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F. Scott Fitzgerald
Born: September
24, 1896 St. Paul, Minnesota. Died: December 21, 1940
Hollywood, California. Novelist, screenwriter
Writing period: 1920-1940
Genres: Literary Fiction
Francis Scott Key Fitzgerald (September 24, 1896 December
21, 1940) was an American Jazz Age author of novels and short stories.
He is regarded as one of the greatest twentieth century writers.
Fitzgerald was of the self-styled "Lost Generation," Americans
born in the 1890s who came of age during World War I. He finished
four novels, left a fifth unfinished, and wrote dozens of short
stories that treat themes of youth, despair, and age.
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Born on Cathedral Hill in St. Paul, Minnesota, to an upper-middle
class Irish Catholic family, Fitzgerald was named for his distant
and famous relative Francis Scott Key, but was commonly known as
'Scott'. He spent 18981901 and 19031908 in Buffalo,
New York, where his father worked for Procter & Gamble. When
Fitzgerald, Sr. was fired, the family moved back to Minnesota, where
Fitzgerald attended St. Paul Academy and Summit School in St. Paul
from 19081911.
His first piece of literature was published in his school newspaper
when he was 13. He attended Newman School, a prep school in Hackensack,
New Jersey, in 19111912. He entered Princeton University in
1913 as a member of the Class of 1917 and became friends with the
future critics and writers Edmund Wilson (Class of 1916) and John
Peale Bishop (Class of 1917), and while there wrote for the Princeton
Triangle Club.
A mediocre student throughout his three-year career at the university,
Fitzgerald dropped out in 1917 to enlist in the United States Army
when the US entered World War I. Fitzgerald wrote a novel titled
The Romantic Egotist, portions of which later largely were reincarnated
as the first half of This Side of Paradise, while at Princeton and
edited, to some extent, at Camp Zachary Taylor and Camp Sheridan.
When Fitzgerald submitted the novel to Charles Scribner's Sons,
the editor praised the writing but ultimately rejected the book.
The war ended shortly after Fitzgerald's enlistment.
19081911.
His first piece of literature was published in his school newspaper
when he was 13. He attended Newman School, a prep school in Hackensack,
New Jersey, in 19111912. He entered Princeton University in
1913 as a member of the Class of 1917 and became friends with the
future critics and writers Edmund Wilson (Class of 1916) and John
Peale Bishop (Class of 1917), and while there wrote for the Princeton
Triangle Club.
A mediocre student throughout his three-year career at the university,
Fitzgerald dropped out in 1917 to enlist in the United States Army
when the US entered World War I. Fitzgerald wrote a novel titled
The Romantic Egotist, portions of which later largely were reincarnated
as the first half of This Side of Paradise, while at Princeton and
edited, to some extent, at Camp Zachary Taylor and Camp Sheridan.
When Fitzgerald submitted the novel to Charles Scribner's Sons,
the editor praised the writing but ultimately rejected the book.
The war ended shortly after Fitzgerald's enlistment.
[edit] Marriage to Zelda Sayre
While at Camp Sheridan, Fitzgerald met Zelda Sayre (19001948),
the "top girl," in Fitzgerald's words, of Montgomery,
Alabama youth society. She was the daughter of an Alabama Supreme
Court Judge. The two were engaged in 1919, and Fitzgerald moved
into an apartment at 1395 Lexington Avenue in New York City to try
to lay a foundation for his life with Zelda. Working at an advertising
firm and writing short stories, he was unable to convince Zelda
that he would be able to support her, leading her to break off the
engagement.
Fitzgerald returned to his parents' house on Cathedral Hill in St.
Paul to revise The Romantic Egotist. Recast as This Side of Paradise,
about the flapper generation of the Roaring 20s, it was accepted
by Scribner's in the fall of 1919, and Zelda and Scott resumed their
engagement. The novel was published on March 26, 1920, and became
one of the most popular books of the year. Scott and Zelda were
married in New York's St. Patrick's Cathedral. Their daughter and
only child, Frances Scott "Scottie" Fitzgerald, was born
on October 26, 1921.
The 1920s proved the most influential decade of Fitzgerald's development.
His second novel, The Beautiful and Damned, published in 1922, demonstrates
an evolution beyond the comparatively immature This Side of Paradise.
The Great Gatsby, Scott's masterpiece, was published in 1925. Fitzgerald
made several excursions to Europe, notably Paris and the French
Riviera, and became friends with many members of the American expatriate
community in Paris, notably Ernest Hemingway.
Hemingway looked up to Fitzgerald as an experienced professional
writer. Hemingway greatly admired The Great Gatsby and wrote in
his A Moveable Feast "If he could write a book as fine as The
Great Gatsby I was sure that he could write an even better one"
(153). Hemingway expressed his deep admiration for Fitzgerald, and
Fitzgerald's flawed, doomed character, when he prefaced his chapters
concerning Fitzgerald in A Moveable Feast:
His talent was as natural as the pattern that was made by the
dust on a butterfly's wings. At one time he understood it no more
than the butterfly did and he did not know when it was brushed or
marred. Later he became conscious of his damaged wings and their
construction and he learned to think and could not fly any more
because the love of flight was gone and he could only remember when
it had been effortless.
Fitzgerald drew largely upon his wife's intense, mentally disturbed
personality in his writings, at times quoting direct segments of
her personal diaries in his work. Zelda made mention of this in
a 1922 mock review in the New York Tribune, saying that "[i]t
seems to me that on one page I recognized a portion of an old diary
of mine which mysteriously disappeared shortly after my marriage,
and also scraps of letters which, though considerably edited, sound
to me vaguely familiar. In fact, Mr. FitzgeraldI believe that
is how he spells his nameseems to believe that plagiarism
begins at home" (Zelda Fitzgerald: The Collected Writings.
Although Fitzgerald's passion lay in writing novels, they never
sold well enough to support the opulent lifestyle that he and Zelda
adopted as New York celebrities. To supplement his income, he turned
to writing short stories for such magazines as The Saturday Evening
Post, Collier's Weekly, and Esquire magazine, and sold movie rights
of his stories and novels to Hollywood studios. He was constantly
in financial trouble and often required loans from his literary
agent, Harold Ober, and his editor at Scribner's, Maxwell Perkins.
Fitzgerald began working on his fourth novel during the late 1920s
but was sidetracked by financial difficulties that necessitated
his writing commercial short stories, and by the schizophrenia that
struck Zelda Sayre Fitzgerald in 1930. Her emotional health remained
fragile for the rest of her life. In 1932, she was hospitalized
in Baltimore, Maryland. Scott rented the "La Paix" estate
in the suburb of Towson, Maryland to work on his latest book, the
story of the rise and fall of Dick Diver, a promising young psychiatrist
who falls in love with and marries Nicole Warren, one of his patients.
The book is clearly a thinly-veiled autobiographical novel recounting
Fitzgerald's problems with his wife, the corrosive effects of wealth
and a decadent lifestyle, his own egoism and self-confidence, and
his continuing alcholism. It was published in 1934 as Tender Is
the Night. While it was not received well upon publication, and
Scott continued to revise it throughout the 1930s, the book's reputation
has since risen significantly.
Although he reportedly found movie work degrading, Fitzgerald was
once again in dire financial straits, and spent the second half
of the 1930s in Hollywood, working on commercial short stories,
scripts for Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (including some unfilmed work on
Gone with the Wind), and his fifth and final novel, The Love of
the Last Tycoon. Published posthumously as The Last Tycoon, it was
based on the life of film executive Irving Thalberg. Scott and Zelda
became estranged; she continued living in mental institutions on
the east coast, while he lived with his lover Sheilah Graham, a
movie columnist, in Hollywood. From 1939 until his death, Fitzgerald
mocked himself as a Hollywood hack through the character of Pat
Hobby in a sequence of 17 short stories, later collected as "The
Pat Hobby Stories"
Fitzgerald had clearly been an alcoholic since his college days,
and he became notorious during the 1920s for his extraordinarily
heavy drinking. This left him in poor health by the late 1930s.
According to Zelda's biographer, Nancy Milford, Scott claimed that
he had contracted tuberculosis, but she states that this was usually
a pretext to cover his drinking problems. However, Fitzgerald scholar
Matthew J. Bruccoli contends that Fitzgerald did in fact have recurring
tuberculosis, and Nancy Milford reports that Fitzgerald biographer
Arthur Mizener said that Scott suffered a mild attack of tuberculosis
in 1919, and in 1929 he had "what proved to be a tubercular
hemorrhage".
Given the extent of Scott's alcoholism, however, it is possible
that the hemorrhage was caused by bleeding from esophageal varicesenlarged
veins in the esophagus that result from advanced liver disease.
In spite of these serious problems, it was most likely Fitzgerald's
lifelong smoking habit that most damaged his health and brought
on the heart problems that eventually killed him.
Fitzgerald suffered two heart attacks in late 1940. After the first,
in Schwab's Drug Store, he was ordered by his doctor to avoid strenuous
exertion and to obtain a first floor apartment, which he did by
moving in with Sheilah Graham. On the night of December 20, 1940,
he had his second heart attack, and the next day, December 21, while
awaiting a visit from his doctor, Fitzgerald collapsed in Graham's
apartment and died. He was 44.
Among the attendants at a visitation held at a funeral home in Hollywood
was Dorothy Parker, who reportedly cried and murmured "the
poor son of a bitch," a line from Jay Gatsby's funeral in Fitzgerald's
The Great Gatsby. In another strange coincidence, the author Nathanael
West, who was a friend and admirer of Fitzgerald, was killed along
with his wife on the way to Fitzgerald's services.
Fitzgerald's remains were then shipped to Maryland, where his funeral
was attended by very few people. Zelda died tragically in a fire
at the Highland Mental Hospital in Asheville, North Carolina, in
1948. The two were originally buried in Rockville Union Cemetery,
but with the permission and assistance of their only child, Frances
"Scottie" Fitzgerald Lanahan Smith, the Women's Club of
Rockville had their bodies moved to the family plot in Saint Mary's
Cemetery, in Rockville, Maryland.
Fitzgerald never completed The Love of the Last Tycoon. His notes
for the novel were edited by his friend Edmund Wilson and published
in 1941 as The Last Tycoon. However, there is now critical agreement
that Fitzgerald intended the title of the book to be The Love of
the Last Tycoon, as is reflected in a new 1994 edition of the book,
edited by Fitzgerald scholar Matthew Bruccoli of the University
of South Carolina. (Courtesy wikipedia.com)
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