Southern Belles
by
Gail Jarvis
by
Gail Jarvis
In
the decades following the War Between the States three girls grew
up together in the "Cradle of the Confederacy," Montgomery,
Alabama. Their parents and relatives’ lives were still etched with
painful memories of the War as well as the stark deprivations experienced
during the period of Radical Reconstruction that followed. Although
the girls entered a world without automobiles, airplanes, radio
or motion pictures, all three would live to experience these modern
"miracles."
Each
of these young women possessed beauty, brains and ambition. Also,
each was lucky enough to be born into families that had the financial
wherewithal to provide them with every advantage. They attended
the best schools and shared social experiences together, even dating
the same boys. By their early teens, each was already part of that
unique genus "Southern Belle." It is impossible to briefly
define a Southern Belle because of the complexity of these women
but they all share one attribute; "the ability to manage men
without seeming to do so."
In
their adolescence, like most precocious teens, the girls dreamed
of living glamorous and exciting lives far beyond the confines of
their hometown. But, unlike most adolescent girls, their dreams
came true. Two would marry two of the most famous men of their epoch
and would publish short stories as well as novels. The third would
become an internationally famous stage and screen actress.
The
girls parted company in their late teens when each left Montgomery.
But there was a kismet quality about their relationship that kept
their paths crossing throughout their lives in both the United States
and Europe.
Sara
Powell Haardt was born in 1899. A "blue baby"; she only
survived as a result of the alert physician’s drastic measures that
forced her to begin breathing. Her precarious birth presaged a lifetime
of frail health. Although she was one of five children, her parents
were upper middle class and financially able to send her to the
exclusive Margaret Booth School for Girls in Montgomery. Early in
her life her gift for writing was evident and it ripened at the
Booth School.
Upon
graduation from the Booth School, Sara moved to Baltimore to attend
Goucher College where she graduated Phi Beta Kappa. Sara stayed
on at Goucher as Professor of English while pursuing her literary
career. Her love/hate relationship with the South is evident in
her essays, short stories and novels that won critical acclaim during
her lifetime. But today Sara Haardt is not as well known as the
Southern writers who followed her and flourished in the 1920s and
1930s, although she was certainly their equal.
At
the time of Sara’s tenure at Goucher College, Baltimore’s premiere
celebrity was the Editor of The Baltimore Sun, Henry Louis Mencken.
Today Mencken is usually remembered as a cantankerous journalist
who fulminated against mediocrity and big government. But he was
also one of the leading literary critics of his time and he used
his editorship of The Smart Set and The American
Mercury to promote the careers of many promising writers. His
power and popularity helped make him one of the most eligible bachelors
of his time. Mencken was sought after by Broadway and Hollywood
actresses, as well as famous female literati of the day.
In
addition to his acerbic attacks on all things bourgeois, Mencken
was also noted for his low opinion of marriage, which he described
as "the end of hope." The literary and intellectual attainments
of the post-Reconstruction South didn’t seem to impress Mencken
very much either. And his ambivalent feelings for marriage as well
as Southern cultural aspirations might have become permanent if
fate had not decided to subject him to the wiles of a Southern Belle.
In
1923 Mencken was invited to speak to the graduating class at Goucher
College. Afterwards he had dinner with some of the professors and
one of these women, Sara Haardt, caught his eye. As he chatted with
this young lady, 18 years his junior, he was struck by her knowledge
and her poise. Sara reminded Mencken that she had submitted a story
to The Smart Set but it had not been accepted. Mencken encouraged
her to submit another story and mark it for his personal attention.
After
reading Sara’s story, he suggested they meet for lunch and discuss
his ideas. Their lunches became more frequent and when either Mencken
or Sara was away from Baltimore, they corresponded regularly; always
addressing their letters formally as "Miss Haardt" and
"Mr. Mencken." But during one extended trip to Montgomery,
Sara received a letter from Mencken that began "Dear Sara."
At the end of this letter he wrote; "I miss you terribly."
What
was to become a seven-year erratic courtship ensued, during which
H. L.Mencken promoted Sara Haardt’s writing career. He even
arranged a stint in Hollywood for her to write screenplays. Although
each continued to date other partners, Henry and Sara had formed
an inseparable bond. But while other women aggressively pursued
Mencken, Sara used her Southern Belle conjuring tricks to convince
Henry that he was the pursuer and she the pursued. The other women
in Henry’s life were always available whenever he called, but Sara
was often unable to see him because of a visit from one of her wealthy
suitors from Montgomery or Birmingham. On these occasions, Sara
was always extremely apologetic; protesting that she wished Henry
had called sooner, a suggestion that was extremely vexing to Mencken.
Sara’s
Southern Belle strategy finally brought Mencken to the altar. The
marriage of Henry Louis Mencken and Sara Haardt was a complete surprise
to almost everyone, except their closest friends. Even more shocking
was the fact that the groom abandoned his rigid agnosticism and
married Sara in Baltimore’s Episcopal Church of St. Stephen the
Martyr. No doubt the church’s name seemed appropriate to Henry’s
bachelor friends.
Zelda
Sayre, the youngest daughter of a Justice of the Alabama Supreme
Court, was born in 1900. Although a healthy baby, she entered the
world with a retina missing in one eye, a defect she never knew
about. As a result of this visual infirmity, Zelda had an odd way
of squinting at people. Later in life, as she developed mental problems,
this peculiar way of staring at people became more pronounced and
profoundly altered peoples’ perception of her. Zelda’s unusual name
came from a gypsy queen in a romance novel her mother admired. Indeed,
from early childhood on, Zelda behaved like a gypsy and was described
as having "a sort of insolence toward life and a total lack
of caution." In her senior year at Montgomery’s Sidney Lanier
High School, Zelda Sayre was voted the Prettiest and The Most Attractive
girl in her class and beneath her graduation picture are these prophetic
lines: "Let’s only think of today and not worry about tomorrow."
In
1918, World War I was drawing to a close, but there was still a
large contingent of American soldiers being trained at Camp Sheridan
near Montgomery. Some of the luckier soldiers, especially officers,
were able to obtain special passes to social functions at the exclusive
Montgomery Country Club. It was at one of these moonlit parties
on a steamy Saturday night of that year that Lieutenant F. Scott
Fitzgerald spotted Zelda Sayre on the dance floor and insisted that
he be introduced. There was an immediate attraction between the
two and they became involved.
On
one occasion, Zelda took Scott to the State Capitol to show him
the star that marked the spot where Jefferson Davis had been sworn
in as the President of the Confederacy. There the couple encountered
Sara Haardt who was also visiting the Capitol that day and Zelda
proudly introduced Lieutenant Fitzgerald explaining that he was
the great-grandson of Francis Scott Key, who had written "The
Star Spangled Banner." Scott reacted to the attractive Sara
by turning on the charm and launching into a recounting of his family
connections as well as describing the story he was working on. Unimpressed,
Sara remarked dryly, "How interesting!" Her off-putting
comment put a chill on further conversation and the parties went
their separate ways.
Scott
proposed marriage to Zelda, but at the peak of her youthful popularity,
she wasn’t ready to stop dating other men. Among her most fervent
admirers were Auburn University’s star quarterback and a famous
Atlanta golfer. On one occasion, she sent photographs of herself
to Scott and her Atlanta friend. Unfortunately, she put the photographs
in the wrong envelopes and Scott was miffed to receive a picture
of Zelda tenderly inscribed to the other man. Although Zelda claimed
she had simply made a mistake, the mix up sounds suspiciously like
a typical Southern Belle ruse.
Finally,
after the success of his first novel, This
Side of Paradise, provided Scott with a respectable source
of income and a heightened social profile, Zelda accepted his proposal.
Early in their marriage, Scott and Zelda lived in Baltimore where
they became frequent guests of Henry and Sara. Mencken not only
thought highly of Scott’s writing but he was also delighted with
the vivacious and unpredictable Zelda.
Eventually,
however, the Menckens became troubled over Zelda’s increasingly
bizarre behavior along with Scott’s excessive drinking. Zelda’s
condition ultimately worsened to the point that Scott had to commit
her to the psychiatric unit at Johns Hopkins. During Zelda’s hospitalization,
Scott began showing up at the Mencken’s apartment, uninvited, frequently
inebriated, and often, to Henry’s annoyance, overly flirtatious
with Sara.
Over
the years, Scott and Zelda became the stuff of legends, the golden
couple that epitomized the Roaring Twenties. Most accounts of their
lives focus on Scott’s talent and Zelda’s mental problems. Not only
are Zelda’s literary talents usually given short shrift, but she
is also accused of hindering Scott’s attempts to write. To the contrary,
Zelda proofread and critiqued her husband’s drafts and also made
invaluable suggestions for scene development. She served as the
model for most of his female characters and Scott frequently incorporated
Zelda’s unique way of expressing herself into the language of his
novels.
Mencken
said of Zelda: "What a girl! Cleverer than Scott, if the truth
were known." Zelda had a knack for witty and incisive comments
as illustrated by her remark to a famous author who stated that
his novel was complete except for the loose ends. "It is the
loose ends with which men hang themselves."
Tragically,
because of intermittent periods of psychosis that professionals
were never able to explain, Zelda was in and out of sanitariums
for most of her life and those who came in contact with her sensed
that something was terribly wrong. Ernest Hemingway once recalled
being seated next to Zelda at a dinner party when she abruptly asked
him: "Ernest, don’t you think Al Jolson is greater than Jesus?"
Tallulah
Brockman Bankhead was born in 1903 in Huntsville, Alabama. Her mother
died as a result of complications from the delivery and the baby
was christened alongside her mother’s coffin. Her grief-stricken
father sent Tallulah to Montgomery to be raised by her aunt. Throughout
her life, Tallulah always felt that her father subconsciously blamed
her for her mother’s death. She claimed that her struggle to become
a successful actress was an attempt to win back her father’s affection
because he too had wanted to become an actor in his youth.
The
Bankhead family was one of the most prominent in Alabama. Tallulah’s
grandfather and his brother served together in the U.S. Congress.
One of her aunts was the first woman to become a department head
in the Alabama State government, and her father served in both the
Alabama House of Representatives as well as the U.S. House of Representatives.
Her unusual first name was passed down from her paternal grandmother
who was named after Tallulah Falls; a popular resort town in Georgia
from the late 1800s until the 1940s.
Tallulah
and Zelda were both accomplished gymnasts as well as dancers and
often performed a rigorous song-and-dance routine together that
involved turning cartwheels and standing on their heads. Tallulah’s
specialty was bending over backwards and picking up a handkerchief
from the floor with her teeth. Sara, possibly because of delicate
health, preferred intellectual pursuits to athletic ones.
When
Tallulah was only sixteen, she had glamour photos made in order
to enter a Hollywood movie magazine’s beauty contest. To make herself
look older, she artfully applied extra makeup; wore a large hat
and draped a feathered boa around her neck. From the hundreds of
contestants, Tallulah Bankhead was included among the magazine’s
selection of the "twelve most beautiful women in America."
The
persuasive Tallulah convinced her father and grandfather to allow
her to move to New York to live with relatives and appear in New
York plays. A few years on Broadway were quickly followed by several
highly successful years in the London theater circuit. Tallulah
was not only a talented actress but she also had an enviable grasp
of theater. In fact, it was not unusual for critics to invite her
to attend opening nights with them in order to hear her keen and
usually amusing comments, which they would often use in their own
reviews. One evening, while suffering through a particularly uninspiring
play, Tallulah whispered to her companion: "There is less here
than meets the eye."
H.L.
Mencken first encountered Tallulah at a gathering of literary types
at the Algonquin Hotel and he was as taken with her as he would
later be with Zelda and Sara. After a few drinks, Tallulah insisted
on demonstrating her acrobatic skills to the assembled group. She
made several faulty attempts at cartwheels during which she smashed
a chair and crashed into a table of glasses. Finally, she had to
be helped to her room.
While
vacationing in the South of France, Tallulah was surprised to discover
her girlhood friend Zelda in a small flower shop. Zelda acted strangely.
In Tallulah’s words: "Zelda, poor darling, went off her head.
She had gone into a flower shop and suddenly for her all the flowers
had faces."
In
1931, the now infamous Tallulah was finally lured to Hollywood,
arriving in that glittery Shangri-La shortly after Sara Haardt had
ended her Hollywood stint and returned to Baltimore. During her
years in Hollywood, Tallulah’s biggest disappointment was not getting
the role of Scarlett O’Hara in Gone
with the Wind. Coincidentally, Scott Fitzgerald was working
on the screenplay for the film while Zelda was ensconced in a mental
hospital back East.
After
a twenty-year career in Hollywood, Tallulah recreated herself into
an all-purpose celebrity on radio and television, always using her
trademark greeting, "Hello, Dahling." In addition to being
a chain smoker, (her brand of cigarettes, Craven A’s), she was also
a daily drinker of Old Grand Dad bourbon whiskey reportedly
a bottle or more a day. On one Christmas Eve, after she had been
to entirely too many cocktail parties, a friend foolishly convinced
her to attend midnight mass. Seated next to the aisle, Tallulah
squinted through bleary eyes at the approaching procession led by
a priest in a long robe, carrying the smoking incensure. Leaning
into the aisle Tallulah loudly proclaimed: "Darling, your gown
is lovely but I’m afraid I have to tell you that your purse is on
fire."
Sophistication,
witty repartee and marriages are only part of the story of these
three Southern Belles. There is so much more all three were immensely
talented. They were lauded for their accomplishments during their
lifetimes and their literary and artistic attainments have an appreciative
following today.
At
age 21, Sara Haardt was the head of the Alabama branch of the National
Woman’s Party, and it was Sara who led the campaign to have the
Alabama Legislature ratify the 19th Amendment that gave
women the right to vote. In 1933, one of her short stories was among
the O’Henry Prize Stories. Other winners that year were Erskine
Caldwell, Conrad Aiken and Scott Fitzgerald. She also had a story
included in the Best
Short Stories of 1935. Her novels, especially The Making
of a Lady, were also widely acclaimed. Some of her short stories
and essays have been collected in a volume called Southern
Souvenirs. A collection of her letters and papers is maintained
in the Julia Rogers Library at Goucher College.
Zelda
Fitzgerald’s unconventional paintings and drawings were exhibited
in New York City galleries and most are currently housed in a Montgomery
museum. She published several short stories in the leading periodicals
of her day and her 1932 novel Save Me the Waltz was republished
in 1960. Her unusual use of language seems eccentric but she manages
to capture the mood she is rendering. For example, these comments
about an adolescent girl’s summer night’s drive with a boyfriend:
"A southern moon is a sodden moon, and sultry. When it swamps
the fields and the rustling sandy roads and the sticky honeysuckle
hedges in its sweet stagnation, your fight to hold on to reality
is like a protestation against a first waft of ether."
Tallulah
Bankhead was featured in several award-winning films and she herself
won numerous awards. Her clever quips, often mistakenly attributed
to Groucho Marx, are still being quoted. During World War II, she
frequently entertained American soldiers for the United Service
Organization (USO). At one of these USO functions, the performer
scheduled to follow Tallulah didn’t show so Tallulah had to improvise
for 90 minutes. With a glass of bourbon in one hand and a cigarette
in the other, she kept the soldiers rolling in the aisles with her
outrageous, ribald humor. This event has been recreated in the play
Tallulah, Hallelujah! In 1952, she published the story of
her life, Tallulah: My Autobiography.
At
the age of 37, the fragile Sara succumbed to tubercular meningitis.
At her request, she was cremated and her ashes were placed in the
Mencken family plot at Loudon Park Cemetery in Baltimore. Henry
never married again and throughout his remaining years continued
to periodically place a single white flower on Sara’s grave. Mencken
died at age 76 and his ashes were buried beside Sara’s.
Scott
Fitzgerald, at age 44, died of a heart attack aggravated by chronic
alcoholism. Because he had renounced Catholicism, he was buried
in Rockville Union Cemetery, a Protestant cemetery in Rockville,
Maryland. Zelda’s tragic death occurred at age 48 when she was trapped
on the top floor of a burning mental hospital in Asheville, North
Carolina. Her remains were buried beside Scott in Rockville.
At
age 65 Tallulah Bankhead died from complications from emphysema
and was buried in St. Paul’s Churchyard in Chestertown, Maryland.
The
three Southern Belles had traveled in widely different directions
after they left Montgomery, but with their graves clustered around
Baltimore, they had come together again to their final resting-places.
Sara,
Zelda and Tallulah were the last of the Southern Belles. And, although
Tallulah lived on until 1968, her star began to flicker in the 1950s.
Around that time, the appreciation of witty, sophisticated types
started to wane. Also, people with "background and breeding"
were beginning to be looked upon with disfavor as a result of an
emerging "egalitarian" philosophy intent on leveling society.
Over the years, this leveling campaign has been so successful that
it has created a new breed of "celebrities," quite different
from those admired in the decades from 1900 to 1950.
August
18, 2003
Gail
Jarvis [send
him mail], a CPA living in
Beaufort, SC, is an advocate of the voluntary union of states established
by the founders.
Copyright
© 2003 LewRockwell.com
Gail
Jarvis Archives
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