Arts & Culture

A New Lens on Eudora Welty

Eudora, a documentary premiering this month at the Mississippi Book Festival, reveals the fierce, fun-loving side of the literary icon
A black and white portrait of Eudora Welty

Photo: Courtesy of the WILLIAM R. FERRIS COLLECTION in the Southern Folklife Collection, Wilson Library, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Eudora Welty at Yale University in 1977.

When fans envision Eudora Welty, one of the titans of Mississippi literature, they might picture an elderly woman at a typewriter by the window of her house on Pinehurst Street in Jackson. “But she was so much more than that,” says Anthony Thaxton. Or, a little more simply: “She was not just a little matron. She was a badass,” says the writer W. Ralph Eubanks in Eudora, the new documentary Thaxton produced with his wife, Amy, and the restaurateur and author Robert St. John through the Institute for Southern Storytelling at Mississippi College

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Eudora and its companion book will debut at the tenth annual Mississippi Book Festival on September 14. The wider public can catch the film on Mississippi Public Broadcasting starting in October, and nationwide next spring.

View the trailer here:

With unprecedented access to Welty’s home videos, family papers, and personal photos, the documentary unveils the woman behind the words. Welty supported civil rights, refusing to read in front of segregated crowds. She engaged in a romance of letters (some four hundred) with a married man. She won a Charleston dance competition while studying business at Columbia in New York. She watched her father die during an ill-advised blood transfusion.

photo: Courtesy of the WILLIAM R. FERRIS COLLECTION in the Southern Folklife Collection, Wilson Library, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Walking through Yale’s campus in the 1970s.

“She had this youth, this life of loves and lost loves and tragedies,” Thaxton says. “She was also just so funny and witty. My favorite photo we found is of Eudora on a drum set.” The documentary also includes interviews with Mississippi stars such as writer Kathryn Stockett and artist William Dunlap, plus Welty’s niece Mary Alice Welty White and biographer Suzanne Marrs. 

“Most of the people in there knew her, and because of that, there is this intimacy,” Thaxton says. “It’s like you’re sitting around a table with her friends.” 

photo: Courtesy of the WILLIAM R. FERRIS COLLECTION in the Southern Folklife Collection, Wilson Library, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
An archival image from the 1970s of Welty behind the camera.


Caroline Sanders Clements is the associate editor at Garden & Gun and oversees the magazine’s annual Made in the South Awards. Since joining G&G’s editorial team in 2017, the Athens, Georgia, native has written and edited stories about artists, architects, historians, musicians, tomato farmers, James Beard Award winners, and one mixed martial artist. She lives in North Charleston, South Carolina, with her husband, Sam, and dog, Bucket.


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