
Friday, September 28, 2007
| 9:00 p.m. | Queen Christina Rouben Mamoulian (U.S., 1933) |
Introduced by Patricia White
Patricia White is associate professor and chair of the Program in Film and Media Studies at Swarthmore College. She is the author of Uninvited: Classical Hollywood Cinema and Lesbian Representability.
In 1933, MGM lured Garbo back from Sweden with $250,000 a picture and the green light for her pet project, Queen Christina. "Delving into historic Swedish castles, tumbling with antiquity and mellow in memories of bygone glory, Greta Garbo in person" researched the film, the Los Angeles Times reported. Like Garbo, the Swedish Queen Christina was infamous as a powerful, cross-dressing, girl-kissing woman. Small wonder that the Hays Office worried that a scene in which Garbo plants a full-mouthed kiss on costar Emma Young would be "construed as lesbianism." John Gilbert plays the Spanish ambassador who, believing in Christina's boyish costume, convinces her to share a bed with him in a secluded country inn. In Queen Christina, Garbo explores the pains and pleasures of crossing between nations, genders, and sexualities, evoking, in her famous gaze beyond the horizon, "nostalgia for places one has never seen."
—Laura Horak
• Written by H. M. Harwood, Salka Viertel, S. N. Behrman, from an original story by Viertel, Margaret P. LeVino. Photographed by William Daniels. With Greta Garbo, John Gilbert, Ian Keith, Lewis Stone. (97 mins, B&W, 35mm, From Warner Bros.)
Preceded by short:
Rowdy Ann (Al Christie, U.S., 1919). Bruce Loeb on Piano. A rough-and-tumble young cowgirl (Fay Tincher) is sent East to become a proper lady. (15 mins, Silent, B&W, From Library of Congress)
• (Total running time: 112 mins)

