F.
Scott Fitzgerald & The
Great Gatsby
Scott & Zelda Fitzgerald
On academic probation,
Fitzgerald joined the army
as a 2nd lieutenant in 1917.
June 1918: While on
assignment in Montgomery,
AL, he fell in love with
Zelda Sayre, daughter of an
Alabama Supreme Court
judge.
She broke off their
engagement in 1919
because she was unwilling
to live on Scott’s small
salary.
Literary Career Beginnings
June 1919: Fitzgerald
returns to St. Paul, MN
(place of birth) to rewrite
his novel, This Side of
Paradise.
In the fall of that year, he
begins writing stories in
mass-circulation
magazines.
He wrote many stories for
the Saturday Evening Post
describing the free-
thinking flappers of the
1920’s.
Overnight Fame
March 26, 1920: This
Side of Paradise is
published, making the
24 year-old Fitzgerald
famous almost
overnight.
One week later, he
marries Zelda Sayre
in New York.
Extravagant Living
Scott & Zelda begin to
live as young
celebrities, socializing
and drinking heavily.
They take their first
trip to Europe in 1921.
October 1921: Their
first and only child,
Frances Scott
(Scottie) Fitzgerald is
born.
Early Stumblings
Fall, 1922: The young family
moves to Great Neck, NY,
expecting to earn a lot of
money from Scott’s play, The
Vegetable.
1923: The play bombs, and
Scott has to write short
stories to get out of debt.
Scott’s drinking increases.
He and Zelda fight often.
Gatsby is Born
Spring 1924: The
Fitzgeralds go to France.
Summer 1924: Scott starts
writing The Great Gatsby.
Zelda has a relationship
with a French pilot.
Winter 1924-25: The
Fitzgeralds go to Rome
where Scott revises Gatsby.
April 1925. Gatsby is
published. Critical reviews
are positive, but sales
remain low.
Fitzgerald and the Expatriates
During the mid 1920’s
in Paris, Fitzgerald
becomes part of the
group of expatriate
American writers
which included Ernest
Hemingway, Gertrude
Stein, and Ezra
Pound.
Further Estrangement
During the 1920’s, Scott
and Zelda’s relationship
continues to be strained
due to his drinking and her
mental instability. They
live in Paris, the Riviera,
and a mansion near
Wilmington, DE.
Even though Fitzgerald
earns about $4,000 per
story (equal to about
$40,000 today), he and
Zelda continue to run into
debt.
1930’s
The Fitzgeralds rent a
house in Montgomery, AL
in 1931. Scott makes an
unsuccessful trip to
Hollywood; Zelda suffers
a mental breakdown in
1932 and is hospitalized.
1936-37: Scott drinks,
gets into more debt, and
lives in hotels near
Asheville, NC. Zelda
enters a nearby hospital.
The Last Years
Summer 1937: Fitzgerald
goes to Hollywood with a
screenwriting contract
earning $1,000/ week.
Despite earning $91,000
from MGM, he is unable to
save any money.
1938: He falls in love with
Sheilah Graham, a movie
columnist.
Dec 21, 1940: Fitzgerald
dies of a heart attack in
Graham’s apartment.
1948: Zelda dies in a fire
at Highland Hospital.
Fitzgerald’s Death
“On December 21, 1940 -- the Winter Solstice -- the author F.
Scott Fitzgerald jolted to his feet from a green armchair, grasped hold
of a marble mantlepiece, and fell down dead of a massive heart attack.
He was forty-four years old. His woman companion of three-and-a
half years ran out into the hallway and began knocking frantically on
doors of their small Hollywood apartment building on Laurel Avenue,
just south of Sunset Boulevard, crying desperately for help. She
refused to accept that Scott was dead, even later when the ambulance
came, and a fire engine also, and a fireman stood over the body and
shook his head.
The name of the woman was Sheilah Graham, Fitzgerald's last
heroine -- a young, pretty Hollywood newspaper columnist.”
--Robert Westbrook, son of Sheilah Graham
Fitzgerald’s Legacy
Although Fitzgerald’s drinking gave him a reputation as an
irresponsible writer, he was a painstaking reviser.
While he endured a lot of criticism just after his death, his
reputation grew in the 1960’s.
Today, he is considered one of the great American novelists,
and The Great Gatsby is considered his masterpiece.
Enduring Associations
Fitzgerald has become
identified with the
extravagant living of the
Jazz Age:
“It was an age of
miracles, it was an age of
art, it was an age of excess,
and it was an age of satire.”
--F. Scott Fitzgerald
He felt that aspiration and
idealism defined America
and its people.
His writing style is known
for being clear, lyrical, and
witty.