Monday 20 May 2013

The Gatsby Connection

Looking from "East Egg" to "West Egg"
When The Great Gatsby opened at our local cinema last week, The Doctor and I rushed to see it. Not because we are huge fans of Leonardo di Caprio or even Baz Luhrmann (although the fact that Luhrmann himself was in that very cinema the week before was exciting). But because our town has a direct connection to the Fitzgerald novel. The fictional East Egg of the story (where Gatsby's long lost love Daisy resides) was based on this very peninsula. Or at least, Fitzgerald himself lived in Kings' Point (West Egg in the story), and it is widely assumed that the two opposing coastlines in the story are Kings' Point and Sands Point.

Although the movie was filmed in Australia, Luhrmann had visited and studied the geography of the area before making it. If you see the film, you may think that Gatbsy's mansion, in the style of a French chateau, is way too over the top. But drive up to Sands Point, a few miles from here, and you'll see ridiculous houses in that exact style. There is one house where the original owner imported stone walls from a French Abbey to act as his gates; another resembles a Scottish castle, another a Spanish Hacienda.

In the 1920s, the North Shore of Long Island was known as the "Gold Coast". It was where New York's wealthy built their mansions, commuting into the city by boat or by road (via the "Valley of Ashes" in the Gatsby story: otherwise known as Queens). The area was the Hamptons of its day (back then the Hamptons, 100 miles from New York, was an undiscovered backwater and too far away for a weekend escape).

Now, the houses here are owned by modern-day Gatsbys - as well as bankers and lawyers, there are sports and TV personalities and company founders who live down their sweeping driveways. But the wild parties don't take place there nowadays; it's a quiet area, still dripping with money, but the only people you're likely to see as you drive around are landscapers, joggers and dogwalkers. The old distinctions, too, between the "new money" of West Egg and the "old money" of East have largely disappeared, although there's still a sense here in the East that the people "over there" are somehow a little ostentatious.

Living here, it's fun to think that the area has such a romantic history, particularly if you like F Scott Fitzgerald. And if you're interested in the film, don't let reviews put you off - yes, it's gaudy and over-the-top, but it's faithful to the story and beautiful to watch, and Leonardo di Caprio has the charisma required of Jay Gatsby. I'll think of him, staring at Daisy's green light at the end of her dock, whenever I gaze out at the bay in darkness, with the lights of the city glimmering in the distant sky.








10 comments:

MsCaroline said...

We haven't seen it yet, but I loved the book and am looking forward to it. Never been to that part of NY, but can only imagine...

saravanarani yadhavan said...


Thank you so much... i didnt have the knowledge in this now i get an idea about this.. thks a lot:-)






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Nota Bene said...

Gatsby is everywhere at the moment...I'm looking forward to seeing it. We went to see an audience participation version at Wiltons Music Hall recently, and some friends went to see a dance version at Sadlers! There was a terrific article in the Sunday Times a little while ago about some of the houses...they are truly remarkable!

About Last Weekend said...

How fascinating - you live in such a beautiful area - close to the city and close to the water. Are all the houses around there grand as Gatsby's and Daisy's - are all the people Gatsby-ish or Daisy-ish? So if you live where Daisy lives you are the source of the" green orgiastic light!"

nappy valley girl said...

ALW - well I wish I could say that my life is like Daisy's, but sadly no. I don't know about the people in the mansions of Sands Point, but the 'normal' part of town where we live is just middle class New York suburbia, with most people commuting to jobs in Manhattan. Having said that occasionally a luxury yacht sails past, and I do wonder who is on it....

Michelloui | The American Resident said...

I studied this at uni, but one thing that was missing was seeing any images of the setting that inspired FSF. Perhaps they were more difficult to get pre-internet, but what you've described here has really filled in the gaps for me! I'm looking forward to seeing it.

Metropolitan Mum said...

Can't wait to see it, too! I hate how film critics slate every attempt of turning classic literature into film - it seems they just can't win.

Iota said...

I got goose bumps reading this post.

I was in a group at a school fundraiser last week which decided to go with a theme "The Great Gatsby". I happened to have a flapper dress (unlikely, I know, but true) and had great fun getting all the accessories. It was a glamorous era.

Bridal lehenga said...

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Jay said...

Thanks for the little insight, I knew nothing of the background of Gatsby - I'm hoping to see the film in the next week or so.