The most famous quote is "Frankly my dear, I don't give a damn."
"I don't know nothin' 'bout birthin' babies!"
"Tomorrow is another day."
"You can't show your bosom before three o'clock."
"Most of the miseries of the world were caused by wars. And when the wars were over, no one ever knew what they were about."
"Yankees in Georgia! How did they ever get in?"
"Ashley Wilkes is still alive to come home to the women who love him...both of them."
"[Stay here] without a chaperone, Dr. Meade? It simply isn't done! --Good heavens, woman, this is war, not a garden party!"
"As God is my witness. As God is my witness, they're not going to lick me. I'm going to live through this, and when it's all over, I'll never be hungry again. No, nor any of my folk. If I have to lie, steal, cheat or kill. As God is my witness, I'll never by hungry again!"
"Frankly, my dear, I don't give a damn." is a line from the 1939 film Gone with the Wind starring Clark Gable and Vivien Leigh.
"I don't no nothing 'bout birthin' babies!"
Yes it is her famous line in the movie Gone With the Wind! TRUST ME ON THAT!
Originally, Margaret Mitchell had named the heroine of Gone With the Wind, Pansy O'Hara, but people thought this was too weak-sounding, so it was changed to Scarlett.
CaTherine
No, she is alive when the film ends.
It is Scarlet.
Yes it is her famous line in the movie Gone With the Wind! TRUST ME ON THAT!
Originally, Margaret Mitchell had named the heroine of Gone With the Wind, Pansy O'Hara, but people thought this was too weak-sounding, so it was changed to Scarlett.
CaTherine
No, she is alive when the film ends.
Having read the book and seen the movie several times, the answer is no. Sewing machines did exist in the 1860's to 1870's(the movie takes place aprox 1861 to 1873 because Scarlet is 16 at the begining of the story and 28 at the end ) but there is no sewing machine mentioned in the book or shown in the film.
no, she was for it
It is Scarlet.
The first one, and the one which made it a famous line is, of course, Gone with the Wind (1939). "After all, tomorrow is another day" is the movie's final line, spoken by Scarlet O'Hara.
Scarlett Ohara was her full name. Her full name was Katie Scarlett O'Hara..
Gone with the Wind
Six important characters die in "Gone with the Wind". They are Ellen, Gerald, Melanie, Charles, Frank Kennedy, and Bonnie.Ellen Robillard Ohara - Mother of Scarlett, Suellen. Wife to Gerald Ohara. Mistress of Tara plantation. Of French descent. Coastline aristocrat. Dies when Scarlett is away in Atlanta.Gerald Ohara - Father of Scarlett, Suellen. Owner of Tara Plantation. Husband to Ellen Robillard Ohara. Of Irish descent, born overseas. Becomes insane after death of wife, and dies by falling off horse while jumping dangerous fence.Melanie Hamilton Wilkes - Wife of Ashley Wilkes. Mistress of Twelve Oaks Plantation. Sister to late Charles Hamilton, the first husband of Scarlett Ohara. Mother to Beaux Wilkes. Dies in second pregnancy, warned by Dr. Meade.Charles Hamilton - First husband to Scarlett Ohara. Brother to Melanie Hamilton-Wilkes. Dies in Civil War, childless.Frank Kennedy - Second husband to Scarlett Ohara-Hamilton. Former lover of Suellen Ohara, the younger sister of Scarlett. Dies while avenging the prevented assault on Scarlett. Dies childless.Eugenia Victoria Buttler - Better know as Bonnie. Daughter to Rhett Butler and Scarlet Ohara Kennedy. Spoiled by Rhett. Dies jumping over a fence with her pony, just like her grandfather, Gerald Ohara.
With Scarlet O'Hara's family at home