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- <text id=90TT1110>
- <link 93HT0115>
- <link 93HT0109>
- <title>
- Apr. 30, 1990: Greta Garbo:1905-1990
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Apr. 30, 1990 Vietnam 15 Years Later
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- SHOW BUSINESS, Page 107
- The Last Mysterious Lady
- Greta Garbo: 1905-1990
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>By Richard Corliss
- </p>
- <p> To several generations of moviegoers, Greta Garbo was only
- the world's most famous recluse. Wasn't she the star who, in
- the 1932 film Grand Hotel, had murmured, "I want to be alone"
- and then played out that role for the rest of her life? What
- else could excite the old awe when she died last week, at 84,
- from complications of kidney disease? After all, Garbo stopped
- making movies when she was 36, nearly a half-century ago. She
- never won an Oscar. She worked with few good directors, made
- fewer great films than any star of comparable magnitude. She
- appeared in 14 silent features, then 14 talkies beginning in
- 1930--but even in that era her fervid, hypnotic style of
- acting was an odd anachronism. Except in drag clubs, she
- inspired no real imitators. But Garbo was more than a camp
- goddess. She was just the most haunting beauty, and the finest
- actress, in movie history.
- </p>
- <p> "What, when drunk, one sees in other women," Kenneth Tynan
- wrote, "one sees in Garbo sober." But it wasn't the beauty
- alone that intoxicated. Garbo used her severe gorgeousness to
- suggest that the characters she played were creatures from a
- nobler, alien world, doomed to exile among the puny men and
- cramped conventions of earth. She was typecast as the siren who
- lures men to hell, only to get there first; but her pained
- dignity gave the lie to cliche. This Garbo lived by a standard
- too high for men to reach, so they grabbed what they could
- touch--her body. "How little you know of love," she sighs in
- A Woman of Affairs, "my kind of love." Her films, from Flesh
- and the Devil to The Mysterious Lady, from Anna Christie to
- Anna Karenina, were a master course in the varieties of that
- kind of love: desperate, consuming, exalted. They were also
- lessons in her kind of star acting. Cinema would never again
- see its like.
- </p>
- <p> The Garbo charisma was a creation as mysterious in its
- genesis as in its impact. She was born Greta Gustafsson to a
- poor Stockholm family, and at first she gave little hint of her
- unique hold on the camera. In early publicity films she giggles
- and models dresses or gorges on a cream puff. There is no
- beauty here, no acting ability. What could Mauritz Stiller, the
- pioneer Swedish director, have seen in this plump teenager?
- Maybe the future of movies. He changed her name to Garbo, cast
- her as the young female lead in his The Story of Gosta Berling
- (1924), then brought her along to Hollywood. The rest of their
- story is too trite and tragic for even a Garbo vehicle. Stiller
- was fired from The Temptress, their only American film together.
- He went home and died two years later.
- </p>
- <p> From then on, and despite headline-grabbing flirtations with
- John Gilbert and Leopold Stokowski, Garbo became in effect the
- indentured mistress of her movie studio, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer.
- This most galvanizing of actresses was the most passive of
- stars. At MGM's urging, the young Garbo slimmed down, had her
- teeth capped, adjusted her hairline. Her most enduring studio
- ally was her doting cinematographer, William Daniels. Garbo
- must have felt comfortable, surrounded by MGM's middlebrow high
- gloss. She may not have cared that its gentility suffocated her
- films, so long as she could breathe her artistry into them.
- </p>
- <p> And she did, in the most improbable of circumstances. She
- could be a convincing "older woman," older than Eve, when
- barely out of her teens. She could find temporary haven in the
- spindly arms of any callow leading man MGM cast opposite her,
- or in the mature embrace of a Gilbert or John Barrymore. She
- could play vibrant love scenes with just a vase of flowers (A
- Woman of Affairs) or bedroom furniture (Queen Christina). She
- could suggest regal exhaustion with the minutest shift in
- posture, then fling an extravagant gesture at the movie
- audience, daring it to laugh. She could laugh at herself too,
- as in Ernst Lubitsch's delicious Ninotchka (1939). When asked,
- "Do you want to be alone, Comrade?" she snaps back, "No!"
- </p>
- <p> She was alone, in an acting empyrean, in George Cukor's 1937
- Camille. As the selfless courtesan Marguerite Gautier, Garbo
- transforms her face into a life-and-death mask, and Dumas's
- melodrama into classical tragedy. Every calculated audacity--the hint of disintegration in the eyes, the dry little laugh
- exploding into a tubercular cough, the weight of a thoughtful
- passion that gives substance to every line of dialogue--testifies to Garbo's acute, intuitive knowledge of screen
- acting, and it allows her to play Marguerite at high pitch and
- with perfect precision. At the end, as she dies reconciled with
- her lover, she is both a helpless child and a hoarse old
- woman, whispering pleas and forgiveness. No other actress could
- create such a performance, or get away with it.
- </p>
- <p> In Two-Faced Woman, Garbo exits a cocktail party and says
- brightly, "I look forward to my return." She never did return;
- this amiable 1941 comedy was her last film. For years she was
- reported to be mulling beguiling projects (on the lives of St.
- Teresa of Avila, Eleanora Duse, Dorian Gray) from eminent
- auteurs (Max Ophuls, Salvador Dali, Orson Welles). Eventually,
- the vacation became permanent, and Garbo's only pictures were
- those snapped on the fly by avid paparazzi. Now the camera was
- not a lover but a predator. Still, her withdrawal was a good
- and gracious career move. By refusing to make a comeback film,
- or star on a nighttime soap, or do a dentures commercial, Garbo
- kept her image and achievement indelible. She became the
- discreet curator of her own museum. On the screen of that
- museum a divine woman is whiplashed by fate, and we, her
- late-show subjects, sit in awe at the spectacle.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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