那里可以下到《飘》(乱世佳人)的英文版或英文缩写版

2025-03-18 11:34:09
推荐回答(2个)
回答1:

最佳答案:

全称

Gone with the wind

缩写

GWTW

Little Known
Facts
1) When Margaret Mitchell began writing GWTW, the star was originally
called "Pansy O'Hara," but she later changed it to "Scarlet! O'Hara." (thank
goodness)
2) TARA was not often photographed from straight in front of it because it
was built with the front door off-centered.
3) Olivia de Havilland and Joan Fontaine were sisters.
4) Margaret Mitchell began writing GWTW wile recuperating from a sprained
ankle. Vivien Leigh began reading GWTW while recuperating from a broken
ankle.
5) After seeing the "wounded soldiers" scene where Scarlett searches for Dr.
Mead, Margaret Mitchell's husband John Marsh remarked, "Why, if we'd had
that many soldiers, we'd have won the war."
6) Butterfly McQueen absolutely refused to do two things in the film: be
slapped and eat watermelon.
7) Vivien Leigh refused to make the vomiting sounds needed for the scene at
the end of Part 1, so Olivia de Havilland provided the sounds for the track.
8) The cotton in the cotton field that Scarlett and the others are picking were
actually store-bought cotton balls glued on by the prop people.
9) When GWTW began production, Olivia de Havilland had been neither a
wife or a mother. To prepare for the scene where she was to give birth, Olivia
spent hours cowering in a corner of a delivery room at LA County Hospital.
During the shooting of the scene, director George Cukor would twist Olivia's
ankle whenever he wanted he to 'have a labor pain.'
10) In the scene just after the birth of Bonnie, where Rhett pours Mammy a
glass of scotch, there was actually supposed to be cold tea in the Scotch
decanter. However, dark Gable had put real Scotch in the decanter, much to
Hattie McDaniel's suprise.
book onto the screen. Casting directors were sent to all the comers of the
country to find Scarlett O'Hara and bring her back to the waiting gates of the
studio. The casting searchers viewed a total of fourteen hundred girls. And
although Alicia Rhett, a Southern belle from Charleston, was discovered and
later cast as poor, plain India Wilkes, no Scarlett came to light. Eventually the
search was called off, with still no Scarlett.
Seiznick hired Sidney Howard as screenwriter, and George Cukor as
director. Sidney Howard took possession ofSeIznick's copy of the book with
the notes scribbled in the margins and fled back to his farm to hammer out the
script. Three months later Sidney Howard sent back to Seiznick the first stage
of his work, which he had entitled a "preliminary treatment."
The first scene to be shot was the Burning of Atlanta scene. Lyie
Wheeler, GWTW's art director, had come up with the idea of actually setting
the studio back lot on fire. An elaborate system of oil and water pipes was
rigged up behind the buildings to allow control of the flames. Security guards,
studio firemen, city fire departments, cameraman, a horse trainer and extra
horses, stunt doubles for Rhett and Scarlett, secretaries, makeup girls,
wardrobe ladies, invited guests, Cukor, and Seiznick all took their assigned
places on the cold, dark lot.The signal was given, the oil ignited, and a three-hundred-foot wall of flame shot up into the night. Black smoke billowed
skyward. The doubles for Rhett and Scarlett raced through the fire.
It was at the filming of this scene that Seiznick met his Scarlett. He met
her when is brother, Myron, showed up with English film star Vivien Leigh.
Leigh had read Gone With the Wind and determined, with all the willfulness
of Scarlett, to make the role her own. She signed a contract with Seiznick
International on a luck Friday, January 13, 1939. Barbara O'Neil, only a year
older than Vivien Leigh, was cast her mother, Ellen.
The first day of filming was slated for January 26, 1939. Everything
and everybody was ready_except the script.
outside the studio in the Simi Valley, for the filming of Scarlett's retching
over a radish and vowing to "never be hungry again." Vivien Leigh, Victor
Fleming and the necessary camera, and makeup and crew people had already
made this trip a half a dozen times, hoping to catch a properly scenic sunrise.
Finally, on May 23, having left the studio at eleven p.m. after a full day's
shooting, they drove north to Lasky Mesa yet again, arriving in time to
capture a picture-perfect dawn on film. Perhaps this was more luck than
timing, for according to Vivien Leigh in the souvenir program, The sun rose
shortly after two a.m," surely an unheard-ofhour for sunrise anywhere south
of the Arctic Circle. But the sun, and Vivien, performed admirably, and the
group returned home at four-thirty, just in time for an hour's sleep before
reporting to the studio again. 'Yet I do not recall that I was so terribly tired,"
Vivien reported. "Instead I think of the day that Scarlett shoots the
deserter...after that nerve-wracking episode, both Olivia de Havilland...and
myself were on the verge of hysterics_ not alone from the tenseness of the
scene, but from the all too real fall as the 'dead' man went down the stairs
before us."
By the time filming of Gone With the Wind was officially completed
on July 1, Vivien worked 125 days, or five months, with only a few days off.
Gable worked 71 days. It was apparent to most observers that Vivien Leigh
was driving herself at top speed, and harder than Scarlett drove her sisters to
pick cotton after the war. Feverish with desire to finish the movie and fly to
New York and Olivier, GWTWs leading lady threw herself into the project
with a disregard for rest of any kind. At last the day came when the final
scene was to be filmed_Scarlett sobbing on the staircase for the departed
Rhett. Vivien had to postpone her New York flight for this scene, a last-
minute invention ofSeIznick's, and as a consequence, the tears were real.
During the preview show in a theatre, when the title Gone With the
Wind flashed across the screen, the audience rose to its collective feet,
cheering, applauding, and screaming. And the movie was now ready for the
big time. Lights, action, Atlanta!

回答2:

飘英文版下载
http://www.dxxk.com/dxxkmw/Soft/SoftShow.Asp?SoftID=5580