Vivien-Leigh.com is announcing a Enter for Your Chance to Win Contest! Together with Kathy Witt, V-L.com will be giving away 1 autographed copy of The Secret of the Belles. Written by Kentucky based freelance writer Kathryn Witt, this children’s book is based on Gone with the Wind, Ona Munson who played “Belle Watling,” and the 3-day film premiere in Atlanta, GA (GWTW author Margaret Mitchell’s hometown). Mrs. Witt attended the November Gone with the Wind Re-Premiere weekend, and I had the pleasure of meeting her. I read this fictional story and absolutely loved it! To read my Interview with the author, click HERE. The book is available for purchase in the E-Store for $12.95.
To enter the contest, please answer the question below. One winner will be chosen at random from the correct submissions. This contest is open to everyone! THIS CONTEST HAS ENDED!
QUESTION: The Marietta Gone with the Wind Museum is one of the settings in The Secret of the Belles. What original dress from the film is on display at the Museum? Hint: Answer can be found on Vivien-Leigh.com.
ANSWER: The Bengaline Honeymoon gown!
Additional Information:
Ms. Witt’s website, www.KathyWitt.com, provides a teaser for this new book: “Lanie Sullivan and Belle Blakely never meet, but they share a fascination for all things Gone With the Wind—especially Belle Watling, a character in the book, and Ona Munson, the actress who portrays Belle in the movie. Lanie meets Ona in 1939, during the three-day movie premiere. When Lanie thwarts a thief in Ona’s hotel room, Ona rewards Lanie with a gift—a gift originally given to Ona by Gone With the Wind author Margaret Mitchell. More than sixty years later, as she helps prepare a museum dedicated to Gone With the Wind for its Grand Opening, Belle reads Lanie’s letters to Ona and is intrigued by Lanie’s references to the gift. Margaret Mitchell died in 1949; Ona Munson in 1955. What about Lanie? Belle begins a quest to discover what the gift was that connects the three women, where it is now—and what happened to Lanie Sullivan. . .”





















