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10 - The Furthest Side of Paradise: Two-Faced Woman, A Woman's Face, Hot Spell, Wild is the Wind, and Winged Victory

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 October 2017

R. Barton Palmer
Affiliation:
Calhoun Lemon Professor of Literature and Director of Film Studies at Clemson University
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Summary

“Usually, when you make a picture that doesn't turn out well, it's happily buried,” reminisced George Cukor to Gavin Lambert, undoubtedly expressing a view shared by many of his classic studio era colleagues (122). The unpleasantness of last season's critical disaster could be, and often was, effaced by this month's box-office success. An industry devoted to the never ending, sometimes frantic turning out of a product that came and went quickly offered many opportuni¬ties for self-reclamation, even as, of course, the volume of production and the complex forms of collaboration on which it depended insured that there would be missteps as well. Television changed that, Cukor sadly observed, because what you did years ago keeps “popping up and you may be confronted with your past failures” (122). An oeuvre (if one thinks about one's career in this expressively collective fashion) becomes available for evaluation through various forms of re-screening, and this, so Cukor suggests, might not always be a cause for celebration.

An Unexpected Failure: Two-Faced Woman

Cukor's meditations on projects that don't “turn out well” were prompted by Lambert's mention of Two-Faced Woman (1941), a film that upon initial release earned a “C” from the Legion of Decency reviewers, thereby prompting a boycott from observant Catholics. Despite this notoriety, often box-office enhancing (see Howard Hughes and The Outlaw [1943]) never connected with audiences when Two-Faced Woman was reissued in a slightly less suggestive, but still rather naughty, form. Two-Faced Woman, as it turns out, was Greta Garbo's last film, and that meant Cukor had to suffer the further indignity (if that is what it was) of his work being exhibited at festivals in the actress's honor. Was he to blame in some way for Garbo's decision to retire? The film did, in effect, end her career, and so the question was perhaps inevitable. Metro terminated Garbo's contract in the wake of the film's dismal reviews and pitiful box-office earnings. Had Cukor somehow managed to drain from her image what appeal she still had, through his ineffective coaching of her limited gifts for comedy? No wonder that Cukor, who had such success directing her in Camille (1936), inevitably inviting comparisons, would have liked the film to be forgotten.

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Chapter
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George Cukor
Hollywood Master
, pp. 156 - 172
Publisher: Edinburgh University Press
Print publication year: 2015

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