Zelda Fitzgerald: Her Voice in Paradise

BOOK: Zelda Fitzgerald: Her Voice in Paradise
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ZELDA FITZGERALD

Her Voice in Paradise

SALLY CLINE

This book is dedicated

to
Marmoset Adler
V
ic Smith, Esme Ashley-Smith, A. Het Shackman
‘Everybody
was
so
young’
(Sara Murphy)

to
Ba Sheppard
‘They
were
banking
in
gods
those
years’
(Zelda Sayre Fitzgerald)

to
Marion Callen
‘Once
Again
to
Em’
(after F. Scott Fitzgerald)

to
Rosemary Smith
‘[S]he
knew
everything’
(Zelda Sayre Fitzgerald)

In memory of
Larry Adler
10 February 1914–7 August 2001
‘Life
seemed
so
promissory
always
when
he
was
around’
(Zelda Sayre Fitzgerald)

LIST OF
ILLUSTRATIONS

1. Minnie Machen Sayre, Montgomery

2. Judge Anthony Sayre, 1880

3. Church of the Holy Comforter, Montgomery, 1998

4. Marjorie Sayre

5. Rosalind (Tootsie) Sayre

6. Clothilde (Tilde) Sayre

7. Anthony Sayre Jnr

8. Zelda aged about 18 in dance costume, Montgomery

9. Katharine Elsberry Steiner

10. Out of school picnic, Montgomery, 1918

11. Scott Fitzgerald, Dellwood, 1921–2

12. Zelda and Scott at Compo Beach, Westport Conn., July 1920

13. Zelda on auto trip south to Montgomery, 1920

14. Zelda and Scott,
Hearst’s
International
Magazine,
1923

15. Marie Hersey, St Paul, Minnesota

16. Xandra Kalman
c
. 1921, St Paul

17. Sara Haardt

18. H. L. Mencken

19. Annabel Fitzgerald aged 18, 1919

20. Zelda, Scott and Scottie swimming, early 1920s

21. Lubov Egorova, Paris, 1928

22. Romaine Brooks, 1925

23. Natalie Barney and Djuna Barnes, Nice, France 1928–30

24. Emily Vanderbilt

25. Gerald and Sara Murphy, Etienne and Edith de Beaumont at La Garoupe,
c
. 1924

26. Ernest Hemingway, 1931

27. Max Perkins

28. Zelda Sayre, Montgomery, June 1918

29. ‘Birth of a Flapper’, Zelda’s bookjacket design for
The
Beautiful
and
Damned,
1921

30. ‘Family in Underwear’, early paper doll series by Zelda,
c.
1927

31. Times Square, New York (gouache on paper, 13½” × 17⅝”)
c.
1944

32. Scott with Scottie, Rome, 1924

33. The Fitzgeralds embarking for France, 1928

34. Zelda, 1931

35. Scottie at her graduation, 1938

36. Dr Irving Pine, 1990

37. Zelda and her grandson Tim, shortly before her death in 1948

38. Zelda playing volley ball with fellow patients at Highland Hospital

39. The fire at Highland Hospital, 11 March 1948

Readers who wish to see Zelda Fitzgerald’s paintings can:

  • read
    Zelda:
    An
    Illustrated
    Life,
    ed. Eleanor Lanahan, Harry N. Abrams Inc., New York, 1996;
  • contact the Visual Materials Division, Department of Rare Books and Special Collections, Princeton University Library, where there are copies of the slides of Zelda’s paintings;
  • contact Sally Cline (c/o John Murray (Publishers) Ltd) who also has copies of the slides.

The author and publisher would like to thank the following for their kind permission to reproduce illustrations: 1, 2, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 12, 13, 14, 20, 28, 29, 33, 34, 35: pho tographs from the F. Scott Fitzgerald archives at Princeton University Library used by permission of Harold Ober Associates as agents for the Fitzgerald Trustees, reproduced courtesy of Princeton University Library; 3: by permission of Sally Cline, Cambridge, UK; 9: courtesy of Edward Pattillo, Montgomery, Alabama; 10: Estate of the late Grace Gunter Lane, courtesy of Fairlie Lane Haynes, Montgomery, Alabama; 11, 19, 32: by kind permission of Pat Sprague Reneau, California; 15, 16: Lloyd C. Hackl, Center City, Minnesota; 17, 18: courtesy of Enoch Pratt Free Library, Baltimore. Reproduced by permission; 22: © 1997 Meryle Secrest, Washington DC; 23: Papers of Djuna Barnes, Special Collections, University of Maryland Libraries; 25: copyright 2002 Estate of the late Honoria Murphy Donnelly, courtesy of John C. Donnelly, Florida; 26: courtesy of the Bruccoli Collection of F. Scott Fitzgerald, Thomas Cooper Library, The University of South Carolina; 27: from the Scribner Archives. Courtesy Scribner/Simon & Schuster (reproduced courtesy of Princeton University Library); 30: used by permission of Harold Ober Associates as agents for the Fitzgerald Trustees, courtesy of Cecilia Ross (also courtesy of Princeton University Library); 31: used by permission of Harold Ober Associates as agents for the Fitzgerald Trustees, courtesy of Samuel J. Lanahan Jnr (also courtesy of Princeton University Library); 36: (photograph by Koula Svokos Hartnett, Columbus, Ohio, 1990) copyright Koula Svokos Hartnett in
Zelda
Fitzgerald
and
the
Failure
of
the
American
Dream
for
Women,
1991, Peter Lang Publishing, Inc., New York; 37: used by permission of Harold Ober Associates as agents for the Fitzgerald Trustees, courtesy of Eleanor Lanahan; 38: courtesy of Mary Parker, North Carolina; 39: North Carolina Collection, Pack Memorial Public Library, Asheville, North Carolina.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

This is in no way an authorized biography but without the
unstinting
support of Zelda Fitzgerald’s granddaughter Bobbie (Eleanor) Lanahan, and through her the Fitzgerald family and Estate, it could not have been adequately researched. My most significant
acknowledgement
is therefore to Bobbie, herself a painter, for showing me Zelda’s paintings, analysing her artwork, sharing her knowledge, spending several weeks talking to me and giving me photographs and slides of Zelda’s paintings. For five years she has facilitated my access to the wide network of Fitzgerald friends and relations across the USA. Bobbie did not necessarily agree with my findings but with rare generosity she guided me, removed obstacles from my path and was a constant source of encouragement.

An initial interest in my work came from Henry Dunow of the Fitzgerald Estate, which was followed by unprecedented help from Zelda’s other granddaughter Cecilia Lanahan Ross who exchanged ideas and gave me the gift of Scottie’s memoir. I am further indebted to their father the late Samuel Lanahan, to their brother Samuel Lanahan Jnr and to Scott Fitzgerald’s nieces Courtney Sprague Vaughan and Pat Sprague Reneau, for photographs, paintings, memoirs and family information. I am most appreciative to Chris Byrne of the Harold Ober Literary Agency for his initial help over
permissions
and to Craig Tenney, also of Harold Ober, in the later stages.

I have been fortunate in being given seven awards for this
biographical
research. I owe special debts of gratitude to the British Academy for their Independent Scholar’s Research Award; to the Society of Authors initially for their Writer’s Award and in the last stages of the book for a further award; and to the Eastern Arts Board for three bursaries, all of which enabled me to travel and work in Europe and America with time to peruse archives, to live in cities inhabited by the Fitzgeralds and to view Zelda’s paintings in private collections and museums throughout the USA.

I thank Princeton University for their Fellowship and two years’
access to the Rare Books Department in the Firestone Library where the major Fitzgerald archives and photographs are held. The Rare Books Curator of Manuscripts, Don Skemer, shared with me his invaluable knowledge and came to my aid warmly and cleverly many times. Great gratitude is given to John Delaney (Chairman, Fellowship Committee), Ben Primer (Fellowship Committee) and to William Joyce (former Associate University Librarian) most
especially
for his generosity over permissions for the use of slides and photos. I thank also Jennifer Bowden, Chris Dupin, Charles Eyre Greene (Keeper of the Reading Room), Monica Ruscil, Jane Snedeker, Susan Waterman. For AnnaLee Paul’s hours of patient photoduplication and her lasting friendship I am very appreciative. Above all I thank Peggy Sherry, the Reference Librarian and Archivist, who gave me several months of professional help and who, together with Stuart Rich, made my long stay in Princeton feel like home. During my Princeton sojourn I was fortunate in meeting the scholar Raymond Cormier, who enlivened my days with
fascinating
ideas on Zelda and who untiringly maintained a further three-year stimulating correspondence.

I thank John Hurley and Jane Raper for helping me find
accommodation
in Princeton, Judy Thompson and Al and Betty Cohen for providing it, Ann and Mitsuru Yasuhara and Liz Socolow for their local knowledge and hospitality.

I wish to thank those Fitzgerald scholars and biographers who have gone before me from whom I received illuminating insights. They include the premier Fitzgerald scholar Matthew J. Bruccoli and his assistant Judith Baughman who were constantly courteous and informative, Jackson R. Bryer, Scott Donaldson (a memorable lunchtime talk on Hemingway and Fitzgerald), Koula Svokos Hartnett (five years’ discussions and communications), Nancy Milford (who put aside her own writing for a lengthy interview), Ted Mitchell for a riveting exchange of ideas over
Caesar’s
Things
and Zelda’s death, Ruth Prigozy (who gave me food, drink,
contacts
, articles, information, advice and guidance), Frances Kroll Ring (two long interviews and two years’ correspondence), Jacqueline Tavernier-Courbin (several
Save
Me
The
Waltz
discourses
), and James West. The late James Mellow’s biography of Zelda and Scott was a constant source of inspiration.

From the many people involved in the Fitzgeralds’ lives who showered me with kindness, conversation and counsel I would mention particularly Waverly Barbe, Tony Buttitta (who gave me two long interviews and a marvellous tea when he was gravely ill), Lucy
Dos Passos Coggin, Carol Lobman Hart, the late Grace Gunter Lane, Ring Lardner Jnr, the late Ida Haardt McCulloch, Sally Wood Millsap, Mary Parker, the late Dr Irving Pine, Landon Ray, Budd Schulberg, Joanne Turnbull and Janie Wall. Exceptional help in the shape of family photographs, afternoon teas, tapes, slides, videos, letters,
documents
, memories and conversational enchantments came from Fanny Myers Brennan and the late Honoria Murphy Donnelly.

Institutions, librarians, curators, archivists, journalists, academics who have contributed information, interviews, materials include: Alabama Department of Archives and History; Anglia Polytechnic University Library, Cambridge; Arbury Court Library, Cambridge; Asheville Chamber of Commerce; Asheville Charter Hospital;
Asheville
Citizen
Times;
Asheville Fire Department;
Atlanta
Constitution
and
Journal;
Atlanta Fulton Public Library; Birmingham Public Library, Alabama; Cambridge University Library; Lana Burgess (Assistant Curator, Montgomery Museum of Fine Arts); Mitchell Dakelman (Hoorman Library, Wagner College, New York); Harvard University; Vincent Fitzpatrick and Averil Kadis (Enoch Pratt Free Library, Baltimore) for wonderful photographs and
information
on the Menckens; Kim Korby Fraser (
Ladies
Home
Journal,
New York); Chandler W. Gordon (Captain’s Bookshelf, Asheville); Antonia Hodgson (for help with Dolly Wilde information); Chris Jakes and his team at the Cambridgeshire Collection, Cambridge Central Library, who provided weeks of help with archival
microfilms
; the John F. Kennedy Library;
Journal
of
the
American
Medical
Association;
Frances Kessler (
Esquire
); Dr Levington, Medical Superintendent, Charter Hospital (formerly Highland Hospital); Nancy Magnuson (Librarian, Julia Rogers Library, Goucher College); Malaprop’s Bookstore, Asheville; Maryland Historical Society, Baltimore; Nancy McCall (Archivist, Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions); the endlessly helpful out-of-print team at Micawber Bookstore, Princeton; Minnesota Historical Society; the
Montgomery
Advertiser;
New York Public Library; Don Noble (University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa); the
Princeton
Packet;
Princeton University Bookstore team; Rebecca Roberts (Sara Mayfield Collection, University of Alabama); Shannon Scarborough (
Birmingham
News,
Alabama); Kathy Shoemaker (Special Collections, Woodruff Library, Emory University, Atlanta); Dr James Stephenson (Assistant Dean, University of West Virginia);
Town
Topics,
Princeton; Troy State University, Montgomery; University of Georgia Library; J. Willis (
New York Times
); Ann S. Wright (Special Collections Librarian, Asheville Buncombe Library).

For manuscript reading, advice, networking, medical help, and encouragement of many kinds I thank: Tim Barnwell (for
exceptional
photos of the fire), Davina Belling, Larry Belling, Carl Brandt, Stephen Bristow, Heidi Bullock (Zelda’s art), the Cambridge Women Readers Group, Tracy Cams (for her enthusiasm over a Zelda lunch), Gwynneth Conder, Kirk Curnutt (discourse on
fundamentalism
and madness), Heather Dearnaley, Michelle Dodsworth, Kay Dunbar, Olga Foottit, Mary Gordon, Wayne Greenhaw, Katherine Grimshaw, Allan Gurganus (for the typed version of his talk on ‘Sacrificial Couples’), Ann Henley, Jan Hensley (for recovering news reports and making me tapes), Jane Jaffey, Joel Jaffey, Carol Jones, Jean Kesler, Stella King, Heidi Kuntz, Cheryl Lean, Alan Margolies, Nancy Marlen, Josie McConnell, Eileen McGuckian, Bonnie McMullen, Graham Metson, Jane Miller, Linda Patterson Miller, James Moody, Kathy Mullen, Erin Murphy, Andrea Porter, Aliye Seif, Ruth Shaw, Gail Sinclair, Keith Soothill, Deborah Thorn, Eleanor Vale (who in my absence sustained my house during a massive burglary with great courage), Nancy VanArsdale (many interesting talks in Asheville), Linda Wagner-Martin, Ralph Ward, Alison West, Alisa Hornung Weyman. I owe special thanks to Kathy Bowles and Chris Carling for their unending enthusiasm,
encouragement
and wise counsel.

The infectious optimism of several writers and artists has
sustained
me: I thank the Cambridge Women Writers Group (Joy Magezis, Chris Carling, Geraldine Ryan, Marion Callen), Julia Darling, Millicent Dillon (for six years’ long distance writerly support), Helen Dunmore (for the gift of her ‘Zelda’ poem), Kathryn Hughes, Christina Johnson, Neil McKenna, Cliff McNish, Marion Meade (for spirited discussions about Dorothy Parker), Wendy Mulford, Michelle Spring, and especially Marion Elizabeth Rodgers for her intriguing biographical insights into H. L. Mencken and Sara Haardt and her constant optimism. I am also grateful to Andrew Lownie and the stimulation of the Biographers’ Club. For advice on Zelda’s art I thank Frankie (Frances) Borzello, Julia Ball, Carolyn Shafer and Jane S. Livingston.

In Montgomery I thank Julian and Leslie McPhillips, who direct the Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald Museum, for accommodation,
entertainment
, enormous Southern hospitality and constant
chauffeuring
, and at the Museum Elena Aleinikov for her valuable assistance and several meals. I owe a major debt of gratitude to Eddie Pattillo, my encyclopaedic wise and funny guide, who more than anyone helped me to comprehend the nature of the Deep South. In
Tuscaloosa Camella Mayfield (literary executor of the Sara Mayfield Collection) spent many months minutely tracking documents and offering personal and professional insights into the relationship between Zelda, Sara Mayfield and Tallullah Bankhead.

In St Paul and Center City Minnesota I am grateful to Lloyd Hackl and Barbara Paetznick for city tours, historical research, a folder of unpublished Kalman letters, accommodation and incredible warmth and hospitality. Lloyd trod in Scott’s trails with me and helped me understand Scott’s community. In Burlington, Vermont, I am grateful to Susan O’Brien for accommodation, information and the freedom to write and roam through her lovely house. In New York I thank Anne Gurnett and Jonathan Bander for
accommodation
, unstinting guidance, laughter and several exciting art tours. For five years’ writing space in Sennen Cove, Cornwall, where much of this book was written, I thank Jean Adams and Susan Willis.

I feel remarkably fortunate that John Murray, my London
publishers
, genuinely love books and are concerned for their authors’ well-being. Thank you to John Murray, Grant McIntyre, Stephanie Allen and my patient resourceful copy editor Anne Boston. Caroline Westmore has stood between me and trouble many times with delightful good humour and superb skill. My editor Caroline Knox is always courteous, sometimes critical (usually correct!) and knows just how to get the best from her author.

Barbara Levy, my good friend and perceptive literary agent, has rigorously read and analysed every chapter. I thank her and her lively helpful assistant Lindsay Schusman for critical comments, tact and always being on my side. For typing, photocopying and editorial assistance I thank Caroline Middleton and Stephanie Croxton Blake in Britain and Karen S. Doerstling in Princeton, and for hours of hard work on the bibliography I thank Jo Wroe.

I have relied on the excellence of my talented research assistant Rosemary Smith more than on anyone else. Scholarly, clever and kind, she has an encyclopaedic memory for detail and with
perseverance
and meticulous craft she has transcribed hundreds of tapes, typed all the research notes, devised charts, organized research systems, sorted photographs, done sterling work on the
bibliography
, cut, edited and helped structure every draft and the final version and kept me afloat.

I am indebted to the Royal Literary Fund, London, for its awards of two Writers’ Fellowships (2000–2001 and 2001–2002) which have enabled me to write up the research with a strong measure of security.
I am continuously grateful to Hilary Spurling, originator of the Fellowship Scheme, and to the imaginative thoughtful Steve Cook, its director. My Fellowship has been tenable at Anglia Polytechnic University Cambridge, where my time in the English Department has been joyous. At Anglia I thank my three student researchers: Jason Austen Guest (for editorial aid), Sally Peters (illuminations about Zelda’s art), most of all Miranda Landgraf (for clarity,
constant
attentiveness and sensitive skilled cutting). I thank Shirley Prendergast for research insights, Clare Bruges for her warmth and fortitude, the Dean, Rick Rylance; and my colleagues Rick Allen, David Booy, Peter Cattermole, Nora Crook, Mark Currie, Simon Featherstone, John Gilroy, Ted Holt, Mary Joannou, Kim Landers, Kate Rhodes, Anna Snaith, Carol Thomas, Gina Whisker, Vicki Williamson, Sue Wilson, for their encouragement. In particular Tory Young (for her vivacity), Ed Esche (for his daily supportive, often political conversations), Nigel Wheale (for his poetic wisdom and friendship) and most of all my writer friend and Head of Department, Rebecca Stott. Rebecca has read and edited many chapters, has spent long hours after work discussing the book’s minutiae. She has made a significant sparkling professional
contribution
to this book for which my gratitude is beyond formal words.

On the domestic front one person is owed a benediction: my friend Angie North who runs my house and cares for my cat and deals with all emergencies during my research trips abroad. There could not be any research without her formidable kindness.

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