Carol Burnett Show Went With The Wind
Carol Burnett Show Went With The Wind
Carol Burnett Show Went With The Wind
Walter KLINGER
The Hollywood classic film, Gone with the Wind (1939), was first shown on
American TV over two evenings, on November 7 and 8, 1976. A highly anticipated event,
the broadcast attracted more than 30 million viewers, comprising 65% of all TV viewers and
47% of all households, still the record for a movie shown on TV. A few days later, on
November 13, the popular weekly comedy-variety show, The Carol Burnett Show
(1967-1978), presented an 18-minute parody entitled Went with the Wind, which cleverly
deconstructed the themes of the movie and the personalities of the characters. The Burnett
skit was tremendously successful, and is still today fondly remembered by many people.
Gone with the Wind (GWTW) is fascinating for its characters and acting
performances, its dramatic and humorous scenes, and its sets and costumes. Its
interpretation of American history is suspect at best; but, it is at heart a story of interpersonal
relationships. Thus it has many scenes of intimate talk, more than in many other movies,
where conversation is secondary to action. The speech speed is often quite fast; but, the
style of speaking is simple and the vocabulary fairly common. For these reasons, GWTW is
useful for language classes and is appealing to English language learners. Any study
program of GWTW should also include a look at the Carol Burnett performance, both for its
comedy and its serious commentary. In particular, the frequent slapping in the Burnett skit
mocks and displaces the infamous slapping scene of the original movie, where Scarlett slaps
Prissy, and so works to redeem the disturbing racism of the original.1
The Went with the Wind skit opens with “Starlet” coming down a staircase,
exchanging pleasantries with guests. At the bottom of the stairs, “Sissy” jumps up and down,
shouting “Miss Starlet! Miss Starlet!” again and again, until Starlet finally slaps her. Sissy
1
The political and social setting of GWTW, both Margaret Mitchell’s 1936 novel and David O. Selznick’s film,
requires a lot of background explanation. I have prepared an introduction for class use in Klinger (2009),
including comments on GWTW’s portrayal of the Old South cause and race relations.
2 Walter KLINGER
calms down and tells her the exciting news that “Brashly” has arrived, whereupon Starlet
starts jumping up and down, just as hysterical as Sissy was. Starlet hurries to open the front
door, where Brashly and “Melody” are standing. Starlet invites Brashly in, but shuts the
door before Melody can enter.
When Starlet eventually does let Melody in, Melody greets Starlet sweetly. Starlet
sneers and suggests, “Melody, why don’t you stick your head in the punchbowl? I’m sure it
could use a little more sugar.” The ever-cheerful Melody agrees and proceeds to do just that.
Starlet goes to tell Brashly, “I love you! I love you! I love you!” Brashly tells
her, “I married Melody this afternoon,” whereupon Starlet neatly segues to, “I hate you! I
hate you! I hate you!” Starlet throws a vase, which “Ratt Butler” catches. Ratt declares
his love for Starlet, saying, “If it wasn’t for this blasted war, I’d marry you in a minute.”
Starlet asks, “What war?” Sissy comes in, shouting, “Miss Starlet! They’ve declared war!”
The guests leave hurriedly. Scarlett and Melody, in unison, call after Brashly, “Goodbye, my
darling Brashly!”
Melody is about to have her baby. Sissy screams she doesn’t know what to do, and
Starlet slaps her. Sissy calms down and says, “I’ll try.” She gives instructions about what
everyone should do. Starlet starts her soliloquy about not being defeated, but Sissy wanders
in front of her, singing loudly and tunelessly. Melody, in labor, also moans and apologizes
for creating an inconvenience. Starlet can barely hear herself think. She finally shouts,
“Will you two shut up?!” The First Act ends.
A caption informs us the time is “One War Later.” When Sissy says that a Yankee
soldier is at the door, Melody points out that there will be a problem with social conventions:
“Well, you can’t ask him in. It simply isn’t done.” The Yankee wants $300 for taxes.
Starlet hits him over the head with a chair, knocking him out. Brashly returns, and Starlet
and Melody both run to embrace him. Starlet is the middle of the sandwich. The
ever-oblivious Melody says, “Oh, my darling Brashly! Now that the war is over, we’ll never
let anything come between us ever again.”
Starlet asks Brashly to help pay the taxes. Brashly says, “My money’s gone.”
Starlet asks, “Gone? Gone where?” Brashly says, “It went with the wind.” Confused,
Starlet asks, “Wind? What wind?” A variation on Max Steiner’s lush “Tara’s Theme” from
GWTW starts to play loudly. Starlet comments, “Well, that’s pretty, but it doesn’t answer
my question.”
Went with the Wind 3
Scarlett plans to ask Ratt for the money, but her clothes are all tattered. Sissy
suggests, “When he comes in, why don’t you hide behind the drapes?” Scarlett has a great
idea. She pulls down the drapes, rod and all, and runs upstairs. There is a knock on the
door, and Sissy jumps up and down, shrilly asking herself, “What’ll I say? What’ll I say?”
As she is alone, she must slap herself to calm down.
Scarlett comes down the stairs, wearing not only the drapes, but the curtain rod as
well, like a huge shoulder pad. The Burnett lampoon was filmed before a studio audience,
and at this point the audience apparently laughed and applauded non-stop for over 10
minutes.2 This dress scene was number 2 in TV Guide’s January 23-29, 1999, list of “The 50
Funniest Moments in Television” (the funniest moment was the chocolate wrapping scene
from “I Love Lucy”). The dress, designed by Bob Mackie, is now on display in the
Smithsonian National Museum of American History, and in 2009 a commemorative Barbie®
doll depicting Carol Burnett wearing the rod dress was put on sale.
Ratt tells Starlet, “That gown is gorgeous.” Starlet replies, “Thank you. I saw it in
the window, and I just couldn’t resist it.” The Yankee soldier revives, and, as he is
conveniently also a minister, performs a marriage ceremony. Starlet takes money out of
Ratt’s pocket to pay the Yankee. Starlet refuses Ratt’s attempt to kiss her. Ratt picks her up
and carries her up the stairs, panting with the effort. At the top of the stairs, Starlet,
impressed with Rat’s masculine strength, says, “I’m yours,” but Ratt says he is exhausted and
leaves. Starlet embraces Brashly and asks him, “Would you like to kiss the bride?” Ratt
re-appears and angrily says, “Step out of the way, woman! This is between us men!”
Brashly, in keeping with his mild character, says, “Oh, perhaps I ought to get out of the way,
then.” Ratt throws a punch at Brashly, but Brashly ducks, and the punch lands on Starlet,
who tumbles down the stairs. Melody appears at the top of the stairs and announces that she
2
The 2007 PBS American Masters documentary, Carol Burnett: A Woman of Character, mentions that the
audience laughed so hard and so long when Burnett appeared in the rod dress that they had to stop the taping so
that the show wouldn’t run over its hour time limit. In an interview (Vary 2007), Burnett said:
When we were doing the Gone with the Wind take-off, it had originally been written that Scarlett would
come down the stairs with just the draperies hanging [off her]. I went into the costume fitting on that
Wednesday, and [fashion designer Bob Mackie] said, ‘‘I have an idea.’’ He picked up the curtain rod
with the dress on it, and I fell on the floor. I said, ‘‘This is one of the most brilliant ideas anybody has
ever come up with.’’ It was one of the longest laughs we’ve ever had on the show. You can see me kind
of biting the inside of my cheek, trying not to laugh, before I could say, ‘‘I saw it in the window, and I just
couldn’t resist it.’’ It was a wonderful sketch; anyway, it was written beautifully by two of our junior
writers.
In her memoirs, Burnett (2010:114) also mentions the dress fitting was on a Wednesday and the taping of the
show was on Friday. The show was aired on TV on Saturday. Miss Burnett also famously portrayed Norma
Desmond from Sunset Boulevard (1950), among her other movie parodies.
4 Walter KLINGER
is dying. She asks for Starlet to come up the stairs to talk to her. Starlet climbs up the
stairs. Melody says to Starlet, “I want you to know how I really feel,” and shoves Starlet
tumbling down the stairs again.
Melody dies, and Starlet finally realizes that Brashly “really, really, really, really”
loved Melody. Ratt tells Starlet he is leaving her. He is already on the other side of the
door when Starlet wails, “What’ll I do? What will become of me?” Ratt starts to say,
“Frankly, my dear, I don’t gi...” but Starlet, in despair, shuts the door and walks away before
he can finish his sentence. Starlet cries, “Oh, Sissy, what am I gonna do? What am I gonna
do?” Sissy slaps her and says, “Frankly, Miss Starlet, I don’t give a damn.” The skit
finishes.
Carol Burnett plays Starlet, Tim Conway is Brashly, Harvey Korman is Ratt, Vicki
Lawrence is Sissy, Dinah Shore is Melody, and Lyle Waggoner is the Yankee Soldier-cum-
Minister.3
Following is a transcript with commentary and vocabulary annotations for English
language study for Japanese students.
Carol Burnett introduces the skit: “Recently, nearly the entire nation spent a total of 5
hours watching Gone with the Wind make its TV debut. So for those of you who ran out of
Kleenex and were unable to watch it, we put together our own mini-version to let you know
what you’ve missed. Uh-huh.”4
Background music: Terra Theme.5 Captions: WENT WITH THE WIND!
ATLANTA, TERRA PLANTATION. SOMEWHERE IN GEORGIA.
Belles and beaux are chatting. Starlet appears at the top of the stairs and comes
down the stairs, greeting guests.
Beauregard: Good afternoon, Miss Starlet. You’re looking lovelier than ever.
Starlet: Oh! Why, Cousin Beauregard. How you do turn a girl’s head!6
3
starlet = 女優の卵, 売り出し中の若手女優. brashly = がむしゃらに. rat = クマネズミ, 悪い
やつ. sissy = 弱虫.
4
run out of Kleenex = GWTW makes some people cry and they need Kleenex tissue paper to wipe their tears
and blow their noses with. Kleenex® is a trademark, but in common American speech, Kleenex refers to any
facial tissue, regardless of the brand. *Uh-oh = an interjection said in anticipation of something bad about to
happen. Burnett doesn’t quite say uh-oh, but uh-huh which seems to have a similar sense.
5
Terra is a homonym 同音異義語 for Tara; it is the Latin word meaning land, 地,大地, often heard in the
expressions terra firma 堅い土地;大地,陸地 as contrasted with space, the sky, air, or water, and terra incognita
未知[未開拓]の地[分野,問題].
6
*to turn someone’s head = to cause to become infatuated or conceited,(人)をうぬぼれさせる. E.g.,
Success turned his head. * How you do (+ verb) = You do (this) very much. Sometimes the implication is
that you aren’t happy with what the speaker is saying, e.g., Shakespeare: History of Henry VIII, Act II, Scene 3,
Went with the Wind 5
How you do talk! This form is also sometimes used to express that you are a little embarrassed by what the
person is saying, e.g., How you do go on. How you do prattle on. How you do tease.
7
I swear =本当だってば. a vision = a beautiful sight.
8
twins = this is a reference to the Tarleton twins with whom Scarlett was flirting with in the first scene of
GWTW novel (though in the GWTW movie they are just brothers, not twins). The audience laughs at the
reference.
9
This refers to the lyrics of “Ode to Billie Joe,” a 1967 number-one hit song written and recorded by Bobbie
Gentry, in which “Billie Joe McAllister jumped off the Tallahatchie Bridge,” apparently in a tragic and
mysterious suicide.
6 Walter KLINGER
Starlet: My goodness.
Starlet closes the door. The door panel breaks, with Melody’s hand sticking through
the door. Starlet stands close to Brashly.
Brashly: Mm? Oh!
Starlet: Brashly, darling, why don’t you go into the parlor 休憩室 and I’ll join you
directly, huh?
Brashly: Hah? Well, what about Melody? Uh...
Starlet: Don’t worry, don’t worry about Melody. I’ll take care of that twit ばか者.
Starlet goes back to the front door and opens it.
Starlet: Hello, Melody.
Melody: Hello, Starlet. How sweet of you, how kind of you to invite me.
Starlet: Yeah, I know. But come on in, anyway.
Melody: May I take this moment to tell you how very much I admire you, and I
certainly hope someday we can be as close as sisters.
Starlet: In the meantime, Melody, why don’t you just stick your head in the punch
bowl.10 I’m sure it could use a little more sugar.
Melody: All right.
Melody puts her head in the punch bowl. Starlet is disgusted. She goes to Ashley.
Starlet: Brashly, my darling, I’ve got something to tell ya.
Brashly: Well, I have something...
Starlet: No, no, no.
Starlet covers Brashly’s mouth with her hand.
Starlet: Let me tell you mine first and then you can tell me yours. Oh, Brashly, I
love you. I love you, I love you, I love you, I love you. I really, really do love you. Now,
what was it you wanted to tell me, darling?
Brashly: Um. I wish you’d said that sooner. This isn’t going to be easy.
Starlet: Oh, Brashly, I love you, I love you, I love you, I love you.
Brashly: Well, uh, I married Melody this afternoon.
Starlet: I hate you, I hate you, I hate you! How could you do that to me? How
could you?
Starlet pounds her fists on Brashly’s chest.
10
punch =ワインなどに水・砂糖・レモン・香料などを混ぜた飲料.
Went with the Wind 7
11
There are many web search references to being upset or angry enough to spit nails. The expression
apparently refers to carpenters who hold nails between their lips, to easily access them. They would have to
take them out of their mouths or spit them out when they suddenly became angry and wanted to say something.
12
liable to (+ verb) = ~しがちだ、~しそうだ. bust = 破裂する. stay =コルセットのひも.
13
This refers to A Streetcar Named Desire, the 1947 play by American playwright Tennessee Williams. The
1951 film adaptation stars Marlon Brando as Stanley Kowalski, and Vivien Leigh as Blanche DuBois, a fading
and neurotic, but still attractive, Southern belle. Leigh of course played Scarlett in GWTW, for which she won
the Academy Award for Best Actress. She won her second Best Actress Academy Award for Streetcar Named
Desire. The famous line spoken by Blanche at the end of this movie is “I’ve always depended on the kindness
of strangers.”
14
to be cut from the same cloth = to be very similar. renegade = 反乱者. blasted = mild version of “damn.”
in a minute = right away.
15
This expression seems to be of Irish origin, and means the early part or the best part of the evening.
16
《米略式》ちぇっ,くそ. Shit!の婉曲用法.
8 Walter KLINGER
17
When people want someone to believe that they are telling the truth, they might say As God is my witness. A
typical Japanese translation is 神様、私の証人として…神様、私の証人になってください but I don’t think
Scarlett is talking to God, or making a promise to God, especially because she says she will lie, steal, cheat, or
kill if she has to. I think that is not something most people want God to hear them say. I think it is more of a
vow she is saying to herself rather than to God. The movie GWTW replaces Yankees with they, apparently
trying to avoid making the Yankees the villains, while Mitchell’s novel identifies they as Yankees. The parody
puts back Mitchell’s word for our consideration.
10 Walter KLINGER
18
Tuna casserole is a one-dish “homey” 家庭的[アットホーム]meal, quickly prepared with egg noodles and
canned tuna fish, perhaps with added cheese, milk, butter, and/or canned or frozen vegetables like green peas or
diced carrots, and topped with bread crumbs. The audience laughs here probably because tuna casserole has an
image of a low-status meal.
19
Grits is a dish common in the Southern United States, consisting mainly of coarsely ground corn boiled into a
porridge.
20
The meaning is それは下手なエティケット
Went with the Wind 11
Terra.
Starlet: Oh! Well, uh, won’t you step into the parlor while I fetch my pocketbook
財布?
Soldier: Very well, but you better be quick about it.
Starlet: I will. Why don’t you just go right over here. Uh, tell me, could I offer
you a chair?21
Starlet picks up a chair.
Soldier: Why, yes. I don’t mind if I do.
Starlet: You got it.
Starlet hits the soldier with the chair. He falls down.
Sissy: Head for the hills,22 Miss Starlet! There’s another soldier coming up the
walk!
Starlet: Another one? What the heck did you do, Melody? Tie a yellow ribbon
round the old oak tree?23
Brashly opens the door. He calls out to people behind him.
Brashly: Ciao! Thanks for the ride, boys. Maybe we’ll win the next one!24
Brashly comes in.
Brashly: Hi, girls. What’s for dinner?
Starlet and Melody rush to Brashly and embrace him, with Starlet in the middle.
Starlet & Melody: Brashley!
Melody: Brashley! You’re back! Oh, my darling Brashly! Now that the war is
over, my darling, we’ll never let anything come between us ever again.
Starlet: Brashley! Brashley! Brashley!
Brashley: Oh, uh, howdy,25 Starlet. What’s new?
21
The meaning is “Could I offer you a chair to sit down in.”
22
flee to higher ground, run away quickly, 一目散に逃げる.
23
What the heck = mild variation of “What the hell.” “Tie a Yellow Ribbon Round the Old Oak Tree” was a
big pop hit in 1973 for the pop trio “Dawn featuring Tony Orlando.” In the lyrics, a prisoner in jail asks his
wife or lover to tie a yellow ribbon around the old oak tree in front of their house to show “if you still want me”
after he is released from prison. If there was no ribbon, he could see that and would not come to the house.
“If I don’t see a ribbon ‘round the old oak tree, I’ll just stay on the bus, forget about us, put the blame on me.”
When he does come home, he sings, “I see a hundred yellow ribbons tied ‘round the old oak tree. I’m comin’
home. I’m glad you waited for me.” The yellow ribbon these days is typically used as a sign of support for
American military troops stationed in foreign war zones.
24
It sounds to me that Brashley is saying ciao, which is an Italian greeting for both hello and goodbye, rather
like aloha and shalom, but if so, it is a rather out of place expression for the Old South. Some soldiers
apparently have given Brashley a ride home in their carriage. “The next one” is obviously “the next war.”
25
《米略式》 《あいさつ》よう, やあ.
12 Walter KLINGER
Starlet: Nothin’. Nothin’ is new, darlin’. Everything is just the same as it was
when you left.
Melody: Oh, well, not quite, Starlet darling. Don’t forget about little Brashley
Junior.
Starlet: We’ll talk about your brat がき later. Right now I’ve got more important
things to discuss. Listen, Brashley, they want $300 on back taxes on Terra, and I don’t have
the money, so could you help me pay up the note 紙幣 ?
Brashley: Why, I’d love to...
Starlet: Oh!
Melody: Oh, you sweet, generous, darling, Brashley! You’ve always been so
good!
Starlet: Oh, Brashley!
Brashley: Yeah, uh, but you see, my money is gone.
Starlet: Gone? Gone where?
Brashley: It went with the wind.
Starlet: Wind? What wind?
The Terra Theme starts to play. The three look around.
Starlet: Well, that’s pretty, but it doesn’t answer my question.
Melody: Brashley, come upstairs. I wanna show you our son!
Starlet: No, but, wait! What am I gonna do about the back taxes?
Melody: Well, why don’t you ask that nice Captain Butler?
Starlet: That no-account, low-life Captain Butler!26
Brashley: You mean Ratt Butler, the man who became a millionaire during the
war?
Starlet: Why, precious いとしい Ratt! Where is he?
Brashley: He said he was gonna be here this afternoon, but he stopped off at the
Camptown races. As you folks know, that track is 5 miles long. He was out there betting
on a bob-tailed nag. I put 2 bucks on the gray, myself, of course. (indistinct mumbling) only
pay 2-60 to show, so I.... doo-dah, doo-dah.27
26
no-account = good-for-nothing, worthless, ろくでなしめ. low-life =下層階級.
27
This refers to the well-known comical song, “Camptown Races” or “Camptown Ladies” written in 1850 by
Stephen Foster (1826–1864). Part of the lyrics go like this:
The Camptown ladies sing this song, doo-da, doo-da.
The Camptown racetrack’s five miles long, oh, de doo-da day.
Went with the Wind 13
Melody: Brashley, darling. Don’t you wanna go upstairs and see little Brashley
Junior?
Brashley: Brashley Junior?
Melody: Yes!
Brashley: Gaw! I was hopin’ you’d kind of name him after me!28
Melody & Brashley go upstairs.
Starlet: Sissy! Sissy, get in here! Oh! What am I gonna do? Captain Butler’s
comin’ over here, and he’s got money, and I’ve gotta get it, and look at me! I look like the
inside of a goat’s stomach!29 What am I gonna wear?
Sissy: Well, Miss Starlet, the Yankees done stole {steal の過去形} all your clothes.
Starlet: I know that, stupid!
Horse hoofs ひづめ are heard. Sissy looks out the window.
Sissy: Look, Miss Starlet! Isn’t that Captain Butler’s carriage now?
Starlet: Oh, Lord! What am I gonna do?
Sissy: Well, I got an idea. When he comes in, why don’t you hide behind the
drapes?
Starlet raises her eyebrows and smiles craftily ずる賢く. She goes to the drapes.
Starlet: Sissy, help me take these down!
Sissy: Well, what you doing that for?
Starlet pulls down the drapes and the rod.
Starlet: Never you mind. Now, listen, when he gets here, you just keep him busy.
You understand?
Sissy: Yes, ’m.30
Starlet: ‘Cause I’ve got me a dress to make!
31
This is a standard expression to use as a compliment about someone’s redecorated or renovated house.
32
pit against =(…と)戦わせる,(…に)対抗[競争]させる. The American Civil War was fought largely
between white Northerners and white Southerners; there were inevitably family members on opposing sides.
The slave-owning South was defeated = crumbling beneath his feet. Ratt is upset that Sissy is asking such a
casual question. Perhaps he expects Sissy to say something more sympathetic, but Sissy doesn’t seem to have
any particularly sad feelings about the Old Slave South being destroyed.
33
The song “Dixie” was first sung in New York City in 1859 as part of a blackface minstrel show 黒人に扮し
た白人の芸人による歌や踊りの演芸 and quickly became popular across the United States. The lyrics tell
the story of a black man, apparently a freed slave in the North, who is homesick for the Southern land of his
birth.
I wish I was in the land of cotton, old times there are not forgotten,
Look away, look away, look away, Dixie Land.
In Dixie Land where I was born in, early on a frosty 凍てつくような morn’,
Look away, look away, look away, Dixie Land.
Then I wish I was in Dixie, hooray! hooray!
In Dixie Land I’ll take my stand 態度を取る to live and die in Dixie,
Away, away, away down South in Dixie.
Abraham Lincoln was a great fan of the song. During the Civil War it was informally adopted as the theme
song of the Southern Confederacy, so today it still has bad associations for many people whose ancestors
Went with the Wind 15
Sissy: You know, that’s real catchy うけそう. You oughta set that to music ~に
曲をつける, Captain Butler.
Ratt: My wish won’t come true, Sissy. It, like my dreams, have went with the
wind.
Sissy: What wind?
The Terra Theme starts to play
Sissy: That’s real pretty, but that don’t answer my question.
Starlet appears at the top of the stairs. Her gown has the curtain rod still in it.
She comes down the stairs.
Starlet: What, uh, what brings you to Terra?
Ratt: You! You, vixen,34 you. Starlet, I love you. That, that, that gown is
gorgeous.
Starlet: Thank ya. I saw it in the window and just couldn’t resist it.35
Ratt: Starlet. I’m sorry, maybe it isn’t Starlet. Yes, it is Starlet.36 Starlet.
Starlet: Yes?
Ratt: Will you marry me?
Starlet: Marry you? Why, you’re the scum of the ocean and the chicken of the
sea.37 Of course, I’ll marry you.
Sissy: Where you gonna find a minister?
Soldier: Why, I’m a minister!
Starlet: Oh, good!
Ratt: Will you marry us?
Soldier: Sure! I now pronounce you man and wife.38 Now how ‘bout them back
taxes?
Starlet takes money out of Ratt’s pocket.
Starlet: Here you are, minister. 300 dollars. Uh, Sissy, show the minister the
suffered in the South. Max Steiner’s score of Gone with the Wind quotes the song in the opening scene, and a
band plays the tune in the scene of the Gettysburg death reports where the piper boy sheds tears.
34
雌ギツネ, 《古風》意地悪な女.
35
I saw it in the window = a standard expression: You see a nice dress in a shop window, and you have to go
into the store because you cannot resist trying it on or buying it.
36
The actor seems to have become unsure of the name of the character he is addressing.
37
The usual expression is “the scum of the earth” meaning a really terrible person, but the comedians apparently
wanted to make an association with “chicken of the sea,” which is a brand name of canned tuna and a general
name for canned tuna. Both expressions are quite meaningless in describing Ratt.
38
ここにあなたがたは夫婦であると宣言します(牧師の言葉)
16 Walter KLINGER
door.
Sissy: Shoot. For $300, I’ll show him anything he wants! Come on, sugar!39
Sissy takes the Soldier/Minister to the door. Starlet takes off her drape dress. Ratt
pulls her to him.
Ratt: Now, at last we’re alone, Starlet.
Starlet: Oh, no, you don’t. No, you don’t! There will be no kissing in this
marriage.
Ratt: Oh, yes, there will. Starlet. You need kissin’. You need a lotta kissin’, and
from someone who knows how.
Ratt picks Starlet up and carries her up the stairs.
Starlet: Oh! Put me down! Oh! Put me down! What are you doing? Oh!
Oh! Oh! Put me down!
Ratt reaches the top with some difficulty. He puts Starlet down.
Starlet: Ratt! Ratt, I never realized what a virile 雄々しい, strong, hunk たくま
しい of man you are. I’m yours!
Ratt: Not now, Starlet. I’m pooped 疲れ果てた.
Ratt staggers off ぐらつく.
Starlet: Shoot. This just hasn’t been my day.
Brashley appears.
Starlet: Oh! Brashley!
Brashley: Oh, uh, hi, Starlet. What’s going on?
Starlet: I just became Mrs. Ratt Butler. Would you like to kiss the bride?40 My
darling!
Brashley: Well, I…, Well, I…, Well, I…, Well, I…, Well, I…, Well, I….
Starlet: Oh, Brashley, you know I love you, you know I love you.
Ratt appears.
Ratt: Well, I always seem to be interrupting your tender moments!
Starlet: Ratt...
39
“show someone the door” has a literal meaning of(人)にドアを指し示す and a figurative meaning of(人)
に出て行けと命じる, including the sense of 退職を促される. The crucial inclusion of “to” in “show
someone to the door” changes the meaning to(人)を玄関まで見送る、(人)を戸口へ送り出す. Sissy is
making a “naughty” joke.
40
A religious wedding typically ends with the official saying to the groom, “You may kiss the bride.” This
tradition of closing the ceremony with a kiss probably comes from ancient Rome when contracts were finalized
with a kiss to demonstrate trust and sincerity.
Went with the Wind 17
41
~の大御所. The reference is to a heaven 極楽 of some sort. It is a fairly common expression; a Google
search of “going to that * in the sky” or “gone to that * in the sky” results in thousands of examples.
42
“Something that’s going around” refers to a contagious illness like a cold virus which isn’t usually going to
result in death.
18 Walter KLINGER
Starlet slams the door shut before Ratt can finish his sentence.
Starlet (despondently 落胆して): Oh…
Starlet wanders to the foot of the stairs where Sissy is standing.
Sissy: What did he say?
Starlet: He said, frankly my dear, I don’t gi..
Sissy: Makes sense to me.
Starlet starts to bawl 泣き叫ぶ.
Starlet: Oh, Sissy! Sissy, what am I gonna do? What if I don’t have Ratt?
What am I gonna do? What am I gonna do? What am I gonna...
Sissy slaps Starlet.
Starlet: Oh!
Sissy: Frankly, Miss Starlet, I don’t give a damn.
Sissy walks away. Caption: THE END
In this version of Gone with the Wind, Prissy/Sissy has the last slap and the last word,
and then walks away from her former owner. This is perhaps quite appropriate, considering
the centuries of slave-owning and racial oppression that frame the story. Scenes of white
southern racists viciously beating participants in the black freedom movement had appalled
television viewers around the world not very many years before the Burnett broadcast.
Went with the Wind can be seen on YouTube and other sites. Gone with the Wind
was also spoofed on TV series The Sonny & Cher Show (1976–1977), MAD-TV (1995–2009),
French & Saunders (1987-2007), and The Muppet Show (1976-1981). The movie was also
satirized in C.S.A.: The Confederate States of America (2004), a “faux documentary”
depicting what the USA would be like now if the south had won and slavery were entrenched
throughout American society.
References
Burnett, Carol. 2010. This Time Together: Laughter and Reflection. Random House Harmony Books.
Burnett, Carol. 1976. The Carol Burnett Show. Episode Number: 238. Season Number: 10. First Aired: Saturday,
November 13 at 10:00 p.m. on CBS. Copyright, C.B. Distribution Co.
Klinger, Walter. 2009. “Introduction to Screenplay's Gone with the Wind.” Academic Reports of The University
Center for Intercultural Education, The University of Shiga Prefecture, No. 14, December, pp. 45-64.
PBS (Public Broadcasting Service). 2007. American Masters Presents Carol Burnett: A Woman of Character.
http://www.pbs.org/wnet/americanmasters/episodes/carol-burnett/a-woman-of-character/90/
Vary, Adam B. 2007. Carol Burnett: Funny Lady. Entertainment Weekly, Nov. 16.
http://www.ew.com/ew/gallery/0,,20171550_20171627_20160519,00.html