Thursday, 11 August 2016

MGM Stories Part Four: John Gilbert and Greta Garbo /October 5, 2015

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Rising romantic lead John Gilbert signed with MGM in 1924 and the next year he starred in King Vidor’s The Big Parade, the studio’s biggest hit of the silent era. That same year, Louis B. Mayer brought his new discovery to Hollywood: an enigmatic Swedish actress named Greta Garbo. Garbo and Gilbert starred together in the romantic melodrama Flesh and the Devil, and began a relationship in real-life, which was eagerly exploited by the still-fledgling Hollywood publicity machine. Gilbert’s career suffered from his contentious relationship with Mayer, and his increasing alcoholism, while Garbo’s star continued to rise. In 1933, Garbo made it a condition of her MGM contract extension that the studio cast Gilbert as her love interest in Queen Christina. Within three years, Gilbert was dead. Within ten years, Garbo’s career had taken a turn, too
Special thanks to special guest star Craig Mazin, reprising his role as Louis B. Mayer.
This episode was edited by Henry Molofsky.
This episode included a clip from the John Gilbert film His Glorious Night, pulled from Kevin Brownlow's incredible silent era documentary Hollywood. Hollywood is watchable in several installments on YouTube.
We are proud to welcome our new sponsor, Audible.com! Get a free audiobook and a 30-day trial at Audible.com/remember
Sources:
Basinger, Jeanine. Silent Stars. Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group. Kindle Edition. 2012
Bret, David. Greta Garbo: The Divine Star. London: Robson Press, 2012.
Conway, Michael; McGregor, Dion & Ricci, Mark. The Complete Films of Greta Garbo. New York: Carol Publishing Group, 1991.
Eyman, Scott Lion of Hollywood: The Life and Legend of Louis B. Mayer . Simon & Schuster. Kindle Edition. 2008
Eyman, Scott The Speed of Sound: Hollywood and the Talkie Revolution 1926-1930 Simon & Schuster. Kindle Edition. 1998
Golden, Eve John Gilbert: The Last of the Silent Film Stars (Screen Classics) The University Press of Kentucky. Kindle Edition. 2013
Krützen, Michaela. The Most Beautiful Woman on the Screen: The Fabrication of the Star Greta Garbo. Berlin: Peter Lang, 1992.
"Garbo's Last Days" by Michael Gross. New York Magazine, May 21, 1990
 
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1936: A Hollywood Psychic Predicts Clark Gable and Carole Lombard’s Future

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Featured in Screen Guide magazine in November 1936, here is one of those wacky articles that could only come from the 1930’s–a psychic tells you what will become of Hollywood’s great couples!
wanda hollywood
“The Future of Ten Hollywood Romances as Predicted by Wanda, One of Hollywood’s Most Famous Seers”
The ten blazingest Hollywood romances! How will the end? Marriage? Split up? This story tells.
In presenting this remarkable set of predictions, I have kept in mind that my readers’ interest in the stars is no fleeting thing. You will be amazed as time goes on, to note the accuracy of Wanda’s readings. She has built for herself a tremendous following among the Hollywood famous. I suggest that you keep this article–refer to it in the future and see how right she has been this time. It’ll be fun!
Yes, let’s see just how right this “remarkable” Wanda was, shall we?
Rose Joan Blondell and Richard Ewing Powell (Joan Blondell and Dick Powell)
dick powell joan blondell
There is no if, and or but about this romance. Joan and Dick (if they’re not married by the time you read this) will be married shortly after her divorce from George Barnes becomes final….[Dick] is a charming boy and he and Joan will get along beautifully…She and Dick have many tastes in common and she will always be interested in anything that Dick likes. They will have a child within a year or so after their marriage.
Well, she wasn’t totally wrong here. Joan and Dick were indeed married by the time this magazine hit news stands, tying the knot on September 19, 1936.  They did have a child in 1938, a daughter named Ellen.  Wanda couldn’t predict, I suppose, that in 1944 Dick’s head would be turned by a younger blonde actress, June Allyson, and he would subsequently leave Joan for her.
Arlington Brugh and Ruby Stevens (Robert Taylor and Barbara Stanwyck)
robert taylor barbara stanwyck
For his own good Robert Taylor should not marry for many years. I say this because he is an extremely restless personality. He likes action–lots of it–and hates monotony. He never sits still and never is. He is like a wild horse who hates a halter…He will come under a marriage aspect next year, but if he should marry then it will not last…As far as his “romance” with Barbara Stanwyck is concerned, this is really a glorified friendship. Barbara is very intuitive and psychic; she understands Bob’s spirit perfectly…She will have a proposal of marriage in 1937–and perhaps from Bob, but neither should she marry during that year. It would be what we call an “inevitable marriage”—one which she would have no control.
Her timeline is off, but she’s not completely wrong. Bob and Barbara were married on May 14, 1939, after three years of dating and being called out for “acting like they are married but they aren’t” in the same magazine article that called out Clark and Carole. Bob was indeed not a man who could be tamed, so to speak. After years of him cheating on her, Barbara finally filed for divorce in 1951. He went on to marry actress Ursula Theiss and have two children; Barbara never remarried and missed him the rest of her life.
William Powell and Harlean Carpentier (William Powell and Jean Harlow)
jean harlow william powell
Jean Harlow is two distinct personalities, and she is another person who cannot be restricted. That is why she changed her hair to a brownish shade when she found that its platinum color interfered with her independence. Instead of being its slave she decided to let it be hers…Regardless of what people think, she is very timid and has a strong mother complex. She is also of a restless disposition and enjoys changes. 1937 will prove to be a better year for her than 1936. My advice to her would be to wait a little longer for another marriage.
William Powell was born a genius. He is very proud and disdainful person but loves children and dogs…Bill wants a great deal of love and affection and he wants a wife to be always at his beck and call. That’s why there will be a disturbing element in any marriage he enters into with a busy actress. A woman must role his home as well as his heart.
“1937 will be a better year for her than 1936″?? There is an appalling prediction! Jean Harlow died at the age of 26 in 1937.  Bill and Jean were still together at the time of her death and he was devastated. Married and divorced twice before the Jean romance (his second marriage being to Carole Lombard), Bill eventually married actress Diana “Mousie” Lewis in 1940 and they were married until his death in 1984.
Raymond Guion and Jeanette MacDonald (Gene Raymond and Jeanette MacDonald)
jeanette macdonald gene raymond
Because Jeanette MacDonald is a Gemini and Gemini women usually marry men of a different nationality or religion, I have long been expecting this Jeanette MacDonald-Gene Raymond engagement…The marriage aspects are better for her than for Gene. His best marriage year is really 1938. Still a partnership with Jeanette will turn out happily for him as well as for her so long as he is careful about disagreements and separations…Gene is almost as much wrapped up in music as Jeanette is, and you’ll hear a lot more about him as a composer as time goes on. But my advice to them is to wait awhile, until Gene passes through his present aspects. He had one big love affair last year–he’ll know whom I mean–from which he hasn’t yet recovered.
Jeanette and Gene were indeed married, although sooner than the great Wanda wanted–making it official on June 16, 1937. They remained married until her death in 1965, however revelations from friends and discoveries of personal letters and diaries in the past decade or so have provided clear evidence that this marriage of theirs was a cover-up because Gene was gay and Jeanette was being kept away from her ongoing love affair with Nelson Eddy.
James Stewart and Eleanor Powell
james stewart eleanor powell
This is a nice friendship but has very little marriage possibilities. Eleanor will make a better friend than a marriage partner in this case…I doubt if either of them would learn the lesson of give and take. James Stewart will have two or more marriages.
Again she is kind of right. Jimmy and Eleanor starred in together in Born to Dance that year and were briefly coupled. Eleanor went on to marry actor Glenn Ford in 1943, her only marriage, which ended in divorce in 1959. Wanda is wrong about Jimmy though, he was one of the very few of the golden age of Hollywood’s leading men who held out for the right woman and stayed once he found her. He married Gloria Hatrick in 1949 and they were happily married until her death in 1994.
George Brent and Greta Gustafson (George Brent and Greta Garbo)
george brent greta garbo
It is quite likely that this one will be at an end shortly. George Brent is the burnt child who dreads fire. The memory of his marriage to Ruth Chatterton has never been erased–its happiness and its grief both come back to haunt him…He likes to “putter” and as a matter of fact, he is very fussy and old-maidish. Greta, on the other hand, is just the opposite. An introvert who lives completely in herself. The state of things about her makes very little difference.
I don’t think this relationship was ever anything at all. Greta certainly never seemed ready for marriage–she left a brokenhearted John Gilbert at the altar in the late 1920’s and never married.  George was ultimately married five times. After this article, he married actress Constance Worth in 1937 and they were divorced less than a year later. He also had a short-lived marriage to actress Ann Sheridan. He had two children with his fifth wife, model Janet Michaels.
David Niven and Estelle Merle O’Brien Thompson (David Niven and Merle Oberon)
merle oberon david niven
This romance is destined to follow a rocky path. Like “water” which is their symbol, they are too easily ruffled and changeable with the tide. Their sign is Pisces, which is two fish swimming in opposite directions. David likes to stand on his own two feet and doesn’t like to be bossed. And the compelling Merle Oberon has to be boss! …She is no back-seat driver.
Correct, Wanda. This one didn’t work out. Merle dated Clark before Carole was on the scene and one of the reasons Clark lost interest was apparently Merle’s tendency to be controlling and jealous.  Merle married British producer Alexander Korda in 1939, the first of four husbands. David married a British socialite named Primmie in 1940. She died tragically in an accident in 1946. He then married a Swedish fashion model in 1948 and although it was rather a tumultuous union, they stayed married until his death in 1983.
Cesar Romero and Virginia Briggs (Cesar Romero and Virginia Bruce)
cesar romero virginia bruce
These two are well suited to each other–both are “air” people and therefore could find happiness together. Virginia comes under a very strong marriage vibration after October of this year, and Cesar, too, begins a new cycle in February…Virginia will always attract men who will be constantly telling her how much they admire her, and any man who marries her will have to keep ahead of the others. Even when she is a very old lady there will always be a man waiting for her just around the corner–she can’t help it; hers is just that fatal attraction. But Cesar worships beauty as much as any man and will always respect and revere it. He also senses that she is an adorable mother and he has a strong inclination for a home and family. And if they marry the first of next year there will be a child before October, 1939.
No marriage for these two. Virginia, who was previously married to John Gilbert and had his daughter, married director J. Walter Ruben in 1937. They had one child before his death in 1942. Her third marriage lasted from 1946-1964, ending in divorce. Cesar, who dated Carole Lombard before Clark came on the scene, never married and was rumored to be gay.
And last but not least:
Clark Gable and Jane Peters (Clark Gable and Carole Lombard)
clark gable carole lombard
Clark Gable doesn’t come into another strong marriage vibration until the year 1938, and if he marries then, the only thing I can say to him is that he should keep his suitcase packed. I feel that this warning is necessary because he is individual and independent, and people of his type always marry on impulse. Yet in other respects, and a strange contradiction, he plays life like a game of chess, or like an actor who plays a part and watches himself go by. Few people “get this” about Gable, but it’s true. Another thing about him is that he can’t be bossed. This may have had something to do with the failure of his first two marriages. He is very aggressive and likes to do as he pleases. He will always want much more love and affection than he will give out.
There s little doubt about the fact that Clark Gable and Carole Lombard do get along beautifully, but because she doesn’t come under a strong marriage vibration until 1939 I cannot see a happy immediate marriage. There is, however, always that matter of Gable’s impulsiveness to be reckoned with. Many people point out that Clark and Carole have so much in common–that they both like sports, for example. However, they like them in a different way. Carole likes smart sports–smart tennis on a smart court in a smart pair of shorts. Clark likes backwoods “roughing it” sports. Their ideas are really quite far apart in this connection. Also Clark is content to live in plain, homey surroundings, while Carole’s artistic expression demands something more elaborate and “interior decorated.” She’s really amazingly artistic and when her film career over she can always find a lucrative livelihood as a painter, a landscape gardener, or an interior decorator. Also she is very rhythmic and if she would devote time and study to her voice, she might easily become a successful singer–even an opera singer. She is what we would call extravagant, yet her extravagances are really necessary to her. She hates miserliness in any form and there is nothing stingy about her, nor will she tolerate it in others around her. She has a very real humanitarian outlook and is abnormally patient with everything and everybody. She will put up with things for a long time, but, as is typical of such people, when she finally does get around to putting her foot down, she puts it down irrevocably. Carole is so interested in other people and other things that she neglects herself, and therefore I would advise her to marry someone who would take an interest in her…her health and her welfare–a physician or a surgeon preferably.
Well, well! There are a couple of things wrong about this: Carole did get into Clark’s kind of sport, and she wasn’t the type to scoff at wearing hunting gear and waders and getting dirty.  I don’t think Carole would have made much of an opera singer! Really! If you have seen her film Swing High, Swing Low, you can hear that Carole was not exactly an opera singer! Carole was more extravagant with Clark, but she wasn’t stupid with her money, and I don’t think she minded Clark’s tendency to be a penny pincher too much, as they both pretty much spent their own money as they pleased. I can’t see Carole being some surgeon’s wife…sounds like she’d get bored. I can’t argue that Clark was the type to marry on impulse—he’d done it before then and he’d do it again. Also he did like to do just what he pleased and I would say that him wanting more love and affection than he’d be willing to give out is fairly accurate. And of course, they did get married in 1939–when Carole was having a “strong marriage vibration.”
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Thursday, 7 January 2016

Greta Garbo practiced a witchcraft beyond analysis

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Through the crowded frenzy of an aristocratic ball, a man sees her and is transfixed. Rushing across the room, he throws himself at this vision and gasps, "Who are you?" Her reply says it all: "What does it matter?" What indeed.

The character's name in 1926's "Flesh and the Devil" turned out to be the tongue-twisting Felicitas von Rhaden, but no one then or now cared about that. Names come and go, but the beauty and presence of the actress who played the role, the actress under whose spell the world fell, are eternal.

So it was with Greta Lovisa Gustafsson, known simply as Garbo. If ever an actress created pure magic on the screen, managing to be of this earth and not, it was Garbo. She was simultaneously accessible and unfathomable, a mystery we couldn't hope to penetrate, a tantalizing promise just out of reach. Although the only Oscar Garbo ever received was an honorary one, with what director Clarence Brown called her infallible ability to make audiences "see thought," she is arguably the greatest screen actress of all time.

Bette Davis, hardly ungifted or egoless herself, agreed, calling Garbo's work "pure witchcraft. I cannot analyze this woman's acting. I only know that no one else so effectively worked in front of a camera." As critic Kenneth Tynan famously said, "What, when drunk, one sees in other women, one sees in Garbo sober."


With the 100th anniversary of Garbo's birth coming this year, the UCLA Film and Television Archive and the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences are paying a centennial tribute to this icon. A Lena Olin-hosted evening at the Academy's Samuel Goldwyn Theater starts things off on Thursday, followed by a film series at UCLA's James Bridges Theater.

As a personal tribute to this great star, I recently spent several days revisiting Garbo's legendary roles. And while the UCLA series has its share of rarities, including a reel from 1928's "The Divine Woman" (a film once thought completely lost), this is one star whose classic roles pleasantly surprise you on a renewed viewing. No matter how familiar we may think we are with films such as "Queen Christina," "Camille" and "Ninotchka," seeing them again remains a moving experience.

When you see Garbo's films all in a rush, you're especially conscious of how much the experience is like spending a day with just one person, someone with a distinct emotional through-line. Her characters' names and their peripheral characteristics may change, but the core remains the same.

Always in the moment, always intoxicated with the now, Garbo seemed not to be acting but to be actually living out her roles. In this she puts one in mind of Isaiah Berlin's famous essay on human nature "The Hedgehog and the Fox," in which the British philosopher quoted a Greek poet to the effect that "the fox knows many things, but the hedgehog knows one big thing." Garbo was clearly a hedgehog, and the one big thing she knew turned out to be central to the concerns of the cinema: how to convey the perils and joys of great romantic love.

Though her biographers say her private life was not driven by passion, Garbo specialized in playing women who wanted to live for love but were prevented from doing so by the cruel vagaries of the world. No one else, certainly no man, loved with her purity and commitment; she loved too deeply to be lastingly happy in this life.

When the Variety reviewer of 1935's "Anna Karenina" called her part "an uncompromisingly sad role," he couldn't help adding, "that is strawberry jam to Miss Garbo's toast."

Garbo conveyed her passion and numerous other emotions through a face that was universally considered a wonder of the cinematic age. Director G.W. Pabst said, "Such a face you see once in a century"; critic Tynan, forever enraptured, called it "the furthest stage to which the human face could progress, the nth degree of cultured refinement, complexity, mystery and strength."

No matter what it was expressing -- playfulness or displeasure, world-weary desperation or transporting happiness -- this was a face beyond mere words, a face to melt steel or haunt your dreams. No wonder so many of her films -- most famously "Queen Christina" but also "Anna Karenina," "The Torrent" and others -- end on an image of her face. No one dominated a close-up like her: She owned the screen and all adjacent territory. For directors who wanted to go with their strength, her face was the only possible choice.

"The Torrent," released in 1926, was Garbo's first American feature, done after she arrived from Sweden along with her mentor, the director Mauritz Stiller. If MGM was uncertain about her abilities when the studio signed her at Stiller's insistence, "The Torrent's" story of a poor Spanish peasant girl who became "La Brunna," the diva who thrilled Paris, erased all doubts.
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George Hurrell put glamour into the Hollywood portrait

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'George Hurrell's Hollywood: Glamour Portraits 1925-1992' by Mark A. Vieira shows the work and mercurial personality of the groundbreaking photographer.

Stars had faces in the golden age of Hollywood. And for many years, photographer George Hurrell, the father of the Hollywood glamour portrait, captured their allure, glamour and indefinable charisma.

Known as the "Rembrandt of Hollywood," the groundbreaking photographer is the subject of "George Hurrell's Hollywood: Glamour Portraits 1925-1992," a biographical coffee-table book by writer-photographer Mark A. Vieira, who knew Hurrell for more than 15 years.

Using interviews, archival documents and 20 years' worth of his own diaries, Vieira creates a portrait of a brilliant, complicated artist who had a great working relationship with the stars and a mercurial personality with studio chiefs. "He told Louis B. Mayer to go to hell," Vieira said.

An outcast after a 1943 scandal — "he broke the rule, he got involved with a model" — Hurrell was working as a unit still photographer to pay off his debts when Vieira met him in 1975. Down but not out, Hurrell emerged from obscurity in the early 1980s.
There are 420 exquisite black-and-white and color images featured in the book, from the collections of Michael H. Epstein & Scott E. Schwimer, and Ben S. Carbonetto, of such Hollywood royalty as Joan Crawford, Jean Harlow, Clark Gable, Carole Lombard, James Cagney, Norma Shearer, Marlene Dietrich and Errol Flynn, as well as Hurrell's later portraits of Harrison Ford, Paul McCartney, Michael Douglas and Sharon Stone, who wrote the foreword to the book.
"This man was a trailblazer," said Vieira.

Before Hurrell, who died in 1992 at age 87, photographers used a soft focus lens, which gave the subjects an ethereal quality.

"Hurrell introduced a new look: sharp focus, high contrast, and seductive poses," Vieira writes in his book. "Using new lighting and retouching effects, he created spectacular, enticing images of Greta Garbo, Clark Gable, and Jean Harlow."

Hurrell also had the ability to eliminate a star's flaws. "These people owe so much to him," said Vieira. "He had this gift to make people look fantastic — the best they ever would look."

So there's little wonder the stars loved him. "He was fun to be around," said Vieira. "He would play music and sing with it and jump around to keep the mood up."

But Garbo just wanted to be left alone. "She was the one person who would not respond to that kind of direction," said Vieira. "Because she was used to directing herself."
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Tuesday, 6 October 2015

The Other Golden Ages on Screen

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New series honor Swedish director Mauritz Stiller and the influential Cahiers du Cinema critic-filmmakers.


Los Angeles cineastes should be in celluloid heaven for the next few weeks with the arrival of two major retrospectives highlighting the work of several influential European filmmakers.

The UCLA Film and Television Archive's "The Golden Age of Mauritz Stiller" features 10 films from the long-neglected Swedish silent film director. The Los Angeles County Museum of Art's "A 50th Anniversary Tribute to Cahiers du Cinema" emphasizes the early years of the French film magazine as well as more contemporary French directors that the publication has influenced.
Seventy-four years after his death, Stiller is finally getting the renewed attention he deserves. For years, he was best known as the director who made Greta Garbo a star when he cast her in his 1924 "The Atonement of Gosta Berling, Parts I and II." The success of that film bought them both to Hollywood. Garbo flourished; Stiller floundered.
Adding insult to injury, when he was given a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 1960, his name was inscribed as "Maurice Diller." The mistake wasn't corrected until several years later.
From World War I until the mid-'20s, the Swedish film industry flourished, influencing European and American directors in style and subject matter. But Stiller has taken a back seat to the other noted Swedish director of the period, Victor Sjostrom. Unlike Stiller, Sjostrom had several successes in the U.S., including the 1926 MGM film "The Wind," with Lillian Gish.
"I think there is a rediscovery of Stiller happening right now which is partially being promoted by the Swedish Film Institute," UCLA programmer David Pendelton says. "This retrospective was done in London and is traveling around the States."
The series kicks off Saturday at UCLA's James Bridges Theater with three of Stiller's earliest films, 1916's "Love and Journalism" and "The Wings" and 1917's "Thomas Graal's Best Film."
Andreas Ekman, Swedish consul general in Los Angeles, says Stiller and Sjostrom are household names to film fans in Sweden. "There are some films that are part of our heritage like 'Sir Arne's Treasure,' which is an adaptation of a book. Also another one of Stiller's adaptations is the 'Gosta Berling' story, which actually brought Greta Garbo to fame. These adaptations were done in a very dramatic way."
Born in Finland of Russian Jewish heritage, Moshe Stiller fled to Sweden after he was drafted into the czar's army. Changing his name to Mauritz Stiller, he distinguished himself as a stage director and actor. In 1912, he began working in film. His films ranged from delightful comedies like "Thomas Graal's Best Film" and the sequel, "Thomas Graal's Best Child" (1918)--both starring Sjostrom--and 1920's "Erotikon" to such dramas as 1916's "The Wings," which subtly explored homosexuality, and "Sir Arne's Treasure" (1919), a haunting tale about an orphaned girl who unwittingly falls in love with the man who murdered her foster family.
The Swedish Film Institute has restored all films in the retrospective. Because all but the silent "Graal" comedies have Swedish titles, UCLA will have a translator at the screenings; Robert Israel will provide live musical accompaniment.
Pendleton sees Stiller has a precursor to Swedish director Ingmar Bergman, who came to fame in the '50s. "They are both people who move back and forth very well between farce and sort of comedy of manners to psychological drama to self-reflecting filmmaking. Sjostrom has long been this figure who is respected because he is part of film history. But looking at these Stiller films, they in some ways seem fresher and more contemporary to us now, particularly because there is much more humor in his work."
Because his films were visually striking and often funny, it's hard to believe he couldn't find a home in Hollywood.
"Some people have conjectured that Stiller didn't work well in the Hollywood hierarchical studio system with big budgets," Pendleton says. "He was somebody who came out of smaller Stockholm theater circles, more like an impresario or entrepreneur.
Stiller died at 45 in 1928. His "Hotel Imperial" is the only film that still exists from his four-year stint in Hollywood.
Since Jacques Doniol-Valcroze, Lo Duca and the renowned critic Andre Bazin created Cahiers du Cinema (Book of Cinema) in 1951, it has been one of the most influential film publications. The magazine was an offshoot of Revue du Cinema, published by Jean-Georges Auriol and two Parisian film clubs, Objectif 49 and Cine-Club du Quartier Latin.

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Hollywood Icons Solve Your Problems: Greta Garbo’s Advice on Work, Friendship, and Love

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The stars of classic Hollywood endured unfair studio contracts, arranged romances, brutal rumors, and demanding directors—which makes them perfect guides through our own everyday problems. Rachel Kapelke-Dale, co-author of Graduates in Wonderland, brings us the inaugural installment of Hollywood Icons Solve Your Problems, in which Swedish silent film siren Greta Garbo provides her inimitable advice for overcoming all kinds of obstacles.
Dear Greta Garbo, I’ve been at the same company for years now, and I’m stuck at a dead end. I haven’t had a raise since 2005, and I’m worried that I’m wasting the best years of my life at a company where I’m invisible. What should I do? —Invisible in New York
New York Lady.
This is not right. This is not done. This must not stand.
If boss do not recognize your value, you say, “This is it! I will be left alone!” Then you leave and you see. He come around.
If he do not, must be very precise. Must be smart. You say, “O.K. Now I have agent. No longer can you talk to me; now you talk to agent.” This is best way, promise.
While boss talks to agent, you go to sauna. Get massage. Take vacation. Söderköping? Very beautiful this time of year.
But, darlink? Before you do, you must stop. You must be honest. You say to yourself: Am I really best at company? Probably yes, but still, you must consider. I consider, I tink a bit, then I say, yes, O.K., I am the best. But if you are not, you must say: Why am I not best? Is it my teeth? Does my hair (um, what is phrasal verb)—come down?—yes, come down too far on forehead? I have my teeth capped and I pulled the hairs out of my forehead. Maybe you, too?
Then, once you are most beautiful, boss will fall in love with you. He will say, O.K. You have your raise. You stay forever and I pay you everyting. And if he does not? Söderköping. Or Göthenburg. No matter what, you say, I tink I go to Sweden.
Once in Sweden? Sauna. Sauna, sauna, sauna. Also, naked sunbath.
You go now.

Dear Greta Garbo, I’ve just moved to a city and I’m having a really hard time making friends. Sometimes it seems like I’m just sitting around my apartment after work by myself. And I know what you’re going to say—just make friends with my colleagues. But they’re all such stuck-up prima donnas! What should I do? Am I doomed to a friendless future? —Friendless in Phoenix
What is Phoenix?
Look, Phoenix. You tink you need these girls. You do not need these girls. You do not need nobody but yourself. So you start to feel bad one day, you must look in mirror. You say, “I am Greta Garbo. Greatest actress of all time!” Or whatever you are. “Greatest data processor of all time!” And den you must tink, the price of glory? It is loneliness.
You know where people friendly?
Sverige. (That Sweden.)

O.K., so maybe we not so friendly. But we like hiking in woods. Coffee. Food in tubes. We be nice to you if you like dese tings, too.
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Greta Garbo Biography

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Mini Bio (1)

Greta Garbo was born Greta Lovisa Gustafsson on September 18, 1905, in Stockholm, Sweden, to Anna Lovisa (Johansdotter), who worked at a jam factory, and Karl Alfred Gustafsson, a laborer. She was fourteen when her father died, which left the family destitute. Greta was forced to leave school and go to work in a department store. The store used her as a model in its newspaper ads. She had no film aspirations until she appeared in short advertising film at that same department store while she was still a teenager. Erik A. Petschler, a comedy director, saw the film and gave her a small part in his Luffar-Petter (1922). Encouraged by her own performance, she applied for and won a scholarship to a Swedish drama school. While there she appeared in at least one film, En lyckoriddare (1921). Both were small parts, but it was a start. Finally famed Swedish director Mauritz Stiller pulled her from the drama school for the lead role in Gösta Berlings saga (1924). At 18 Greta was on a roll.

Following The Joyless Street (1925) both Greta and Stiller were offered contracts with MGM, and her first film for the studio was the American-made Torrent (1926), a silent film in which she didn't have to speak a word of English. After a few more films, including The Temptress (1926), Love (1927) and A Woman of Affairs (1928), Greta starred in Anna Christie (1930) (her first "talkie"), which not only gave her a powerful screen presence but also garnered her an Academy Award nomination as Best Actress (she didn't win). Later that year she filmed Romance (1930), which was somewhat of a letdown, but she bounced back in 1931, landing another lead role in Mata Hari (1931), which turned out to be a major hit.

Greta continued to give intense performances in whatever was handed her. The next year she was cast in what turned out to be yet another hit, Grand Hotel (1932). However, it was in MGM's Anna Karenina (1935) that she gave what some consider the performance of her life. She was absolutely breathtaking in the role as a woman torn between two lovers and her son. Shortly afterwards, she starred in the historical drama Queen Christina (1933) playing the title character to great acclaim. She earned an Oscar nomination for her role in the romantic drama Camille (1936), again playing the title character. Her career suffered a setback the following year in Conquest (1937), which was a box office disaster. She later made a comeback when she starred in Ninotchka (1939), which showcased her comedic side. It wasn't until two years later she made what was to be her last film, Two-Faced Woman (1941), another comedy. But the film drew controversy and was condemned by the Catholic Church and other groups and was a box office failure, which left Garbo shaken.

After World War II Greta, by her own admission, felt that the world had changed perhaps forever and she retired, never again to face the camera. She would work for the rest of her life to perpetuate the Garbo mystique. Her films, she felt, had their proper place in history and would gain in value. She abandoned Hollywood and moved to New York City. She would jet-set with some of the world's best-known personalities such as Aristotle Onassis and others. She spent time gardening and raising flowers and vegetables. In 1954 Greta was given a special Oscar for past unforgettable performances. She even penned her biography in 1990.

On April 15, 1990, Greta died of natural causes in New York and with her went the "Garbo Mystique". She was 84.
- IMDb Mini Biography By: Denny Jackson (qv's & corrections by A. Nonymous)

Trivia (64)

Interred at Skogskyrkogården Cemetery, Stockholm, Sweden.

Lived the last few years of her life in absolute seclusion.

October 1997: Ranked #38 in Empire (UK) magazine's "The Top 100 Movie Stars of All Time" list.
Letters and correspondence between Garbo and poet, socialite and notorious lesbian Mercedes de Acosta were unsealed on April 15, 2000, exactly 10 years after Garbo's death (per De Acosta's instructions). The letters revealed no love affair between the two, as had been rumored.

Garbo, according to director Jacques Feyder: "At 9 o'clock a.m. the work may begin. 'Tell Mrs. Garbo we're ready,' says the director. 'I'm here,' a low voice answers, and she appears, perfectly dressed and combed as the scene needs. Nobody could say by what door she came but she's there. And at 6 o'clock PM, even if the shot could be finished in five minutes, she points at the watch and goes away, giving you a sorry smile. She's very strict with herself and hardly pleased with her work. She never looks at rushes nor goes to the premieres but some days later, early in the afternoon, enters all alone an outskirts movie house, takes place in a cheap seat and gets out only when the projection finishes, masked with her sunglasses.

Once voted by The Guinness Book of World Records as the most beautiful woman who ever lived.
Her parents were Karl and Anna Gustafson, and she also had an older sister and brother, Alva Garbo and Sven Garbo. Her father died when she was 14 of nephritis, and her sister was also dead of lymphatic cancer by the time Greta was 21 years old.

Her personal favorite of all her movies was Camille (1936).

She disliked Clark Gable, a feeling that was mutual. She thought his acting was wooden while he considered her a snob.

Left John Gilbert standing at the altar in 1927 when she got cold feet about marrying him.

Before making it big, she worked as a soap-latherer in a barber's shop back in Sweden.

During filming, whenever there was something going on that wasn't to her liking, she would simply say, "I think I'll go back to Sweden!", which frightened the studio heads so much that they gave in to her every whim.

In the mid-'50s she bought a seven-room apartment in New York City (450 East 52nd St.) and lived there until she died.

1951: Became a US citizen.

Garbo's sets were closed to all visitors and sometimes even the director! When asked why, she said:
"During these scenes I allow only the cameraman and lighting man on the set. The director goes out for a coffee or a milkshake. When people are watching, I'm just a woman making faces for the camera. It destroys the illusion. If I am by myself, my face will do things I cannot do with it otherwise."

Garbo was criticized for not aiding the Allies during WWII, but it was later disclosed that she had helped Britain by identifying influential Nazi sympathizers in Stockholm and by providing introductions and carrying messsages for British agents.

Garbo was prone to chronic depression and spent many years attacking it through Eastern philosophy and a solid health food regiment. However, she never gave up smoking and cocktails.

Except at the very beginning of her career, she granted no interviews, signed no autographs, attended no premieres, and answered no fan mail.

Her volatile mentor/director Mauritz Stiller, who brought her to Hollywood, was abruptly fired from directing her second MGM Hollywood film, The Temptress (1926), after repeated arguments with MGM execs. Unable to hold a job in Hollywood, he returned to Sweden in 1928 and died shortly after at the age of 45. Garbo was devastated.

Garbo actually hoped to return to films after the war but, for whatever reason, no projects ever materialized.

She was as secretive about her relatives as she was about herself, and, upon her death, the names of her survivors could not immediately be determined.

Never married, she invested wisely and was known for her extreme frugality.

Related to Anna Sundstrand of the Swedish pop group Play.

Although it was believed that Garbo lived as an invalid in her post-Hollywood career, this is incorrect. She was a real jet setter, traveling with international tycoons and socialites. In the 1970s she traveled less and grew more and more eccentric, although she still took daily walks through Central Park with close friends and walkers. Due to failing health in the late 1980s, her mobility was challenged. In her final year it was her family that cared for her, including taking her to dialysis treatments. She died with them by her side.

She was originally chosen for the lead roles in The Paradine Case (1947), My Cousin Rachel (1952) and "The Wicked Dutchess". She turned down these roles, with the exception of "The Wicked Dutchess", which was never shot due to financial problems.

Popularized trench coats and berets in the 1930s.

According to her friend, producer William Frye, he offered Garbo $1 million to star as the Mother Superior in his film The Trouble with Angels (1966). When she declined, he cast Rosalind Russell in the part--at a much lower salary.

She was voted the 25th Greatest Movie Star of all time by Entertainment Weekly.

Sister of Sven and Alva.

Her favorite American director was Ernst Lubitsch, although Clarence Brown, directed her in six films, including the classics Flesh and the Devil (1926), A Woman of Affairs (1928), Anna Christie (1930) and Anna Karenina (1935).

Her first "talkie" film was Anna Christie (1930).

She was voted the 8th Greatest Movie Star of all time by Premiere Magazine.

Was named #5 Actress on The American Film Institute's 50 Greatest Screen Legends
Spanish sculptor Pablo Gargallo created three pieces based on Garbo: "Masque de Greta Garbo à la mèche," "Tête de Greta Garbo avec chapeau," and "Masque de Greta Garbo aux cils".

Is one of the many movie stars mentioned in Madonna's song "Vogue"
Pictured on a 37¢ USA commemorative postage stamp issued 23 September 2005, five days after her 100th birthday. On the same day, Sweden issued a 10kr stamp with the same design. The likeness on the stamps was based on a photograph taken during the filming of As You Desire Me (1932).

Once lived in the famed Chateau Marmont hotel in Los Angeles (8221 Sunset Boulevard).

Aunt of Gray Reisfield (daughter of Sven Gustafson).

Grandaunt of Derek Reisfield and Scott Reisfield, children of Gray Reisfield and Donald Reisfield.
Her first film appearance ever was in a short advertising film that ran in local theaters in Stockholm.
Her performance as Ninotchka in Ninotchka (1939) is ranked #25 on Premiere Magazine's 100 Greatest Performances of All Time (2006).

Her greatest confidante was Salka Viertel, a German friend who had known her back in Sweden. Viertel proved to be very manipulative of her, including relationships (particularly with that of Mercedes de Acosta), film choices and general living. It was Viertel, in fact, who persuaded her not to return to films. Ironically, Viertel was friendly with Marlene Dietrich, Garbo's enemy, whom Salka had known back in Germany's Weimer Republic, and she had a lot of dirt on Dietrich's deepest secrets and past. Garbo's film choices were largely determined by Salka's persuasion; they co-starred in the German version of Anna Christie (1930), and shortly after that Garbo insisted that Salka be placed on the MGM payroll as a writer for her films.

Is portrayed by Kristina Wayborn in The Silent Lovers (1980)

Biography in: "The Scribner Encyclopedia of American Lives". Volume Two, 1986-1990, pages 316-319. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1999.

In Italy, her first films (like Mata Hari (1931) and Grand Hotel (1932)) were dubbed by Francesca Braggiotti. Because Braggiotti had been living in the United States for many years and had a slight American accent, the Italian public didn't really accept her voice so the very Italian Tina Lattanzi was chosen as Garbo's official Italian voice instead (she even re-dubbed Mata Hari (1931)). For her last two films Ninotchka (1939) and Two-Faced Woman (1941), she was dubbed by Andreina Pagnani. When some of Garbo films were re-released in Italy in the 1960's, they were re-dubbed once more. This is how stage actress Anna Proclemer lent her voice to the divine Garbo.

Gary Cooper was reportedly one of her favorite actors. She requested him for several of her films, but nothing ever materialized.

Throughout her MGM career she insisted that William H. Daniels be cinematographer on her pictures. This may not have been purely superstition, as the two notable films she made without him--Conquest (1937) and Two-Faced Woman (1941)--were her only notable flops.

She was Adolf Hitler's favorite actress.

In late 1934, after Queen Christina (1933) and The Painted Veil (1934), which were both huge hits in Europe (making twice their budget in the UK alone) but underwhelming US successes, Garbo signed a contract with MGM saying that she would only make films under David O. Selznick and Irving Thalberg. Her next two films, Anna Karenina (1935) and Camille (1936), were notable hits at the US box office, and produced by Selznick and Thalberg respectively. In 1937 her contract had to be revised, as Selznick left the studio in 1935 and Thalberg had died. She made only three films after "Camille".

When she heard that David O. Selznick, who had produced her hit Anna Karenina (1935), was leaving MGM in 1935 to start his own studio, she begged him to stay, promising that she would let him personally supervise all of her pictures exclusively. He said that it would be a great honor, but he had other plans. Ironically, the usually very finicky Irving Thalberg, Garbo's other favorite producer, was the first person to give Selznick money to start his company ($200,000).

Mentioned in The Killers' "The Ballad of Michael Valentine".

Mentioned in the song "Celluloid Heroes" by The Kinks.

Was offered the role of Norma Desmond in Sunset Blvd. (1950), but she turned it down. Gloria Swanson was cast instead and she went on to receive a Best Actress Oscar nomination for her performance.

A photograph of Garbo, probably cut from a movie magazine, was one of several images of movie stars, royalty, pieces of art, and family members used as decoration by Anne Frank on the wall of her room in the "Secret Annex" in Amsterdam where she and her family hid from July 1942 until their capture by the Nazis in August 1944.

Was offered the role of Mama Hanson in I Remember Mama (1948), but she turned it down. Irene Dunne was cast instead and went on to receive a Best Actress Oscar nomination for her performance.
Is going to be on the 50 Kronors banknote in 2015.

Mentioned in the song "Perfect Skin" by Lloyd Cole & The Commotions.

For her last acting role of Siobhan O'Dea on Murder, She Wrote: Wearing of the Green (1988), Jean Peters modeled her character after Garbo, as she was portraying a reclusive foreign actress who goes into seclusion following the demise of her lover at the height of her career.

In 1924 Mauritz Stiller planned to shoot a film in Turkey titled "The Odalisque from Smyrna" and had hired Conrad Veidt and Einar Hansen as stars. Stiller, along with Hansen and protégé Garbo, left for Istanbul but the promised financing vanished. Stiller reportedly returned to Berlin to raise backing, but failed. Garbo remained in Turkey sulking, not even communicating with fellow Swede Hansen. Eventually she returned to Berlin.

Director Clarence Brown said of her, "Working [with her] was easy because she trusted me. I never directed her in anything above a whisper. She was very shy, so we'd go through the changes I wanted in a little quiet whisper off in the corner, without letting others know what I was telling her. I learned through experience that Garbo had something behind the eyes that told the whole story that I couldn't see from my distance. Sometimes I would be dissatisfied with a take, but would go ahead and print it anyway. On the screen Garbo multiplied the effect of the scene I had taken. It was something that no one else ever had.

According to a 1974 Michael Parkinson interview with Orson Welles, Garbo did two bread commercials for theater use before she changed her name. The films existed at a Stockholm archive at that time.

At the Swedish School of Drama, where she studied from 1921 to 1924, she made a close friend with Vera Schmiterlöw with whom she grew a lifelong friendship. The intimate correspondence between the two are saved in the National archives of Sweden.In 2005 three of these numerous letters were stolen from the archives and are not yet found.

She was the last surviving person mentioned in the song "You're the Top" featured in the 1934 Cole Porter musical "Anything Goes".

First Swedish actress to be nominated for an Academy Award. The others are Ingrid Bergman, Lena Olin and Ann-Margret. The only Swedish actor to be nominated is Max von Sydow.

Personal Quotes (20)

There is no one who would have me . . . I can't cook.

Being a movie star, and this applies to all of them, means being looked at from every possible direction. You are never left at peace, you're just fair game.

You don't have to be married to have a good friend as your partner for life.

I wish I were supernaturally strong so I could put right everything that is wrong.

Life would be so wonderful if we only knew what to do with it.

Anyone who has a continuous smile on his face conceals a toughness that is almost frightening.
I never said, "I want to be alone".I only said, "I want to be left alone". There is a whole world of difference.

I don't want to be a silly temptress. I cannot see any sense in getting dressed up and doing nothing but tempting men in pictures.

The story of my life is about back entrances, side doors, secrets elevators and other ways of getting in and out of places so that people won't bother me.

If only those who dream about Hollywood knew how difficult it all is.

Your joys and sorrows. You can never tell them. You cheapen the inside of yourself if you do.

There are some who want to get married and others who don't. I have never had an impulse to go to the altar. I am a difficult person to lead.

[asked in her later years by a fan if she is Greta Garbo] I WAS Greta Garbo.

If you're going to die on screen, you've got to be strong and in good health.

There are many things in your heart you can never tell another person. They are you, your private joys and sorrows, and you can never tell them. You cheapen yourself, the inside of yourself, when you tell them.

I live like a monk: with one toothbrush, one cake of soap, and a pot of cream.

[on secrets] Every one of us lives his life just once; if we are honest, to live once is enough.

[on Hollywood in 1926] Here, it is boring, incredibly boring, so boring I can't believe it's true.

[in 1932, about her recreational preferences] If I needed recreation, I liked to be out of doors: to trudge about in a boy's coat and boy's shoes; to ride horseback, or shoot craps with the stable boys, or watch the sun set in a blaze of glory over the Pacific Ocean. You see, I am still a bit of a tomboy.
Most hostesses disapprove of this trousered attitude to life, so I do not inflict upon them.

[on another factor contributing to her decision to shun publicity (1932)] I am still a little nervous, a little self-conscious about my English. I cannot express myself well at parties. I speak haltingly. I feel awkward, shy, afraid. In Hollywood, where every teat table bristles with gossip-writers, what I say might be misunderstood. So I am silent as the grave about my private affairs. Rumors fly about. I am mum. My private affairs are strictly private.

[in 1932, on director Mauritz Stiller, the nature of her relationship with him and the part it played in cultivating her well-publicized preference for privacy over publicity] Stiller's death was a great blow to me. For so long I had been his satellite. All Europe at that time regarded Stiller as the most significant figure in the film world. Directors hurried to the projecting rooms where his prints were shown. They took with them their secretaries and, in the dim silence, they dictated breathless comments on the wide sweep of his magnificent technique. Stiller had found me, an obscure artist in Sweden, and brought me to America. I worshiped him. There are some, of course, who say it was a love story. It was more. It was utter devotion which only the very young can know--the adoration of a student for her teacher, of a timid girl for a mastermind. In his studio, Stiller taught me how to do everything: how to eat; how to turn my head; how to express love--and hate. Off the screen I studied his every whim, wish and demand. I lived my life according to the plans he laid down. He told what to say and what to do. When Stiller died I found myself like a ship without a rudder. I was bewildered--lost--and very lonely. I resolutely refused to talk to reporters because I didn't know what to say. By degrees I dropped out of the social whirl of Hollywood. I retired into my shell. I built a wall of repression around my real self, and I lived--and still live--behind it.
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