By Robert Stacy McCain on 12.15.09 @ 6:07AM
Seventy years ago today since his silver screen debut, Rhett
Butler remains a charming scoundrel.
Conceited and coolly cynical, he has "the most terrible
reputation," so breathtakingly scandalous that he isn't received
by "any decent family in Charleston." Yet 70 years since his
silver screen debut, Rhett Butler's roguish charms are still
irresistible.
Rhett will once again swagger into ladies' hearts tonight
as the Turner Classic Movies cable channel broadcasts the Civil
War epic Gone With the Wind on the
anniversary of its 1939 Atlanta premiere at Loew's Grand
Theater.
Margaret Mitchell's Pulitzer-winning 1936 novel tells the
tale of Scarlett O'Hara, but it is Clark Gable as Rhett who
gallantly carries the three-hour movie on his broad shoulders.
Never have an actor and a role fit together so well, and while
Mitchell had her criticisms of producer David Selznick's film
adaptation -- she especially felt Leslie Howard was wrong for the
role of Ashley Wilkes -- she considered Gable perfect for his
part.
Gable brought to his greatest role both the comic flair he
had shown in It Happened One Night (1934)
and the dramatic heroism he displayed as Fletcher Christian in
1935's Mutiny on the Bounty. From the
moment Gable appears as Rhett, leering at Scarlett as she ascends
the stairway at the Twelve Oaks barbecue -- "as if he knows what
I look like without my shimmy," Scarlett remarks -- his character
dominates the story.
Beyond Gable's Oscar-winning ability as an actor, what is
the secret of Rhett's enduring appeal? Above all, it is his utter
independence and supreme self-confidence.
While those around him scrupulously obey the superficial
social conventions of the age, Rhett scoffs at his own disrepute
and brashly invites scandal, as when he shocks Atlanta society by
bidding $150 for the honor of dancing with the recently widowed
Scarlett. And while Ashley is torn by doubt, Rhett is the
embodiment of decisive certainty.
He has a way with the ladies, but Rhett is indisputably a
man's man. When his blunt skepticism toward the South's prospects
in the impending war enrages the touchy pride of his hosts in the
drawing room at Twelve Oaks, Rhett is insulted by young Charles
Hamilton, but declines the challenge. "I apologize again for all
my shortcomings," Rhett says as he excuses himself. The
hot-tempered Hamilton imputes this to cowardice -- "He refused to
fight!" -- only to be informed by Ashley that Butler is a
notoriously deadly duelist, "one of the best shots in the
country."
In an agrarian antebellum society obsessed with the noble
ideals of ancient chivalry, Rhett's attitudes are shockingly
modern. He is a calculating capitalist, shamelessly professing
his pursuit of self-interest. When Scarlett reproaches him for
doubting the Confederate cause, Butler memorably retorts, "I
believe in Rhett Butler. He's the only cause I know."
Yet Rhett ultimately proves not quite so shameless and
selfish as he proudly claims to be. Not only does he allow
himself to fall desperately in love with Scarlett, but after he
rescues her from the Yankee army surrounding Atlanta, Butler
decides to join the retreating Confederates, telling Scarlett,
"I've always had a weakness for lost causes, once they're really
lost."
Rhett's weakness is a vulnerability that haunts Gone
With the Wind in the 21st century. The
accusation of a sentimental attachment to the Lost Cause is an
affront to politically correct sensibilities, as scandalous today
as the antebellum gossip about Butler's unchaperoned buggy-ride
with a belle he refused to marry.
Whereas in 1939, the film's most shocking element was
Rhett's famous exit line -- "Frankly, my dear, I don't give a
damn" -- today it is denounced for its portrayal of servile black
characters and its depiction of slavery as essentially benign.
However, anyone who thinks the movie version of Gone With the
Wind is reprehensively racist would be well
advised to avoid Mitchell's novel, whose frank representation of
Old South racial attitudes was softened substantially in
Selznick's screen adaptation. To condemn Gone With the
Wind as an apologia for slavery, secession or
white supremacy, however, is to miss the metaphoric purpose of
Mitchell's tale.
Written during the grimmest years of the Great Depression,
the novel offered a historical message of hope during an economic
cataclysm nearly as crushing to the larger nation as Sherman's
march through Georgia had been to the Confederacy. In Scarlett's
fierce determination to overcome hardship -- "As God is my
witness, I'll never be hungry again!" -- and Rhett's sarcastic
laughter even amid the most disastrous war in American history,
Gone With the Wind gave hope to an America
badly in need of hope.
Though set in the Old South, Mitchell's story really
represents the spirit of the New South, the can-do attitude
espoused by Atlanta newspaper editor Henry Grady who, in the
postbellum era, urged Southerners to reject nostalgic
helplessness and embrace the challenges of industrial capitalism.
The New South mentality and its consequences have their critics.
The rush-hour traffic jams of my native Atlanta are a scourge
that Georgians now curse as thoroughly as their ancestors cursed
Sherman's Yankee invaders. Yet forward-looking confidence
continues to triumph over the alternative as surely as Rhett's
boldness trumped the honor-obsessed doubts of the rival he called
"the wooden-headed Mr. Wilkes."
Seventy years after his first appearance onscreen, Rhett
still charms millions, despite the damage done to his reputation
by decades of political correctness. And as he tells Scarlett
during their scandalous first dance, "With enough courage, you
can do without a reputation."
topics:
Gone With the Wind