Gone with the Rewrite
Ross Valley Players’ new season opens with Ron Hutchinson’s Moonlight and Magnolias, a view of 1939 Hollywood suffering for its art. Here’s a 6:00 a.m. meeting with no breakfast offered because the powerhouse who called the meeting, Producer David O. Selznick, believes that breakfast interferes with the creative process, and he wants all creative processes in high gear right now. Three weeks into his present film, Gone with the Wind, the producer insists on a complete rewrite of the script and a new film director. Scrap it all, and start over, he says, even though this delay is costing fifty thousand a day and hard feelings in the cast.
Ex-newspaperman Ben Hecht has been brought in to redo the script, and Victor Fleming will replace ex-director, George Cukor. Two complications: Fleming is needed back on the set of The Wizard of Oz, where he has left a crowd of drunken Munchkins singing, “Ding Dong, the bitch is dead,” and Hecht hasn’t read the book. Worse, word is already getting around town that there’s trouble on the set, and newshounds and gossip columnists are clamoring for a quote.
Time is critical, so Selznick and Fleming will tell the story, and Hecht will type it as they go. When they say that Margaret Mitchell’s book is a story of heartbreak and pursuit of a useless cause, Hecht asks, “Is it the deep South or the Writers’ Building?”
Two days later, still sequestered in the office and living on a diet of bananas and peanuts, the team is unraveling. Is this a racist story, Hecht asks. He refuses to glorify racism; Fleming’s burst a blood vessel in his eye; Selznick’s father-in-law, Louis B. Mayer, is holding on line two. Each man declares his importance to the filmmaking process, and then all three break into a wonderfully antic demonstration of how, exactly, Scarlett should slap Prissy. (Director Bob Wilson gives credit here to fight director, Ron Severdia.) Tension is broken, but where do they go from here?
By the second act, it’s evident that the playwright has really painted himself into a corner. Now in the fifth day of the lockdown, the characters are both underfed and fed up, but everyone in the audience knows that the film will be made. And so Hutchinson diverges into serious world issues of the time: Hecht takes potshots at Selznick’s refusal to attack anti-semitism; Selznick says Hecht is “looking at the world through a six-pointed star.” The dialogue turns improbable and talky. Could any of this really have happened?
Records of the production suggest that much of it did. Screen credits for Gone with the Wind do list David Selznick as Producer and Victor Fleming as Director, but the screenplay names Sidney Howard as the writer. (Howard was the one Ben Hecht replaced, after he had already written several drafts.) Hecht worked on the script for five intense days, and then Howard was brought back during the filming. When Gone with the Wind won eight Oscars; Sidney Howard’s screenplay got one of them.
In the Ross Valley Players’ production, David Kester plays the obsessive and powerful Selznick, Russell E. Lessig portrays the driven director, Victor Fleming, and Stephen Dietz (also the sound designer) is the frumpy, sympathetic Ben Hecht. Molly McGrath plays the Producer’s dutiful secretary, Miss Poppenguhl, who has to say, “Yes, Mr. Selznick,” over and over, in endless variations.
Moonlight and Magnolias will be at The Barn Theatre in the Marin Art & Garden Center in Ross through October 12. Performances are Thursdays at 7:30, Fridays and Saturdays at 8:00, and Sundays 2:00. Tickets may now be ordered online through the website, www.rossvalleyplayers.com, or from the box office, 456-9555.