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Sat, Jun 15

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Epsilon Spires

FLESH AND THE DEVIL! w/ Organ Score by Peter Krasinski

Enjoy the 1926 silver-screen-sizzler that established Greta Garbo as a femme fatale- a film intense with emotion – swinging from youthful cheer and love to uninhibited lust, jealousy and wrath with a rousing live soundtrack performed on our historic Estey by award-winning organist Peter Krasinski!

FLESH AND THE DEVIL! w/ Organ Score by Peter Krasinski
FLESH AND THE DEVIL! w/ Organ Score by Peter Krasinski

Time & Location

Jun 15, 2024, 8:00 PM – 10:30 PM

Epsilon Spires, 190 Main St, Brattleboro, VT 05301, USA

About the event

The pre-code blockbuster that established Greta Garbo as an international superstar, FLESH AND THE DEVIL (Dir. Clarence Brown, 1926, 112 mins) is a swooning melodrama full of surprising ironies as two boyhood best friends (John Gilbert and Lars Hanson) get caught in a dangerous love triangle with a mesmerizing femme-fatale. John Gilbert was at the peak of his career when he played the film’s lead, and his electric chemistry with Garbo led to three more movies together as well as a passionate off-screen romance. The sensuality and emotional intensity of their love scenes (more documentary than fiction) helped to make the film a box-office hit with the public. The film’s cinematographer, Oscar-winner William H. Daniels, continued to work with Garbo as her principal lensman throughout the rest of her career.  

"A face as beautiful as Garbo’s—the enormous eyes and deep-set lids, the way love or tenderness or some private, unspoken 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 countenance plunged crowds into the greatest perturbation, where people literally lost themselves in the human image.”- Read more about Greta Garbo in Margaret Talbot's fascinating essay in The New Yorker

PETER EDWIN KRASINSKI is broadly recognized as a motivating consultant for the pipe organ community, and as a conductor, organist, and music educator, whose imaginative and energetic performances elevate and inform diverse audiences. Well respected in both the secular and sacred genres of his field, he has taught the enchantment of music to both public and private institutions in the greater Boston area for many years. His Bach interpretations have been hailed in print as "sublimely spiritual.” and his improvisations have been critically acclaimed in the press as "stunning,” "seamless,” and “brilliant.” His silent film performances have been called “a great marriage of movie and music.” He consistently receives rave reviews about his “compositions in real time.” “Krasinski’s musicianship and command of the organ were matched by his intuition and keen sense of dramatic sensitivity.” “It was remarkable and seamless, and yes—no modern movie could out do it… It was as if Krasinski became one with the elements.” This will be his 2nd time performing on our historic Estey organ after soundtracking Metropolis in October, 2023.

For more about the background of the film, enjoy this exceptional essay by Shari Kizirian for the San Francisco Silent Film Festival-

Reflecting on a career that included 26 years at MGM and six Academy Award nominations, director Clarence Brown summed up the studio system under which he both thrived and bristled: “In those days we didn’t just make movies. We made myths, and they had to be protected and helped.” Hollywood’s most enduring myth was also its most unlikely. A slightly overweight actress with crooked teeth and a stubborn streak, Greta Garbo arrived in the United States in 1925 at age 19, with her own director in tow and a $100-a-week contract at MGM. Less than two years later, she was the studio’s most prized female player, boasting a $5,000-a-week contract–and declining all requests for photo shoots and interviews. The story of how this shy teenager from Sweden conquered Hollywood, then the world, begins with her third American film Flesh and the Devil, for which the MGM mythmakers converged.

Garbo, neé Greta Gustafson, quit school at the age of 13 to care for her sick father. She always considered herself a misfit, dressing in her brother’s clothes as a child and introducing herself as “Gustafson’s youngest boy.” Given to solitude and fantasy, she later said her sole wish growing up “was to creep inside the magic stage door.” She became a clerk at a department store, which featured her in its magazine ads and publicity shorts. Later, while studying under scholarship at the Royal Dramatic Theatre in Stockholm, she caught the eye of director Mauritz Stiller, who saw in her a captivating innocence. He cast her in The Saga of Gösta Berling (1924) and took complete control of her career. She accompanied him to Germany, where she further demonstrated her onscreen pathos in G.W. Pabst’s The Joyless Street (1925).

After signing a contract in Berlin with Louis B. Mayer himself, Garbo arrived in Los Angeles to a bewildered studio who did not know how to use her type-defying, androgynous beauty. Before making her first two pictures–formulaic potboilers about seductresses–Garbo spent her idle hours on the set of Victor Sjöström’s The Scarlet Letter (1926), mingling with compatriots. The time was well-spent, as she learned about camera angles, how correct lighting could enhance emotion–and how star Lillian Gish managed to avoid participating in publicity stunts. In her third MGM picture, she would learn much more from co-star John Gilbert.

A vaudeville orphan, John Gilbert learned about the movies alongside Clarence Brown on the sets of Maurice Tourneur’s films. He co-wrote The Great Redeemer with Brown in 1919, and became Tourneur’s assistant when Brown moved on. The multitalented Gilbert later made his way to MGM, where he starred in a string of popular films. By the time he appeared in King Vidor’s The Big Parade (1925), he was considered the most-known man in America, where stores stocked John Gilbert long-collared shirts with French cuffs, and John Gilbert ties. His pairing with Garbo in Flesh and the Devil was the idea of new MGM production head Irving Thalberg, who banked on his highest paid player to help define an unknown entity.

Neither Garbo nor Gilbert liked their assigned roles in Flesh and the Devil. Garbo feared further typecasting as a vamp, and wanted to hold out for serious roles like she had had in Europe. Gilbert, who was about to inherit the Great Lover mantle following Valentino’s death, was afraid he would never see another well-rounded role like the one he had played in The Big Parade. Yet he was curious about Garbo, and agreed not only to the film but also to equal billing. Garbo was less willing to concede, and requested a better project. MGM saw it differently, and ordered her back to work. After a 48-hour boycott, Garbo acquiesced.

Assigned director Clarence Brown arrived at MGM in 1925. Besides his seven years under Maurice Tourneur, his pedigree included a run of five successful movies at Universal. The chosen cinematographer was William Daniels, a veteran of Erich von Stroheim’s films who had photographed Garbo in her first MGM picture, Torrent. For Flesh and the Devil, which features the very first horizontal love scene and close-up, open-mouth kiss in American movie history, Daniels put heavy gauzes and filters over the lens, to make the illicit lovers shimmer in luminescence. He created Garbo’s signature look, lighting her long eyelashes so they cast a shadow on her face, and, in one scene, he put a pencil-size carbon light in Gilbert’s palm to mimic the effect of a flickering match. Further enhancing the erotic imagery was the fact that the two principal actors were falling in love on the set. So intense were Garbo and Gilbert’s encounters that Brown later admitted he was too embarrassed to call cut during their love scenes – he would just move the crew away until they stopped. When Daniels worked again with Gilbert and Garbo on 1927’s Love, he requested a closed set. “She was so shy,” he recounted later, “so I did it to protect her.”

Mad for the mysterious young actress who barely spoke English, Gilbert did all he could to help her, calling for retakes when he thought Garbo didn’t come off well, and deferring to her on camera angles. The grateful Garbo credited Gilbert with improving her performance. “If he had not come into my life at this time, I should probably have come home to Sweden at once, my American career over.” But she also possessed something innate that was only revealed on film, and director Brown learned early to print takes even if he was initially unhappy with them. “She had something behind the eyes that told the whole story, that I couldn’t see from my distance. On the screen Garbo multiplied the effect of the scene I had taken. It was something she had that nobody else ever had.”

The heat between Garbo and Gilbert also multiplied on screen, and audiences responded with record-breaking ticket sales. Off the set, the Garbo-Gilbert romance blossomed, to the delight of the publicity office. Garbo continued to withhold details of her personal life, and the couple was hounded by paparazzi – which most likely provoked the reclusive lifestyle Garbo clung to for the rest of her life. Yet the mystery only fed the myth, to the irritation of MGM publicity chief Howard Dietz. Years later he would concede that it was “the best publicity notion of the century.”

Gilbert’s assistance extended to advising her on managing her career, and standing up to MGM’s notorious Louis B. Mayer. Gilbert offered her the services of his business manager Harry Edington, who handled her affairs free of charge. Her $400-a-week contract, while unprecedented for a new player, paled in comparison to Gilbert’s $250,000 per picture. With profits from Flesh and the Devil rolling into the studio, Garbo felt emboldened enough to stage a second boycott. It lasted seven months and yielded her the best deal for a female player in the business, including back pay for the months she refused to work.

By the time Gilbert and Garbo were teamed for a second time in Love, Garbo had already rejected several marriage proposals by Gilbert, declaring, “I will die a bachelor.” The two remained friends, however, and appeared opposite each other again in A Woman of Affairs (1928). The film offered a relatively small part to Gilbert, which director Brown suggested be expanded. Always the professional, Gilbert declined: “I’d rather play the part of a butler in a good picture than have every foot in a film that’s a flop.” Any further success for Gilbert was sabotaged by Mayer, who took every opportunity to discredit the expensive and strong-willed star. Gilbert made a few sound films and did fine work, as in 1932’s Downstairs, which he himself wrote. However, the mythmaking machine had already turned his story into one of failure. Garbo remained loyal to Gilbert throughout his declining fortunes, staging another boycott until he was cast opposite her in Queen Christina (1933). Broken-hearted by the business he had helped to create, Gilbert made his last film in 1934, dying two years later at age 38.

Garbo ended her own film career in 1941. After Two-Faced Woman lost money, she released MGM from her lucrative contract and moved to New York City, where she continued to feed the publicity machine by ignoring it. She looked back only once, in 1949, when she agreed to star opposite James Mason in Max Ophuls’s The Duchesse. The skittish financiers of the doomed project demanded a screen test of the 44-year-old actress. William Daniels was hired to film it, along with James Wong Howe. “When the camera started to roll,” recalled Howe, “she started to come to life. You could see her personality come out, her mood change. She became more beautiful.” After several hours in front of the camera, the Divine Miss Garbo made her usual retreat. “Thank you,” she said. “I go back to the beach now.” Returning to Manhattan, she spent her life as “the hermit about town.” Rare glimpses of her would provide fodder for the gossip columns until her death in 1990, at age 85.

Tickets

  • FLESH AND THE DEVIL!

    Admission for one to FLESH AND THE DEVIL! W/ Pipe Organ Soundtrack by Peter Krasinski. Popcorn & refreshments will be provided! Please choose your seating with respect for others and let us know if you require special arrangements. Thank you for your support! Enjoy the program!

    $20.00
  • Sliding-Scale Ticket

    Ticket for one to FLESH AND THE DEVIL w/ live pipe organ score by Peter Krasinski. General admission is $20. Thanks to a generous grant from the Ben and Jerry’s Foundation, subsidized sliding-scale tickets are available for those who self-identify as experiencing financial hardship. In order to make this program accessible for all, we are offering tickets by sliding scale. Taking equity and inclusion into account, please pay what you can to help support the venue.

    $
  • SUPPORT FUTURE EVENTS!

    Would you like to see more programming like FLESH AND THE DEVIL w/ Pipe Organ Soundtrack by Peter Krasinsk? Please add a donation to your ticket to express your support and appreciation of the adventurous and intellectually-engaging programs at Epsilon Spires. Thank you!!! Your support mean so much to us! Admission for one to FLESH AND THE DEVIL! Popcorn is provided, please bring cash for the bar. Please let us know if you require special arrangements. Looking forward to seeing you there!

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