Gerald died October 17, 1964, in East Hampton, two days after his friend Cole Porter. Sara died on October 10, 1975, in Arlington, Virginia. Nicole and Dick Diver of
Tender Is the Night by
F. Scott Fitzgerald are widely recognized as having been based on the Murphys, mainly from the marked physical similarities, although many of their friends, as well as the Murphys themselves, saw as much or more of Zelda and Scott Fitzgerald's relationship and personalities in the couple than those of the Murphys. Ernest Hemingway's couple in
The Garden of Eden is not explicitly based on this pair, but given the similarities of the setting (Nice) and of the type of social group portrayed, there is clearly some basis for such an assumption. Guests of the Murphys often swam at
Eden Roc, an event emulated in Hemingway's narrative.
Archibald MacLeish based the main characters in his play
J.B. on Gerald and Sara Murphy.
Calvin Tomkins's biography of Gerald and Sara Murphy,
Living Well Is the Best Revenge, originally appeared in
The New Yorker in 1962 and was published in book form in 1971.
Amanda Vaill documented their lives in the 1995 book
Everybody Was So Young. In 1982, Honoria Murphy Donnelly, the Murphys' daughter, wrote (with
Richard N. Billings)
Sara & Gerald: Villa America and After. On July 12, 2007, a play by
Crispin Whittell titled
Villa America, based entirely on the relationships between Sara and Gerald Murphy and their friends, had its world premiere at the
Williamstown Theatre Festival with
Jennifer Mudge playing Sara Murphy.
Paintings by Gerald Murphy Gerald only painted from 1921 until 1929; he is known for his
hard-edged still life paintings in a
Precisionist,
Cubist style. During the 1920s Gerald Murphy, along with other
American modernist painters in Europe, notably
Charles Demuth and
Stuart Davis, created paintings that prefigured the
pop art movement, containing pop culture imagery such as mundane objects culled from American commercial products and advertising design. •
Razor, 1924 •
Watch, 1925 •
Cocktail, 1927 •
Wasp and Pear, 1929 Gerald Murphy’s jazz-rhythmed painting titled
Razor (1924) and the 6-by-6-foot
Watch (1925) are part of the Dallas Museum’s permanent collection and are two of eight remaining paintings in Murphy’s 14-work oeuvre.
Paintings of Sara Murphy by Picasso Pablo Picasso, a friend of Sara, painted her in several of his 1923 works: •
Femme assise les bras croisés •
Portrait de Sarah Murphy •
Buste de Femme (Sara Murphy) •
Femme assise en bleu et rose •
Woman Seated in an Armchair Archives The Sara and Gerald Murphy Papers are held at the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library at Yale University. Some Mark Cross Company objects are located at the
Metropolitan Museum of Art. ==References==