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Ginevra King

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Nationality
  
American

Occupation
  

Name
  
Ginevra King

Education
  
Ginevra King httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommons99

Died
  
1980, Lake Forest, Illinois, United States

Ginevra King (November 30, 1898-December 13, 1980) was an American socialite and debutante and was the inspirational muse for several characters in the novels and short stories of American novelist F. Scott Fitzgerald.

Contents

Ginevra King Carey Mulligan How 39Gatsby39 era women inspired me CNNcom

Early life

Ginevra King Carey Mulligan How 39Gatsby39 era women inspired me CNNcom

King was born in Chicago in 1898, the daughter of Ginevra Fuller and Charles Garfield King. She, like her mother and her grandmother, was named after Leonardo Da Vinci's painting Ginevra de' Benci. Her father was a wealthy Chicago businessman and financier. She had two younger sisters, Marjorie and Barbara. Ginevra grew up amid the Chicago social scene, as a member of the elite "Big Four" Chicago debutantes during World War I. She attended the Westover School in Middlebury, Connecticut.

Relationship with Fitzgerald

Ginevra King Ginevra King Pirie 1898 1980 Find A Grave Memorial

Ginevra first met Fitzgerald on January 4, 1915, while visiting her roommate from Westover, Marie Hersey, in St. Paul, Minnesota. They met at a sledding party and, according to letters and diary entries, they both immediately became infatuated. They sent letters back and forth for months, and their passionate romance continued until January 1917. According to Fitzgerald biographer Andrew Mizner, Fitzgerald "remained devoted to Ginevra as long as she would allow him to", and she would become his inspiration for the character of Isabelle Borgé, Amory Blaine's first love in This Side of Paradise, for Daisy in The Great Gatsby, and several other characters in his novels and short stories. In August 1916, Fitzgerald wrote in his ledger words possibly said to him by Ginevra's father: "Poor boys shouldn't think of marrying rich girls." This line was picked up and used in the 1974 film production of The Great Gatsby.

Later life

Ginevra King Meet Ginerva King the real Daisy Buchanan

On July 15, 1918, King wrote to Fitzgerald, informing him of her engagement to William Mitchell, the son of her father's business associate. They were married on September 4, 1918, and had three children, William, Charles, and Ginevra. Then in 1937, she left Mitchell for businessman John T. Pirie (of the Chicago department store Carson Pirie Scott & Company). That year she also saw Fitzgerald for the last time, in Hollywood; when she asked him which character in Gatsby was based on her, Fitzgerald replied, "Which bitch do you think you are?"

Ginevra King Ginevra King Pirie 1898 1980 Find A Grave Memorial

King later founded the Ladies Guild of the American Cancer Society. She died in 1980 at the age of 82.

Literary legacy

Ginevra King The Girls Who Inspired Gatsby THe Girls of Gatsby

King exerted a great influence on Fitzgerald's writing, perhaps as much as his relationship with his wife, Zelda. His work abounds with characters modeled after and inspired by King, which include:

Ginevra King Ginevra King the inspiration for Daisy Buchanan tribunedigital

  • Judy Jones in "Winter Dreams"
  • Isabelle Borge in This Side of Paradise
  • Most notably, Daisy Buchanan in The Great Gatsby
  • Fitzgerald also recreated their meeting in "Babes in the Woods," from the collection Bernice Bobs Her Hair and Other Stories, which he also reused in This Side of Paradise.

  • Ginevra King Ginevra King Fitzgeralds Gatsby Inspiration And His First Love

    King is also featured in the books The Perfect Hour by James L.W. West III, and in a fictionalized form in Gatsby's Girl by Caroline Preston. The musical The Pursuit of Persephone tells the story of King's romance with Fitzgerald.

    References

    Ginevra King Wikipedia