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Greta Garbo

 
Who2 Biography: Greta Garbo, Actor
Greta Garbo
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  • Born: 18 September 1905
  • Birthplace: Stockholm, Sweden
  • Died: 15 April 1990
  • Best Known As: The starlet who said "I want to be alone"

Name at birth: Greta Lovisa Gustafsson

Greta Garbo was an enigmatic superstar of silent films and early Hollywood "talkies" until her surprising retirement at age 36. She was discovered in Sweden and moved to America under contract to MGM Studios, where she played aloof, dramatic beauties in films like Flesh and The Devil (1926) and Mysterious Lady (1928). She became a star and made the transition to talking pictures: Anna Christie (1930) was promoted with the famous tag line "Garbo Talks!" In the 1930s she played doomed title characters like Mata Hari (1932) and Anna Karenina (1935) and was a pensive ballerina in the 1932 Oscar-winner Grand Hotel, where she uttered the famous line "I want to be alone." She changed styles a bit for the 1939 Ernst Lubitsch satire Ninotchka, playing a drab Soviet envoy transformed by a Parisian romance. She stopped making films in 1941, refused all attempts to lure her back to Hollywood, and settled in New York City. She dropped from public life entirely, and her solitary nature -- combined with her earlier movie mystique -- earned her a reputation as a romantic recluse.

Garbo never married, though she had a much-publicized relationship with her silent film co-star John Gilbert... Garbo was irritated by the famous quote attributed to her, and reportedly told friends, "I never said, 'I want to be alone.' I only said, 'I want to be left alone.' There is a world of difference."

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Greta Garbo in Camille (1936).
(click to enlarge)
Greta Garbo in Camille (1936). (credit: Culver Pictures)
(born Sept. 18, 1905, Stockholm, Swed. — died April 15, 1990, New York, N.Y., U.S.) Swedish-U.S. film star. She was working as a salesclerk when she was chosen to appear in publicity films for the store where she worked. Her modest success encouraged her to study at the Royal Dramatic Theatre's training school, where the film director Mauritz Stiller discovered her. He cast her in The Story of Gösta Berling (1924) and became her mentor and coach. Stiller and Garbo were hired by MGM in 1925, and Garbo's beauty and enigmatic personality made her a star in her first U.S. film, The Torrent (1926). Aloof, mysterious, yet passionate, she mesmerized audiences in films such as Love (1927), Anna Christie (1930), Grand Hotel (1932), Anna Karenina (1935), Camille (1936), and Ninotchka (1939). Her reclusive life after her sudden retirement at age 36 added to her mystique.

For more information on Greta Garbo, visit Britannica.com.

Biography: Greta Garbo
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The Swedish-born American film star Greta Garbo (1905-1990) became one of Hollywood's legendary personalities.

Born Greta Louisa Gustafsson on Sept. 18, 1905, in Stockholm, Sweden, Greta Garbo grew up in respectable poverty - inhibited, self-conscious, and oddly mature. She was one of three children who became a legendary actress and one of the most fascinating women of all time. Garbo was a woman of remarkable beauty, intelligence, and independent spirit. Despite her beauty, Garbo was somewhat reclusive and photophobic. She once told a gossip columnist in France, "I feel like a criminal who is hunted … when photographers come, they draw crowds. I am frightened beyond control. When so many people stare, I feel almost ashamed."

She was a stagestruck girl of 14 when her job as a clerk in a department store led to photographic modeling for her employer's catalog. This in turn brought parts in two short advertising films and, at 16, a bathing beauty role in E.A. Petschler's film The Vagabond Baron. In 1923 Garbo was one of only seven students admitted to Sweden's prestigious Royal Dramatic Theatre Academy. While attending the training school, she chose her stage name and worked to develop her voice. Her studies at the academy served as both the foundation for her acting career and a source of several lifelong friendships with other actors and artists.

Within a year, one of Sweden's foremost film directors, Mauritz Stiller, recognized Garbo's unique beauty and immense talent. Stiller selected Garbo to play the role of Countess Elizabeth Dohna in the Swedish film The Atonement of Gosta Berling (1924). The film was considered a silent screen masterpiece and was a huge success throughout Europe. Garbo was soon cast in the leading role of Joyless Street, the definitive masterpiece of German realistic cinema, directed by G.W. Pabst. The film received international acclaim for its depth of feeling and technical innovations. The film and Garbo's performance were a critical success, shattering box office records.

Driving her unmercifully, Stiller molded her into an actress and insisted on bringing her with him to the Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM) studio in Hollywood in the summer of 1925. Through Stiller, she won an assignment in her first American film The Torrent (1926). Garbo quickly became the reigning star of Hollywood, due to both the box office success of her films and her captivating performances. She starred in eleven silent films. Her dramatic presence on the screen redefined acting. Garbo's aura created a unique balance between femininity and independence, proving that these qualities were not mutually exclusive. While many of her silent film contemporaries failed in making the transition to sound films, Garbo found artistic expression and thrived in this breakthrough medium. Her voice added a wonderful new dimension to her characters. She then starred in The Temptress (1926) and Flesh and the Devil (1927), which not only made her famous but introduced her to John Gilbert, with whom she conducted (both on and off the screen) a flaming romance which lasted several years. On the day they were to be married, Garbo left Gilbert standing at the altar.

Garbo's first sound picture was Anna Christie (1930), based on a play by American dramatist Eugene O'Neill. The sound scene was a tour de force, the longest, continuous sound take of the time. Because of the film's extraordinary success, MGM created a German language version with Garbo and an entirely new cast. Garbo's ability to act successfully in two languages demonstrates her remarkable range and linguistic talent.

Garbo's career continued to flourish. She starred in 15 sound films including such classics as Mata Hari (1932), As You Desire Me (1932), and Queen Christina (1933), one of her first classic roles. Director Rouben Mamoulian used Garbo's mask-like visage as a canvas upon which the audience ascribed an array of intense emotions. This use of her face as an expressive conduit became Garbo's signature style, and she created magic with it in her starring roles in Susan Lennox - Her Fall and Rise (1931 with Clark Gable), Grand Hotel (1932), Anna Karenina (1935), Camille (1936), Conquest (1937), and Ninotchka (1939).

Garbo gradually withdrew into an isolated retirement in 1941 after the failure of Two-Faced Woman, a domestic comedy. Her retirement was also partly because of World War II. She was tempted by a number of very interesting acting possibilities, but, unfortunately, none of the projects came to fruition.

Her twenty years of brilliant film portrayals created a cinematic legend characterized by financial success. During the mid-1930's she was America's highest paid female. Garbo's retirement from films did not mark the end of a very busy, independent life. Without the pressures of film-making, Garbo had the opportunity to turn to other creative pursuits such as painting, poetry, creative design of clothing and furnishings, gardening, and a rigorous daily exercise routine. In 1950 Garbo was chosen the best actress of the half-century in a poll conducted by the theatrical newspaper Variety. She became a U.S. citizen in 1951, and in 1954 she received (in absentia) a special Academy Award for "her unforgettable screen performances." Garbo moved to New York city in 1953 and traveled extensively. While many accounts claim she died at home in the privacy she so desperately sought, major news sources reported that she died at New York Hospital in Manhattan, on April 15, 1990.

Further Reading

The most informative works about Greta Garbo are John Bainbridge, Garbo (1955); Fritiof Billquist, Garbo (trans. 1960); and Raymond Durgat and John Kobal, Greta Garbo (1965).

US History Companion: Garbo, Greta
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(1905-1990), actress. Born Greta Lovisa Gustafsson in Stockholm, Sweden, Garbo as a child lived in poverty. After the death of her father, when she was fourteen, she went to work as a barber's assistant, lathering faces. Later she became a salesgirl at pub, a Stockholm department store. Because of her exquisite features she modeled hats for a pub catalog and in 1921 appeared in a short film promoting the store's clothes. In 1922 she made another short film advertising bakery products, played the female lead in a low-budget comedy film Luffar-Petter (Peter the Tramp), and won a scholarship to Stockholm's Royal Dramatic Theatre Academy.

While she was there, Sweden's foremost filmmaker, Mauritz Stiller, cast her as the female lead in his movie Gösta Berling's Saga (1924). Stiller took over her life in a relationship described as "Svengali and Trilby all over again" and changed her name to Garbo. Following the failure of a German-financed Turkish project, Stiller and Garbo went to Berlin where she played a lead in director G. W. Pabst's stark view of post-World War I Vienna, Die Freudlose Gase (The Joyless Street). Meanwhile, mgm signed Stiller and, at his insistence, Garbo, too. They arrived in Hollywood in 1925, but he floundered and returned to Sweden. She flourished, making twenty-four films (ten silent) before retiring in 1941.

Invariably, as in her first mgm film, The Torrent (1926), she played passionate, sensual, insecure women. Among her silents Flesh and the Devil (1927) especially thrilled audiences because of the apparently uninhibited romantic scenes with John Gilbert, with whom she was having a well-publicized affair. Garbo made the transition to sound successfully when mgm carefully packaged her in a well-received version of Eugene O'Neill's Anna Christie (1930). During 1931-1932, at the height of her American box-office power, mgm produced five Garbo films. But the profitability of her films increasingly depended on overseas earnings, and mgm allowed sixteen months to pass between the release of Anna Karenina (1935) and Camille (1937). Both roles won her New York Critics' Best Actress Awards and Academy Award nominations.

The outbreak of World War II in 1939 adversely affected Garbo's career because the markets supporting her movies were cut off. Her last films were the anticommunist satire Ninotchka (1939), which won her another Academy Award nomination, and the lackluster comedy Two-Faced Women (1941), a disastrous attempt to change her screen persona. Garbo never made another movie despite the many projects offered her. In the 1920s, mgm, unsure of how to promote her, had dubbed her "the Swedish Sphinx"; she turned P.R. into reality by becoming an increasingly private person. Although the press reported various romances, she never married. The frugal Garbo had been among mgm's highest paid stars (getting $250,000 a film in the mid-1930s), and having invested her money wisely, she had a comfortable retirement.

Garbo remains an icon from another era. Regarded, in Alistair Cooke's words, as "an unapproachable goddess," she retained her following and won new admirers as her films were shown on television and made available on videocassettes. Through her long retirement, she remained the prototypical movie star and in 1954 received a special Oscar for "her unforgettable screen performances."

Bibliography:

John Bainbridge, Garbo (1971); Mark Ricci, The Films of Greta Garbo (1968); Frederick Sands and Sven Broman, The Divine Garbo (1979).

Author:

Daniel J. Leab

See also Movies.


 
Columbia Encyclopedia: Greta Garbo
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Garbo, Greta, 1905-90, American film actress, b. Stockholm, Sweden, as Greta Gustafsson. Garbo's success in the Swedish film The Atonement of Gösta Berling (1923) brought her to Hollywood. Possessing classic beauty and a husky, alluring voice, she was known in her early films for her portrayals of sexual passion. Her image as a tragic heroine was established in Anna Christie (1930), Anna Karenina (1935), and Camille (1936). Garbo retired from the screen and lived in legendary seclusion from 1941 until her death. Her films include Flesh and the Devil (1927), Grand Hotel (1932), and Ninotchka (1939).

Bibliography

See biographies by J. Bainbridge (1971) and B. Paris (1995); M. Conway, The Films of Greta Garbo (1968); H. Vickers, Loving Garbo: The Story of Greta Garbo, Cecil Beaton, and Mercedes Acosta (1994).

Fine Arts Dictionary: Garbo, Greta
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A twentieth-century Swedish-born American film actress. Garbo was celebrated for her classic beauty and her portrayals of moody characters.

  • In the movie Grand Hotel, Garbo made the famous statement, “I want to be alone.” She retired from the movies in the early 1940s and lived as a recluse until her death in 1990.

  • Quotes By: Greta Garbo
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    Quotes:

    "I want to be left alone."

    Actor: Greta Garbo
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    • Born: Sep 18, 1905 in Stockholm, Sweden
    • Died: Apr 15, 1990 in New York City, New York
    • Occupation: Actor
    • Active: '20s-'30s, '60s
    • Major Genres: Drama, Romance
    • Career Highlights: Grand Hotel, Camille, Die Freudlose Gasse
    • First Major Screen Credit: Gösta Berlings Saga (1924)

    Biography

    Few who knew Swedish actress Greta Garbo in her formative years would have predicted the illustrious career that awaited her. Garbo grew up in a rundown Stockholm district, the daughter of an itinerant laborer. In school, she did little to distinguish herself; nor was her first job, as a barbershop lather girl, indicative of future greatness. But, even as a youth, she photographed beautifully, a fact that enabled her to get a few modeling jobs with the Stockholm department store where she worked. Her first film was a 1921 publicity short financed by her employers titled How Not to Dress. Garbo followed this with Our Daily Bread, a one-reel commercial for a local bakery. She then played a bathing beauty in a 1922 two-reel comedy, Luffarpetter/Peter the Tramp.

    Billed under her own last name, Garbo (born Greta Gustafsson) garnered a couple of good trade reviews, and the confidence to seek out and win a scholarship to the Royal Dramatic Theatre. While studying acting, she was spotted by director Mauritz Stiller, who was Sweden's foremost filmmaker in the early '20s. Stiller cast Garbo in The Atonement of Gosta Berling (1923), an overlong but internationally successful film which made her a minor star. The director became her mentor, glamorizing her image and changing her professional name to Garbo. On the strength of Gosta Berling, she was cast in the important German film drama The Joyless Street (1925), which was directed by G.W. Pabst. Hollywood's MGM studios, seeking to "raid" the European film industry and spirit away its top talents, then signed Stiller to a contract. MGM head Louis B. Mayer was unimpressed by Garbo's two starring roles, but Stiller insisted on bringing her to America; thus, Mayer had to contract her, as well.

    The actress spent most of 1925 posing for nonsensical publicity photos which endeavored to create a "mystery woman" image for her (a campaign that had worked for previous foreign film actresses like Pola Negri), but it was only after shooting commenced on Garbo's first American film, The Torrent (1926), that MGM realized it had a potential gold mine on its hands. As Mauritz Stiller withered on the vine due to continual clashes with the studio brass, Garbo's star ascended. But when MGM refused to pay her commensurate to her worth, Garbo threatened to walk out; the studio counter-threatened to have the actress deported, but, in the end, they buckled under and increased her salary. In Flesh and the Devil (1927), Garbo co-starred with John Gilbert, and it became obvious that theirs was not a mere movie romance. The Garbo/Gilbert team went on to make an adaptation of Tolstoy's Anna Karenina titled Love (its original title was Heat, but this was scrapped to avoid an embarrassing ad campaign which would have started with "John Gilbert and Greta Garbo in..."). The couple planned to marry, but Garbo, in one of her frequent attacks of self-imposed solitude, did not show up for the wedding; over the years, the actress would have other romantic involvements, but would never marry.

    In 1930, MGM's concerns about Garbo's voice -- that her thick Swedish accent (tinged with "stage British") would not register well in talkies -- were abated by the success of Anna Christie, which was heralded with the famous ad tag "Garbo Talks." Some noted that the slogan could also have been "Garbo Acts," for the advent of talkies obliged the actress to drop the "mysterious temptress" characterization she'd used in silents in favor of more richly textured performances as worldly, somewhat melancholy women to whom the normal pleasures of love and contentment would always be just out of reach. In this vein, Garbo starred in Grand Hotel (1932), Queen Christina (1933), Anna Karenina (1935), and Camille (1936), which served to increase her worshipful fan following, even if the films weren't the box-office smashes her silent pictures had been. The actress' legendary aloofness and desire to "be alone" (a phrase she used often in her films, once to comic effect in Ninotchka) added to her appeal, though less starry-eyed observers like radio comedians and animated-cartoon directors found Garbo a convenient target for satire and lampoon.

    Always more popular overseas than in the U.S., Garbo became less and less a moneymaker as war clouds gathered in Europe; this was briefly stemmed by Ninotchka (1939), a bubbly comedy which was advertised Anna Christie-style with "Garbo Laughs." But, by 1940, it was clear that the valuable European market would soon be lost, as would Garbo's biggest following. The actress' last film, Two-Faced Woman (1941), was a pedestrian domestic comedy that some observers believe was deliberately made badly by MGM in order to kill her career. Actually, it wasn't any worse than several other comedies of its period, but, for Garbo, it was a distinct step downward. She retired from movies directly after Two-Faced Woman, and, although she came close to returning to films with Hitchcock's The Paradine Case (1947), she opted instead for total and permanent retirement.

    A millionaire many times over, Garbo had no need to act, nor any desire to conduct an active social life. She traveled frequently, but always incognito -- which didn't stop photographers from ferreting her out. A solitary woman, but not really a recluse, Garbo could frequently be spotted strolling the streets near her New York apartment; in fact, "Garbo sightings" became as much a topic of conversation in some icon-worshipping circles as "Elvis sightings" would be in the 1970s, the major difference being, of course, that Garbo was alive to be sighted. Even after her death in 1990, the legend of Greta Garbo was undiminished. Few of her fans talk of her in human terms; to her devotees, Greta Garbo was not so much film legend as film goddess. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
    Wikipedia: Greta Garbo
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    Greta Garbo
    Head and shoulders profile of a young woman with a haunted expression, one hand raised to just touch the base of her throat
    Photo by Arnold Genthe, 1925
    Born Greta Lovisa Gustafsson
    18 September 1905(1905-09-18)
    Stockholm, Sweden
    Died 15 April 1990 (aged 84)
    New York City, New York,
    United States
    Occupation Actress
    Years active 1920–1941

    Greta Garbo (18 September 1905 – 15 April 1990) was a Swedish actress during Hollywood's silent film period and part of its Golden Age.

    Regarded as one of the greatest and most inscrutable movie stars ever produced by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer and the Hollywood studio system, Garbo received a 1954 Honorary Academy Award "for her unforgettable screen performances"[1] and in 1999 was ranked as the fifth greatest female star of all time by the American Film Institute.[2]

    Contents

    Early life

    Garbo was born Greta Lovisa Gustafsson in Stockholm, Sweden, the youngest of three children of Karl Alfred Gustafsson (1871–1920) and Anna Lovisa Johansson (1872–1944).[3] Garbo's older brother and sister were Sven Alfred (1898–1967) and Alva Maria (1903–1926). The family lived in a small apartment at Blekingegatan No. 22 in Stockholm. She stated in the book Garbo On Garbo (p. 33) that her relationship with her mother was not strained.

    Becoming an actress

    c. 1920

    When Gustafsson was 14 years old, her father, to whom she was extremely close, died. She was forced to leave school and go to work. Her first job was as a soap-lather girl in a barbershop. One day a young man with the name of Kristian Bergström, son of the founder of PUB department store, Paul U. Bergström, entered the barbershop for a shave. He eventually offered her a job as a clerk at PUB. She accepts the offer and start to work for PUB in July 1920 where she would also model for newspaper advertisements. Her first motion picture aspirations came when she appeared in two short film advertisements (the first for the department store where she worked). They were eventually seen by comedy director Erik Arthur Petschler and he gave her a part in his upcoming film Peter the Tramp (1922).

    From 1922 to 1924, Gustafsson studied at the prestigious Royal Dramatic Theatre in Stockholm. While there, she met director Mauritz Stiller who worked as a teacher. He trained her in cinema acting technique, gave her the stage name 'Greta Garbo', and cast her in a major role in the silent film Gösta Berlings Saga (The Story of Gösta Berling) in 1924, a dramatization of the famous novel by Nobel Prize winner Selma Lagerlöf. She starred in Gösta Berling opposite Swedish film actor Lars Hanson, then appeared in the 1925 German film Die freudlose Gasse (The Joyless Street or The Street of Sorrow) directed by G. W. Pabst and co-starring Asta Nielsen.

    During filming of Die freudlose Gasse (1925)

    She and Stiller were brought to Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer by Louis B. Mayer when Gösta Berlings Saga caught his attention. On viewing the film during a visit to Berlin, Mayer was impressed with Stiller's direction, but was much more taken with Garbo's acting and screen presence. According to Mayer's daughter, Irene Mayer Selznick, with whom he screened the film, it was the gentle feeling and expression that emanated from her eyes which so impressed her father.

    Unfortunately, her relationship with Stiller came to an end as her fame grew and he struggled in the studio system. He was fired by MGM and returned to Sweden in 1927, where he died the following year. Garbo was also a close friend of Einar Hanson, a Swedish actor who worked with her and Pabst on The Joyless Street, and then came to Hollywood to work at MGM and Paramount Pictures. Einar Hanson was killed in an auto accident in 1927, after leaving a dinner with Garbo and Stiller. Garbo's sister Alva died of cancer in 1926 at the age of 23 after appearing in one feature film in Sweden, adding to the melancholy Garbo felt at being in Hollywood. MGM refused to allow Garbo to attend her sister's funeral in Sweden. She was only able to return there for a visit in 1928.

    Life in Hollywood

    Greta Garbo in 1932

    The most well received of Garbo's silent movies were Flesh and the Devil (1927), Love (1927) and The Mysterious Lady (1928). She starred in the first two with the popular leading man John Gilbert. Her name was linked with his in a much publicized romance, and she was said to have left him standing at the altar in 1926, when she changed her mind about getting married.[4]

    Having achieved enormous success as a silent movie star, she was one of the few actors or actresses who made the transition to talkies, though she delayed the shift for as long as possible. Her film The Kiss (1929) was the last film MGM made without dialogue (it used a soundtrack with music and sound effects only).

    Her voice was first heard on screen in Eugene O'Neill's Anna Christie (1930), which was publicized with the slogan "Garbo Talks". The movie was a huge success. In 1931 Garbo made a German version of the movie.

    Garbo appeared as the World War I spy Mata Hari (1931). She was next part of an all-star cast in Grand Hotel (1932) in which she played a Russian ballerina.

    She then had a contract dispute with MGM, and signed a new contract with the studio in July 1932, departing for Sweden later the same month. She exercised her new control by having her leading man in Queen Christina (1933), Laurence Olivier, replaced with Gilbert. In 1935, David O. Selznick wanted her cast as the dying heiress in Dark Victory, but she insisted on doing Tolstoy's Anna Karenina. Bette Davis would eventually play the Judith Traherne role in Dark Victory and score her third Oscar nomination.

    Her role as the doomed courtesan in Camille (1936), directed by George Cukor, would be regarded by Garbo as her finest acting performance. She then starred opposite Melvyn Douglas in Ninotchka (1939), directed by Ernst Lubitsch.

    Garbo was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Actress for Anna Christie (1930), Romance (1930), Camille (1937) and Ninotchka (1939).

    Garbo received praise from many fellow actors:

    Her instinct, her mastery over the machine, was pure witchcraft. I cannot analyse this woman's acting. I only know that no one else so effectively worked in front of a camera. —Bette Davis

    During Garbo's Hollywood career, she was frequently caricatured in the animated cartoons of the day. These include Warner Brothers' Porky's Road Race, Speaking of the Weather (both directed by Frank Tashlin) and Hollywood Steps Out (directed by Tex Avery). She is also caricatured in Disney's Mickey's Gala Premiere, among others.

    Later career

    Greta Garbo together with her mother Anna Gustafsson during a trip in USA 1939.

    Ninotchka was a successful attempt at lightening Garbo's image and making her less exotic. The comedy, Garbo's first, was marketed with the tagline, "Garbo laughs!". The follow-up film, Two-Faced Woman (1941), attempted to capitalize by casting Garbo in a romantic comedy, where she played a double role that featured her dancing, and tried to make her into "an ordinary girl". The film, Garbo's last, was directed by George Cukor, and was a critical (though not a commercial) failure.

    It is often reported that Garbo chose to retire from cinema after this film's failure, but already by 1935 she was becoming more choosy about her roles, and eventually years passed without her agreeing to do another film. By her own admission, Garbo felt that after World War II the world changed, perhaps forever.

    In 1949, Garbo filmed several screen tests as she considered reentering the movie business to shoot La Duchesse de Langeais directed by Walter Wanger; otherwise she never stepped in front of a movie camera again. The plans for this film collapsed when financing failed to materialize, and these tests were lost for 40 years, before resurfacing in someone's garage.[5] They were included in the 2005 TCM documentary Garbo,[6] and show her still radiant at age 43.[7] There were suggestions that she might appear as the "Duchess de Guermantes" in a film adaptation of Marcel Proust's Remembrance of Things Past: but this never came to fruition. She was offered many roles over the years, but always turned them down.

    Her last interview was probably with the entertainment writer Paul Callan of the British newspaper Daily Mail during the Cannes Film Festival. Meeting at the Hotel du Cap Eden Roc, Callan began "I wonder..." before Garbo cut in with "Why wonder?" and stalked off, making it one of the shortest interviews ever published.

    She gradually withdrew from the entertainment world and moved to a secluded life in New York City, refusing to make any public appearances. Until her death, Garbo sightings were considered sport for paparazzi photographers. In 1974, pornographic filmmaker Peter De Rome tracked Garbo across New York and shot unauthorized footage of her for inclusion in his X-rated feature Adam & Yves.[8]

    Despite these attempts to flee from fame, she was nevertheless voted Best Silent Actress of the Century (her compatriot Ingrid Bergman winning the Best Sound Actress) in 1950, and was once designated as the most beautiful woman who ever lived by the Guinness Book of World Records.[9][10][11]

    Private life

    A veiled Garbo in dark coat and hat writes at a counter.
    Filling out U.S. citizenship paperwork in 1950

    Soon after her career took off, Garbo became known as a recluse; throughout her lifetime she conducted no interviews, signed no autographs, attended no social functions and answered no fan mail. Today she is often associated with her famous line from Grand Hotel: "I want to be alone", spoken in a heavy accent which substituted the w with a v sound. However, Garbo later commented, "I never said, 'I want to be alone.' I only said, 'I want to be let alone.' There is all the difference." Garbo neither married[12] nor had children; she lived alone.[13]

    Garbo suffered from periods of severe depression, and has been described in various private letters as being narcissistic, possessive and supposedly ashamed of her father, a latrine cleaner.[14]

    There was some speculation, that Garbo was bisexual, that she had intimate relationships with women as well as men, such as the actor John Gilbert.[15] They starred together for the first time in the classic Flesh and the Devil in 1926. Their on-screen "erotic intensity"[15] soon translated into an off-camera romance, and by the end of production Garbo had moved in with Gilbert. Gilbert allegedly proposed to her three times before she finally accepted.[16] When a marriage was finally arranged in 1926, she failed to show up at the ceremony.[17] After the affair ended, and Gilbert's career collapsed with sound films, Garbo showed great loyalty to him and insisted that he appear with her in 1933's Queen Christina, despite the objection of MGM studio head Louis B. Mayer.

    In 1931, Garbo befriended the writer and socialite Mercedes de Acosta, introduced to her by the author Salka Viertel. According to de Acosta, the pair ultimately began a sporadic and volatile romance, punctuated by long periods of Garbo ignoring her and disregarding her many love letters. After about a year, the relationship ended, but they maintained contact. Following de Acosta's claims about her many trysts with Garbo, in her controversial autobiography Here Lies the Heart in 1960, the pair were permanently estranged.

    According to the memoir written by dancer, model and silent film actress Louise Brooks, she and Garbo had a brief liaison.[18][19] Brooks described Garbo as masculine but a "charming and tender lover".[20][21]

    The 1995 biography Garbo relates Garbo's relationships—which were often just close friendships—with actor George Brent, conductor Leopold Stokowski, nutritionist Gayelord Hauser, and her manager George Schlee, husband of designer Valentina.

    Secluded retirement

    Gravestone of Greta Garbo

    Garbo felt her movies had their proper place in history and would gain in value. On 9 February 1951, she became a naturalized citizen of the United States. In 1954 she was awarded a special Academy Award.

    In 1953, she bought a seven-room apartment in New York City at 450 East 52nd Street, where she lived for the rest of her life.

    She would at times jet-set with some of the world's best known personalities such as Aristotle Onassis and Cecil Beaton, but chose to live a private life. She was known for taking long walks through the New York streets dressed casually and wearing large sunglasses, always avoiding prying eyes, the paparazzi, and media attention. Garbo did, however, receive one last flurry of publicity when nude photos, taken with a long-range lens, were published in People in 1976. Trim and relaxed, she was enjoying a swim.

    Garbo lived the last years of her life in absolute seclusion. Having invested very wisely, particularly in commercial property along Rodeo Drive in Beverly Hills, she was known for extreme frugality, and was very wealthy.

    She died in New York Hospital on 15 April 1990, aged 84, as a result of pneumonia and renal failure. She had previously been successfully treated for breast cancer.[citation needed]

    She was cremated, and after a long legal battle her ashes were finally interred at the Skogskyrkogården Cemetery in her native Stockholm. She left her entire estate, estimated at $20,000,000 USD to her niece, Gray Reisfield of New Jersey.

    For her contributions to cinema, she has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6901 Hollywood Boulevard. In addition, in September 2005, the United States Postal Service and Swedish Posten jointly issued two commemorative stamps bearing her likeness.[22][23]

    Filmography

    Year Film Role Notes
    1920 Mr and Mrs Stockholm Go Shopping Elder sister former title: How Not To Dress
    The Gay Cavalier Extra uncredited
    1921 Our Daily Bread Companion
    The Scarlet Angel Extra uncredited
    1922 Peter the Tramp Greta
    1924 The Story of Gösta Berling Elizabeth Dohna directed by Mauritz Stiller
    1925 Die freudlose Gasse Greta Rumfort The Joyless Street
    1926 The Torrent Leonora Moreno aka La Brunna First American movie
    The Temptress Elena
    Flesh and the Devil Felicitas directed by Clarence Brown
    1927 Love Anna Karenina directed by Edmund Goulding
    1928 The Divine Woman Marianne Only a 9 minute reel exists. Source: The Mysterious Lady DVD
    The Mysterious Lady Tania Fedorova
    A Woman of Affairs Diana Merrick Furness
    1929 Wild Orchids Lillie Sterling
    The Single Standard Arden Stuart Hewlett
    The Kiss Irene Guarry
    1930 Anna Christie Anna Christie Nominated – Academy Award for Best Actress
    Garbo's first talkie
    Romance Madame Rita Cavallini Nominated – Academy Award for Best Actress
    1931 Anna Christie Anna Christie MGM's German version of Anna Christie, released early 1931
    Inspiration Yvonne Valbret
    Susan Lenox (Her Fall and Rise) Susan Lenox
    Mata Hari Mata Hari
    1932 Grand Hotel Grusinskaya
    As You Desire Me Zara aka Marie
    1933 Queen Christina Queen Christina
    1934 The Painted Veil Katrin Koerber Fane
    1935 Anna Karenina Anna Karenina New York Film Critics Circle Award for Best Actress
    1936 Camille Marguerite Gautier Nominated – Academy Award for Best Actress
    1937 Conquest Countess Marie Walewska
    1939 Ninotchka Nina Ivanovna 'Ninotchka' Yakushova Nominated – Academy Award for Best Actress
    1941 Two-Faced Woman Karin Borg Blake

    References

    1. ^ Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (11 March 2005). "Academy to Celebrate Greta Garbo Centennial". Press release. http://www.oscars.org/press/pressreleases/2005/05.03.11.html. 
    2. ^ "AFI's 100 Years...100 Stars". American Film Institute. http://www.afi.com/tvevents/100years/stars.aspx. 
    3. ^ "Garbo Facts." GarboForever.com.
    4. ^ Paris, Barry. Garbo. pp 124–125
    5. ^ Alberge, Dalya. "Why Garbo just wanted to be alone." The Times. August 20, 2005.
    6. ^ "Garbo: A TCM Original Documentary." Turner Classic Movies.
    7. ^ "Greta Garbo Profile." Turner Classic Movies.
    8. ^ Christakos, John. "Adam & Yves." Chicago Free Press. February 13, 2008.
    9. ^ Petrucelli, Alan W. "Garbo's lonely legacy: Seeking the actress's final resting place." Post Gazette. September 9, 2007.
    10. ^ Reynolds, Elisabeth. "Greta Garbo Returns." The Epoch Times. November 2, 2005.
    11. ^ Callahan, Dan. "DVD Review: Garbo – The Signature Collection." Slant Magazine. September 7, 2005.
    12. ^ Greta Garbo
    13. ^ Top 10 Most Reclusive Celebrities
    14. ^ Smith, Alex Duval. "Lonely Garbo's love secret is exposed." The Observer. September 11, 2005.
    15. ^ a b "Flesh and the Devil." Home.hiwaay.net
    16. ^ "John Gilbert." Home.hiwaay.net.
    17. ^ Greta Garbo. Goldensilents.com
    18. ^ Brooks, Louise, Roland Jaccard, and Gideon Y. Schein. Louise Brooks: Portrait of an Anti-star. Phébus, 1977. ISBN 285940502X,.
    19. ^ Weiss, Andrea. Vampires & Violets: Lesbians in the Cinema. J. Cape, 1992. ISBN 0224035754.
    20. ^ Wayne, Jane Ellen. The Golden Girls of MGM. Carroll & Graf Publishers, 2003. ISBN 0786713038. p.89.
    21. ^ McLellan, Diana. The Girls: Sappho Goes to Hollywood. Macmillan, 2001. ISBN 0312283202 p. 81.
    22. ^ United States Postal Service (2005-09-25). "Greta Garbo Has Starring Role on U.S. Postal Stamp". Press release. http://www.usps.com/communications/news/stamps/2005/sr05_045.htm. Retrieved 2008-07-09. "...the U.S. Postal Service and Sweden Post jointly issued two commemorative postage stamps bearing her likeness. Both stamps, issued near what would have been her 100th birthday, are engravings based on a 1932 photograph...." 
    23. ^ ed. William J. Gicker (2006). "Greta Garbo 37¢" (print). USA Philatelic 11 (3): 12. 

    Further reading

    External links


     
     

     

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