The World’s Most Beloved Novels | Gatsby in Connecticut: The Untold Story | Documentary Central

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  • Опубликовано: 3 май 2022
  • The summer Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald met a mystery millionaire inspired one of the world’s most beloved novels: The Great Gatsby. Discover the untold story of the real-life Jay Gatsby himself.
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Комментарии • 80

  • @user-zl6bb8xu7d
    @user-zl6bb8xu7d 10 месяцев назад +11

    This video repeatedly refers to the house at 244 Compo Road as being small or a "cottage". If you check photos of the so-called "cottage" at 244 Compo Road such as at 0:33 and 04:24 in this film you see that the residence is really a large, 3 story house, having 2 full floors plus third story attic rooms and has dozens of windows. Fitzgeralds used to host many guests there. It may not be as large as some estates in the region but is still a large house and not a "bungalow" or "cottage" no matter how often this video tries to give it those names. The THIRD Story windows in the attic rooms are indeed small. as someone has noted, and rooms would be cramped under the sloped ceilings. The Second story rooms do not have this issue. At 15:20 we see the video's creators in the house, which the caption states is the "Upstairs Bedroom Fitzgerlad House." This clearly shows there is ample headroom in the second floor and there is nothing "cramped" about it.
    The house is over a half mile from the Lewis mansion, not near it, although some of Lewis' extended property is adjacent to the FSF house. It resides on over an acre of land. If you have any factual information, please update us.

    • @sebastianbernardo9900
      @sebastianbernardo9900 10 месяцев назад +1

      You seem to have a point

    • @1234cheerful
      @1234cheerful 4 месяца назад

      Yes, but perhaps they are calling it a cottage because it is not an actual mansion.

  • @jonathanmitchell9886
    @jonathanmitchell9886 11 месяцев назад +5

    This is fascinating. Having done some detective work on a classic of popular literature myself, I remember the awe I felt when recognition locked into place: when I could finally match real-life names and events to their fictional counterparts. Sam Waterston's words ("a literary experience that makes your hair stand on end") are an accurate description of that moment.
    Thanks for sharing the film!

  • @veritasveritas8031
    @veritasveritas8031 2 года назад +8

    This is brilliant. Thank you for sharing ❇️

  • @poetcomic1
    @poetcomic1 11 месяцев назад +7

    In the end it doesn't matter, old sport. Its art.

  • @yevaburshteyn6938
    @yevaburshteyn6938 11 месяцев назад +10

    It's seems to me that Fitzgerald used his own imagination to create image of Gatsby Together with Zelda in their's happiest time😊

  • @cdmac517
    @cdmac517 11 месяцев назад +9

    What happened to the video's sound from around the 15:59 mark to the 18:41 mark?

    • @1234cheerful
      @1234cheerful 4 месяца назад

      Sometimes that is done because of ownership of a work, to alter the work so it is different from the c0pyr1ghted version.You can read the scraps of letters and picture captions to see what was being "talked" about. The transcript just says "Music" so there may have been very little narration till we get to "bucket" and the sound is back. During the credits Sam Waterston reads from the ending of the book, but the video stops with the last line of the book. In the transcript there is some back and forth obviously with Scottie's daughter Bobbie about her parents and how they were at their best when young. Worth opening the transcript to read what she says.

    • @shamekamoonjr33
      @shamekamoonjr33 Месяц назад

      Agreed 💯

  • @greenLaVitameadows
    @greenLaVitameadows Год назад +8

    Remarkable documentary 🌟

  • @midnightblue1973
    @midnightblue1973 Год назад +6

    This video has made me really want to see Westport.

  • @SM16
    @SM16 2 года назад +8

    I have always loved The Great Gatsby 👏🤩🎉💗💕

    • @jasonemmettmyers
      @jasonemmettmyers 9 месяцев назад

      Someone should form a group or something to talk about the bill; like overall themes or something

  • @lakovkreativity1451
    @lakovkreativity1451 Год назад +6

    Audio is missing from 15:50-18:43
    35:36-35:57

  • @sebastianbernardo9900
    @sebastianbernardo9900 Год назад +9

    A rebuttal video reveals that Fred Lewis, this video’s candidate for Gatsby, was in California in 1920 so unknown to Fitzgerald. Judge for yourself by searching RUclips for “Phantom Gatsby, a Recluse”

    • @marquitaarmstrong399
      @marquitaarmstrong399 11 месяцев назад

      LEWIS. Fred. Gatsby
      Okay. My theory? GATSBY F SCOTT DAISY ZELDA

    • @marquitaarmstrong399
      @marquitaarmstrong399 11 месяцев назад +1

      Thanx will do

    • @ToniFromBrooklyn
      @ToniFromBrooklyn 11 месяцев назад +2

      Wow, I saw that video & now think that Mr Lewis was not a Gatsby role model

  • @osiris_blanche
    @osiris_blanche 10 месяцев назад +3

    It's funny how Fitzgerald's biography has more literature, drama and longer stories than all his books combined

  • @Greenhouse_Co.
    @Greenhouse_Co. Год назад +5

    Just generally, Fitzgerald always had a terrible sense of geography. While the Westport theory makes perfect sense he likely jumbles a lot of different places together in his mind.

  • @jeanberard2078
    @jeanberard2078 11 месяцев назад +6

    I feel he combined locations and characters to write this book.

    • @1234cheerful
      @1234cheerful 4 месяца назад

      Shrank the house to a cottage, kept the estate, yeah.

  • @debisybesma5855
    @debisybesma5855 9 месяцев назад +5

    just watched the 1974 version of the great gatsby for the first time last night. enjoyed it very much. much more than a more recent version

    • @marilyn6556
      @marilyn6556 5 месяцев назад

      I have always said that Robert Redford was Gatsby! He was perfect in the role.

  • @veritas6335
    @veritas6335 10 месяцев назад +6

    Fiction is FICTION!!! NOT BIOGRAPHY!!!
    Scott had a right to make his characters any damn way he wanted them to be. It was HIS BOOK. As writers of fiction we ALL dream up characters that are amalgams of our own qualities and those of others plus a lot of stuff we just make up. That's what art is. Stuff we MAKE UP!! There doesn't have to be a "model" for gods sake.
    Settings, in literature, are more often taken literally from real places and the Lewis estate and the goings on there do appear to have been the inspiration for Gatsby's house and parties. But Gatsby himself was Scott's creation, not a real person. Gatsby was a literary character that evolved from Scott's own hopes and dreams and experiences and made into an enduring literary character through the writer's art. That's what writers do. He wasn't a real person and doesn't have to be, any more than Rick Blaine or Huck Finn or James Bond or Captain Ahab or Scarlett Ohara or Rhett Butler or Scout or Nancy Drew or Popeye have to be real people. Get a grip. . This is a lot of people who aren't writers and aren't creative (with the exception of Waterston) trying to understand and explain those who are. It's futile. They'll never get it. . It's enough that they appreciate one of the finest literary talents of the twentieth century and work to shed some light on his life and times and in that respect, this is quite interesting. Nice to see pictures of those actual houses in Westport.

  • @veritasveritas8031
    @veritasveritas8031 2 года назад +11

    🚫 No sound beginning at 15:54 🚫

    • @bttrflygal
      @bttrflygal Год назад +1

      I was enjoying it till then .it was a waste after

    • @mangos2888
      @mangos2888 10 месяцев назад +1

      My god I thought something happened to my audio 😂

  • @damarysdingui
    @damarysdingui 2 года назад +1

    Thanks for the interesting upload, D.C..💖

  • @kameronicole
    @kameronicole Год назад +6

    He probably blended all his experiences into his novels.

    • @alteredcatscyprus
      @alteredcatscyprus Год назад +1

      Yes, and I can imagine him imagining himself in that mansion, wondering what would it have taken for him to be motivated for such wealth, and his own passion unfolding before his eyes into this story.

  • @alteredcatscyprus
    @alteredcatscyprus Год назад +8

    It’s fun to speculate about these things. In the end though, I wonder if it’s unkind of us to go over their personal lives with microscopes like they are just carcasses now and cannot feel it or be hurt by it. It’s important to remember in the end we are trying to understand ourselves, and because we have the luxury of this couple’s life together being exposed by the endless curiosity they aroused with their success or fame or beauty or greatness, and perhaps that they even sought after, and we are still enshrouded by the entitled privacy of being alive, we feel eager to grab the chance at self knowledge, because we can do it without exposing ourselves, only them.

    • @quickchris10
      @quickchris10 10 месяцев назад +1

      Well, it's art, so, obviously no one has to explain it. It's like having a documentary about the Mona Lisa or the Scream. It is what it is to the viewer/transcends many levels. But I think its valid to discuss the macrocosm, of Fitzgerald's view and of American society. Then, on another level, we can all feel what we feel, relating to the individuals in the stories.

  • @jajanesaddictions
    @jajanesaddictions Год назад +2

    It would have been a good docu until the sound cut out. smh...

  • @terilward59
    @terilward59 Год назад +4

    if only they hadn't muted the part describing how the Fitzgerald'sgot together.... frustrating!

    • @RainbowBrite80
      @RainbowBrite80 Год назад

      They met at a dance 1 night. At least that's the most popular story. There's another story that they met at someone's house.

    • @thomasseabolt9385
      @thomasseabolt9385 Год назад

      I think in reality it was a dating app.

  • @thomasseabolt9385
    @thomasseabolt9385 Год назад +2

    When candidates are chosen as models for a Fitzgerald character one must remember that contrary to Hemingway's critique Fitzgerald's characters were almost always composites.

  • @edwarddantoni4372
    @edwarddantoni4372 Год назад +2

    The description of Gatsbys mansion is dead on with Beacon Towers in Sans Pointe Long Island as well as geography of two peninsulas jutting out as East and West Egg.

  • @robertsantana3261
    @robertsantana3261 Год назад +2

    No sound at halfway pt

  • @veritas6335
    @veritas6335 8 месяцев назад +1

    The Gatsby story is a reimagined and fictionalized rendition of Scott's real life rejection by the wealthy Ginevra King, when he was younger. He never quite got over her and of course, she became Daisy and Scott became Gatsby in his story, which he set at a grand estate like the one he'd seen in Westport. It's that simple.

  • @edwarddantoni4372
    @edwarddantoni4372 Год назад +3

    I agree with the documentary that Westport inspired much of Gatsby, though more of Beautiful and the Damned, especially the proximity of the millionaire and their cottage.
    But I think when he moved to Great Neck, he was inspired by Beacon Towers in his description of Gatsbys mansion.

    • @brianwrynn3109
      @brianwrynn3109 11 месяцев назад +2

      Please check old photos of the Fitzgeralds' so-called "cottage" at 244 Compo Road such as the photo at 0.33 in this film. The residence is really a large , 2 story, house, with 2 dozen windows and a portico which the Fitzgeralds used to host many guests. It may not be as large as some estates in the region but is still a large house and not a "bungalow" or "cottage" no matter how often this video tries to give it those names.

    • @quickchris10
      @quickchris10 10 месяцев назад

      @@brianwrynn3109 I think it's ``small,'' because so many of the second-story windows seem cramped; I'm sure the ceilings were low, making the whole level uncomfortable and surely nobility would consider it uninhabitable. That's the kind of floor you give to the servants. No one wants to sleep under steeply sloping ceilings.

    • @user-zl6bb8xu7d
      @user-zl6bb8xu7d 10 месяцев назад +3

      The THIRD Story windows in the attic rooms are indeed small and room space wouid be cramped under the sloped ceilings. (See photo at 04:24) The Second story rooms do not have this issue. This is a large THREE story house (counting attic rooms), with 2 dozen windows and many rooms which the Fitzgeralds used to host numerous guests. It is over a half mile from the Lewis mansion, not near it, although some of Lewis' property is adjacent to the FSF house. If you have any factual information please update us. [ Note: RUclips has given me a new ID for sone reason. It should be @brianwrynn3109 as before]

    • @user-zl6bb8xu7d
      @user-zl6bb8xu7d 10 месяцев назад

      .]@@quickchris10​

    • @user-zl6bb8xu7d
      @user-zl6bb8xu7d 10 месяцев назад +1

      At 15:20 we see the video's creators in the second floor bedroom of the "Upstairs Bedroom Fitzgerlad House" This clearly shows there is ample headroom in the second floor bedroom and there is nothing "cramped" about it.@@quickchris10

  • @terr777
    @terr777 Год назад +3

    I should live in such a "little bungalow".

    • @brianwrynn3109
      @brianwrynn3109 11 месяцев назад +2

      Good, you saw that too. "Please check old photos of the Fitzgeralds' so-called "cottage" at 244 Compo Road such as the photo at 0.33 in this film. The residence is really a large , 2 story, house, with 2 dozen windows and a portico which the Fitzgeralds used to house many guests. It may not be as large as some estates in the region but is still a large house and not a "bungalow" or "cottage" no matter how often this video tries to give it those names.

    • @sylvia810
      @sylvia810 10 месяцев назад

      LOL 😂

  • @jacpratt8608
    @jacpratt8608 Год назад +3

    fancy this taking so long to show up? West Egg West Port. Local historians good for you all. A great story of a story. Now, what was the real story of this Mr Lewis? The atmosphere Mr McKaig iwrites of.?

  • @kittenlady3193
    @kittenlady3193 11 месяцев назад +1

    Regrettably no sound for a long time as of Boy meets Girl.

  • @quickchris10
    @quickchris10 10 месяцев назад

    Well the premise seems to argue different points. Bruccoli would have thought Westport insignificant because its not part of Fitzgerald's formative years. But it is significant, if you're wanting a complete picture of Americana, because the '20's was such a pivotal time.

  • @shamekamoonjr33
    @shamekamoonjr33 Месяц назад

    Please tel me YYYY thr isn't Nooo Sound ❓

  • @christopherp.hitchens3902
    @christopherp.hitchens3902 2 года назад +21

    Wait…why do they keep talking about making a documentary IN a documentary? Is this a documentary ABOUT a documentary???? If so, why not title it so: “Warning: This is not about F. Scott Fitzgerald, this is a documentary about making a documentary about Fitzgerald”. That way we don’t have to waste our time with this bizarre effort.

    • @haroldfadorka3816
      @haroldfadorka3816 Год назад +3

      Maybe it's a reenactment of an intended documentary.

    • @christopherp.hitchens3902
      @christopherp.hitchens3902 Год назад +1

      @Jebb34 - You seem fully prepared to live in a world where NOTHING is quite what it appears to be? Is this laziness or fatigue or…ignorance? You’ll excuse me for INSISTING that products be exactly what they claim to be otherwise… there are consequences.
      Imagine that: Consequences for lies and deception? What a novelty!
      Trump seems to have made lying and distortion part of American culture. You may of have signed up for this…your tongue sticking out like a happy dog…spittle flying about. As for me: If you claim to have a documentary, SHOW THE DOCUMENTARY. If this is mere advertising for their personal egos (the hell with Fitzgerald?) then I will move along.

    • @suziecreamcheese211
      @suziecreamcheese211 11 месяцев назад +2

      Well said.

    • @quickchris10
      @quickchris10 10 месяцев назад +2

      Thank you.

    • @LivingLife72
      @LivingLife72 9 месяцев назад

      🎉 Thank You

  • @caroledrury1411
    @caroledrury1411 Год назад

    Wow

  • @veritas6335
    @veritas6335 8 месяцев назад +1

    No doubt Scott used the Lewis estate and mansion in Westport as his model for the Gatsby home. The rest is a STORY folks. It's FICTION. He never met Lewis. He invented Gatsby because that's what writers do - they CREATE characters.

  • @carolking6355
    @carolking6355 10 месяцев назад

    I lost sound then picture??/????

  • @tintinjailhouse1312
    @tintinjailhouse1312 2 года назад +1

    I Will look at it later🔥👧🔥🔥🔥🔥

  • @RadioWhoPoo
    @RadioWhoPoo Год назад +1

    Fascinating documentary.
    The commentary on how Westport changed is very interesting -- how many individuals in the documentary voted for more immigration and no border wall? Hmm

    • @sylvia810
      @sylvia810 10 месяцев назад

      Whaaat?!!😂

    • @RadioWhoPoo
      @RadioWhoPoo 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@sylvia810 it's a legitimate question :)

    • @lisaa.sharpe4227
      @lisaa.sharpe4227 10 месяцев назад +1

      I spent summers in Westport as a child in the 70s and 80s because I had family members who lived there. Things really started changing there in the mid-90s when all of the New Yorkers invaded. Before that, we could go to Longshore Inn and always see quite a few people we knew. When I was last at Longshore in the mid-90s, it had a very different vibe, and we didn't know a single soul there.

    • @RadioWhoPoo
      @RadioWhoPoo 10 месяцев назад

      Wow. Demographic replacement in real time.@@lisaa.sharpe4227

  • @cherylcummins5209
    @cherylcummins5209 10 месяцев назад

    I actually had to read this in English class and answer questions in my end year exam!
    It was such a cheesy book, and waste of my last semester.
    Lester B Pearson high school Burlington Canada

    • @veritas6335
      @veritas6335 8 месяцев назад +1

      How horrifyingly shallow you are.

    • @marilyn6556
      @marilyn6556 5 месяцев назад +2

      Well, it was written 100 years ago, and it’s still being used in schools today. Not bad, for a “cheesy” book.

  • @michaelmorin2807
    @michaelmorin2807 2 года назад +2

    Who cares, old Man?