and that people would be unable to pronounce it.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". After both Zelda and Perkins expressed their preference for The Great Gatsby, Fitzgerald agreed.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". It was also on this trip, while ill with colitis, that Zelda began painting artworks.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
Meeting Ernest Hemingway
Returning to Paris in April 1925, Zelda met Ernest Hemingway, whose career her husband did much to promote. Through Hemingway, the Fitzgeralds were introduced to Gertrude Stein, Alice B. Toklas, Robert McAlmon, and others.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Scott and Hemingway became close friends, but Zelda and Hemingway instantly disliked each other from their first meeting, although Hemingway admitted to having an "erotic dream" about Zelda the night they met.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". She openly referred to him with homophobic slurs and denounced him as a "fairy with hair on his chest".Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". She considered Hemingway's domineering macho persona to be merely a posture to conceal his homosexuality; in turn, Hemingway told Scott that Zelda was "insane".Template:Sfnm In his memoir A Moveable Feast, Hemingway claims he realized that Zelda had a mental illness when she insisted that jazz singer Al Jolson was greater than Jesus Christ.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Hemingway alleged that Zelda sought to destroy her husband, and she purportedly taunted Fitzgerald over his penis size.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". After examining it in a public restroom, Hemingway confirmed Fitzgerald's penis to be of average size.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
Hemingway claimed that Zelda urged her husband to write lucrative short stories as opposed to novels in order to support her accustomed lifestyle.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".[34] To supplement their income, Fitzgerald often wrote stories for magazines such as The Saturday Evening Post, Collier's Weekly, and Esquire.Template:Sfnm "I always felt a story in The Post was tops," Zelda later recalled, "but Scott couldn't stand to write them. He was completely cerebral, you know. All mind."Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Scott would write his stories in an "authentic" manner and then rewrite them to add plot twists, which increased their salability as magazine stories.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". This "whoring" for Zelda—as Hemingway dubbed these sales—emerged as a sore point in their friendship.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". After reading The Great Gatsby, Hemingway vowed to put any differences with Fitzgerald aside and to aid him in any way he could, although he feared Zelda would derail Fitzgerald's career.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". In a letter to Fitzgerald, Hemingway warned him that Zelda would derail his career:
<templatestyles src="Template:Blockquote/styles.css" />
Of all people on earth you needed discipline in your work and instead you marry someone who is jealous of your work, wants to compete with you and ruins you. It's not as simple as that and I thought Zelda was crazy the first time I met her and you complicated it even more by being in love with her and, of course, you're a rummy.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
A more serious rift in the Fitzgerald's marriage occurred when Zelda suspected that Scott was closeted homosexual,Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". and she alleged that Fitzgerald and Hemingway engaged in homosexual relations.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".[35] In the ensuing months, she frequently belittled Scott with homophobic slurs during their public excursions.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Biographer Matthew J. Bruccoli posits that Zelda's inordinate preoccupation with other persons' sexual behavior likely indicated the onset of her paranoid schizophrenia.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". However, Fitzgerald's sexuality was a popular subject of debate among his friends and acquaintances.[36][37]Template:Sfnm As a youth, Fitzgerald had a close relationship with Father Sigourney Fay,[38] a possibly gay Catholic priest,Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".[39] and Fitzgerald later used his last name for the idealized romantic character of Daisy Fay Buchanan.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". After college, Fitzgerald cross-dressed during outings in Minnesota and flirted with men at social events.[40] While staying in Paris, rumors dogged Fitzgerald among the American expat community that he was gay.[37]
Irritated by Zelda's recurrent homophobic attacks on his sexual identity,Template:Efn Scott decided to have sex with a Parisian prostitute.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Zelda found condoms that he had purchased before any sexual encounter occurred, and a bitter quarrel ensued, resulting in ingravescent jealousy.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Soon after, a jealous Zelda threw herself down a flight of marble stairs at a party because Fitzgerald, engrossed in talking to American dancer Isadora Duncan, ignored her.Template:Sfnm In December 1926, after two unpleasant years in Europe that considerably strained their marriage, the Fitzgeralds returned to America, but their marital difficulties continued to fester.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
In January 1927, the Fitzgeralds relocated to Los Angeles, where Scott wrote Lipstick for United Artists and met Hollywood starlet Lois Moran.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Jealous of Moran, Zelda set fire to her clothing in a bathtub as a self-destructive act.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". She disparaged Moran as "a breakfast food that many men identified with whatever they missed from life."Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Fitzgerald's relations with Moran exacerbated the Fitzgeralds' marital difficulties and, after merely two months in Hollywood, the unhappy couple relocated to Ellerslie in Wilmington, Delaware, in March 1927.Template:SfnmScript error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Literary critic Edmund Wilson, recalling a party at the Fitzgerald home in Edgemoor, Delaware, in February 1928, described Zelda as follows:
<templatestyles src="Template:Blockquote/styles.css" />
I sat next to Zelda, who was at her iridescent best. Some of Scott's friends were irritated; others were enchanted, by her. I was one of the ones who were charmed. She had the waywardness of a Southern belle and the lack of inhibitions of a child. She talked with so spontaneous a color and wit—almost exactly in the way she wrote—that I very soon ceased to be troubled by the fact that the conversation was in the nature of a 'free association' of ideas and one could never follow up anything. I have rarely known a woman who expressed herself so delightfully and so freshly: she had no ready-made phrases on the one hand and made no straining for effect on the other. It evaporated easily, however, and I remember only one thing she said that night: that the writing of Galsworthy was a shade of blue for which she did not care.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
Obsession and illness
By 1927, at the Ellersie estate in Wilmington, Delaware, Scott had become severely alcoholic, and Zelda's behavior became increasingly erratic.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Much of the conflict between them stemmed from the boredom and isolation Zelda experienced when Scott was writing.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". She would often interrupt him when he was working, and the two grew increasingly miserable.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Stung by Fitzgerald's criticism that all great women use their talents constructively, Zelda had a deep desire to develop a talent that was entirely her own.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
At the age of 28, she became obsessed with Russian ballet, and she decided to embark upon a career as a prima ballerina.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Her friend Gerald Murphy counseled against her ambition and remarked that "there are limits to what a woman of Zelda's age can do and it was obvious that she had taken up the dance too late."Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Despite her being far too old to achieve such an ambition, Scott Fitzgerald paid for Zelda to begin practicing under the tutelage of Catherine Littlefield, director of the Philadelphia Opera Ballet.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".[41] After the Fitzgeralds returned to Europe in summer 1928, Scott paid for Zelda to study under Russian ballerina Lubov Egorova in Paris.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
In September 1929, the San Carlo Opera Ballet Company in Naples invited her to join their ballet school.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". In preparation, Zelda undertook a grueling daily practice of up to eight hours a day,Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". and she "punished her body in strenuous efforts to improve."Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". According to Zelda's daughter, although Scott "greatly appreciated and encouraged his wife's unusual talents and ebullient imagination,"Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". he became alarmed when her "dancing became a twenty-four-hour preoccupation which was destroying her physical and mental health."Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Soon after, Zelda collapsed from physical and mental exhaustion.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". One evening, Scott returned home to find an exhausted Zelda seated on the floor and entranced with a pile of sand.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". When he asked her what she was doing, she could not speak.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". He summoned a French physician, who examined Zelda and informed him that "your wife is mad."Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
Soon after her physical and mental collapse, Zelda's mental health further deteriorated.Template:Sfnm In October 1929, during an automobile trip to Paris along the mountainous roads of the Grande Corniche, Zelda seized the car's steering wheel and tried to kill herself, her husband, and her nine-year-old daughter, Scottie, by driving over a cliff.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". After this homicidal incident, Zelda sought psychiatric treatment. On April 23, 1930, the Malmaison Clinic near Paris admitted her for observation.Template:Sfnm On May 22, 1930, she moved to Valmont sanatorium in Montreux, Switzerland.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". The clinic primarily treated gastrointestinal ailments, and, due to her profound psychological problems, she was moved again to a psychiatric facility in Prangins on the shores of Lake Geneva on June 5, 1930.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". At Prangins in June, Dr. Oscar Forel issued a tentative diagnosis of schizophrenia,[3] but he feared her psychological condition might be far worse.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Zelda's biographer, Nancy Milford, quotes Dr. Forel's full diagnosis:
<templatestyles src="Template:Blockquote/styles.css" />
The more I saw Zelda, the more I thought at the time [that] she is neither [suffering from] a pure neurosis nor a real psychosis—I considered her a constitutional, emotionally unbalanced psychopath—she may improve, [but] never completely recover.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
After five months of observation, Doctor Eugen Bleuler—one of Europe's leading psychiatrists—confirmed Dr. Forel's diagnosis of Zelda as a schizophrenic on November 22, 1930.[4] (Following Zelda's death, later psychiatrists speculated that Zelda instead had bipolar disorder.Template:Sfnm) She was released from Prangins in September 1931.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". In an attempt to keep his wife out of an asylum, Scott hired nurses and attendants to care for Zelda at all times.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Although there were periods where her behavior was merely eccentric, she could frequently become a danger to herself and others.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". In one instance, she attempted to throw herself in front of a moving train and, in another instance, she attacked a visiting guest at their home without provocation.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Despite her precarious mental health, the couple traveled to Montgomery, Alabama, where her father, Judge Anthony Sayre, lay dying. After her father's death, her mental health again deteriorated and she had another breakdown.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
Save Me the Waltz
Script error: No such module "Labelled list hatnote".
In February 1932, after an episode of hysteria, Zelda insisted that she be readmitted to a mental hospital.Template:Sfnm On February 12, 1932, over her husband's objections,Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Fitzgerald was admitted by The Henry Phipps Psychiatric Clinic at Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore, where her treatment was overseen by Dr. Adolf Meyer, an expert on schizophrenia.Template:SfnmScript error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". As part of her recovery routine, she spent at least two hours a day writing a manuscript.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". At the Phipps Clinic, Zelda developed a bond with Dr. Mildred Squires, a female resident.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". When Dr. Squires asked Scott to speculate why Zelda's mental health had deteriorated, Fitzgerald replied:
<templatestyles src="Template:Blockquote/styles.css" />
Perhaps fifty percent of our friends and relatives would tell you in all honest conviction that my drinking drove Zelda insane—the other half would assure you that her insanity drove me to drink. Neither judgement would mean anything.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
Toward the end of February 1932, Zelda shared fragments of her manuscript with Dr. Squires, who wrote to Scott that the unfinished novel was vivid and had charm.Template:Sfnm Zelda wrote to Scott from the hospital, "I am proud of my novel, but I can hardly restrain myself enough to get it written. You will like it—It is distinctly École Fitzgerald, though more ecstatic than yours—perhaps too much so."Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Zelda finished the novel on March 9. She sent the unaltered manuscript to Scott's editor, Maxwell Perkins, at Scribner's.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
Surprised to receive an unannounced novel in the mail from Zelda, Perkins carefully perused the manuscript.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". He concluded the work had "a slightly deranged quality which gave him the impression that the author had difficulty in separating fiction from reality."Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". He felt the manuscript contained several good sections, but its overall tone seemed hopelessly "dated" and tonally resembled Fitzgerald's 1922 work The Beautiful and Damned.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Perkins hoped that her husband might be able to improve its overall quality with his criticism.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
Upon learning that Zelda had submitted her manuscript to Perkins, Scott became angry that she had not shown her manuscript to him beforehand.Template:Sfnm After reading the manuscript, he objected to her novel's plagiarism of his protagonist in This Side of Paradise.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". He was further upset to learn that Zelda's novel used the very same plot elements as his upcoming novel, Tender Is the Night.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". After receiving letters from Scott delineating these objections, Zelda wrote to Scott apologetically that she was "afraid we might have touched the same material."Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
Despite Scott's initial annoyance, a debt-ridden Fitzgerald realized that Zelda's book might earn a tidy profit.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Consequently, his requested revisions were "relatively few", and "the disagreement was quickly resolved, with Scott recommending the novel to Perkins."Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Several weeks later, Scott wrote to Perkins: "Here is Zelda's novel. It is a good novel now, perhaps a very good novel—I am too close to tell. It has the faults and virtues of a first novel.... It should interest the many thousands in dancing. It is about something and absolutely new, and should sell."Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Although unimpressed,[42] Perkins agreed to publish the work as a way for Fitzgerald to repay his financial debt to Scribner's.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Perkins arranged for half of Zelda's royalties to be applied against Scott's debt to Scribner's until at least $5,000 had been repaid.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
In March 1932, the Phipps Clinic discharged Zelda, and she joined her husband Scott and her daughter at the La Paix estate in Baltimore, Maryland.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Although discharged, she remained mentally unwell.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". A month later, Fitzgerald took her to lunch with critic H. L. Mencken, the literary editor of The American Mercury.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". In his diary, Mencken noted Zelda "went insane in Paris a year or so ago, and is still plainly more or less off her base."Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Throughout the luncheon, she manifested signs of mental distress.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". A year later, when Mencken met Zelda for the last time, he described her mental illness as immediately evident to any onlooker and her mind as "only half sane."Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". He regretted that F. Scott Fitzgerald could not write novels, as he had to write magazine stories to pay for Zelda's psychiatric treatment.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
On October 7, 1932, Scribner's published Save Me the Waltz with a printing of 3,010 copies—not unusually low for a first novel in the middle of the Great Depression—on cheap paper, with a cover of green linen.Template:Sfnm According to Zelda, the book derived its title from a Victor record catalog,Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". and the title evoked the romantic glitter of the lifestyle which F. Scott Fitzgerald and herself experienced during the riotous Jazz Age. The parallels to the Fitzgeralds were obvious: The protagonist of the novel is Alabama Beggs—like Zelda, the daughter of a Southern judge—who marries David Knight, an aspiring painter who abruptly becomes famous for his work. They live the fast life in Connecticut before departing to live in France. Dissatisfied with her marriage, Alabama throws herself into ballet. Though told she has no chance, she perseveres and after three years becomes the lead dancer in an opera company. Alabama becomes ill from exhaustion, however, and the novel ends when they return to her family in the South, as her father is dying.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
<templatestyles src="Template:Quote_box/styles.css" />
A shooting star, an ectoplasmic arrow, sped through the nebulous hypothesis like a wanton hummingbird. From Venus to Mars to Neptune it trailed the ghost of comprehension, illuminating far horizons over the pale battlefields of reality.
Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
Echoing Zelda's frustrations, the novel portrays Alabama's struggle to establish herself independently of her husband and to earn respect for her own accomplishments.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". In contrast to Scott's unadorned prose, Zelda's writing style in Save Me the Waltz is replete with verbal flourishes and complex metaphors. The novel is also deeply sensual; as literary scholar Jacqueline Tavernier-Courbin observed in 1979, "the sensuality arises from Alabama's awareness of the life surge within her, the consciousness of the body, the natural imagery through which not only emotions but simple facts are expressed, the overwhelming presence of the senses, in particular touch and smell, in every description."Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
The reviews of Save Me the Waltz by literary critics were overwhelmingly negative.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". The critics savaged Zelda's florid prose as overwritten, attacked her fictional characters as uninteresting, and mocked her tragic scenes as grotesquely "harlequinade".Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". The New York Times published a particularly harsh review and lambasted her editor Max Perkins: "It is not only that her publishers have not seen fit to curb an almost ludicrous lushness of writing but they have not given the book the elementary services of a literate proofreader."Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". The overwhelmingly negative reviews bewildered and distressed Zelda.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
Painting and later years
Script error: No such module "Multiple image". From the mid-1930s onward, Zelda would be hospitalized sporadically for the rest of her life at sanatoriums in Baltimore, New York, and in Asheville, North Carolina.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". When Scott visited Zelda in the sanatoriums, she increasingly exhibited signs of mental instability.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". During one visit, Scott and friends took Zelda on an outing to a nearby home in Tryon, North Carolina.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". During the lunch, she became withdrawn and ceased communication.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". On the return drive to the sanatorium, she wrenched open the car door and threw herself out of the moving vehicle in an attempt to kill herself.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". In another incident, Zelda's unexpected loss of a tennis match at the Asheville sanatorium resulted in her physically attacking her tennis partner and beating them over the head with her tennis racket.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
Despite the deterioration of her mental health, she continued pursuing her artistic ambitions. After the critical and commercial failure of Save Me the Waltz, she attempted to write a farcical stage play titled Scandalabra in Fall 1932.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". However, after submitting the manuscript to agent Harold Ober, Broadway producers rejected her play.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Following this rejection, Scott arranged for her play Scandalabra to be staged by a Little Theater group in Baltimore, Maryland, and he sat through long hours of rehearsals of the play.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". A year later, during a group therapy session with her husband and a psychiatrist, Fitzgerald remarked that she was "a third-rate writer and a third-rate ballet dancer."Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Following this remark, Zelda attempted to paint watercolors while in and out of sanatoriums.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
In March 1934, Scott Fitzgerald arranged the first exhibition of Zelda's artwork—13 paintings and 15 drawings—in New York City.[5]Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". As with the tepid reception of her book, New York critics were ill-disposed towards her paintings.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". The New Yorker described them merely as "paintings by the almost mythical Zelda Fitzgerald; with whatever emotional overtones or associations may remain from the so-called Jazz Age." No actual description of the paintings was provided in the review.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
Following the critical failure of her artwork exhibition, Scott awoke one morning to discover Zelda had gone missing.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". After the arrival of a doctor and several attendants, a manhunt ensued in New York City.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Ultimately, they found Zelda in Central Park digging a grave.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Soon after, she became even more violent and reclusive. In 1936, Scott placed her in the Highland Hospital in Asheville, North Carolina, writing to friends:Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
<templatestyles src="Template:Blockquote/styles.css" />
Zelda now claims to be in direct contact with Christ, William the Conqueror, Mary Stuart, Apollo and all the stock paraphernalia of insane-asylum jokes ... For what she has really suffered, there is never a sober night that I do not pay a stark tribute of an hour to in the darkness. In an odd way, perhaps incredible to you, she was always my child (it was not reciprocal as it often is in marriages) ... I was her great reality, often the only liaison agent who could make the world tangible to her.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
Zelda remained in the hospital while Scott returned to Hollywood for a $1,000-a-week job with MGM in June 1937.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Estranged from Zelda, he attempted to reunite with his first love, Ginevra King, when she visited California in October 1938, but his uncontrolled alcoholism sabotaged their brief reunion.Template:Sfnm[43] When a disappointed King returned to Chicago, Fitzgerald settled into a clandestine relationship with Hollywood gossip columnist Sheilah Graham.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Throughout their relationship, Graham claimed that Fitzgerald felt constant guilt over Zelda's mental illness and confinement.[44] He repeatedly attempted sobriety, suffered from depression, had violent outbursts, and attempted suicide.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
For the next several years, a depressed Scott continued screenwriting on the West Coast and visiting a hospitalized Zelda on the East Coast. In April 1939, a coterie from Zelda's mental hospital had planned to go to Cuba, but Zelda had missed the trip. The Fitzgeralds decided to go on their own. The trip proved to be a disaster. During the trip, spectators at a cockfight beat Scott when he tried to intervene against animal cruelty.Template:Sfnm Upon his return to the United States, a binge-drinking Scott tested positive for active tuberculosis and required hospitalization, and Zelda returned alone by train to Highland Hospital.Template:Sfnm Scott wrote to Zelda in May: "You are the finest, loveliest, tenderest, most beautiful person I have ever known".Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". The Fitzgeralds never saw each other again.Template:Sfnm
<templatestyles src="Template:Quote_box/styles.css" />
I am sorry that there should be nothing to greet you but an empty shell . . . I love you anyway . . . even if there isn't any me or any love or even any life . . . I love you.
Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
Scott returned to Hollywood in order to pay the ever-increasing bills for Zelda's continued hospitalization. She made some progress in Asheville, and in March 1940, four years after admittance, she was discharged to her mother's care.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". She was nearly forty now, her friends were long gone, and the Fitzgeralds no longer had much money. They wrote to each other frequently, and they made plans to meet again in December 1940. In a letter Zelda wrote to Fitzgerald shortly before he died of a heart attack, she said: "I am sorry that there should be nothing to greet you but an empty shell . . . I love you anyway . . . even if there isn't any me or any love or even any life . . . I love you."Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Their planned rendezvous did not occur due to Scott's death of occlusive coronary arteriosclerosis at 44 years of age in December 1940. Due to her fragile mental health, Zelda could not attend his funeral in Rockville, Maryland.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
After Scott's death, Zelda read his unfinished manuscript titled The Love of the Last Tycoon. She wrote to his friend Edmund Wilson who agreed to edit the book and to eulogize his legacy. Zelda believed Scott's work contained "an American temperament grounded in belief in oneself and 'will-to-survive' that Scott's contemporaries had relinquished. Scott, she insisted, had not. His work possessed a vitality and stamina because of his indefatigable faith in himself."Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". After reading The Last Tycoon, Zelda began work on a new novel, Caesar's Things. As she had missed Scott's funeral because of her mental health, she likewise missed Scottie's wedding. By August 1943, she returned to the Highland Hospital. She worked on her novel while checking in and out of the hospital. She did not get better, and she did not finish the novel.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
Hospital fire and death
Towards the end of her life, Zelda resided in and out of sanatoriums. Zelda checked back into the hospital in September 1946, and then she returned to live with her mother Minnie in their Alabama home.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". By this point in her life, she had undergone over ten years of electroshock therapy and insulin shock treatments.[6][7] Consequently, she now "suffered from severe loss of memory and an apathetic personality due to constant shock therapies."Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
She espoused fascism as a political ideology.[45] According to biographer Nancy Milford, Zelda became "taken with the idea of fascism as a way of holding everything together, of ordering the masses."[45] When acquaintance Henry Dan Piper visited Zelda in March 1947, she declared that fascism served "to keep things from falling apart and to keep the finer things from being lost or extinguished."[45]
In November 1947, Zelda returned for the last time to Highland Hospital in Asheville, North Carolina.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Because of insulin treatments her weight increased to Template:Cvt.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Acquaintance Edna Garlington Spratt recalled Zelda's grim appearance in the final months before her death: "She was anything but pretty when I saw her. She acted normal, but she looked so dreadful. Her hair was stringy and she had lost all pride in herself."Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Early in March 1948, her doctors told her she was better and she could leave, but she allegedly stayed for further treatment.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
On the night of March 10, 1948, a fire broke out in the hospital kitchen. Zelda had been sedated and locked in a room on the fifth floor, possibly awaiting shock therapy.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". The fire moved through the dumbwaiter shaft, spreading onto every floor. The fire escapes were wooden, and they caught fire as well. Nine women, including Zelda, died.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". She was identified by her dental records and, according to other reports, one of her slippers.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". A follow-up investigation raised the unconfirmed possibility that the fire had been a work of arson by Willie Mae, a disgruntled or mentally disturbed hospital employee who had initiated the fire in the kitchen.[8]Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
Zelda and Scott were buried in Rockville, Maryland, originally in Rockville Cemetery, away from his family plot.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Only one photograph of the original gravesite is known to exist, taken in 1970 by Fitzgerald scholar Richard Anderson and published in 2016. At her daughter Scottie's request, Zelda and Scott were interred with the other Fitzgeralds at Saint Mary's Catholic Cemetery.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Inscribed on their tombstone is the final sentence of The Great Gatsby: "So we beat on, boats against the current, borne back ceaselessly into the past."Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
Critical reappraisal
At the time of his third and fatal heart attack in December 1940, her husband Scott Fitzgerald died believing himself to be a failure as a writer.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Two years later, after the United States' entrance into World War II, an association of publishing executives created the Council on Books in Wartime which distributed 155,000 copies of The Great Gatsby to U.S. soldiers overseas,[46] and the book proved popular among beleaguered troops.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". By 1944, a full-scale Fitzgerald revival had occurred.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Despite the renewed interest in Scott's oeuvre, Zelda's death in March 1948 was little noted in the press.
In 1950, acquaintance and screenwriter Budd Schulberg wrote The Disenchanted, with characters based recognizably on the Fitzgeralds who end up as forgotten former celebrities, he awash with alcohol and she befuddled by mental illness. It was followed in 1951 by Cornell University professor Arthur Mizener's The Far Side of Paradise, a biography of F. Scott Fitzgerald that rekindled interest in the couple among scholars. Mizener's biography was serialized in The Atlantic Monthly, and a story about the book appeared in Life magazine. Scott was depicted as a fascinating failure; Zelda's mental health was largely blamed for his lost potential.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
In 1970, however, the history of Zelda and Scott's marriage saw its most profound revision in a book by Nancy Milford, a graduate student at Columbia University. Zelda: A Biography, the first book-length treatment of Zelda's life, became a finalist for the National Book Award and figured for weeks on The New York Times best-seller list.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". The book recast Zelda as an artist in her own right whose talents were belittled by a controlling husband. Zelda posthumously became an icon of the feminist movement in the 1970s—a woman whose unappreciated potential had been suppressed by patriarchal society.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
After the success of Milford's 1970 biography, scholars began to view Zelda's work in a new light.Template:Sfnm Prior to Milford's biography, scholar Matthew J. Bruccoli had written in 1968 that Zelda's novel Save Me the Waltz was "worth reading partly because anything that illuminates the career of F. Scott Fitzgerald is worth reading—and because it is the only published novel of a brave and talented woman who is remembered for her defeats."Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". However, in the wake of Milford's biography, a new perspective emerged,Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". and scholar Jacqueline Tavernier-Courbin wrote in 1979: "Save Me the Waltz is a moving and fascinating novel which should be read on its own terms equally as much as Tender Is the Night. It needs no other justification than its comparative excellence."Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". After Milford's 1970 biography, Save Me the Waltz became the focus of many literary studies that explored different aspects of her work: how the novel contrasted with Scott's depiction of their marriage in Tender Is the Night,Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". and how the consumer culture that emerged in the 1920s placed stress on modern women.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
In 1991, Zelda's collected writings including Save Me the Waltz were edited by Matthew J. Bruccoli and published.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Reviewing the collection, The New York Times literary critic Michiko Kakutani wrote "that the novel was written in two months is amazing. That for all its flaws it still manages to charm, amuse and move the reader is even more remarkable. Zelda Fitzgerald succeeded, in this novel, in conveying her own heroic desperation to succeed at something of her own, and she also managed to distinguish herself as a writer with, as Edmund Wilson once said of her husband, a 'gift for turning language into something iridescent and surprising.'"Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
In addition to a critical reappraisal of her novel, Zelda's artwork also has been reappraised as interesting in its own right. After spending much of the 1950s and 1960s in family attics—Zelda's mother even had much of the art burned because she disliked it—her work drew the renewed interest of scholars.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Posthumous exhibitions of her watercolors have toured the United States and Europe. A review of the exhibition by curator Everl Adair noted the influence of Vincent van Gogh and Georgia O'Keeffe on her paintings and concluded that her surviving corpus of art "represents the work of a talented, visionary woman who rose above tremendous odds to create a fascinating body of work—one that inspires us to celebrate the life that might have been."Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
Scholars continue to debate the role that Zelda and Scott may have had in inspiring and stifling each other's creativity.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Biographer Sally Cline wrote that the two camps can be "as diametrically opposed as the Plath and Hughes literary camps"—a reference to the heated controversy about the relationship of husband–wife poets Ted Hughes and Sylvia Plath.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". In particular, partisan scholars of Zelda frequently depict Scott Fitzgerald as a domineering husband who drove his wife insane.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
In response to this narrative, Zelda's daughter Scottie Fitzgerald wrote an essay dispelling such "inaccurate" interpretations.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". She particularly objected to revisionist depictions of her mother as "the classic 'put down' wife, whose efforts to express her artistic nature were thwarted by a typically male chauvinist husband".Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". In contrast, Scottie insisted "that my father greatly appreciated and encouraged his wife's unusual talents and ebullient imagination. Not only did he arrange for the first showing of her paintings in New York in 1934 he sat through long hours of rehearsals of her one play, Scandalabra, staged by a Little Theater group in Baltimore; he spent many hours editing the short stories she sold to College Humor and to Scribner's Magazine."Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Towards the end of her life, Scottie wrote a final coda about her parents to a biographer: "I have never been able to buy the notion that it was my father's drinking which led her to the sanitarium. Nor do I think she led him to the drinking."Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
Legacy and influence
Zelda was the inspiration for "Witchy Woman",Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". the song of seductive enchantresses written by Don Henley and Bernie Leadon for the Eagles, after Henley read Zelda's biography; of the muse, the partial genius behind her husband F. Scott Fitzgerald, the wild, bewitching, mesmerizing, quintessential "flapper" of the Jazz Age.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
Zelda's name served as inspiration for Princess Zelda, the eponymous character of The Legend of Zelda series of video games.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
In 2003, a wild turkey which roamed Battery Park in New York City was named Zelda due to a famous episode when, during one of her nervous breakdowns, she went missing and was found in Battery Park, apparently having walked several miles downtown.[47]Template:Sfnm
In 1989, the F. Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald museum opened in Montgomery, Alabama. The museum is in a house they briefly rented in 1931 and 1932. It is one of the few places where some of Zelda's paintings are kept on display.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
In 1992, Zelda and her daughter Scottie were posthumously inducted into the Alabama Women's Hall of Fame.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
In 2023, Hatteras Sky and Lark Hotels planned three boutique hotels in Asheville, North Carolina, two of which will have Zelda Fitzgerald themes. Zelda Dearest, with 20 rooms, will have the "beauty and optimism" of Zelda's early life. Zelda Salon, named for Gertrude Stein's home in France, will have 35 rooms, with the design based on where the Fitzgeralds stayed in the 1920s.[48]
References
Notes
Citations
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- ↑ a b Script error: No such module "Footnotes".: "They filled their first weeks with antics, and the newspapers filled their pages with the Fitzgeralds.... As enfants terribles, they did provoke people, but they were never vulgar and often funny, so they got away with it."
- ↑ a b Script error: No such module "Footnotes".: "One night Fitzgerald woke the Murphys with the report that Zelda had taken an overdose of sleeping pills and they helped him keep her awake. It is not clear whether her suicide gesture was related to the Jozan crisis."
- ↑ a b Script error: No such module "Footnotes".: "They did not yet realize the extent of Zelda's breakdown, nor the amount of time that it would take to 'cure' her, nor even if she could be cured. She was diagnosed by Dr. Forel as a schizophrenic"
- ↑ a b Script error: No such module "Footnotes".: "After Zelda suffered relapses in the fall of 1930, Dr. Paul Eugen Bleuler was called in for a consultation on 22 November. He was the leading authority on schizophrenia, which he had named.... Dr. Bleuler confirmed Dr. Forel's diagnosis and offered as hope that three out of four cases of schizophrenia were curable."
- ↑ a b Script error: No such module "Footnotes".: According to her daughter, Scott Fitzgerald arranged "for the first showing of her paintings in New York in 1934".
- ↑ a b Script error: No such module "Footnotes".: "Carroll was pioneering injections of placental blood, honey and hypertonic solutions, and of horse blood, into patients' cerebrospinal fluid. Horse serum caused aseptic meningitis with vomiting, fever and head pains, but Carroll used it on Zelda because it could induce long spells of lucidity. He also regularly gave Zelda the now standard electro-shock and insulin shock treatments, disregarding their known effects of memory loss."
- ↑ a b Script error: No such module "Footnotes".: "Zelda was administered insulin shock treatments which were continued for ten years."
- ↑ a b Script error: No such module "Footnotes".: Willie May Hall "claimed she had wanted to start 'a little trouble' to show up the night watchman, who had spurned her advances and would get the blame."
- ↑ Script error: No such module "Footnotes".: "... that Fitzgerald introduced an incestuous rape into the plot of Tender is the Night at the end of 1931 because Zelda might have been raped by her father, Judge Anthony Sayre..."
- ↑ Script error: No such module "Footnotes".: "Zelda was no housekeeper. Sketchy about ordering meals, she completely ignored the laundry".
- ↑ a b Script error: No such module "Footnotes".: Fitzgerald wished to die in battle, and he hoped that his unpublished novel would become a great success in the wake of his death.
- ↑ Script error: No such module "Footnotes".: "Zelda was attractive and vivacious and reminded him in many ways of Ginevra King".
- ↑ a b Script error: No such module "Footnotes".: According to her daughter Scottie, "the tombstones in the Confederate Cemetery at Oakwood" was "her favorite place to be when she felt quite alone."
- ↑ Script error: No such module "Footnotes".: "As they lingered among the headstones of the Confederate dead, Zelda said Fitzgerald would never understand how she felt about those graves".
- ↑ Script error: No such module "Footnotes".: "By your own admission many years after (and for which I have [never] reproached you) you had been seduced and provincially outcast. I sensed this the night we slept together first for you're a poor bluffer".
- ↑ Script error: No such module "Footnotes".: "As he later described it, despair more than lust now drove him into a woman's arms... 'It seemed on one March [1916] afternoon that I had lost every single thing I wanted—and that night was the first time I hunted down the spectre of womanhood that, for a little while, makes everything else seem unimportant.'"
- ↑ Script error: No such module "Footnotes".: "Fitzgerald's expression for sexual intercourse with a whore—'I hunted down the spectre of womanhood'—is noteworthy."
- ↑ Script error: No such module "Footnotes".: Fitzgerald wrote on December 4, 1918, "My mind is firmly made up that I will not, shall not, can not, should not, must not marry".
- ↑ Script error: No such module "Footnotes".: "Zelda would question whether he was ever going to make enough money for them to marry", and Fitzgerald was thus compelled to prove that "he was rich enough for her."
- ↑ Script error: No such module "Footnotes".: "Unwilling to wait while Fitzgerald succeeded in the advertisement business and unwilling to live on his small salary, Zelda broke their engagement."
- ↑ Script error: No such module "Footnotes".: "When everything in New York had failed him, his career and his writing, he turned to Zelda with a proposal of immediate marriage... It was an effort on Scott's part to redeem at least a fraction of his dreams for success and happiness, but Zelda must have felt it to be founded in failure and she could not accept marriage on that basis."
- ↑ Script error: No such module "Footnotes".: Fitzgerald wrote in 1939, "You [Zelda] submitted at the moment of our marriage when your passion for me was at as low ebb as mine for you. ... I never wanted the Zelda I married. I didn't love you again till after you became pregnant."
- ↑ Script error: No such module "Footnotes".: "Victory was sweet, though not as sweet as it would have been six months earlier before Zelda had rejected him. Fitzgerald couldn't recapture the thrill of their first love".
- ↑ Script error: No such module "Footnotes".: In July 1938, Fitzgerald wrote to his daughter that, "I decided to marry your mother after all, even though I knew she was spoiled and meant no good to me. I was sorry immediately I had married her but, being patient in those days, made the best of it".
- ↑ Script error: No such module "Footnotes".: Describing his marriage to Zelda, Fitzgerald said that—aside from "long conversations" late at night—their relations lacked "a closeness" which they never "achieved in the workaday world of marriage."
- ↑ Script error: No such module "Footnotes".: "Ginevra gave substance to an ideal Fitzgerald would cling to for a lifetime; to the end of his days, the thought of her could bring tears to his eyes."
- ↑ Script error: No such module "Footnotes".: "The review was partly a joke".
- ↑ Script error: No such module "Footnotes".: "More than any other type of the Modern Woman, it was the Flapper who embodied the scandal which attached to women's new public visibility, from their increasing street presence to their mechanical reproduction as spectacles".
- ↑ Script error: No such module "Footnotes".: The flappers, "if they get about at all, know the taste of gin or corn at sixteen".
- ↑ Script error: No such module "Footnotes".: "Unchaperoned young people of the smaller cities had discovered the mobile privacy of that automobile given to young Bill at sixteen to make him 'self-reliant'. At first petting was a desperate adventure even under such favorable conditions, but presently confidences were exchanged and the old commandment broke down".
- ↑ Script error: No such module "Footnotes".: "It is impossible to determine whether the affair was consummated".
- ↑ Script error: No such module "Footnotes".: "...Fitzgerald told Sheilah Graham... that he had fought a duel with Jozan".
- ↑ Script error: No such module "Footnotes".: "Zelda became romantically interested in Edouard, a French naval aviator. It is impossible to determine whether the affair was consummated, but it was nevertheless a damaging breach of trust."
- ↑ Script error: No such module "Footnotes".: "She wanted me to work too much for her and not enough for my dream."
- ↑ Script error: No such module "Footnotes".: "Zelda extended her attack on Fitzgerald's masculinity by charging that he was involved in a homosexual liaison with Hemingway".
- ↑ Script error: No such module "Footnotes".: "Fitzgerald's career records the ambient, dogging pressure to repel charges of his own homosexuality".
- ↑ a b Script error: No such module "Footnotes".: According to Bruccoli, author Robert McAlmon and other contemporaries in Paris publicly asserted that Fitzgerald was a homosexual, and Hemingway later avoided Fitzgerald due to these rumors.
- ↑ Script error: No such module "Footnotes".: "Biographers describe Fay as a 'fin-de-siècle aesthete' of considerable appeal; 'a dandy, always heavily perfumed,' who introduced the teenage Fitzgerald to Oscar Wilde and good wine".
- ↑ Script error: No such module "Footnotes".: "If Fay was a homosexual, as has been asserted without proof, Fitzgerald was presumably unaware of it".
- ↑ Script error: No such module "Footnotes".: "In February he put on his Show Girl make-up and went to a Psi U dance at the University of Minnesota with his old friend Gus Schurmeier as escort. He spent the evening casually asking for cigarettes in the middle of the dance floor and absent-mindedly drawing a small vanity case from the top of a blue stocking".
- ↑ Script error: No such module "Footnotes".: According to their daughter, Scott "was even in favor of her ballet lessons (he paid for them, after all) until dancing became a twenty-four-hour preoccupation which was destroying her physical and mental health."
- ↑ Script error: No such module "Footnotes".: "She has some mighty bad tricks of writing, but she is now getting over the worst of them."
- ↑ Script error: No such module "Footnotes".: Commenting upon his alcoholism, Fitzgerald's romantic acquaintance Elizabeth Beckwith MacKie stated the author was "the victim of a tragic historic accident—the accident of Prohibition, when Americans believed that the only honorable protest against a stupid law was to break it."
- ↑ Script error: No such module "Footnotes".: "The day came when he realized he was drinking to escape—not only to escape the growing sense of his wasted potentialities but also to dull the guilt he felt over Zelda. 'I feel that I am responsible for what happened to her. I could no longer bear what became of her.'"
- ↑ a b c Script error: No such module "Footnotes".: "Zelda was taken with the idea of Fascism as a way of holding everything together, of ordering the masses. She told Piper she joined every organization she could 'to keep things from falling apart and to keep the finer things from being lost or extinguished.'"
- ↑ Script error: No such module "Footnotes".: "One hundred fifty-five thousand ASE copies of The Great Gatsby were distributed-as against the twenty-five thousand copies of the novel printed by Scribners between 1925 and 1942".
- ↑ Script error: No such module "Footnotes".: "The two men set out in search of her. They found her in Central Park digging a grave in which to bury Scott's pants."
- ↑ Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
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Works cited
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Primary sources
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Print sources
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Online sources
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- Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".. Republished online summer 2017.
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External links
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Template:Alabama Women's Hall of Fame Script error: No such module "Navbox". Script error: No such module "Authority control".
- Pages with script errors
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- 1900 births
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- 20th-century American dramatists and playwrights
- 20th-century American women novelists
- 20th-century American novelists
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