A Burning Passion: The Margaret Mitchell Story

A Burning Passion: The Margaret Mitchell Story

DVD cover
Genre Biography
drama
Written by Robert Hamilton
Directed by Larry Peerce
Starring Shannen Doherty
Theme music composer Billy Goldenberg
Country of origin United States
Original language(s) English
Production
Executive producer(s) Robert Hamilton
Renée Valente
Producer(s) Harker Wade
Cinematography Don E. FauntLeRoy
Editor(s) Paul LaMastra
Running time 95 minutes
Production company(s) FNV Inc.
NBC Productions
Renée Valente Productions
Distributor NBC
Release
Original network NBC
Original release November 7, 1994

A Burning Passion: The Margaret Mitchell Story is a 1994 biographical television film directed by Larry Peerce. The film is about the Pulitzer Prize-winning novel writer Margaret Mitchell, who landed to fame when she wrote Gone with the Wind.

The film was praised by critics, with them especially complimenting Shannen Doherty's Old Southern accent.[1][2]

Plot

Margaret grows up to become a respectable lady in the South, just like her mother May Belle. She wants to become a writer, but her feminist mother insists on her becoming a female doctor. May Belle puts a lot of pressure on her daughter, forcing her to be the best in everything. This results in Margaret never being able to satisfy her mother. When she has become a young lady, all the boys want to be with her, but Margaret only has eyes for Clifford.

They fall in love, but their relationship is cut short when Clifford is sent to World War I. Margaret is sent to Smith College by her mother, where she studies medicine. She loathes it, though, and only thinks about getting back to Clifford. When she receives a phone call that he has died in a German bombing, she is crushed. When her mother dies of the Spanish flu, she quits college and returns home.

She works her way up in Atlanta society and desperately wants a membership at the Piedmont Club. She is refused, however, when she shocks everybody with a sensual dance. Red Upshaw and John Marsh notice Margaret and are immediately drawn to her. At first she is not too impressed with the womanizer Red, knowing he earns his money by bootlegging. However, their dislike soon turns into love, and together they enjoy the wild life of the Jazz Age.

When their engagement is announced, Margaret's family make clear they are against it. The pair still decide to marry, but their marriage is troubled from the start. Red decides to quit his job, so Margaret applies to a newspaper to earn money. She is hired as an interviewer, but does not impress her boss. After gaining more experience, she turns out to be a highly respected reporter.

When Red leaves for Texas, Margaret decides to stay to focus on her career. He returns seven months later and thinks she is having an affair with John. They fight, and Red eventually beats Margaret up severely. The next day, John gives Red money to leave town and never come back. He provides Margaret with a gun to defend herself if Red returns. Margaret and John soon start a relationship and are married in 1925.

By this time, Margaret is working on her first novel, "Gone with the Wind." When it is published, it becomes a huge success. Her fame and money do not do much for her marriage and she soon is estranged from John. When she least expects it, Red visits her, regaining peace after their fight. Red announces he is getting married soon. The end credits say that Red committed suicide not much later, and that Margaret died in 1949, after being struck by a reckless driver.

Cast

Production

Doherty was cast in the lead and title role. To play the role as realistic as possible, she read every book about the writer and saw the film Gone with the Wind (1939).[3] The film was shot on location in Wilmington NC between August and September 1994.[4] The film was released a few days before the premiere of Scarlett, the sequel of Gone with the Wind.[5]

References

  1. The New York Times review
  2. Newsweek Margaret Mitchell: The Brenda Years
  3. Interview with Shannen Doherty Archived November 3, 2008, at the Wayback Machine.
  4. Star News Online
  5. The New York Times TELEVISION REVIEW; The Woman Who Invented Scarlett
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