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Danny Klecko, one of the most recognizable and outspoken personalities on the Twin Cities literary scene, has paused his ...
A hundred years after F. Scott Fitzgerald published his classic novel, a trip around Manhasset Bay shows how little has ...
5. The Plaza When F. Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald were painting the town red in the ’20s Jazz Age, invariably The Plaza was their lodging and drinking spot of choice.
Fitzgerald attended Princeton from 1913 to 1917, before dropping out to join the military, and the university now holds the F. Scott Fitzgerald and Zelda Fitzgerald Papers in its Special Collections.
F. Scott Fitzgerald – whose best-known work “The Great Gatsby” was published 100 years ago – and his wife, Zelda Sayre Fitzgerald, rented a home in Montgomery, Ala., in 1931.
Sept. 19 to Sept. 22: “The Last Flapper,” a one-woman show by William Luce based on the writings of Zelda Fitzgerald, performed by Monette Magrath at Landmark Center in St. Paul.
One ill-fated night in December 1924, F. Scott Fitzgerald got into a drunken brawl that ended up in a Rome police station, where he punched an officer and was severely beaten by some others.
Among its guests were F. Scott Fitzgerald and Zelda Fitzgerald, the Beatles, and art dealer Joseph Duveen, who conducted auctions in the Plaza’s ballroom. The lobby of the Plaza Hotel.
After Fitzgerald published his smash hit, “This Side of Paradise” in 1920, he and Zelda partied like there was no tomorrow in New York City, eventually getting kicked out of the Commodore Hotel.
The Bar Fitzgerald in the Hôtel Belles Rives qualifies as one of Europe’s most sybaritic literary shrines. Resembling the interior of a Jazz Age ocean liner and filled with stylish art-deco ...
Petah Coyne, “Untitled #1378 (Zelda Fitzgerald)” (1997–2013), specially formulated wax, pigment, silk flowers, candles, paint, white pearl-headed hat pins, artificial pearl strands, cast-wax ...