September 18, 1905– Greta Garbo was born Greta Lovisa Gustafson in Stockholm. She was lured to Hollywood by Louis B. Mayer who was impressed with her work in the Swedish film- Gosta Berlings Saga (1924), which was directed by her mentor, the flamboyantly gay, Mauritz Stiller, who came up with the name Greta Garbo.
Garbo knew how to make an exit. After just 20 years in films & a life as one of the world’s biggest stars of all time, she walked away from acting & public life when she was only 36 years old.
She lived in NYC in virtual seclusion for the next 50 years, refusing all interviews & photographs, emerging from her apartment only when protected from public view by big hats & sunglasses. I spent many hours walking in Manhattan, from The Cloisters to The Battery, with time spent in her block on East 52nd Street, but I never had the thrill of a Garbo sighting, even after spotting several smart looking older women wearing large hats & sunglasses, following them & being disappointed when I finally was able to grab a quick glance.
Garbo made 14 silent films, with a face that was perfect for the expressions of the style of acting for those early B&W films. She never made a color film. She made the transition to talkies, a move that ruined many screen careers, with no problem at all. Garbo’s beautiful husky, accented voice was a compliment to her unworldly beauty & she gave more complex performances in her talking films.
Garbo’s first talking film was Anna Christie (1930). MGM’s market campaign used the catch-phrase “Garbo Talks!” At the 16 minute mark, she famously utters her first spoken line on film:
“Gimme a whiskey, ginger ale on the side & don’t be stingy, baby.”
She played a world weary, washed-up ballerina in Grand Hotel (1932) at 26 years old. She gave what I think is her very best performance, charming, funny, electric & full of self-parody, in Ninotchka released in what is probably the greatest single year in film history, 1939. The MGM publicity department marketed the film with: “Garbo Laughs!”
Garbo was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Actress 3 times, but never won. She received an honorary Oscar in 1954 for her “luminous & unforgettable screen performances.” She, of course, did not show up to accept the statue.
Garbo required very specific conditions for working on the set. She prohibited any visitors, including the studio brass, & she demanded that black flats surround her between takes to prevent extras & crew from looking at her. When asked about these eccentricities, Garbo said:
“If I am by myself, my face will do things I cannot do with it otherwise.”
During her career, Garbo avoided parties & premiers, preferring to spend her time alone or with a select group of close friends. She never signed autographs or answered fan mail & only rarely gave an interview (she only granted 12 in her lifetime).
Her aversion to a public life was undeniably genuine. Garbo claimed:
“As early as I can remember, I have wanted to be alone. I detest crowds, don’t like many people.”
Her standoffish behavior exasperated MGM’s head of production Irving Thalberg, but he eventually capitalized on it & the studio played up her the image of the reluctant & reclusive woman of mystery.
Garbo had a love affair with her frequent co-star John Gilbert, an actor who matched her beauty, but she left him alone at the altar on their wedding day. Garbo had affairs with women also, including well-known liaisons with actors Louise Brooks, writer Mercedes de Acosta (their affair was on again-off again for 3 decades), & with the star who was her equal, Marlene Dietrich. She was very close friends with 2 noted gay men, designer/photographer Cecil Beaton & director George Cukor.
After Garbo’s passing, Swedish actor, Mimi Pollak, her close friend form her school days, released the letters Garbo had written her. In one, Garbo wrote:
“We cannot help our nature, as God has created it. But I have always thought you & I belonged together”.
In retirement, Garbo claimed that she spent her time “drifting”, her word, used frequently. She lived with a lifelong melancholy. On her 60th birthday, she told her friends:
“In a few days, it will be the anniversary of the sorrow that never leaves me, that will never leave me for the rest of my life.”
Tellingly, in Love (1927) her character’s title card reads: “I like to be alone”. In The Single Standard (1929) she says: “I am walking alone because I want to be alone” & her character sails on a boat named the All Alone. In Susan Lenox (1931) she says: “This time I rise & fall… alone”. In Inspiration (1931) she tells her lover: “I just want to be alone for a little while“. For Mata Hari (1931) Garbo’s dialogue includes: “I never look ahead. By next spring I shall probably be quite alone.” The theme becomes a joke in Ninotchka (1939) where screenwriters Charles Brackett & Billy Wilder have the officials from Soviet Russia ask her: “Do you want to be alone, comrade?” She answers bluntly: “No!”
Garbo’s final credits rolled in 1990, leaving after a series of illnesses, but taken by that damn cancer. She was cremated & her ashes are interred in Stockholm. Smart about money, Garbo died rich, with an estate worth more than 50 million, most of it in important art. She left no heir.
Garbo pointed out that her character in Grand Hotel never uttered the famous: “I want to be alone”, but rather: “I want to be let alone”, a big difference & seemingly true of her life.
“The story of my life is about back entrances, side doors, secret elevators & other ways of getting in & out of places so that people won’t bother me”
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