I want to wear huge fur collars |
The bulk of her film work is from 1931 and earlier. We all know she vanished before her perfect visage would be marred by signs of age. Wise. And perhaps she knew her acting style wouldn't carry over into the forties. Try to imagine Garbo in "His Girl Friday". No. It is too painful. Forgive me for suggesting it. We love her sultry voice, but it is languorous. No long speeches for Garbo. Long takes. The camera is lost in her spell and she takes her time with every thought. But my darling is already outdated in the '30s. Her style is for the time before sound. Everything she feels is there without words. So her acting looks too big.
Next up was "Grand Hotel." This film has become somewhat obscure, but is required viewing for any Garbo fan or lover of old Hollywood, especially pre-code Hollywood. It is summed up nicely here When it comes on I always think I won't watch it. I've already seen it so many times. But the plot is so good. The way these archetypal characters weave into tangled knots sucks you in before you know it. Here Garbo's over acting fits perfectly. She's playing a diva ballerina -- the pampered neurotic star. Perfectly, flawlessly believable. The immortal lines are here, "I want to be alone", "I'm so tired ... ". Brilliant. She clings to the dissolute Baron's (John Barrymore, in make up for the stage) love for her as a precious orchid, a stem so delicate it cannot stand on its own.
Who me? I'm just a stenographer. |
Joan was in an astonishing number of films prior to 1940, but hardly any of them are in circulation. The only two early ones that she is known for are this and "The Women". Ironically they are both star laden ensemble casts where she did not receive top billing. But she did get to play a husband stealing tramp in "The Women" and she's still darn cute.
But Joan is much better known for the later '40s roles. The don't-fuck-with-me Joan. That silky, intoxicating smile is gone. If you are a drag queen you are this Joan. You own those famously forties shoulder pads. Your hair doesn't float anymore. It is architecture, and it's staying put. Now your lips are fixed too. Fuller than '30s lips and the corners go down. You could be covered in the fluffiest peignoir and those lips would still say don't fuck with me.
Scary Joan |
And then There is John Barrymore. He was such a huge star of stage and screen, bigger than Greta, bigger than anyone today. But he was on his way out by '31. If you want to know why watch his brutal characterization of himself in "Dinner at Eight". His brother Lionel is a bigger legend today. I say legend and yet I'm quite sure he's not a household name. Who is anymore? Whose legacy from the Golden Years still holds? Liz Taylor. Any teenagers out there know who Cary Grant is? I'd like to stand on that walk of fame and interview the idiots that come by to walk on those stars. How many of them will have ever heard of the ones I hold so dear?
John Barrymore with Joan Crawford |
~got to go find some photos ...
So I'm looking for photos of Joan and she is smiling or vamping in nearly every one. She was a hard working girl who worked hard on her image. From what I've read her "Grand Hotel" was pretty close to reality. She used her sex appeal to get what she wanted, and that meant being the girl who knows what she's doing, and does it a lot.
Way to look cheap! |
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