December 25, 2021

What Was So Special About Greta Garbo?

 

 

 

By
Margaret Talbot
The New Yorker

 Fame is so powerful that renouncing it can seem like the supreme power move. Celebrities who retreat from the public eye (Howard Hughes, J. D. Salinger, Prince) will always be legends, no matter what else they may be. Rumored comebacks tantalize. Paparazzi circle. The mystery deepens. In 1941, at the age of thirty-six, Greta Garbo, one of the biggest box-office draws in the world, stopped acting and, though she lived for half a century more, never made another film. For a star who, more than any other, “invaded the subconscious of the audience,” as Robert Gottlieb writes in his new biography, “Garbo” (Farrar, Straus & Giroux), this was an abdication, a privilege of monarchical proportions. But it was also a decision made by one particular, peculiar person who had never been temperamentally suited to celebrity in the first place. There was a reason, beyond the exertions of the Hollywood publicity machine, that a single line she uttered in one movie—“I want to be alone”—became so fused with her image. What can look like a strategy for keeping the public interested can also be a sincere and committed desire to keep it at bay.

 

Few other performers have ascended
as quickly to mononymic status as Garbo
did—she started off the way most of us
do, with a first and last name, but the
first soon fell away, like a spent rocket
booster,in the ballyhoo surrounding her.

 

When she appeared in her first sound
picture, “Anna Christie,” the ads pro-
claimed,“Garbo talks!”;for her first sound

comedy, “Ninotchka,” it was “Garbo
laughs!” Quite why she became such a
phenomenon is a puzzle to which film
critics and biographers keep returning.
Garbo made only twenty­eight movies
in her lifetime. (By comparison, Bette
Davis made close to ninety, and Meryl
Streep has made nearly seventy and still
counting.) That slender output could be
part of the mystique, compounded by
her disappearing act.But Garbo had ac-
quired an enigmatic mythos even before
she ended her career—the Hollywood
colony treated her like royalty. Nor has
it seemed to matter that only a handful
of her movies are much watched or ad-
mired today.
 
What Garbo had to offer, above all,
was her extraordinary face,at a timewhen
the closeup, with its supercharged inti-
macy,its unprecedented boon to the emo-
tional and erotic imagination, was still
relatively new. Many of the shots cred-
ited as the first closeups were unlikely to
have set hearts aflame, since they were
often of objects—a shoe, a wrench. But
filmmakers soon grasped the centripetal
seductions of the human face in tight
focus.The screenwriter and director Paul
Schrader picks as a turning pointthe mo-
ment in a D.W. Griffith film from 1912,
“Friends,”in which the camera comes in
tight on Mary Pickford’s face, revealing
her ambivalence aboutwhich of two suit-
ors she should choose. “A real close­up
of an actor is about going in for an emo-
tional reason that you can’t get any other
way,”Schrader writes.“When filmmak-
ersrealized that they could use a close­up
to achieve this kind of emotional effect,
cameras started coming in closer. And
characters became more complex.”
 
A face as beautiful as Garbo’s—the
enormous eyes and deep­set lids,theway
love or tenderness or some private, un-
spoken amusement unknit her brows in
an instant, melting her austerity—was
almost overwhelming when it filled the
screen.She belonged, as Roland Barthes
wrote,“to that moment in cinema when
the apprehension of the human counte-
nance plunged crowds into the greatest
perturbation, where people literally lost
themselves in the human image.” This
is not to diminish her craft as an ac-
tress. But her acting was perhaps most
effective in her silent films or in non-
verbalscenesin talking picturesinwhich
her face is the canvas for emotion. In
the famous last shots of “Queen Chris-
tina”(1933),Garbo’s androgynous Swed-
ish ruler stands at the prow of a ship
bearing her away from her country; the
body of her lover, killed in a duel over
her,is laid out on the deck.Garbo stares
into the distance, her face a
kind of mask but no less el-
oquent for it.The film’s di-
rector,Rouben Mamoulian,
had told her that she must
“make her mind and heart
a complete blank,” empty
her face of expression, so
that the audience could im-
posewhatever emotionsthey
wanted on it. The scene
would then be one of those
“marvelous spots,”he said,where “a film
could turn every spectatorinto a creator.”
 
She was skilled at inciting such pro-
jection.More than one contemporary in
Hollywood noted that her magic truly
showed up only on celluloid,like a ghostly
luminescence undetectable until the film
was developed.ClarenceBrown,who di-
rected Garbo in seven films, recalled
shooting a scene with her, thinking it
was fine,nothing special,then playing it
back and seeing “something that it just
didn’t have on the set.” On her face, he
said,“You could see thought.If she had
to look at one person with jealousy, and
another with love, she didn’t have to
change her expression. You could see it
in her eyes asshe looked from one to the
other.”Garbo herself,with a kind of arch,
adolescent indifference,never wanted to
look at the rushes.According to Brown,
she’d watch only when sound pictures
were played in reverse: “That’s what
Garbo enjoyed.She would sitt here shak-
ing with laughter,watching the film run-
ning backward and the sound going ya-
kablom­yakablom.But as soon as we ran
it forward, she wouldn’t watch it.”
 
Much has been written about Garbo
over the years,but Gottlieb, a former ed-
itor of this magazine,has produced a par-
ticularly charming, companionable, and
clear­eyed guide to her life and work—
he has no axe to grind, no urgent need
to make a counterintuitive case for her
lesser movies, and he’s generous with his
predecessors.By the end ofthe biography,
IfeltI understood Garbo better as a per-
son,without the aura of mystery around
her having been entirely dispelled—and,
at this point, who would want it to be?
 
The actress who came to embody a
kind of unattainable elegance,who
would someday wear sumptuous period
costumes with a grace so offhand that
they might have been rumpled p.j.’s,grew
up in a cramped apartment
with no indoor plumbing,
in one of Stockholm’s most
impoverished neighbor-
hoods. She was born Greta
Lovisa Gustafsson on Sep-
tember 18, 1905, to parents
from ruralstock.Her mother
was, in Gottlieb’s descrip-
tion,“practical,sensible,un-
demonstrative”; her father,
an unskilled laborer, was
handsome, musical, and fun, and Greta
adored him.But he was stricken by kid-
ney disease, and Greta, the youngest of
three children, made the rounds of the
charity hospitals with him. “She never
forgot the humiliations they endured as
poor people in search of live­or­die at-
tention,”Gottlieb writes.She was four-
teen when he died, and she dropped out
of school,leaving her with a lasting em-
barrassment about her lack of formal
education. She went to work to help
support the family,first at a barbershop,
where she applied shaving soap to men’s
faces,then at a department store,where
she sold and modelled hats. She said
later that she was “always sad as a child
for as long as I can think back. . . .I did
some skating and played with snow-
balls, but most of all I wanted to be
alone with myself.”
 
Alongside her shyness and her pen-
chant for solitude, Greta harbored a
passionate desire to be an actress. As a
kid,she’d roam the city by herself,look-
ing for theatres where she could stand
at the stage door and watch the per-
formers come and go. The first time
Garbo was in front of the camera was
at age fifteen, in an advertising film for
the departmentstore that employed her.
Sweden had a thriving film industry,
and she soon quit her day job to appear
in a couple of movies. At Stockholm’s
Royal Dramatic Theatre, to which she
was accepted at seventeen, the young
actors were instructed in a system that
“scientifically” analyzed the semiotics
of movement and gesture.Remarkably,
some of herlecture notesfrom that time
survive—she jotted down that“the head
bent forward equals a mild concession”
or a “condescending attitude,” and that
“the throwing back of the head” con-
veys“a violentfeeling such aslove.”Barry
Paris,an earlier biographerwhom Gott-
lieb cites approvingly,notesthat“Garbo
in silent films would employ that sys-
tem of gestural meaning to a high de-
gree.” She did so in her sound pictures
as well. When she plays the Russian
ballerina in “Grand Hotel” (1932), her
body language is jittery, neurotic. De-
pressed,she lets her head droop as if it
were simply too heavy to hold up; sur-
prised by delight at the prospect of a
romance with John Barrymore’s gen-
tleman jewel thief, she tosses her head
back at giddy angles.It might have been
laughable, but instead it’s riveting.
 
In the spring of 1923, the gifted film
director Mauritz Stiller approached the
Stockholm theatre looking for actresses
to cast in his new movie, an epic based
on a Swedish novel,“The Story of Gösta
Berling.”Stiller came from a Jewish fam-
ily in Finland; orphaned young, he had
fled to Sweden to avoid being conscripted
into the tsar’s army. Garbo and he were
never lovers—Stiller preferred men—
but their relationship was perhaps the
most important in both of their lives.
 
With his commanding height, his taste
forluxury (full­length fur coats,a canary-
yellow sports car), and his domineering
style with actors, he had more than a
touch of the Svengali. But Stiller be-
lieved in Garbo at a time when, as one
veteran actress put it,Greta was“thislit-
tle nobody . . . an awkward, mediocre
novice,”and he loved her.(He also seems
to have been the one who suggested re-
placing “Gustafsson”with “Garbo.”)
 
When Hollywood came calling—in
the form of Louis B. Mayer scouting
European talent forM­G­M—itwasn’t
clear whether Stiller was the lure or
Garbo; the director was certainly bet-
ter known.In any case,Stiller made sure
thattheywere a package deal(and,Gott-
lieb adds, later upped Garbo’s pay to
four hundred dollars a week, an “un-
heard of”salary for an untested starlet).
The two sailed for the United States in
1925, arriving in the pungent heat of
midsummer NewYork.(Garbo’s favor-
ite part of the visit seems to have been
the roller coaster at Coney Island.)Then
it was on to Hollywood by train.
 
The studio moguls gave an unknown
such as Garbo a very short runway.
M­G­M signed up the Swedish girl
for two pictures, “Torrent” and “The
Temptress,” and, as the film historian
Robert Dance writes in his smart new
book,“The Savvy Sphinx: How Garbo
Conquered Hollywood”(Mississippi),
“if those first two films were unsuc-
cessful financially M­G­M would not
renew her contract for a second year.”
As it happened,both were hits.Motion
Picture was among the industry outlets
declaring her début “a complete suc-
cess.” (“She is not so much an actress
as she is endowed with individuality
and magnetism,” it said.) Garbo be-
came a fan favorite, even though she
was almost uniquely averse to the kind
of goofy stunts and mildly salacious
photo shoots that other stars put up
with.When she got to be as famous as
Lillian Gish, she told one interviewer
early on, “I will no longer . . . shake
handswith prize­fighters and egg­and-
milk men so they will have pictures to
put in the papers.”Instead,she worked
with consummate portrait photogra-
phers who lit her gloriously. Eventu-
ally,her films were earning enough that
she was able to negotiate an unusual
contract, one that gave her the right to
veto scripts,co­stars,and directors.And
she shunned interviews so consistently
that in the end her privacy became its
own form of publicity.
 
Despite such badassery,she never re-
ally adjusted to her new country or her
new destiny, at least beyond the movie
set. What looked like carefully culti-
vated hauteur was partly the product of
awkwardness, disorientation, and grief.
She hardly spoke English when she first
arrived, and, within a year, she learned
that her beloved sister, an aspiring ac-
tress herself,had died back home.Stiller
did not make a smooth adjustment to
Hollywood and,in a blow to them both,
he was not chosen to direct Garbo’s first
American picture. Garbo wrote to a
friend in Sweden about how miserable
she was: “This ugly, ugly America, all
machine, it is excruciating.” The only
thing that made her happy,she claimed,
was sending money to her family. At a
young age, Gottlieb writes, she found
herself “trapped in a spotlight extreme
even by Hollywood standards,”andwith
no psychological preparation for grap-
pling with the kind of fame—movie
stardom—that was new not just to her
but to the world.
 
Athletic and physically restless, she
soon took up the long nighttime walks
that became a refuge;with her hat pulled
low over her head,asit customarily was,
she would have been hard to recognize.
Stiller,who probably felt that his young
protégée no longer needed him,returned
to Sweden,where he died in 1928,at the
age of forty­five, reportedly clutching
a photograph of her. “He never seems
to have resented her dazzling ascent to
fame,” Gottlieb writes, “only wanting
her to be happy and fulfilled.” Back in
Sweden to mourn him, Garbo went
with his lawyer to the storehouse con-
taining his possessions,where shewalked
around touching his belongings and
murmuring about her memories.Gott-
lieb says that this episode must surely
have been an inspiration for the scene
in “Queen Christina”in which Garbo’s
character moves around a room at an
inn,touching all the inanimate remind-
ers of the lover she will never spend an-
other night with. On sets, she would
sometimes talk softly to herself about
what her mentor might have told her
to do—one director she worked with
referred to Stiller as“the green shadow.”
 
Garbo appears to have been emo-
tionally stunted in certain ways, dam-
aged by the loss of her father,her sister,
and Stiller,abashed by the limitations of
her English and her education.Though
she had a sense of humor,she emerges
in Gottlieb’s portrait as prickly, stub-
born, and stingy.The sudden onslaught
of celebrity made her more so.She never
married, had children, or apparently
wanted to do either; she had brief ro-
mantic relationships, mostly with men
(the actor John Gilbert, probably the
conductor Leopold Stokowski), and
likely with women, too (the leading
candidate seemsto have been thewriter
Mercedes De Acosta, the “ubiquitous
lesbian rake,”in Gottlieb’s words, who
had affairs with Marlene Dietrich and
many others). Her longest­lasting re-
lationships were with friends,especially,
as Gottlieb makes clear, those who
helped her logistically, advised her de-
votedly, and steadfastly refused to spill
the tea about her.In these,she had pretty
good, if not unerring, taste. Probably
the closest and most enduring friend-
ship was with Salka Viertel, the intel-
lectually vibrant woman at the center
of L.A.’s remarkable community of
refugee writers, composers, and film-
makers from Germany.
 
From the start of her Hollywood ca-
reer in silent pictures, Garbo was often
cast as a vamp—the kind of man-eater
who shimmied and inveigled and home-
wrecked herway through so many nine-
teen-twenties movies. (See the entire
career of ThedaBara.) AsRobert Dance
notes,“Adultery and divorce were cat-
nip to post World War I audiences.”
 
The parts quickly bored her:“I cannot
see any sense in dressing up and doing
nothing but tempting men.” Off the
job,she eschewed makeup and liked to
dress in slacks, men’s oxford shoes, and
grubby sweaters. Her closet was full of
men’s tailored shirts and ties.She often
referred to herself as a “fellow” and
sometimes signed her letters “Harry”
or “Harry Boy.” The movie role she
seemsto have liked bestwasthe learned
cross-dressing seventeenth-century
monarch Christina; it allowed her to
stride around in tunics, tight-fitting
trousers, and tall boots, to kiss one of
her ladies-in-waiting full on the lips,to
declare thatshe intended to “die a bach-
elor!”(As plenty of gender-studiesschol-
arswill tell you,thisis one queer movie.)
 
She expressed a longing to play St.Fran-
cis of Assisi, complete with a beard,and
Oscar Wilde’s vain hero Dorian Gray.
In today’s terms,Garbo might have oc-
cupied a spot along the nonbinary spec-
trum. Gottlieb doesn’t press the point,
but remarks,“How ironic if ‘the Most
Beautiful Woman in the World’ really
would rather have been a man.”
Her third American film,“Flesh and
the Devil” (1926)—the ultimate nine-
teen-twenties title—transformed her
into an international star. It’s about a
love triangle involving two best friends,
played by the magnetic John Gilbert and
the handsome Swedish actor Lars Han-
son, with Garbo at its apex. It, too, is
a pretty queer movie, though it seems
less in control of its signifiers than, say,
“Queen Christina.” As Gottlieb points
out,the two male leads are forever clasp-
ing each other fervently, bringing their
faces close together, as if about to kiss.
(It heightensthe vibe that,in silent-movie
fashion, Hanson appears to be wearing
lipstick some of the time, and Gilbert
eyeliner.)“Flesh and the Devil”also fea-
turessome of the most erotic scenesI’ve
ever encountered on film. There’s one,
in a nighttime garden, in which Garbo
rolls a cigarette between her lips, then
puts it between Gilbert’s,her eyes never
leaving his, as he strikes a match and il-
luminates their gorgeous,besotted faces.
 
There’s one where she lies back in sen-
sual abandon on a couch,Gilbert’s head
lolling against her lap, and he lifts her
hand and drags her fingers across his
mouth. And then there’s my favorite:
she and Gilbert are at a Communion
rail in church. By now, Gilbert’s char-
acter has killed her first husband in a
duel, and she has married the other
friend, but they’re still crazy about each
other,natch.Gilbert sips from the chal-
ice just before she does, and, when the
priest handsit to her,she turnsit around
to drink greedily from the side her lov-
er’s lips have just touched. Her expres-
sion is one of slow-burn ecstasy.
 
Gilbert and Garbo fell in love while
they were making the movie, but their
story is a sad one, mainly because Gil-
bert is a sad figure. He is often offered
up as an example of an actorwho couldn’t
make the transition to sound—his voice
wassaid to have been too reedy orsome-
thing. That turns out to have been an
urban legend: his voice was fine. The
trouble was that he was best at playing
boyish men undone by love at a time
when,as Gottlieb observes,Depression-
era Hollywoodwas more into “gangsters,
snappy dialogue, musicals.” Garbo and
Gilbert lived out a “Star Is Born”trajec-
tory. When they made “Flesh and the
Devil,” he was a big-name actor at the
height of his powers, and he helped
Garbo by making sure the camera an-
gles were right for her and each take of
her was the best it could be. One story
is that he planted a stand of trees on his
property in the Hollywood Hills to re-
mind her of the woods in Sweden, and
he apparently proposed to her repeat-
edly. (She professed herself puzzled
thatshe kept refusing a more permanent
bond,butshe did.)By the time she made
“Queen Christina,”in 1933, she had top
billing,and she insisted that Gilbert,who
was then married to someone else, and
professionally on the skids, play her ro-
mantic interest—rejecting the studio’s
choice, a young Laurence Olivier. Gil-
bert later remembered thatshe wastact-
ful and considerate with him on the set,
though he was drinking heavily, throw-
ing up blood,and nervous about his per-
formance.“It is a rare moment in Gar-
bo’s history,” Gottlieb writes,“when we
can fully admire,even love her,as a human
being,not only as an artist.”Gilbert died
three yearslater,atthe age ofthirty-eight.
Garbo was characteristically unsenti-
mental.“Gott,I wonder what I ever saw
in him,”she remarked while he was still
alive.“Oh well,I guess he was pretty.”
 
Why did Garbo stop acting? It
wasn’t as though her star was
truly on the wane. It had been years
since she’d made her successful transi-
tion to talkies, with a dialogue-heavy
adaptation of Eugene O’Neill’s “Anna
Christie.” (From the moment she ut-
tered her first lines, “Gimme a whis-
key—ginger ale on the side—and don’t
be stingy,baby,”her accent proved to be
a sexy asset.) She’d been nominated for
four Best Actress Oscars.In 1939,she’d
made “Ninotchka,”the romantic com-
edy in which she played a Soviet appa-
ratchik on a mission to Paris who falls
in love with a playboy count and dis-
covers, as the pitch for it went,“capital-
ism not so bad after all.”It was a huge
hit—more than four hundred thousand
peoplewentto see it atRadioCityMusic
Hall during a three-week run,Gottlieb
says. Garbo is very funny, deadpanning
her way through the first half of it in
boxy jackets,rationally assessingMelvyn
Douglas’s charms. (“Your general ap-
pearance is not distasteful.”) As one bi-
ographer,Robert Payne,wrote,the per-
formance worked so brilliantly because
it satirized “Garbo herself,or rather her
legend:the cold Northerner immune to
marriage, solemn and self-absorbed.”
 
The next and last movie she made,
“Two-FacedWoman,”a clumsy attempt
to re-create comedy magic with Doug-
las, was a turkey, but she could surely
have survived it. Instead, she consid-
ered projects that fell through, turned
down others (offered the female lead
in Hitchcock’s “The Paradine Case,”
Gottlieb writes,she is supposed to have
sent her agent a telegram saying “No
mamas.No murderers”), and slowly
drifted away from the business of movie-
making. She had never liked the lime-
light and, Gottlieb says, lacked the
relentless drive that animated contem-
poraries such as Marlene Dietrich or
Joan Crawford. She doesn’t seem to
have been particularly vain about her
beauty, but she was practical enough to
know its precise value, and to antici-
pate the cost of its fading.And,though
she seems to have enjoyed acting, she
was neversatisfiedwith the results.“Oh,
if once, if only once I could see a pre-
view and come home feeling satisfied,”
she remarked after one film screening.
Garbo was no Norma Desmond, view-
ing her old films over and over to ad-
mire her own image. Screening some
of them years later, at MOMA, Barry
Paris reported,she got a kick out of im-
itating herself: “R-r-rodney, when will
this painful love of ours ever die?” She
once told the actor David Niven that
she’d quit because she had“made enough
faces.”The analysis wastypical of her—
unreflective, cryptic, deprecatory.
 
Shewas,TennesseeWilliamsthought,
“the saddest of creatures—an artistwho
abandons her art.” Yet Garbo doesn’t
seem to have seen herself that way.Per-
haps attuned to the perils of growing
old in Hollywood, she moved to New
York,to an apartment on the East Side,
spent long stretches of time in Europe
with friends who were wealthy or witty
or both, went to the theatre, collected
a bit of art. She did not reinvent her-
self as a memoirist or a philanthropist
(though her estatewas valued atroughly
fifty million dollars when she died, in
1990) or an ambassador of any sort of
good will. People loved the mystery of
it all; photographers were always chas-
ing after her. But she wasn’t in hiding;
she got out.One wag called her a “her-
mit about town.”
 
Did Garbo have a rich inner life to
sustain her for all those years? There
isn’t much evidence of it. She was not
a remarkable or notably confiding let-
ter writer, journal keeper, or conversa-
tionalist;she does not seem to have had
a surfeit of intellectual curiosity.In the
movies,she had always been able to con-
vey a sense of hidden depths, of mem-
ories and emotions lighting room after
interior room, never quite surfacing to
be articulated.Were those feelings com-
plex, interesting? We were persuaded
they must be.The relationship to fame
that she enacted in the last decades of
herlifewassomething similar: it looked
profound,perhaps even spiritual—a re-
nunciation of celebrity’s blessings aswell
as its scourges.But who knows? Maybe
she was just tired of making faces. 

 

     

“Looks like the kids have gone off to college. Let’s grab a few years alone in the house before they decide to return.” 

 “Looks like the kids have gone off to college. Let’s grab a few years alone in the house before they decide to return.”




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