All language subtitles for MGM When the lion roars (1992) DVD1

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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:01:01,773 --> 00:01:05,209 Over that rainbow was a land of dreams. 2 00:01:05,377 --> 00:01:06,571 I never went there... 3 00:01:06,745 --> 00:01:10,943 ...except when the rainbow was the turnstile of my local movie theater... 4 00:01:11,116 --> 00:01:13,676 ...and there, in the darkness... 5 00:01:13,852 --> 00:01:18,949 ...the lion's roar would freeze time, suspend reality... 6 00:01:19,124 --> 00:01:24,756 ...and introduce a world of adventure and beauty and romance. 7 00:01:24,930 --> 00:01:26,830 That lion's domain... 8 00:01:26,999 --> 00:01:31,527 ...was the grandest motion-picture studio the world has ever known: 9 00:01:31,703 --> 00:01:34,763 Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 10 00:01:35,107 --> 00:01:37,837 There's magic in the very name. 11 00:01:38,143 --> 00:01:41,579 MGM meant escape, extravagance, glamour. 12 00:01:41,747 --> 00:01:48,277 Garbo, Gable, Crawford, Tracy, Garland. 13 00:01:49,454 --> 00:01:51,388 But there was more. 14 00:01:51,556 --> 00:01:53,251 There was much, much more. 15 00:01:53,425 --> 00:01:58,089 Power struggles, corporate intrigues... 16 00:01:58,563 --> 00:02:01,361 ...shifting alliances, driving ambition. 17 00:02:01,533 --> 00:02:03,967 L.B. Mayer, the founding father. 18 00:02:04,136 --> 00:02:07,230 Irving Thalberg, the boy wonder. 19 00:02:07,572 --> 00:02:11,235 The spectacular rise of an empire... 20 00:02:13,111 --> 00:02:15,136 ...and its lamentable fall. 21 00:02:15,313 --> 00:02:18,282 Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer was a turbulent kingdom with its own rules... 22 00:02:18,450 --> 00:02:20,543 ...its own mythology... 23 00:02:21,353 --> 00:02:23,844 ...but they're all gone now. 24 00:02:24,890 --> 00:02:28,257 all that remain are the memories... 25 00:02:28,427 --> 00:02:31,828 ...dreams, the movies... 26 00:02:31,997 --> 00:02:37,663 ...where the dreams that they dared to dream really did come true. 27 00:02:44,776 --> 00:02:48,177 all we've got is cotton and slaves and arrogance. 28 00:02:48,346 --> 00:02:50,143 Maggie the Cat is alive. 29 00:03:07,065 --> 00:03:08,623 Why don't you ride him, Mi? 30 00:03:09,034 --> 00:03:10,433 Now! 31 00:03:18,944 --> 00:03:20,673 These are my boys. 32 00:03:24,282 --> 00:03:25,806 Jazz hot. 33 00:03:25,984 --> 00:03:27,815 Come on, you... 34 00:03:28,420 --> 00:03:29,887 I'm as mad as hell. 35 00:03:31,857 --> 00:03:34,155 I can't think. I can't do it. 36 00:04:03,455 --> 00:04:05,787 Welcome to Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios. 37 00:04:05,957 --> 00:04:09,484 The date is April 26, 1924... 38 00:04:09,661 --> 00:04:14,655 ...and this morning, a former scrap metal dealer, Louis B. Mayer... 39 00:04:14,833 --> 00:04:17,859 ...and his 24-year-old protégé, Irving Thalberg... 40 00:04:18,036 --> 00:04:24,168 ...ceremoniously opened this shadowland of make-believe. 41 00:04:24,342 --> 00:04:26,207 In doing so... 42 00:04:26,378 --> 00:04:29,939 ...they ushered in a new era in motion-picture history... 43 00:04:30,115 --> 00:04:35,678 ...for today, the movies entered the industrial age. 44 00:05:38,650 --> 00:05:42,984 Moving pictures are the most popular form of entertainment on earth. 45 00:05:43,154 --> 00:05:48,456 The public's appetite for these shimmering silver images... 46 00:05:48,793 --> 00:05:50,021 ...is insatiable. 47 00:05:50,195 --> 00:05:55,030 And the cry for bigger and better movies gets louder. 48 00:05:56,935 --> 00:06:00,462 L.B. Mayer and Irving Thalberg have heard this call. 49 00:06:00,639 --> 00:06:03,733 And together they've set out to create a motion-picture studio... 50 00:06:03,909 --> 00:06:07,936 ...capable of producing and releasing one full-length feature film... 51 00:06:08,113 --> 00:06:09,637 ...each and every week. 52 00:06:10,715 --> 00:06:13,275 Now, that would be an unprecedented feat. 53 00:06:13,451 --> 00:06:17,581 To do it, they would have to revolutionize the entire filmmaking process. 54 00:06:17,756 --> 00:06:23,194 They needed a factory, a dream factory. 55 00:06:26,298 --> 00:06:30,064 They find their factory just outside the town of Hollywood... 56 00:06:30,235 --> 00:06:32,635 ...in Culver City, California. 57 00:06:32,804 --> 00:06:37,400 Some 45 buildings are scattered across 43 acres of land... 58 00:06:37,575 --> 00:06:40,544 ...and connected by 3 miles of paved roads. 59 00:06:40,712 --> 00:06:43,613 The facility has its own police force and fire department... 60 00:06:43,782 --> 00:06:48,082 ...its own hospital, a school house, parks, and even a zoo... 61 00:06:48,253 --> 00:06:52,485 ...but most importantly, Culver City has room to grow. 62 00:06:53,525 --> 00:06:57,017 Mr. Mayer, who is vice president of studio operations... 63 00:06:57,195 --> 00:07:00,096 ...and Mr. Thalberg, who is vice president of production... 64 00:07:00,265 --> 00:07:04,258 ...then set out to populate their dream factory. 65 00:07:04,436 --> 00:07:07,963 The two men hired directors, writers, cameramen, editors... 66 00:07:08,139 --> 00:07:12,974 ...set designers, wardrobe people, prop men, painters and carpenters. 67 00:07:13,144 --> 00:07:16,875 And it isn't long before Louis B. Mayer and Irving Thalberg... 68 00:07:17,048 --> 00:07:21,178 ...have an army of filmmakers under their command. 69 00:07:21,353 --> 00:07:26,313 It was the great film studio of the world. 70 00:07:26,491 --> 00:07:31,554 Not just of America or of Hollywood, but of the world. 71 00:07:34,866 --> 00:07:36,857 The creation of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer... 72 00:07:37,035 --> 00:07:41,631 ...is the brainchild of New York theater magnate Marcus Loew. 73 00:07:41,806 --> 00:07:43,637 A man of wealth and foresight... 74 00:07:43,808 --> 00:07:47,266 ...Mr. Loew orchestrated the merger of Metro Pictures Corporation... 75 00:07:47,445 --> 00:07:50,972 ...The Goldwyn Picture Corporation and Louis B. Mayer Productions... 76 00:07:51,149 --> 00:07:53,049 ...into a single conglomerate. 77 00:07:53,218 --> 00:07:56,016 This new production and distribution operation... 78 00:07:56,187 --> 00:08:00,351 ...would provide Mr. Loew's rapidly expanding chain of first-run movie palaces... 79 00:08:00,525 --> 00:08:03,517 ...with a constant flow of high-quality feature films. 80 00:08:10,235 --> 00:08:16,367 One of MGM's first pieces of business is the creation of a corporate identity. 81 00:08:19,911 --> 00:08:24,348 Marcus Loew and L.B. Mayer want a symbol that evokes both dignity and strength. 82 00:08:24,516 --> 00:08:26,711 Howard Dietz, Loew's New York publicity chief... 83 00:08:26,885 --> 00:08:30,719 ...suggests a roaring lion framed by the former Goldwyn slogan... 84 00:08:30,889 --> 00:08:32,288 ...ars gratia artis. 85 00:08:32,457 --> 00:08:35,153 Art for art's sake. 86 00:08:36,428 --> 00:08:38,919 Leo the Lion will grace the first film conceived... 87 00:08:39,097 --> 00:08:41,930 ...and produced in its entirety at Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer... 88 00:08:42,100 --> 00:08:44,159 ...He Who Gets Slapped. 89 00:08:49,140 --> 00:08:53,600 Irving Thalberg assigns Victor Seastrom to direct this story of a scientist... 90 00:08:53,778 --> 00:08:56,474 ...who has been reduced to the role of a circus clown. 91 00:08:56,648 --> 00:09:00,049 The film contains all the elements of a poetic tragedy: 92 00:09:00,218 --> 00:09:03,881 Irony, unrequited passion, and slow death. 93 00:09:04,055 --> 00:09:07,115 The public loves it and so do the critics. 94 00:09:07,292 --> 00:09:10,489 He Who Gets Slapped is Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer's first hit. 95 00:09:12,897 --> 00:09:15,024 They were good years then, you see. And it was-- 96 00:09:15,200 --> 00:09:17,134 There was a certain beauty involved. 97 00:09:17,302 --> 00:09:21,568 And you hoped you were making something beautiful, meaningful... 98 00:09:21,739 --> 00:09:24,207 ...and that the world might be a little better for it. 99 00:09:24,375 --> 00:09:28,505 Not just entertained, but a little bit better for it. 100 00:09:30,248 --> 00:09:32,773 One of this era's most indomitable characters... 101 00:09:32,951 --> 00:09:38,048 ...is Viennese actor, writer and director, Erich von Stroheim. 102 00:09:38,223 --> 00:09:41,659 Irving Thalberg had first worked with Erich at Universal Pictures... 103 00:09:41,826 --> 00:09:44,522 ...and their relationship had been a tumultuous one. 104 00:09:44,696 --> 00:09:47,460 Mr. von Stroheim was once heard to comment: 105 00:09:47,632 --> 00:09:51,261 "Since when does a boy supervise a genius?" 106 00:09:52,737 --> 00:09:54,864 I first heard of Erich... 107 00:09:55,039 --> 00:09:58,440 ...when I got my first job at Universal in New York. 108 00:09:58,610 --> 00:10:03,547 He was being described as a tyrant and generally unmanageable... 109 00:10:03,715 --> 00:10:08,743 ...and Thalberg always found that the pictures went way over every budget... 110 00:10:08,920 --> 00:10:11,946 ...sometimes ready to break the company. 111 00:10:12,123 --> 00:10:16,059 By the time Thalberg went to MGM... 112 00:10:16,227 --> 00:10:19,287 ...Mr. von Stroheim was making a picture called Greed... 113 00:10:19,464 --> 00:10:23,298 ...which had been begun under the reign of Samuel Goldwyn. 114 00:10:23,468 --> 00:10:25,129 And he was involved in that... 115 00:10:25,303 --> 00:10:28,500 ...when Mayer and Thalberg were brought into MGM. 116 00:10:28,940 --> 00:10:32,205 And Mr. Thalberg was very upset. 117 00:10:32,377 --> 00:10:35,574 Actually, Thalberg said, "I don't want any part of this. 118 00:10:35,747 --> 00:10:38,511 I don't wanna get involved again with Erich von Stroheim." 119 00:10:38,683 --> 00:10:40,514 Don't forget Irving had a weak heart... 120 00:10:40,685 --> 00:10:43,916 ...and he wasn't gonna do that through his own detriment. 121 00:10:54,432 --> 00:10:59,392 Greed is based on Frank Norris' best selling book, McTeague... 122 00:10:59,571 --> 00:11:04,941 ...and Mr. von Stroheim was determined to film each and every page of the novel... 123 00:11:05,109 --> 00:11:07,873 ...from cover to cover. 124 00:11:26,965 --> 00:11:31,334 One of the oddities about it is that von Stroheim was shooting the book. 125 00:11:31,502 --> 00:11:35,404 He began on Page 1 and went right through the book. 126 00:11:35,573 --> 00:11:36,938 As a consequence... 127 00:11:37,108 --> 00:11:40,407 ...they had about 25 reels, maybe more, of film... 128 00:11:40,578 --> 00:11:42,239 ...and they were still shooting. 129 00:11:42,413 --> 00:11:46,782 And that was a terrific problem for a studio. 130 00:11:46,951 --> 00:11:50,580 So Greed, which-- 131 00:11:50,755 --> 00:11:53,223 When it was finally finished... 132 00:11:53,391 --> 00:11:56,588 ...ran about some 70 reels or something like that. 133 00:11:56,761 --> 00:11:58,353 I've never known the exact amount. 134 00:11:58,529 --> 00:12:01,896 I've run into people who said they saw it in its entirety... 135 00:12:02,066 --> 00:12:05,593 ...took two or three days, and they thought it was fabulous... 136 00:12:05,770 --> 00:12:10,673 ...but Mayer and Thalberg elected to cut it down to about 12 reels. 137 00:12:10,842 --> 00:12:14,676 That means that an enormous amount of film was shelved and thrown away. 138 00:12:39,437 --> 00:12:42,406 I think it was generally mauled by the critics. 139 00:12:43,007 --> 00:12:45,271 The picture simply never caught on... 140 00:12:45,443 --> 00:12:47,968 ...the way that von Stroheim thought it was gonna be... 141 00:12:48,146 --> 00:12:50,580 ...the epic of all epics. 142 00:12:50,748 --> 00:12:54,149 In the end, if you look at Erich von Stroheim's history... 143 00:12:54,319 --> 00:12:58,187 ...he finally wound up very discouraged because they would no longer hire him... 144 00:12:58,356 --> 00:12:59,380 ...as a director. 145 00:12:59,557 --> 00:13:01,422 If he were around in our day... 146 00:13:01,592 --> 00:13:04,584 ...he might well be one of the greatest directors we ever knew... 147 00:13:04,762 --> 00:13:08,493 ...because his mind was directed toward doing things... 148 00:13:08,666 --> 00:13:12,227 ...that were forbidden. 149 00:13:14,539 --> 00:13:17,531 When Mr. Mayer and Mr. Thalberg assumed control of MGM... 150 00:13:17,709 --> 00:13:20,542 ...they inherited two films already in production. 151 00:13:20,712 --> 00:13:22,873 One was Erich von Stroheim's Greed... 152 00:13:23,047 --> 00:13:27,814 ...the other will become the most expensive motion picture ever undertaken to date. 153 00:13:27,985 --> 00:13:30,146 Launched in Rome in 1923... 154 00:13:30,321 --> 00:13:34,485 ...the picture reportedly features over 150,000 extras. 155 00:13:34,659 --> 00:13:38,117 Its name, Ben-Hur. 156 00:13:42,367 --> 00:13:44,096 Three years in the making. 157 00:13:44,268 --> 00:13:46,395 Many of this spectacle's elaborate sequences... 158 00:13:46,571 --> 00:13:49,005 ...had been shot in an experimental process... 159 00:13:49,173 --> 00:13:52,165 ...known as two-color Technicolor. 160 00:14:03,054 --> 00:14:07,150 The film was started under a different management. 161 00:14:07,325 --> 00:14:09,486 June Mathis wrote the script... 162 00:14:09,660 --> 00:14:14,188 ...and George Walsh was the leading man. 163 00:14:14,365 --> 00:14:20,929 And Mayer and Thalberg came in after the picture was started. 164 00:14:21,305 --> 00:14:24,934 They were unhappy with the direction of it. 165 00:14:25,109 --> 00:14:28,510 They had the script rewritten by Carey Wilson... 166 00:14:28,679 --> 00:14:31,773 ...and they replaced George Walsh. 167 00:14:31,949 --> 00:14:33,917 Despite the changes in cast and crew... 168 00:14:34,085 --> 00:14:36,883 ...filming continues at an agonizingly slow pace... 169 00:14:37,054 --> 00:14:40,080 ...and Mr. Mayer decides to go to Italy to see for himself... 170 00:14:40,258 --> 00:14:42,158 ...what is causing the delays. 171 00:14:54,238 --> 00:14:55,762 When Mr. Mayer arrives in Rome... 172 00:14:55,940 --> 00:14:59,034 ...he finds a production that is desperately floundering. 173 00:14:59,210 --> 00:15:01,474 Fred Niblo, the picture's replacement director... 174 00:15:01,646 --> 00:15:07,642 ...along with his new star, Ramon Novarro, are re-shooting the epic sea battle. 175 00:15:10,655 --> 00:15:13,556 The script calls for one of the 14 full-sized galleys... 176 00:15:13,724 --> 00:15:15,555 ...to catch fire and burn. 177 00:15:15,726 --> 00:15:20,163 As the vessel's oil drums are lit, all hell breaks loose. 178 00:15:20,331 --> 00:15:24,768 An unexpected draft fans the fires and the ship is engulfed in flames. 179 00:15:25,570 --> 00:15:30,132 The terrified extras, many of whom can't swim, dive into the sea. 180 00:15:30,308 --> 00:15:34,267 Fortunately, no lives are lost. 181 00:15:35,246 --> 00:15:37,077 But Mr. Mayer has seen enough. 182 00:15:37,248 --> 00:15:42,117 With more than $2 million already spent, and the picture nowhere near completion... 183 00:15:42,286 --> 00:15:45,983 ...he demands this debacle must be brought home... 184 00:15:46,157 --> 00:15:50,025 ...to the safety and control of Culver City, and so it is. 185 00:15:50,828 --> 00:15:53,763 There, under the close supervision of Irving Thalberg... 186 00:15:53,931 --> 00:15:57,890 ...the battle sequence is completed and preparations begin... 187 00:15:58,069 --> 00:16:01,561 ...for the filming of the climactic chariot race. 188 00:16:02,006 --> 00:16:06,875 I was the production manager of the studio then. 189 00:16:07,044 --> 00:16:10,673 Thalberg thought we were short of people... 190 00:16:11,482 --> 00:16:15,043 ...and I disagreed with that. 191 00:16:15,219 --> 00:16:16,846 We were short of lunches... 192 00:16:17,021 --> 00:16:19,489 ...and when you're waiting, a minute seemed like five. 193 00:16:20,525 --> 00:16:22,015 Fred Niblo, the director, said: 194 00:16:22,193 --> 00:16:25,162 "We're gonna have a riot if the people aren't fed." 195 00:16:25,329 --> 00:16:28,093 I said, "Then they'll look as if they're cheering the races. 196 00:16:28,266 --> 00:16:29,631 Bring the horses out." 197 00:16:30,701 --> 00:16:34,967 October 5th, 1925, Saturday morning, 11:00. 198 00:16:35,139 --> 00:16:38,233 Hollywood goes to the races. 199 00:16:43,114 --> 00:16:47,448 In the stands of Circus Maximus sit 3500 extras... 200 00:16:47,618 --> 00:16:51,281 ...who have each been paid $3.50, plus lunch... 201 00:16:51,455 --> 00:16:54,356 ...to cheer Ben-Hur to victory. 202 00:17:04,735 --> 00:17:06,635 Scattered throughout the massive set... 203 00:17:06,804 --> 00:17:10,535 ...a legion of 42 cameramen crank for all they're worth. 204 00:17:10,708 --> 00:17:14,838 On the track, Francis X. Bushman and Ramon Novarro race their chariots... 205 00:17:15,012 --> 00:17:18,413 ...in fierce competition with 10 of Hollywood's best stuntmen. 206 00:17:37,335 --> 00:17:40,133 By the time the studio finished shooting this chariot race... 207 00:17:40,304 --> 00:17:43,398 ...35 hours of film had been exposed. 208 00:17:43,574 --> 00:17:46,771 And MGM's head of production, Irving Thalberg, exhausted... 209 00:17:46,944 --> 00:17:48,536 ...collapsed with a heart attack. 210 00:17:48,713 --> 00:17:50,738 Despite the seriousness of his condition... 211 00:17:50,915 --> 00:17:53,577 ...no one could keep the 26-year-old producer in bed. 212 00:17:53,751 --> 00:17:55,412 He ignored doctor's warnings... 213 00:17:55,586 --> 00:17:59,386 ...and was back at work in time for last night's triumphant premiere... 214 00:17:59,557 --> 00:18:01,024 ...of Ben-Hur. 215 00:18:01,192 --> 00:18:04,320 Five weeks earlier, the studio had released another film... 216 00:18:04,495 --> 00:18:07,794 ...that brought particular satisfaction to Mr. Thalberg. 217 00:18:07,965 --> 00:18:11,230 It cost one-tenth the amount of Ben-Hur. 218 00:18:11,402 --> 00:18:16,840 It would become the most acclaimed and profitable silent film in MGM's history. 219 00:18:17,008 --> 00:18:19,670 Its director, a Hollywood pioneer, King Vidor. 220 00:18:19,844 --> 00:18:22,278 The motion picture, The Big Parade. 221 00:18:31,122 --> 00:18:33,147 King Vidor once observed: 222 00:18:33,324 --> 00:18:36,589 "Irving Thalberg knows instinctively when someone submits a good idea." 223 00:18:38,562 --> 00:18:39,756 When Mr. Vidor suggests... 224 00:18:39,930 --> 00:18:43,229 ...making a motion picture depicting the horrors of World War I... 225 00:18:43,401 --> 00:18:45,892 ...and their effect on an ordinary American soldier... 226 00:18:46,070 --> 00:18:48,971 ...Mr. Thalberg doesn't try to change his mind. 227 00:18:49,473 --> 00:18:52,442 Irving hires playwright and war veteran, Laurence Stallings... 228 00:18:52,610 --> 00:18:55,044 ...to create a realistic screenplay. 229 00:18:55,212 --> 00:19:00,013 And then casts matinee idol John Gilbert as the ordinary American doughboy. 230 00:19:00,184 --> 00:19:01,708 Two weeks into the shoot... 231 00:19:01,886 --> 00:19:06,585 ...word spreads throughout the studio that something special is taking place. 232 00:19:07,558 --> 00:19:09,890 You see my idea on The Big Parade... 233 00:19:10,061 --> 00:19:14,430 ...was have this soldier walk through, observe everything that happened. 234 00:19:14,598 --> 00:19:15,758 He didn't cause anything. 235 00:19:15,933 --> 00:19:20,768 Up until then, all pictures said generals had caused the war and colonels... 236 00:19:20,938 --> 00:19:22,405 ...but he didn't cause anything. 237 00:19:22,573 --> 00:19:24,837 He just observed the whole picture. 238 00:19:30,281 --> 00:19:33,682 And I got to experimenting with music. 239 00:19:33,851 --> 00:19:39,084 The association of the right theme and the right tempo with a film... 240 00:19:39,256 --> 00:19:40,484 ...is so important. 241 00:19:40,658 --> 00:19:45,391 That particular walk through the woods in The Big Parade was done... 242 00:19:45,563 --> 00:19:48,054 ...so that every move would be on the beat. 243 00:19:48,232 --> 00:19:50,792 Now, actually, I got that idea... 244 00:19:50,968 --> 00:19:54,597 ...from watching the tempo of a funeral march... 245 00:19:54,772 --> 00:19:57,240 ...in some Signal Corps film. 246 00:19:57,408 --> 00:20:03,210 If we used this tempo as they approached the front lines... 247 00:20:03,380 --> 00:20:05,780 ...it would give the feeling of death. 248 00:20:05,950 --> 00:20:09,579 And I got it to the point of using a metronome. 249 00:20:10,020 --> 00:20:14,423 We didn't have portable loudspeakers, so we used a bass drum... 250 00:20:14,592 --> 00:20:18,619 ...to let the metronome beat be heard all over the woods... 251 00:20:18,796 --> 00:20:22,095 ...and it meant that you picked up the gun on the beat... 252 00:20:22,266 --> 00:20:24,359 ...and pulled the trigger on the beat. 253 00:20:24,535 --> 00:20:26,662 And put your hand to your wound on the beat... 254 00:20:26,837 --> 00:20:33,003 ...and fell on the beat and everything right in tempo. 255 00:20:35,012 --> 00:20:39,210 And therefore, it would look like death... 256 00:20:39,383 --> 00:20:43,217 ...before they got to the actual front line trenches. 257 00:20:43,888 --> 00:20:48,257 The Big Parade makes King Vidor MGM's most prestigious director. 258 00:20:48,425 --> 00:20:51,861 And John Gilbert, the studio's biggest star. 259 00:20:52,029 --> 00:20:54,520 Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer is now a household name. 260 00:20:54,698 --> 00:20:56,097 And in 1926... 261 00:20:56,267 --> 00:20:59,532 ...it is the most profitable company in Hollywood. 262 00:21:01,005 --> 00:21:07,308 In the dusty fields of Culver City, California, an empire is rising. 263 00:21:15,920 --> 00:21:20,016 One could almost mistake these two for father and son. 264 00:21:21,392 --> 00:21:23,792 Such a curious alliance. 265 00:21:23,961 --> 00:21:27,556 Irving was a sickly youth with a weak heart. 266 00:21:27,731 --> 00:21:28,755 An avid reader... 267 00:21:28,933 --> 00:21:32,630 ...he was raised by a protective mother in a middle-class Brooklyn neighborhood. 268 00:21:32,803 --> 00:21:37,467 If he had followed his doctor's orders, he would have spent his entire life in bed. 269 00:21:37,641 --> 00:21:40,439 Louis, on the other hand, was built like an ox. 270 00:21:40,611 --> 00:21:42,704 The son of an immigrant, uneducated junkman... 271 00:21:42,880 --> 00:21:47,908 ...he'd muscle his way into his father's scrap metal business by the age of 12. 272 00:21:48,085 --> 00:21:50,019 On the day that Irving was born... 273 00:21:50,187 --> 00:21:52,712 ...Louis was probably wearing a brass diving helmet... 274 00:21:52,890 --> 00:21:56,485 ...surveying a sunken wreck on the bottom of Boston Harbor. 275 00:21:57,695 --> 00:22:00,425 Following the failure of his father's junk business... 276 00:22:00,598 --> 00:22:03,965 ...L.B. took a job selling tickets in a local movie theater. 277 00:22:04,134 --> 00:22:06,125 Years later, he would say: 278 00:22:06,303 --> 00:22:09,363 "I realized then that movies are the only thing you can sell... 279 00:22:09,540 --> 00:22:11,371 ...and still own." 280 00:22:11,542 --> 00:22:14,010 After borrowing enough money to buy his own theater... 281 00:22:14,178 --> 00:22:17,511 ...he soon discovered the only way to acquire quality motion pictures... 282 00:22:17,681 --> 00:22:19,478 ...was to produce them himself. 283 00:22:19,650 --> 00:22:22,016 He was a hell of a man. 284 00:22:22,186 --> 00:22:24,154 He dealt in the large pictures. 285 00:22:24,321 --> 00:22:28,018 He was a man, I think, who had a vision. 286 00:22:28,192 --> 00:22:30,786 He didn't think small. 287 00:22:31,996 --> 00:22:34,226 And one day he said to me: 288 00:22:34,398 --> 00:22:36,764 "Joe, never be-- 289 00:22:36,934 --> 00:22:41,030 Worry about hiring a man smarter than you are. 290 00:22:41,205 --> 00:22:43,264 You'll only learn from him." 291 00:22:44,708 --> 00:22:46,039 Back in 1923... 292 00:22:46,210 --> 00:22:49,338 ...L.B. Mayer made one of his most fortuitous decisions. 293 00:22:49,513 --> 00:22:53,609 He hired young production executive Irving Thalberg. 294 00:22:53,784 --> 00:22:55,843 Thalberg was a young man... 295 00:22:56,020 --> 00:22:59,751 ...and not terribly prepossessing when you looked at him. 296 00:22:59,924 --> 00:23:03,325 Physically, he was extremely thin. 297 00:23:04,128 --> 00:23:09,930 He got into the movie business first because of Carl Laemmle, Sr... 298 00:23:10,100 --> 00:23:12,193 ...who was the head of Universal Pictures. 299 00:23:12,369 --> 00:23:15,532 Mr. Laemmle, nearly everyone in the industry... 300 00:23:15,706 --> 00:23:18,197 ...owes at least part of their stock to you. 301 00:23:18,375 --> 00:23:20,070 I owe all of mine. 302 00:23:20,244 --> 00:23:22,576 - We all thank you. - Thank you very much. 303 00:23:22,746 --> 00:23:26,978 Marcus Loew saw him constantly in the shadow of Louis B. Mayer... 304 00:23:27,151 --> 00:23:32,589 ...as they negotiated for Mayer to run the Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Corporation. 305 00:23:33,257 --> 00:23:35,282 And one day, Marcus Loew said: 306 00:23:35,459 --> 00:23:38,724 "Who's that little boy that follows you around?" 307 00:23:38,896 --> 00:23:41,160 And Louis B. Mayer said, "That's Irving Thalberg. 308 00:23:41,332 --> 00:23:43,732 He's gonna run the company... 309 00:23:43,901 --> 00:23:46,699 ...and you're gonna pay him a thousand dollars a week." 310 00:23:47,504 --> 00:23:53,204 BOOTH: When he first walked on the lot, I thought, "What a lovely young boy." 311 00:23:53,377 --> 00:23:56,244 He was very nice, a very shy young man. 312 00:23:56,413 --> 00:24:00,008 I used to have dinner with him at nights. 313 00:24:00,184 --> 00:24:03,153 If we were gonna run a picture or something. 314 00:24:03,320 --> 00:24:06,118 I'd have dinner with him, just he and I alone... 315 00:24:06,290 --> 00:24:07,917 ...and we hardly talked. 316 00:24:08,092 --> 00:24:09,525 He was very shy. 317 00:24:10,427 --> 00:24:12,918 He was beautiful to look at. 318 00:24:13,097 --> 00:24:15,895 He was the boy wonder, as he was called... 319 00:24:16,066 --> 00:24:20,469 ...because he was so young and seemed so fragile. 320 00:24:20,637 --> 00:24:22,969 Irving was responsible for all productions... 321 00:24:23,140 --> 00:24:26,473 ...and Irving loved having all that responsibility. 322 00:24:26,643 --> 00:24:31,979 It was too much, but he wanted it and he was given it... 323 00:24:33,517 --> 00:24:35,041 ...and it worked. 324 00:24:35,219 --> 00:24:36,982 It worked for a long, long time. 325 00:24:41,558 --> 00:24:43,685 The only way that Mr. Mayer and Mr. Thalberg... 326 00:24:43,861 --> 00:24:46,523 ...can complete their quota of 52 pictures a year... 327 00:24:46,697 --> 00:24:49,427 ...is by nurturing a stable of stars. 328 00:24:49,600 --> 00:24:52,194 Competing with John Gilbert and Ramon Novarro... 329 00:24:52,369 --> 00:24:58,035 ...for the public's attention is MGM's bouquet of fair maidens. 330 00:25:09,086 --> 00:25:10,849 The brightest flower in the bunch... 331 00:25:11,021 --> 00:25:14,218 ...is an ambitious young actress named Norma Shearer. 332 00:25:14,391 --> 00:25:17,690 Irving first noticed Norma during his tenure at Universal. 333 00:25:17,861 --> 00:25:22,389 When he moved to Metro, he signed her to a five-year contract. 334 00:25:22,566 --> 00:25:24,830 When Norma first met him... 335 00:25:25,002 --> 00:25:27,937 ...she thought she was talking to an office boy. 336 00:25:28,105 --> 00:25:31,597 She asked if he could show her the way to Irving Thalberg's office. 337 00:25:31,775 --> 00:25:33,640 So he said, "Yes, I'll take you there." 338 00:25:33,811 --> 00:25:37,440 And he walked along with her, and when he got there... 339 00:25:37,614 --> 00:25:40,742 ...he opened the door to the private office, sat behind the desk... 340 00:25:40,918 --> 00:25:43,079 ...and he said, "I am Irving Thalberg." 341 00:25:43,921 --> 00:25:48,790 Now, Irving was a bachelor, of course, and Norma was unmarried. 342 00:25:48,959 --> 00:25:53,453 And I think Norma got the first idea that she wanted to marry him. 343 00:25:54,531 --> 00:25:57,091 Although Irving keeps a close watch on Norma's career... 344 00:25:57,267 --> 00:25:59,929 ...in his mind, the relationship is strictly professional. 345 00:26:00,104 --> 00:26:02,163 Norma has a different opinion. 346 00:26:02,339 --> 00:26:05,570 She makes no secret of her intentions and tells her friends: 347 00:26:05,742 --> 00:26:07,266 "I'm out to get him." 348 00:26:07,444 --> 00:26:10,971 On September 29, 1927, she does. 349 00:26:11,148 --> 00:26:12,513 At 4:30 in the afternoon... 350 00:26:12,683 --> 00:26:16,278 ...in a simple ceremony attended by family and a few close friends... 351 00:26:16,453 --> 00:26:19,980 ...Irving Thalberg and Norma Shearer are married. 352 00:26:20,157 --> 00:26:25,390 MGM's wunderkind is 27, his bride, 23. 353 00:26:25,562 --> 00:26:30,966 He really loved her as a movie actress, as a star that he could mold. 354 00:26:31,135 --> 00:26:33,467 He was like a sculptor or a painter. 355 00:26:33,637 --> 00:26:36,037 He was an artist, that's what he was. 356 00:26:36,607 --> 00:26:39,132 She laid out his clothes in the evening... 357 00:26:39,309 --> 00:26:42,676 ...if they were going out to some black-tie event. 358 00:26:42,846 --> 00:26:45,713 She really worshipped him and she coddled him... 359 00:26:45,883 --> 00:26:49,046 ...but he was the head of the whole ménage. 360 00:26:51,088 --> 00:26:54,615 Of all the movie stars that pass through the gates of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer... 361 00:26:54,791 --> 00:26:59,353 ...there is no one more enigmatic than Greta Garbo. 362 00:27:02,866 --> 00:27:04,197 We're not allowed in there. 363 00:27:04,368 --> 00:27:09,237 No one ever is, except maybe John Gilbert. 364 00:27:09,406 --> 00:27:12,773 There are many conflicting stories as to how Greta Gustafsson... 365 00:27:12,943 --> 00:27:16,037 ...found her way to these hallowed halls. 366 00:27:16,213 --> 00:27:19,341 What we know for sure is that Mr. Mayer encountered her in Berlin... 367 00:27:19,516 --> 00:27:22,485 ...when she showed up at a meeting he was having with her mentor... 368 00:27:22,653 --> 00:27:24,712 ...Swedish director, Mauritz Stiller. 369 00:27:24,888 --> 00:27:27,049 Stiller wanted to work in Hollywood... 370 00:27:27,224 --> 00:27:30,853 ...and Miss Gustafsson wanted to go with him. 371 00:27:31,028 --> 00:27:33,588 Mr. Mayer signed them both to studio contracts... 372 00:27:33,764 --> 00:27:36,130 ...at bargain basement prices. 373 00:27:36,300 --> 00:27:41,863 Legend has it, before sailing for home, L.B. told the struggling young actress: 374 00:27:42,039 --> 00:27:44,599 "Americans don't like their women fat. 375 00:27:44,775 --> 00:27:47,608 And get your teeth fixed." 376 00:27:48,545 --> 00:27:51,605 To say that Greta Garbo's arrival at MGM was a welcome event... 377 00:27:51,782 --> 00:27:53,409 ...would be an overstatement. 378 00:27:53,584 --> 00:27:56,519 The New York office didn't understand what Mr. Mayer had seen... 379 00:27:56,687 --> 00:28:00,646 ...in this awkward-looking peasant girl who can barely speak English. 380 00:28:00,824 --> 00:28:03,384 The publicity department was also bewildered. 381 00:28:03,560 --> 00:28:05,824 They attempted to fabricate an athletic persona... 382 00:28:05,996 --> 00:28:10,695 ...by photographing her with University of Southern California's track and field team. 383 00:28:10,867 --> 00:28:12,596 Mr. Thalberg was equally perplexed... 384 00:28:12,769 --> 00:28:17,103 ...and after a considerable search, finally found a film to put her in. 385 00:28:17,274 --> 00:28:19,367 The Torrent is a standard melodrama... 386 00:28:19,543 --> 00:28:23,809 ...starring a second-string matinee idol named Ricardo Cortez. 387 00:28:23,981 --> 00:28:25,710 When the picture was completed... 388 00:28:25,882 --> 00:28:29,443 ...it became obvious which one was the real star. 389 00:28:29,620 --> 00:28:31,918 It's something she had that nobody else ever had. 390 00:28:32,956 --> 00:28:34,947 She did everything that was wanted of her... 391 00:28:35,125 --> 00:28:38,492 ...and then she had something else behind all that that she gave to us... 392 00:28:38,662 --> 00:28:40,926 ...that we didn't know what it was. 393 00:28:41,365 --> 00:28:45,028 There was something behind the eye that told the whole story. 394 00:28:45,936 --> 00:28:49,394 She could be looking in this direction, in a close-up... 395 00:28:49,573 --> 00:28:53,009 ...at somebody whom she despised and you could see it in her eyes... 396 00:28:53,176 --> 00:28:57,044 ...and she could turn across the camera without a change of expression... 397 00:28:57,214 --> 00:28:58,306 ...but it was there. 398 00:28:58,482 --> 00:29:03,784 Nobody ever had that, in my knowledge, on the screen but Garbo. 399 00:29:09,326 --> 00:29:13,262 Clarence is the first person who saw on the set... 400 00:29:13,430 --> 00:29:17,526 ...the huge emotional outburst of love... 401 00:29:17,701 --> 00:29:20,727 ...between Greta Garbo and John Gilbert. 402 00:29:20,904 --> 00:29:24,101 So much so that when they were doing an emotional romantic scene... 403 00:29:24,274 --> 00:29:26,606 ...and he called cut, they didn't cut. 404 00:29:26,777 --> 00:29:29,644 He went to Louis B. Mayer about that and said: 405 00:29:29,813 --> 00:29:32,077 "I think we've got the greatest romantic couple... 406 00:29:32,249 --> 00:29:34,410 ...that have ever appeared in films." 407 00:29:34,785 --> 00:29:35,809 And he said: 408 00:29:35,986 --> 00:29:37,510 "I think you ought to know... 409 00:29:37,688 --> 00:29:41,089 ...that this is more than just a celluloid romance. 410 00:29:41,258 --> 00:29:42,555 This is the real thing. 411 00:29:42,726 --> 00:29:44,990 They are crazy about each other." 412 00:29:48,799 --> 00:29:52,326 Flesh and the Devil radiates a smoldering sensuality... 413 00:29:52,502 --> 00:29:55,960 ...and audiences the world over are mesmerized by the torrid love scenes... 414 00:29:56,139 --> 00:29:59,438 ...between Greta Garbo and John Gilbert. 415 00:30:06,750 --> 00:30:09,378 When John hears that his good friend King Vidor... 416 00:30:09,553 --> 00:30:12,317 ...and young actress Eleanor Boardman are getting married... 417 00:30:12,489 --> 00:30:15,322 ...he decides to turn the occasion into a double ceremony... 418 00:30:15,492 --> 00:30:16,925 ...and marry Greta Garbo. 419 00:30:17,094 --> 00:30:19,528 Unfortunately, Miss Garbo doesn't show up... 420 00:30:20,230 --> 00:30:25,497 ...and this puts an end to one of Hollywood's all-time great romances. 421 00:30:27,204 --> 00:30:29,468 Jack Gilbert and Greta Garbo... 422 00:30:30,907 --> 00:30:34,434 ...were having a very torrid liaison... 423 00:30:34,611 --> 00:30:39,913 ...and they would be married at the same time, a double ceremony. 424 00:30:40,751 --> 00:30:44,881 I remember Louis B. Mayer was there and Irving Thalberg. 425 00:30:46,790 --> 00:30:49,418 I was upstairs with a little champagne. 426 00:30:49,593 --> 00:30:52,585 People were downstairs, the music was playing... 427 00:30:52,763 --> 00:30:56,631 ...Garbo hadn't shown up and Gilbert was getting very nervous. 428 00:30:56,800 --> 00:30:58,597 He was getting rather violent. 429 00:30:58,769 --> 00:31:03,069 It seems that Mayer was in the men's room with Gilbert... 430 00:31:03,240 --> 00:31:06,437 ...and Gilbert was crying about this thing. 431 00:31:06,610 --> 00:31:10,273 He was very nervous, and Mayer said, "Sleep with her, don't marry her." 432 00:31:10,881 --> 00:31:12,815 Gilbert socked him and knocked him down. 433 00:31:12,983 --> 00:31:15,349 He hit his head on the tile. 434 00:31:15,519 --> 00:31:19,455 That was really the beginning of the end of Gilbert's career. 435 00:31:19,623 --> 00:31:21,523 From then on, they were violent enemies... 436 00:31:21,691 --> 00:31:25,388 ...and Mayer did everything he could to ruin Jack. 437 00:31:44,314 --> 00:31:47,306 This morning, September the 5th, 1927... 438 00:31:47,484 --> 00:31:53,548 ...Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer's founding father, Marcus Loew, died in his sleep. 439 00:31:53,723 --> 00:31:56,487 The first of the great movie magnates to pass away. 440 00:31:56,660 --> 00:32:01,154 He's respected throughout the industry for his honesty and simplicity. 441 00:32:01,331 --> 00:32:06,894 Mayer and Thalberg are stunned by the loss of their champion and mentor. 442 00:32:07,070 --> 00:32:11,473 Shortly after the funeral, Marcus Loew's trusted adviser, Nicholas Schenck... 443 00:32:11,641 --> 00:32:16,101 ...assumes control of the MGM parent company, Loew's Incorporated. 444 00:32:16,279 --> 00:32:20,477 The new president is a devious master of the corporate boardroom. 445 00:32:20,650 --> 00:32:24,746 When rival studio kingpin William Fox attempts to take over Loew's... 446 00:32:24,921 --> 00:32:29,654 ...and with it MGM, it is with the complicity of Nick Schenck. 447 00:32:29,993 --> 00:32:31,688 Through connections in Washington... 448 00:32:31,862 --> 00:32:35,161 ...L.B. Mayer thwarts the takeover and saves the studio. 449 00:32:35,332 --> 00:32:39,063 The wounds inflicted by this conflict will never fully heal. 450 00:32:39,236 --> 00:32:42,330 And years later, they will fatally rupture. 451 00:32:42,506 --> 00:32:47,705 Mr. Mayer is now often heard referring to his New York boss as Mr. Skunk. 452 00:32:49,246 --> 00:32:53,979 The death of Marcus Loew foreshadowed the passing of an era. 453 00:32:54,384 --> 00:32:58,343 It is 1927. Sound is coming. 454 00:32:58,522 --> 00:33:03,482 Many of these silent stars will soon fade from the screen. 455 00:33:03,660 --> 00:33:09,792 Renée Adorée, William Haines, Mae Murray, Lew Cody. 456 00:33:09,966 --> 00:33:13,026 all names that sadly will soon be forgotten. 457 00:33:13,203 --> 00:33:18,539 Fortunately, a few strike indelible impressions. 458 00:33:18,708 --> 00:33:20,835 Lon Chaney is one of these. 459 00:33:21,011 --> 00:33:24,208 A master of disguise and a genius in the art of make-up. 460 00:33:24,381 --> 00:33:28,317 He is "The Man of a Thousand Faces." 461 00:33:39,229 --> 00:33:42,130 Listen, children. Children. 462 00:34:43,326 --> 00:34:46,318 Lon Chaney had been a great star in the silent days. 463 00:34:46,496 --> 00:34:50,762 He played those roles primarily with a director named Tod Browning. 464 00:34:52,002 --> 00:34:55,233 Tod Browning was a master at making pictures... 465 00:34:55,405 --> 00:34:57,168 ...that were off the ordinary beat. 466 00:34:57,807 --> 00:35:00,275 Chaney was a rather inarticulate man. 467 00:35:00,443 --> 00:35:03,640 I think he came from parents who were deaf and dumb. 468 00:35:03,813 --> 00:35:05,144 He was not a cripple... 469 00:35:05,315 --> 00:35:09,217 ...but he could pretend to be one of the greatest cripples you ever saw. 470 00:35:23,366 --> 00:35:28,633 Lillian Gish has been one of the great stars of the silent screen since the early 1900s. 471 00:35:28,805 --> 00:35:34,505 In 1925, L.B. Mayer proudly announces that she is joining MGM's family. 472 00:35:34,678 --> 00:35:38,375 During her brief stay at Culver City, Miss Gish will place before the cameras... 473 00:35:38,548 --> 00:35:41,711 ...such classics as The Scarlet Letter, The Wind... 474 00:35:41,885 --> 00:35:45,150 ...and her studio debut, La Bohème. 475 00:35:45,588 --> 00:35:48,489 To entice her to sign a multi-picture contract... 476 00:35:48,658 --> 00:35:52,025 ...Irving Thalberg grants her unprecedented artistic control. 477 00:35:52,195 --> 00:35:57,428 For La Bohème, she selects her co-star, John Gilbert, and her director, King Vidor... 478 00:35:57,934 --> 00:36:03,839 ...then insists they film the tragic love story without ever showing the lovers kiss. 479 00:36:04,007 --> 00:36:08,740 I thought it was a story of passion way beyond love scenes... 480 00:36:08,912 --> 00:36:10,937 ...life and death, really. 481 00:36:11,114 --> 00:36:13,742 And I suggested we do it... 482 00:36:13,950 --> 00:36:18,580 ...suggesting everything beyond a kiss and a hug. 483 00:36:18,755 --> 00:36:21,986 When they saw it, they said it's a love story without any lovemaking. 484 00:36:22,158 --> 00:36:26,618 So we had to go back and spend a day kissing and hugging John Gilbert. 485 00:36:39,743 --> 00:36:42,610 VIDOR: She wanted to know about two or three days ahead... 486 00:36:42,779 --> 00:36:47,409 ...when we were gonna shoot the death scene of Mimi in La Bohème. 487 00:36:47,584 --> 00:36:52,078 And she wanted to prepare to look dead or dying. 488 00:36:52,255 --> 00:36:57,454 And she wanted to not eat and got her mouth dry... 489 00:36:57,627 --> 00:37:02,360 ...so her lips would leave her gums and teeth. 490 00:37:02,532 --> 00:37:05,933 I don't know everything she did to prepare... 491 00:37:06,102 --> 00:37:09,503 ...but when it came the time to shoot it... 492 00:37:09,672 --> 00:37:15,076 ...I began to become convinced that she was dying, during the scene. 493 00:37:15,645 --> 00:37:21,413 And she died so realistically and her breath didn't move... 494 00:37:21,584 --> 00:37:23,984 ...that I began to see headlines: 495 00:37:24,154 --> 00:37:30,525 "That actress does a scene so well that she actually dies." 496 00:37:42,472 --> 00:37:44,440 Marion Davies' arrival at Culver City... 497 00:37:44,607 --> 00:37:49,271 ...is an event comparable to the entrance of a queen and her royal household. 498 00:37:51,681 --> 00:37:53,911 A former Ziegfeld girl has come to the studio... 499 00:37:54,083 --> 00:37:59,043 ...complete with a 14-room bungalow and the undivided attention of her mentor... 500 00:37:59,222 --> 00:38:02,953 ...publishing czar William Randolph Hearst. 501 00:38:05,028 --> 00:38:07,053 Mr. Mayer is overjoyed... 502 00:38:07,230 --> 00:38:09,892 ...not only because of Miss Davies' delightful talents... 503 00:38:10,066 --> 00:38:13,968 ...but because Mr. Hearst has decreed that not a single day shall pass... 504 00:38:14,137 --> 00:38:17,504 ...without some mention of the actress and Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer... 505 00:38:17,674 --> 00:38:21,110 ...in his nationwide chain of newspapers. 506 00:38:50,273 --> 00:38:54,334 She was adorable in every way. 507 00:38:54,978 --> 00:38:57,811 She was not only generous... 508 00:38:59,816 --> 00:39:02,944 ...with her money, with presents... 509 00:39:03,119 --> 00:39:06,179 ...but she was generous in her heart and her mind. 510 00:39:30,813 --> 00:39:32,906 Her métier was comedy... 511 00:39:33,082 --> 00:39:35,949 ...and Mr. Hearst was her really worst enemy... 512 00:39:36,119 --> 00:39:40,886 ...when it came to picking films for her. He wanted to see her in costumes... 513 00:39:42,458 --> 00:39:48,795 ...period things or boy's clothes, strangely enough. But she was a great comedienne. 514 00:39:48,965 --> 00:39:51,331 And she did a few pictures that brought it out. 515 00:39:51,501 --> 00:39:54,664 One was The Patsy and one was Show People. 516 00:39:55,438 --> 00:39:58,999 Marion Davies will remain at Culver City for nine years... 517 00:39:59,175 --> 00:40:01,905 ...until a rift between Mr. Thalberg and Mr. Hearst... 518 00:40:02,078 --> 00:40:05,809 ...causes the actress to pack up her bungalow and move on. 519 00:40:08,952 --> 00:40:13,582 Another ace in the studio's hand in the mid- 1920s is Buster Keaton. 520 00:40:13,756 --> 00:40:16,452 A noted film critic remarks about him: 521 00:40:16,626 --> 00:40:20,653 "How dead a human being can get and still be alive... 522 00:40:20,830 --> 00:40:25,597 ...proper in granite, but uncanny in flesh and blood." 523 00:40:25,768 --> 00:40:28,566 Old Stone Face is the producer, director... 524 00:40:28,738 --> 00:40:32,230 ...and star of a great many of the silent era's comic masterpieces. 525 00:40:32,408 --> 00:40:35,809 His MGM debut is The Cameraman. 526 00:41:06,275 --> 00:41:08,402 Buster Keaton is a renegade filmmaker... 527 00:41:08,578 --> 00:41:11,342 ...with a reputation for being fiercely independent. 528 00:41:11,514 --> 00:41:16,144 He's been lured to MGM by Nick Schenck with the promise of artistic freedom. 529 00:41:16,319 --> 00:41:17,946 He is quickly disillusioned... 530 00:41:18,121 --> 00:41:21,557 ...for the only way the studio can complete its yearly production quota... 531 00:41:21,724 --> 00:41:24,420 ...is by rigid supervision. 532 00:41:32,368 --> 00:41:35,235 While many filmmakers flourish at Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer... 533 00:41:35,405 --> 00:41:37,771 ...Buster Keaton finds it unbearable. 534 00:41:37,940 --> 00:41:42,377 He's unable to express himself creatively under the studio's strict controls... 535 00:41:42,545 --> 00:41:48,177 ...and he will never again see the success he once had as an independent filmmaker. 536 00:42:00,463 --> 00:42:04,627 It says here Irving Thalberg thinks that sound won't last. 537 00:42:04,801 --> 00:42:08,635 "The talking motion picture has its place as has color photography... 538 00:42:08,805 --> 00:42:12,935 ...but I do not believe it will ever replace the silent drama any more than I believe... 539 00:42:13,109 --> 00:42:16,169 ...color photography will replace black and white." 540 00:42:16,345 --> 00:42:21,510 Well, the young tycoon isn't often wrong, but he certainly is this time. 541 00:42:21,684 --> 00:42:24,676 Mr. Mayer's philosophy is wait and see. 542 00:42:24,854 --> 00:42:30,190 Consequently, MGM is the last studio to undertake the conversion to sound. 543 00:42:31,194 --> 00:42:35,688 It is Nick Schenck who finally gives the order to retool the factory. 544 00:42:35,865 --> 00:42:37,162 Faced with the inevitable... 545 00:42:37,333 --> 00:42:41,667 ...Mayer and Thalberg mobilize Culver City's vast body of resources. 546 00:42:41,838 --> 00:42:44,204 Metro's parks and country lanes are ripped out... 547 00:42:44,373 --> 00:42:47,342 ...to make way for fortress-like sound stages. 548 00:42:47,510 --> 00:42:50,479 Technical experts are shipped in from the East Coast... 549 00:42:50,646 --> 00:42:54,207 ...under the supervision of Irving's brother-in-law, Douglas Shearer. 550 00:42:54,383 --> 00:42:57,113 Their mission, to train MGM's creative staff... 551 00:42:57,286 --> 00:43:01,347 ...in the use and application of this frightening new medium. 552 00:43:01,524 --> 00:43:05,221 If I were to tell you that we have a camera capable of photographing a voice. 553 00:43:05,394 --> 00:43:07,692 Many think, "How can they photograph something... 554 00:43:07,864 --> 00:43:10,697 ...that happens in thin air, even in Hollywood?" 555 00:43:10,867 --> 00:43:13,392 But with a few transformations of the sound waves... 556 00:43:13,569 --> 00:43:15,036 ...that's really what is done. 557 00:43:15,204 --> 00:43:19,140 The sound film was as wide as my little finger... 558 00:43:19,308 --> 00:43:25,178 ...and it was always breaking and you were always out of sync. 559 00:43:25,348 --> 00:43:29,910 Everybody went through hell. Everybody was afraid of it. 560 00:43:30,086 --> 00:43:33,783 You'd run with Doug Shearer because he was supposed to know. 561 00:43:33,956 --> 00:43:36,618 He didn't know anything more than anybody else. 562 00:43:36,792 --> 00:43:40,387 And he used to say, "That is out of sync... 563 00:43:40,563 --> 00:43:43,498 ...one sprocket hole." 564 00:43:43,900 --> 00:43:46,027 Well, you know, one sprocket hole... 565 00:43:46,202 --> 00:43:50,798 ...you could hardly tell whether somebody's mouth was moving or not. 566 00:43:50,973 --> 00:43:54,807 But he used to say that, and it drove us crazy. 567 00:44:00,249 --> 00:44:06,711 The Broadway Melody is MGM's first all-talking, all-singing, all-dancing film. 568 00:44:06,889 --> 00:44:09,323 The musical numbers are shot with a live orchestra... 569 00:44:09,492 --> 00:44:12,620 ...without the benefit of pre-recorded playback. 570 00:44:12,795 --> 00:44:17,027 In 1929, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences... 571 00:44:17,200 --> 00:44:20,169 ...an organization L.B. Mayer has co-founded by the way... 572 00:44:20,336 --> 00:44:23,794 ...awards The Broadway Melody its Best Picture Oscar. 573 00:44:23,973 --> 00:44:27,636 It is the first talking film to be so honored. 574 00:44:28,811 --> 00:44:35,046 The coming of sound was not received with open arms by many directors. 575 00:44:35,451 --> 00:44:39,353 Because at first, sound anchored the camera still... 576 00:44:39,522 --> 00:44:42,821 ...and it was just like photographing a stage play... 577 00:44:42,992 --> 00:44:47,759 ...because the cameras were in big, heavy soundproof boxes... 578 00:44:47,930 --> 00:44:52,094 ...and the only thing you could photograph was out through a glass window. 579 00:44:57,840 --> 00:45:00,138 We were going back to the beginning of movies. 580 00:45:00,309 --> 00:45:01,970 Camera movement was finished. 581 00:45:02,144 --> 00:45:06,444 The general rhythm, the general music of the film was tied down. 582 00:45:06,616 --> 00:45:11,986 We felt just about this time that we had developed a technique... 583 00:45:12,154 --> 00:45:17,217 ...and a form of pantomime that expressed everything we wanted to express. 584 00:45:17,393 --> 00:45:19,884 It was a sort of a Universal language. 585 00:45:20,062 --> 00:45:22,895 And we didn't feel we needed the dialogue. 586 00:45:23,065 --> 00:45:26,523 The words, we felt music and sound effects great... 587 00:45:26,702 --> 00:45:28,329 ...but we didn't need the words. 588 00:45:40,182 --> 00:45:43,879 Several very, very good prominent players... 589 00:45:44,053 --> 00:45:46,180 ...when they jumped in and made a sound film... 590 00:45:46,355 --> 00:45:50,223 ...their voices did not sound the way the audience expected them to sound. 591 00:45:50,393 --> 00:45:52,759 They may have been good voices... 592 00:45:52,928 --> 00:45:55,863 ...but they didn't fit what the audiences saw... 593 00:45:56,032 --> 00:45:59,593 ...as the personality of that man on the screen... 594 00:45:59,769 --> 00:46:01,293 ...and they wouldn't accept them. 595 00:46:01,470 --> 00:46:03,495 Oh, gentle Romeo... 596 00:46:03,673 --> 00:46:07,871 ...if thou dost love, pronounce it faithfully. 597 00:46:09,779 --> 00:46:12,543 will thou thinkst I am too quickly won? 598 00:46:12,715 --> 00:46:17,311 I'll frown and be perverse and say thee nay. 599 00:46:17,687 --> 00:46:21,350 Lady, by yonder blessed moon... 600 00:46:21,524 --> 00:46:26,359 ...I swear which tips with silver all these fruit tree tops. 601 00:46:26,529 --> 00:46:28,861 Swear not by the moon... 602 00:46:29,031 --> 00:46:32,865 ...the inconstant moon that monthly changes in her... 603 00:46:33,035 --> 00:46:35,162 Of all the stars that will fall from grace... 604 00:46:35,338 --> 00:46:40,674 ...none will fall quite so far or quite so hard as John Gilbert. 605 00:46:40,843 --> 00:46:43,641 I love you. I've told you that a hundred times this week. 606 00:46:43,813 --> 00:46:46,680 - I love you. - And I told you not to tell me that again. 607 00:46:46,849 --> 00:46:48,009 I don't wish to hear it. 608 00:46:48,184 --> 00:46:51,676 What is a man to do, darling, when he loves so helplessly as I? 609 00:46:51,854 --> 00:46:53,048 You must remember what I-- 610 00:46:53,222 --> 00:46:57,522 I just remember him as a hysterical person. 611 00:46:57,893 --> 00:47:02,193 If he had good reviews, he hit the ceiling, he was the happiest man in the world. 612 00:47:02,365 --> 00:47:03,832 But if he had a bad review... 613 00:47:03,999 --> 00:47:06,695 ...he'd go in the dumps and you couldn't get him out of it. 614 00:47:06,869 --> 00:47:08,166 Strange fellow. 615 00:47:08,337 --> 00:47:11,204 And actually, it wasn't his bad voice. 616 00:47:11,374 --> 00:47:14,104 His voice was no different than anybody else's... 617 00:47:14,276 --> 00:47:16,972 ...but the studio didn't know how to handle sound. 618 00:47:18,414 --> 00:47:21,815 In 1930, John Gilbert is a bitter man. 619 00:47:21,984 --> 00:47:24,509 He's the highest paid movie star in the country... 620 00:47:24,687 --> 00:47:27,155 ...yet his love scenes are drawing giggles. 621 00:47:27,757 --> 00:47:30,885 After His Glorious Night is laughed off the screen... 622 00:47:31,060 --> 00:47:35,861 ...rumors begin to circulate that L.B. Mayer is trying to destroy him. 623 00:47:36,031 --> 00:47:38,625 I can only tell you that when I came to the studio... 624 00:47:38,801 --> 00:47:40,769 ...Gilbert's career was on the rocks. 625 00:47:41,437 --> 00:47:44,270 Gilbert was a highly literate man, by the way. 626 00:47:44,440 --> 00:47:49,503 And I think he caught on to a story that he wanted to do... 627 00:47:49,678 --> 00:47:53,079 ...a boy whose mother was a prostitute. 628 00:47:53,249 --> 00:47:57,583 And in the course of Gilbert making an impassioned pitch for it... 629 00:47:57,753 --> 00:48:00,984 ...Louis B. Mayer, who was a highly righteous man... 630 00:48:01,157 --> 00:48:04,820 ...when he was thinking of movies especially, stopped him and said: 631 00:48:04,994 --> 00:48:09,556 "Are you telling me that the boy's mother is a whore?" 632 00:48:09,732 --> 00:48:12,166 And John Gilbert said, "Well, what's wrong with that? 633 00:48:12,334 --> 00:48:13,528 My mother was a whore." 634 00:48:13,702 --> 00:48:16,000 And Mayer hit him and knocked him down. 635 00:48:17,740 --> 00:48:20,607 John Gilbert's star is slowly flickering out. 636 00:48:20,776 --> 00:48:25,804 In 1934, he will place an advertisement in The Hollywood Reporter that reads: 637 00:48:25,981 --> 00:48:31,351 "Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer will neither offer me work nor release me from my contract." 638 00:48:31,520 --> 00:48:36,753 Two years later, he will die of a heart attack, a broken man. 639 00:48:42,865 --> 00:48:47,063 Here's to the funeral knell... 640 00:48:47,503 --> 00:48:49,801 ...of the living dead. 641 00:48:53,609 --> 00:48:56,806 The last star at MGM to face the microphone... 642 00:48:56,979 --> 00:48:59,038 ...is the studio's greatest asset. 643 00:48:59,215 --> 00:49:04,050 The question on everyone's lips, "Can Garbo talk?" 644 00:49:04,220 --> 00:49:07,587 Mr. Mayer is understandably nervous, given her thick Swedish accent... 645 00:49:07,756 --> 00:49:11,453 ...and Irving has spent more than two years searching for the proper vehicle. 646 00:49:11,627 --> 00:49:18,556 He finds it in Eugene O'Neill's seedy waterfront drama, Anna Christie. 647 00:49:38,888 --> 00:49:42,949 Give me a whiskey. Ginger ale on the side. 648 00:49:43,759 --> 00:49:46,125 I'm awfully stingy, baby. 649 00:49:46,295 --> 00:49:47,819 Well, shall I serve it in a pail? 650 00:49:47,997 --> 00:49:51,125 Well, that suits me down to the ground. 651 00:49:52,835 --> 00:49:56,236 BROWN: I never directed Garbo in anything above a whisper. 652 00:49:56,405 --> 00:49:57,929 She was very backward... 653 00:49:58,107 --> 00:50:03,010 ...and I think she had probably a bit of an inferiority complex. 654 00:50:03,178 --> 00:50:06,238 I did an awful lot of rehearsing... 655 00:50:06,415 --> 00:50:08,906 ...and she didn't like it very much. 656 00:50:09,285 --> 00:50:10,809 But she finally put up with it... 657 00:50:10,986 --> 00:50:14,683 ...because we had some old pros in there along with her, you know. 658 00:50:14,857 --> 00:50:17,553 We had George Marion who played the original sea captain... 659 00:50:17,726 --> 00:50:21,321 ...and we had that gal named Marie Dressler in there, alongside of her. 660 00:50:21,497 --> 00:50:23,863 So she was in some pretty high-class talent. 661 00:50:24,033 --> 00:50:27,469 I'm gonna have another drink. What do you say? 662 00:50:27,636 --> 00:50:31,868 - Will you have something on me? - Sure thing, thanks. 663 00:50:32,041 --> 00:50:33,872 Larry? 664 00:50:34,143 --> 00:50:36,134 Larry? 665 00:50:37,112 --> 00:50:40,548 A little service here, please. 666 00:50:41,917 --> 00:50:44,385 Anna Christie may have been Garbo's picture... 667 00:50:44,553 --> 00:50:47,716 ...but Marie Dressler stole the show. 668 00:50:48,390 --> 00:50:51,450 The former vaudeville queen had been reduced to cleaning houses... 669 00:50:51,627 --> 00:50:56,064 ...when her career was resurrected by MGM's top screenwriter, Frances Marion. 670 00:50:56,231 --> 00:50:59,826 Frances convinced Irving to give the aging comedienne a break. 671 00:51:00,002 --> 00:51:04,939 Audiences fell in love with her weather-beaten face and comedic charms. 672 00:51:05,107 --> 00:51:10,272 In the early '30s, Marie Dressler reigns as America's most popular actress. 673 00:51:10,813 --> 00:51:13,611 You ain't mad at me, Min, are you? 674 00:51:13,782 --> 00:51:18,515 No, I ain't mad at you. 675 00:51:25,427 --> 00:51:30,592 We just had a couple of snifters and I got to feeling kind of wild. 676 00:51:30,766 --> 00:51:32,927 Can't you take a joke? 677 00:51:34,336 --> 00:51:39,467 The uncanny pairing of Marie Dressler and Wallace Beery is irresistible. 678 00:51:39,642 --> 00:51:42,372 Min and Bill is MGM's biggest hit of the year... 679 00:51:42,544 --> 00:51:46,878 ...and for her performance, Miss Dressler receives an Oscar. 680 00:51:47,049 --> 00:51:51,349 I want to thank The Academy for allowing me to present this award... 681 00:51:51,520 --> 00:51:54,387 ...to the most distinguished actress of this past year. 682 00:51:55,524 --> 00:52:01,258 Our tribute goes to someone who is not only a great artist... 683 00:52:01,430 --> 00:52:04,263 ...but to someone whom we all dearly love. 684 00:52:05,034 --> 00:52:10,904 A grand old trouper who has carved her niche of fame in two generations. 685 00:52:11,840 --> 00:52:14,070 Miss Marie Dressler. 686 00:52:19,248 --> 00:52:21,910 I never so happy in my life. 687 00:52:22,451 --> 00:52:24,612 I never had anything like this. 688 00:52:25,254 --> 00:52:27,779 Marie Dressler once said of her Oscar: 689 00:52:27,956 --> 00:52:32,450 "It is the crown for all the years of suffering that have gone before." 690 00:52:32,628 --> 00:52:35,426 Oh, I don't think I've missed anything. 691 00:52:35,597 --> 00:52:40,625 You see, when, well, when people like we grow old... 692 00:52:40,803 --> 00:52:43,795 ...well, we've had all the bad things in life... 693 00:52:43,972 --> 00:52:49,740 ...and then when the good things come, they seem so much better. 694 00:52:55,451 --> 00:52:58,318 It is 1932 and L.B. Mayer is known... 695 00:52:58,487 --> 00:53:02,651 ...as "the most dignified personage in Hollywood." 696 00:53:02,825 --> 00:53:04,292 The former scrap metal dealer... 697 00:53:04,460 --> 00:53:07,258 ...is the film industry's ambassador to the world. 698 00:53:07,429 --> 00:53:11,763 When royal figures, politicians and other luminaries visit the West Coast... 699 00:53:11,934 --> 00:53:14,266 ...L.B. Mayer is their host. 700 00:53:14,436 --> 00:53:18,566 He's even President Hoover's first weekend guest at the White House. 701 00:53:18,741 --> 00:53:20,572 He would later muse: 702 00:53:20,743 --> 00:53:26,147 "There I was, an immigrant boy, born in Russia, the guest of the president. 703 00:53:26,315 --> 00:53:28,545 I didn't sleep a wink." 704 00:53:29,518 --> 00:53:31,486 He was literally a legend. 705 00:53:31,653 --> 00:53:36,420 I think he was entitled to everything that people sometimes think of him... 706 00:53:36,592 --> 00:53:39,322 ...as a great motion-picture authority. 707 00:53:39,495 --> 00:53:43,659 He made MGM the important studio that it became. 708 00:53:43,832 --> 00:53:47,199 Mayer was a very determined man once he knew what he was doing. 709 00:53:47,369 --> 00:53:49,860 He was also a charming man... 710 00:53:50,038 --> 00:53:53,906 ...when it came to thinking about other people. 711 00:53:54,076 --> 00:53:58,809 BOOTH: He used to take me to church on Sunday with his Ford. 712 00:53:58,981 --> 00:54:02,041 He had a Ford touring car... 713 00:54:02,217 --> 00:54:06,620 ...and I used to ride in the front seat with my prayer book. 714 00:54:06,789 --> 00:54:09,553 Like everybody, he wanted people to love him and like him... 715 00:54:09,725 --> 00:54:15,391 ...and admire him and respect him, but he'd want it his way. 716 00:54:15,564 --> 00:54:17,555 It was done his way. 717 00:54:17,733 --> 00:54:22,102 Maybe he wasn't that wrong for the kind of a showman he was. 718 00:54:22,271 --> 00:54:25,297 I mean, he came from theaters and standing out in the lobby. 719 00:54:25,474 --> 00:54:26,771 He was a showman. 720 00:54:26,942 --> 00:54:30,537 So since he did that, and he knew more about your audience than any of you... 721 00:54:30,712 --> 00:54:33,340 ...shut up, do what he says, that's the way he wanted it. 722 00:54:33,515 --> 00:54:38,452 Mayer's great faculty was the wooing of stars... 723 00:54:38,620 --> 00:54:41,487 ...the developing of stars... 724 00:54:41,657 --> 00:54:45,024 ...and the preservation... 725 00:54:47,496 --> 00:54:49,225 ...of the star system and of the-- 726 00:54:49,398 --> 00:54:51,525 I mean, he used every method in the world. 727 00:54:51,700 --> 00:54:53,827 He was a genius to hold them there. 728 00:54:55,070 --> 00:54:59,131 Lucille LeSueur is MGM's first Cinderella. 729 00:54:59,308 --> 00:55:00,502 An unknown chorus girl... 730 00:55:00,676 --> 00:55:03,144 ...she is transformed by L.B. Mayer's dream factory... 731 00:55:03,312 --> 00:55:07,806 ...into the movie star, Joan Crawford. 732 00:55:07,983 --> 00:55:12,147 Here's one of my favorites and I know you all like her too. 733 00:55:12,321 --> 00:55:14,619 Because she's the personification of youth and beauty... 734 00:55:14,790 --> 00:55:18,191 ...and joy and happiness, Joan Crawford. 735 00:55:28,570 --> 00:55:32,370 In her earliest career she'd been a chorus girl, I think. 736 00:55:32,541 --> 00:55:37,740 But I will say that when I got there, she was a superior star. 737 00:55:37,913 --> 00:55:40,177 She had been fired, by the way. 738 00:55:40,349 --> 00:55:43,147 They were letting her go, and she got on a train to New York. 739 00:55:43,318 --> 00:55:47,652 And Harry Rapf, one of the producers under Thalberg, was on the same train... 740 00:55:47,823 --> 00:55:52,192 ...and they got to talk, and he decided she had great possibilities... 741 00:55:52,361 --> 00:55:55,125 ...and suggested she get off the train and go back... 742 00:55:55,297 --> 00:55:57,629 ...and when he came back he would work on her. 743 00:55:57,799 --> 00:55:59,494 She became a great star. 744 00:56:01,003 --> 00:56:03,096 Now let's see. 745 00:56:04,306 --> 00:56:07,469 Lovely eyes. That's goodie. 746 00:56:09,511 --> 00:56:12,776 Intelligent forehead, mm, not so good. 747 00:56:16,685 --> 00:56:20,086 Straight nose with plenty of spirit. Show it. 748 00:56:21,924 --> 00:56:25,189 Warm mouth with plenty of pride, oh, hide it. 749 00:56:25,360 --> 00:56:29,126 Now with all this equipment, what do you intend doing in New York? 750 00:56:29,831 --> 00:56:32,265 You see, we were trained with a stable of stars... 751 00:56:32,434 --> 00:56:35,369 ...when I was growing up and in my teens. 752 00:56:35,537 --> 00:56:38,438 I used to sneak over from my set... 753 00:56:38,607 --> 00:56:42,168 ...when I was playing an extra or a small bit part. 754 00:56:42,344 --> 00:56:45,211 And sneak over and watch the Lewis Stones... 755 00:56:45,380 --> 00:56:49,214 ...Wally Beery, Greta Garbo, three Barrymores. 756 00:56:49,851 --> 00:56:52,752 You see, pictures have given me all the education I ever had... 757 00:56:52,921 --> 00:56:56,413 ...since I never went beyond the fifth grade. 758 00:56:57,025 --> 00:56:59,493 No formal education whatsoever... 759 00:56:59,661 --> 00:57:03,529 ...and I used to have to read scripts and then look up words in the dictionary. 760 00:57:03,699 --> 00:57:05,690 How to pronounce them and what they meant... 761 00:57:05,867 --> 00:57:07,528 ...before I could learn the lines. 762 00:57:09,538 --> 00:57:11,335 Regrets? 763 00:57:13,775 --> 00:57:16,505 I left school when I was only 12. 764 00:57:16,678 --> 00:57:18,839 Never learned how to spell regret. 765 00:57:19,014 --> 00:57:21,005 Over the years, Joan Crawford will go on... 766 00:57:21,183 --> 00:57:24,118 ...to become the heroine of shop girls everywhere. 767 00:57:24,286 --> 00:57:28,120 A working-class woman who was able to rise through the ranks of society. 768 00:57:28,824 --> 00:57:33,318 Of her frequent co-star, Clark Gable, Joan once said: 769 00:57:33,495 --> 00:57:36,623 "He is pure animal magnetism." 770 00:57:36,798 --> 00:57:41,201 When Irving Thalberg sees Clark Gable on the screen for the first time, he declares: 771 00:57:41,370 --> 00:57:44,965 "We've got ourselves a star." 772 00:57:45,974 --> 00:57:48,841 Clark Gable is a new hero for a new age. 773 00:57:49,011 --> 00:57:53,675 Not dashing and debonair like John Gilbert, but rough and tough. 774 00:57:53,849 --> 00:57:59,481 A man's man, lusting after life and women. 775 00:57:59,654 --> 00:58:03,181 MGM wastes no time in exploiting its new discovery. 776 00:58:03,358 --> 00:58:08,193 Culver City's screenwriters are instructed to make Gable's characters rogues. 777 00:58:08,363 --> 00:58:13,665 Hot-tempered, hard-boiled, sexy. 778 00:58:16,905 --> 00:58:19,499 In reality, Mr. Gable is a private man... 779 00:58:19,674 --> 00:58:22,302 ...who loves the solitude of hunting and fishing. 780 00:58:22,477 --> 00:58:24,638 At the few Hollywood functions he attends... 781 00:58:24,813 --> 00:58:27,077 ...he can often be found discussing automobiles... 782 00:58:27,249 --> 00:58:28,716 ...with the parking attendants. 783 00:58:28,884 --> 00:58:34,948 At work, he prefers the company of studio technicians to studio big shots. 784 00:58:35,123 --> 00:58:40,356 Clark was, as I was growing up, always, "Hi, guy," one of these fellas, you know. 785 00:58:40,529 --> 00:58:41,553 He was just terrific. 786 00:58:41,730 --> 00:58:43,925 And I loved him and he knew I loved him and he-- 787 00:58:44,099 --> 00:58:45,123 He was terrific. 788 00:58:45,734 --> 00:58:50,137 Talking about fishing and talking about adventures and films... 789 00:58:50,305 --> 00:58:53,206 ...and Mr. Mayer, he was just a delight. 790 00:58:53,375 --> 00:58:56,071 I heard he would be kind of tough... 791 00:58:56,244 --> 00:58:59,236 ...with some of the ladies, the leading ladies and this and that. 792 00:58:59,414 --> 00:59:00,438 I don't know. 793 00:59:00,615 --> 00:59:04,415 He was terrific with me and any of the guys that I knew. 794 00:59:04,586 --> 00:59:05,746 He was a guy's guy. 795 00:59:05,921 --> 00:59:08,481 I couldn't wait to get back, to marry you. 796 00:59:08,890 --> 00:59:11,256 Marry, that's funny. 797 00:59:11,860 --> 00:59:13,157 I should have paid you off. 798 00:59:13,328 --> 00:59:16,729 Thrown a few dollars on the bureau. That's language you understand. 799 00:59:16,898 --> 00:59:18,490 You don't know what you're saying. 800 00:59:18,667 --> 00:59:19,827 I even bought the ring... 801 00:59:20,001 --> 00:59:23,493 ...engraved with your initials and mine and the word "always." 802 00:59:23,672 --> 00:59:26,334 You said you wanted a wedding ring more than anything. 803 00:59:26,508 --> 00:59:28,567 Well, there it is. 804 00:59:28,743 --> 00:59:32,144 I'm not a one-woman man. I never have been and I never will be. 805 00:59:32,314 --> 00:59:34,748 And if you wanna take your turn-- 806 00:59:39,154 --> 00:59:42,055 all right, if it makes you feel any better. 807 00:59:42,691 --> 00:59:45,023 We had, it seemed to me... 808 00:59:45,193 --> 00:59:48,754 ...great strength and depth in the studio. 809 00:59:49,164 --> 00:59:51,098 And Mayer encouraged it. 810 00:59:51,266 --> 00:59:53,393 It was more important to him... 811 00:59:53,568 --> 00:59:58,130 ...that we made a personality than we made money on a picture. 812 00:59:58,306 --> 01:00:02,333 He always figured that we'd make money with the personality later. 813 01:00:02,511 --> 01:00:05,912 And Mayer was very, very certain of that. 814 01:00:06,081 --> 01:00:12,418 Contrary to what some people think, he had a respect for talent. 815 01:00:12,587 --> 01:00:16,648 Louis B. Mayer's prime speech to everybody at the Christmas parties... 816 01:00:16,825 --> 01:00:20,727 ...and he meant every word of it, and he thought it was true: 817 01:00:20,896 --> 01:00:24,593 "Ladies and gentlemen, we have a marvelous studio. 818 01:00:24,766 --> 01:00:28,964 Do your job, do the best you can and you've got a job for life." 819 01:00:30,872 --> 01:00:32,066 Back in 1926... 820 01:00:32,240 --> 01:00:35,835 ...Mr. Mayer added one of the most prestigious names in show business... 821 01:00:36,011 --> 01:00:37,774 ...to the MGM marquee: 822 01:00:37,946 --> 01:00:39,880 Lionel Barrymore. 823 01:00:40,048 --> 01:00:43,916 Despite being afflicted in later years with crippling arthritis... 824 01:00:44,085 --> 01:00:49,318 ...Mr. Barrymore will remain under contract to Metro until his death in 1954. 825 01:00:49,491 --> 01:00:51,721 He once said of L.B. Mayer: 826 01:00:51,893 --> 01:00:57,854 "His loyalty to me never wanes, and that is why I remain loyal to him." 827 01:00:58,033 --> 01:01:01,434 In 1931, Lionel will receive his one and only Academy Award... 828 01:01:01,603 --> 01:01:04,629 ...for his portrayal of a drunken father in A Free Soul. 829 01:01:05,106 --> 01:01:08,837 When this man threatened the rest of her life... 830 01:01:09,010 --> 01:01:13,037 ...this father wasn't there to protect his daughter. 831 01:01:14,049 --> 01:01:17,416 all this Dwight Winthrop knew. 832 01:01:17,852 --> 01:01:23,586 all this was caught in the whirlpool of his love. 833 01:01:24,059 --> 01:01:26,857 The poor boy went insane. 834 01:01:27,028 --> 01:01:31,328 And he's not guilty of cold, deliberate murder. 835 01:01:34,936 --> 01:01:37,666 There's only one breast... 836 01:01:37,839 --> 01:01:43,368 ...that you can surely pin the responsibility of this crime on. 837 01:01:43,545 --> 01:01:46,036 Only one. 838 01:01:46,414 --> 01:01:51,818 Stephen Ashe is guilty and nobody else. 839 01:01:51,987 --> 01:01:54,455 Stephen Ashe. 840 01:01:56,291 --> 01:01:58,054 Your Honor. 841 01:01:58,727 --> 01:02:00,251 I-- 842 01:02:01,563 --> 01:02:03,497 At one of the first Academy Awards... 843 01:02:03,665 --> 01:02:09,126 ...I was nominated and my competition was Fredric March and Lionel Barrymore. 844 01:02:09,304 --> 01:02:12,364 Lionel Barrymore was up for A Free Soul, and he won it. 845 01:02:12,540 --> 01:02:17,910 And the story is, I fell asleep on Marie Dressler's lap. 846 01:02:18,079 --> 01:02:23,176 And so when Mr. Barrymore won the award-- He's limping a little bit then. 847 01:02:23,351 --> 01:02:26,548 --he came by our table after all the applause... 848 01:02:26,721 --> 01:02:28,951 ...and I'm in her lap. 849 01:02:29,124 --> 01:02:32,753 And she wakes me up, and she says, "It's Mr. Barrymore, it's Mr. Barrymore." 850 01:02:32,927 --> 01:02:35,157 And he says, "This really belongs to you... 851 01:02:35,330 --> 01:02:38,128 ...but they gave it to me, because they think I'm gonna die." 852 01:02:38,300 --> 01:02:41,963 And of course he worked for about another 25 years after that. 853 01:02:42,370 --> 01:02:49,276 I'm quite too overcome and proud to say anything... 854 01:02:49,444 --> 01:02:51,935 ...but thank you very much. 855 01:02:56,017 --> 01:02:57,541 1932. 856 01:02:57,719 --> 01:03:02,383 The young Irving Thalberg is hailed by Fortune Magazine as a genius. 857 01:03:02,557 --> 01:03:05,617 A flimsy bag of bones held together by the furious ambition... 858 01:03:05,794 --> 01:03:07,762 ...to make the best movies in the world... 859 01:03:07,929 --> 01:03:12,263 ...he is what Hollywood means by MGM. 860 01:03:12,901 --> 01:03:15,392 I think he was rather frightening. 861 01:03:15,570 --> 01:03:20,371 He was slender, and dark and kind of mysterious. 862 01:03:20,542 --> 01:03:22,305 He didn't talk very much. 863 01:03:22,477 --> 01:03:24,945 And when he spoke, it had meaning. 864 01:03:25,113 --> 01:03:26,808 I found him intimidating. 865 01:03:26,981 --> 01:03:29,245 He was a little bit awe-inspiring. 866 01:03:29,417 --> 01:03:31,681 I was scared of him, you know. 867 01:03:31,853 --> 01:03:34,083 But he was a kind of a remote figure. 868 01:03:34,255 --> 01:03:37,782 And when he came on the set, there was really silence. 869 01:03:38,693 --> 01:03:43,027 Despite the responsibility of overseeing the production of 52 pictures a year... 870 01:03:43,198 --> 01:03:46,634 ...Irving still finds the time to guide his wife's career. 871 01:03:46,801 --> 01:03:48,860 He personally supervises her pictures... 872 01:03:49,037 --> 01:03:53,667 ...and insists that she never film two movies in a row with similar themes. 873 01:03:53,842 --> 01:03:55,707 His devoted attention to her pays off... 874 01:03:55,877 --> 01:03:58,539 ...when The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences... 875 01:03:58,713 --> 01:04:01,341 ...honors Norma with an Oscar for The Divorcée. 876 01:04:01,516 --> 01:04:05,077 I'm glad I discovered there's more than one man in the world while I'm young. 877 01:04:05,253 --> 01:04:06,982 Believe me, I'm not missing anything. 878 01:04:07,155 --> 01:04:09,350 I don't doubt it. Once a woman throws down her-- 879 01:04:09,524 --> 01:04:11,924 Pin it on a motto, hang it where janitors can see it. 880 01:04:12,093 --> 01:04:13,560 - Stop that. - Loose women, great. 881 01:04:13,728 --> 01:04:16,128 - But not in the home, eh, Ted? - Cut it, do you hear? 882 01:04:16,297 --> 01:04:18,288 The looser they are, the more they get. 883 01:04:18,466 --> 01:04:20,934 The best in the world, no responsibility. 884 01:04:21,102 --> 01:04:24,037 Well, my dear, I'm going to find out how they do it. 885 01:04:24,205 --> 01:04:26,765 So look for me in the future where the primroses grow... 886 01:04:26,941 --> 01:04:29,307 ...and catch your man's pride with the rest. 887 01:04:29,477 --> 01:04:30,535 And from now on... 888 01:04:30,712 --> 01:04:33,579 ...you're the only man in the world that my door is closed to. 889 01:04:33,748 --> 01:04:35,511 I think he was a genius. 890 01:04:36,518 --> 01:04:40,454 His ideas were extravagant, but great. 891 01:04:40,622 --> 01:04:44,854 He worked constantly and desperately hard. 892 01:04:45,026 --> 01:04:51,261 But it was everything that he wanted and loved in life, was that work. 893 01:04:51,433 --> 01:04:55,062 COHN: He reversed the whole idea of how to make pictures. 894 01:04:55,236 --> 01:05:00,731 He wasn't afraid to remake them or remake portions of them. 895 01:05:01,509 --> 01:05:05,741 As a matter of fact, we were ridiculed in the industry... 896 01:05:05,914 --> 01:05:08,678 ...because we were called Retake Alley. 897 01:05:12,720 --> 01:05:18,750 Irving Thalberg believes that pictures are not made, they are remade. 898 01:05:26,568 --> 01:05:32,529 An integral part of this remake policy is the preview process. 899 01:05:32,707 --> 01:05:37,735 At least once a week, Irving, Margaret Booth, Sam Marx... 900 01:05:37,912 --> 01:05:41,746 ...a handful of executives, and occasionally, L.B. Mayer himself... 901 01:05:41,916 --> 01:05:44,908 ...would board the MGM special. 902 01:05:45,086 --> 01:05:48,852 The studio's plush private trolley car. 903 01:05:49,023 --> 01:05:51,457 They would head for one of the smaller communities... 904 01:05:51,626 --> 01:05:53,651 ...on the outskirts of Los Angeles. 905 01:05:53,828 --> 01:05:57,229 There, they would hold sneak previews of upcoming pictures. 906 01:05:57,398 --> 01:06:00,390 The theater audience would be asked to fill out response cards... 907 01:06:00,568 --> 01:06:05,562 ...and according to their suggestions, scenes from the picture would be re-edited. 908 01:06:05,740 --> 01:06:07,833 Or even re-shot. 909 01:06:08,009 --> 01:06:12,605 They gave me the worst script they had had in years. 910 01:06:12,780 --> 01:06:18,082 The script was called Lullaby, and it was shown at a preview... 911 01:06:18,253 --> 01:06:22,883 ...and was a disaster, and they shelved it. 912 01:06:23,057 --> 01:06:24,251 So when Irving got back... 913 01:06:24,425 --> 01:06:27,690 ...and they were showing him all the pictures that had been finished... 914 01:06:27,862 --> 01:06:32,561 ...and polished up while he was away, he said: 915 01:06:32,734 --> 01:06:34,861 "Where's Helen's picture?" 916 01:06:35,036 --> 01:06:37,504 And they said, "Oh, well, that's out. 917 01:06:37,672 --> 01:06:39,037 That's shelved." 918 01:06:39,207 --> 01:06:44,042 So he said, "Let me see it. I might find something there, who knows?" 919 01:06:44,212 --> 01:06:45,770 He saw it and said: 920 01:06:45,947 --> 01:06:51,613 "It has the last maybe seven minutes of it are the disaster point. 921 01:06:51,786 --> 01:06:54,118 And we just write a new finish." 922 01:06:55,089 --> 01:06:56,647 - You've had quite a life. - What? 923 01:06:56,824 --> 01:06:59,554 Well, I haven't been around women's wards for nothing. 924 01:07:00,028 --> 01:07:01,495 Still... 925 01:07:01,896 --> 01:07:05,263 You don't look like that kind of a woman. They're usually pretty tough. 926 01:07:06,968 --> 01:07:08,799 Do it for the boy? 927 01:07:09,771 --> 01:07:12,069 Mm-hm. 928 01:07:12,607 --> 01:07:14,871 Where is this son of yours? 929 01:07:15,577 --> 01:07:16,874 I... 930 01:07:17,845 --> 01:07:18,869 I don't know. 931 01:07:19,047 --> 01:07:20,878 Tomorrow, we'll go out and look for him. 932 01:07:21,049 --> 01:07:24,485 I've done it a couple of times before and it gives a lot of satisfaction. 933 01:07:24,652 --> 01:07:26,483 Oh, no, no. 934 01:07:26,654 --> 01:07:30,112 I don't know how or why, but you're alive. 935 01:07:33,127 --> 01:07:36,654 - I guess mothers are hard to kill. - Yes. 936 01:07:36,831 --> 01:07:38,992 Robert Young and I did that scene. 937 01:07:39,167 --> 01:07:40,566 And it came out a success. 938 01:07:40,735 --> 01:07:42,999 Oh, and I got an Oscar for it too. 939 01:07:43,171 --> 01:07:46,072 The Sin of Madelon Claudet was the name that Irving gave it... 940 01:07:46,240 --> 01:07:51,234 ...because he thought Lullaby was too naive a name, you see. 941 01:07:51,412 --> 01:07:57,510 And they got that "sin" in there, and that was a good sales lift. 942 01:07:57,685 --> 01:08:01,052 We didn't make bad pictures. We made good pictures. 943 01:08:01,222 --> 01:08:04,282 We went to previews and we corrected the picture... 944 01:08:04,459 --> 01:08:07,087 ...in every way, shape and form that we could. 945 01:08:07,261 --> 01:08:09,195 I couldn't wait to get to a preview... 946 01:08:09,364 --> 01:08:11,696 ...to see what we were gonna do to correct it. 947 01:08:11,866 --> 01:08:14,562 And then when Irving saw it, he came out. 948 01:08:14,736 --> 01:08:17,569 He told exactly what to do with it. 949 01:08:17,739 --> 01:08:22,073 And sometimes we previewed two and three times, because they were-- 950 01:08:22,243 --> 01:08:25,440 It wasn't good and it had to be improved. 951 01:08:25,613 --> 01:08:30,482 He did it with all of the pictures, and he was wonderful, just wonderful. 952 01:08:30,652 --> 01:08:35,817 I think Irving was an experimenter. I think he was an innovator. 953 01:08:35,990 --> 01:08:42,088 He was not averse to trying things that Louis B. Mayer didn't even wanna try. 954 01:08:42,263 --> 01:08:44,128 And they had quarrels about it. 955 01:08:44,298 --> 01:08:47,597 He allowed King Vidor to make the first all-black film. 956 01:08:47,769 --> 01:08:52,638 He allowed Tod Browning to make Freaks, which was an offbeat film. 957 01:08:52,807 --> 01:08:57,107 Oh, monsieur, there must be a law in France to smother such things at birth. 958 01:08:57,278 --> 01:08:59,974 Tod Browning was a delightful man... 959 01:09:00,148 --> 01:09:04,016 ...but his feeling about movies was to make horror pictures. 960 01:09:04,185 --> 01:09:09,213 Suddenly, we, who were sitting in the commissary having lunch... 961 01:09:09,390 --> 01:09:13,486 ...would find Zip the what-is-it sitting at the next table... 962 01:09:13,661 --> 01:09:16,289 ...or the Siamese twins who were linked together. 963 01:09:16,464 --> 01:09:20,264 And half the studio would empty when they would walk in... 964 01:09:20,435 --> 01:09:22,494 ...because the appetites went out. 965 01:09:22,670 --> 01:09:27,266 And so Harry Rapf, who was a great moral figure... 966 01:09:27,442 --> 01:09:30,343 ...got a bunch of us together, and we went in and complained... 967 01:09:30,511 --> 01:09:33,378 ...to Irving about Freaks. And he laughed at that. 968 01:09:33,548 --> 01:09:36,608 He said, "You know, we're making all kinds of movies. 969 01:09:36,784 --> 01:09:40,049 Forget it, I'm gonna make this picture. Tod Browning's a fine director. 970 01:09:40,221 --> 01:09:41,984 He knows what he's doing." 971 01:09:42,156 --> 01:09:44,283 And the picture was made. 972 01:09:44,459 --> 01:09:48,828 But it was a story of poor people... 973 01:09:48,996 --> 01:09:52,397 ...who were caught in terrible physical agonies. 974 01:09:52,567 --> 01:09:54,000 When I get a chance... 975 01:09:54,168 --> 01:10:00,334 ...I like to take them into the sunshine and let them play like children. 976 01:10:01,175 --> 01:10:05,043 That is what most of them are. 977 01:10:06,180 --> 01:10:07,841 Children. 978 01:10:09,016 --> 01:10:13,214 Well, Mayer left the production... 979 01:10:13,387 --> 01:10:16,049 ...the artistic part of it, up to Thalberg. 980 01:10:16,224 --> 01:10:20,251 And he says, "Well, I think MGM is making enough pictures, enough money. 981 01:10:20,428 --> 01:10:24,421 They can afford an experimental film every once in a while. 982 01:10:24,599 --> 01:10:26,260 It'll do something for the studio... 983 01:10:26,434 --> 01:10:29,198 ...and would do something for the whole industry." 984 01:10:29,370 --> 01:10:33,966 So that was a pretty good attitude for a top production executive. 985 01:10:34,142 --> 01:10:36,838 We knew immediately that he was brilliant. 986 01:10:37,011 --> 01:10:41,038 And I've known the way he worked, that he had the long table. 987 01:10:41,215 --> 01:10:43,945 Long table, with scripts laid out. 988 01:10:44,118 --> 01:10:48,054 And he would walk down through and turn the script. 989 01:10:48,222 --> 01:10:51,453 He'd make some comment about it, and then he'd move to the next one... 990 01:10:51,626 --> 01:10:55,027 ...make the changes, and he would deal with 20 scripts. 991 01:10:55,196 --> 01:10:59,360 He was about as intimate with writers... 992 01:10:59,534 --> 01:11:02,594 ...as any film producer could ever hope to be. 993 01:11:02,770 --> 01:11:05,034 He liked good writing. 994 01:11:05,206 --> 01:11:09,734 I had the freedom from Thalberg to bring in anybody I wanted... 995 01:11:09,911 --> 01:11:11,606 ...which was marvelous. 996 01:11:11,779 --> 01:11:15,579 And I went after very eminent authors. 997 01:11:15,750 --> 01:11:20,244 So that sooner or later, Ben Hecht came in, Charlie MacArthur came in. 998 01:11:20,421 --> 01:11:23,447 Herman Mankiewicz, Joe Mankiewicz. 999 01:11:23,891 --> 01:11:25,882 There was Donald Ogden Stewart. 1000 01:11:26,060 --> 01:11:29,518 Anita Loos was almost just as good. 1001 01:11:29,697 --> 01:11:33,189 There were some playwrights, like John Meehan. 1002 01:11:33,367 --> 01:11:36,962 There was the comedy writer Bob Hopkins... 1003 01:11:37,138 --> 01:11:40,539 ...known as Hoppy, who was a great gag man. 1004 01:11:40,708 --> 01:11:42,403 Some of them were star writers. 1005 01:11:42,577 --> 01:11:48,038 Frances Marion was superior to everybody, in my opinion. 1006 01:11:51,485 --> 01:11:54,420 I can't eat that stuff. 1007 01:11:55,323 --> 01:11:58,121 MAN: Who did that? -Me. What do you think of that? 1008 01:11:58,292 --> 01:12:00,852 I want some food. I don't want any more of this swill. 1009 01:12:01,028 --> 01:12:03,553 You give me some food, I'm not going to eat that stuff. 1010 01:12:03,731 --> 01:12:04,755 Shut up! 1011 01:12:04,932 --> 01:12:06,900 Come on and give me some food. Come on now. 1012 01:12:07,268 --> 01:12:10,328 Frances Marion's Oscar-winning screenplay, The Big House... 1013 01:12:10,504 --> 01:12:12,995 ...is the granddaddy of all prison movies. 1014 01:12:13,174 --> 01:12:17,873 It's the first of its kind in Hollywood and, many say, the best. 1015 01:12:25,419 --> 01:12:29,355 L.B. Mayer has no great love for gangster films, but the public does... 1016 01:12:29,523 --> 01:12:33,516 ...and The Big House makes Wallace Beery a box-office sensation. 1017 01:12:33,694 --> 01:12:37,630 I ain't afraid of your guns. I ain't afraid of nobody. 1018 01:12:37,798 --> 01:12:40,323 Come on, you yellow bellies, let's storm. 1019 01:12:40,501 --> 01:12:44,130 MAN: That folly went against the wall. The next time, shoot to kill. 1020 01:12:44,739 --> 01:12:46,707 - Butch, sit down. - Yellow bellies. 1021 01:12:46,874 --> 01:12:50,469 Sit down, Butch. It's your last chance. 1022 01:12:50,645 --> 01:12:56,584 Just the other day, I think it was a bellman in a hotel. 1023 01:12:56,751 --> 01:12:58,150 "What was Wallace Beery like?" 1024 01:12:58,319 --> 01:13:00,514 And they wanna hear, "Oh, what a wonderful guy." 1025 01:13:00,688 --> 01:13:03,987 That's what they wanted, what they saw, that's what I usually say. 1026 01:13:04,725 --> 01:13:07,853 One, as a kid, he hated kids. 1027 01:13:08,029 --> 01:13:12,625 And the crew used to rib him, "Cooper's stealing the picture." 1028 01:13:12,800 --> 01:13:13,824 I can whip him. 1029 01:13:14,001 --> 01:13:16,196 The odds are too big, Andy. You gotta buck them. 1030 01:13:16,370 --> 01:13:17,394 I can whip him. 1031 01:13:17,571 --> 01:13:18,595 Daddy, Daddy. 1032 01:13:18,773 --> 01:13:21,298 I'm scared of what he's doing to you, that's all. 1033 01:13:21,475 --> 01:13:24,911 - I don't want you to go in. - No, I'm all right, Dink. 1034 01:13:25,079 --> 01:13:28,310 - I'm gonna throw in the towel. - No, don't. No. 1035 01:13:29,116 --> 01:13:30,708 He was always playing my father... 1036 01:13:30,885 --> 01:13:33,683 ...or my better, dearest best old friend, you know. 1037 01:13:33,854 --> 01:13:37,312 And the minute a scene was over, he'd push me off like this, you know. 1038 01:13:37,491 --> 01:13:40,051 Just, he couldn't stand any affection or anything. 1039 01:13:40,227 --> 01:13:42,821 Every time I was gonna work in one of these pictures... 1040 01:13:42,997 --> 01:13:45,488 ...I just dreaded it, because this-- I could-- 1041 01:13:45,666 --> 01:13:48,362 I had to be with this guy so much, and he was no fun. 1042 01:13:48,536 --> 01:13:50,800 He didn't like any of my little jokes or anything. 1043 01:13:50,972 --> 01:13:53,099 And he didn't like me, so I didn't like him. 1044 01:13:53,274 --> 01:13:55,367 And then I was gonna have to be reprimanded... 1045 01:13:55,543 --> 01:13:59,035 ...or worked on to try and pretend that I love him. 1046 01:13:59,447 --> 01:14:01,438 What's happened? 1047 01:14:01,615 --> 01:14:04,015 Nothing, Dink. 1048 01:14:04,185 --> 01:14:09,179 All of a sudden, I turned sissy and faint dead away. 1049 01:14:09,357 --> 01:14:15,023 The ground came up and socked me right square in the face. 1050 01:14:16,130 --> 01:14:19,361 I won the fight, didn't I, Dink? 1051 01:14:19,533 --> 01:14:21,592 I'll say you did. 1052 01:14:21,769 --> 01:14:24,704 Ain't you proud of your old man now? 1053 01:14:24,872 --> 01:14:28,330 Well, gee, Champ, I always was. 1054 01:14:28,509 --> 01:14:33,242 But you was going to throw that towel in and stop the fight. 1055 01:14:33,414 --> 01:14:35,882 Ain't you ashamed of yourself? 1056 01:14:36,050 --> 01:14:37,950 Uh-huh. 1057 01:14:38,786 --> 01:14:39,980 Champ. 1058 01:14:40,721 --> 01:14:42,382 Champ. 1059 01:14:43,457 --> 01:14:45,516 Nix it. 1060 01:14:45,893 --> 01:14:48,054 Keep your chin up. 1061 01:14:48,229 --> 01:14:50,197 Don't cry. 1062 01:14:50,364 --> 01:14:54,767 Come on, give the old man a smile. 1063 01:15:02,743 --> 01:15:04,142 Throughout the early 1930s... 1064 01:15:04,311 --> 01:15:06,779 ...Hollywood is in the throes of the Great Depression. 1065 01:15:06,947 --> 01:15:09,415 The motion-picture industry is in desperate straits. 1066 01:15:09,583 --> 01:15:11,710 Several studios are on the brink of bankruptcy. 1067 01:15:11,886 --> 01:15:14,650 Everyone is drowning in red ink. 1068 01:15:14,822 --> 01:15:19,953 Everyone but Louis B. Mayer and MGM. 1069 01:15:23,030 --> 01:15:25,931 Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer literally goes to the ends of the earth... 1070 01:15:26,100 --> 01:15:28,762 ...to provide an escape from the Depression. 1071 01:15:28,936 --> 01:15:33,134 In Tahiti, the studio shoots White Shadows in the South Seas... 1072 01:15:33,307 --> 01:15:37,641 ...a romantic depiction of the civilized world's corruption of Polynesia. 1073 01:15:38,579 --> 01:15:41,946 They were not easy times in this country or all over the world. 1074 01:15:42,116 --> 01:15:46,644 We had a major depression on during most of that heyday of MGM. 1075 01:15:47,388 --> 01:15:50,880 It was an age of wonderment. 1076 01:15:51,058 --> 01:15:55,051 And people wanted to escape into that. 1077 01:15:55,229 --> 01:15:58,357 People could get away from the unpleasantness of reality... 1078 01:15:58,532 --> 01:16:02,161 ...and wallow around in beauty and fun... 1079 01:16:02,336 --> 01:16:05,533 ...and adventure and excitement. 1080 01:16:05,706 --> 01:16:07,503 White Shadows in the South Seas... 1081 01:16:07,675 --> 01:16:10,143 ...was started by veteran filmmaker Robert Flaherty. 1082 01:16:10,311 --> 01:16:12,643 But his anthropological approach to the material... 1083 01:16:12,813 --> 01:16:15,247 ...clashes with the studio's idea of entertainment. 1084 01:16:15,416 --> 01:16:17,976 Mr. Thalberg believes the public wants a love story... 1085 01:16:18,152 --> 01:16:21,986 ...and replaces the distinguished documentarian with Woody Van Dyke... 1086 01:16:22,156 --> 01:16:27,025 ...a young staff director, who will become one of Metro's most prolific creators. 1087 01:16:28,929 --> 01:16:30,988 Meanwhile, on the other side of the world... 1088 01:16:31,165 --> 01:16:34,657 ...veteran filmmaker Clarence Brown is up to his ears in snow. 1089 01:16:34,835 --> 01:16:37,099 Leading an army of extras through an epic saga... 1090 01:16:37,271 --> 01:16:40,763 ...called The Trail of '98. 1091 01:16:42,543 --> 01:16:43,737 Over 2000 of them. 1092 01:16:43,911 --> 01:16:45,879 Put them on a train at 2:00 in the morning. 1093 01:16:46,046 --> 01:16:48,571 Had to clothe them because they were off the streets... 1094 01:16:48,749 --> 01:16:51,809 ...be tramps and things that we'd picked up, anybody we could get. 1095 01:16:51,986 --> 01:16:55,922 I never went through a seizure like that. I lost 20 pounds on the picture. 1096 01:16:56,090 --> 01:16:59,651 Cold. I was at work at 11 , 12,000 feet altitude... 1097 01:16:59,827 --> 01:17:02,022 ...at 20 to 40 below zero. 1098 01:17:02,196 --> 01:17:05,495 Blizzards and everything. That was all real. 1099 01:17:06,066 --> 01:17:08,534 One man dies filming this avalanche... 1100 01:17:08,702 --> 01:17:13,139 ...and three more will perish shooting a treacherous white water sequence. 1101 01:17:13,307 --> 01:17:15,172 We wanted white water. 1102 01:17:15,342 --> 01:17:17,810 We found the white water... 1103 01:17:17,978 --> 01:17:22,608 ...on the Copper River in Alaska. 1104 01:17:23,617 --> 01:17:24,777 From what I understand... 1105 01:17:24,952 --> 01:17:29,685 ...some of the stuntmen didn't wanna wear the jackets. 1106 01:17:29,857 --> 01:17:33,349 That's when we lost three men. 1107 01:17:33,527 --> 01:17:38,157 They should have insisted that all of them wore the life jackets. 1108 01:17:38,332 --> 01:17:40,596 I don't know if it would have made any difference. 1109 01:17:40,768 --> 01:17:42,065 I think it would have. 1110 01:17:42,636 --> 01:17:46,231 There's no economy in a cheap stuntman. 1111 01:17:48,142 --> 01:17:50,303 You may never get the stunt. 1112 01:17:52,146 --> 01:17:55,547 Five years after the tragedies that marred The Trail of '98... 1113 01:17:55,716 --> 01:17:59,152 ...MGM sends another film company to the Arctic Circle. 1114 01:17:59,320 --> 01:18:02,756 The expedition is headed by the studio's resident globetrotter... 1115 01:18:02,923 --> 01:18:04,322 ...Woody Van Dyke. 1116 01:18:04,491 --> 01:18:09,929 The film, Eskimo, is distinguished by its semi-documentary style, native cast... 1117 01:18:10,097 --> 01:18:11,792 ...and use of the local language. 1118 01:18:12,866 --> 01:18:15,664 Oh, hello, Mala. 1119 01:18:15,836 --> 01:18:17,064 What do you want? 1120 01:18:22,610 --> 01:18:24,168 Oh, well, put it down. 1121 01:18:45,699 --> 01:18:48,395 I had a marvelous friend named Peter Freuchen... 1122 01:18:48,569 --> 01:18:50,799 ...who had written the book Eskimo. 1123 01:18:50,971 --> 01:18:53,462 And he went along as a technical adviser. 1124 01:18:53,641 --> 01:18:57,202 He reported to me that Woody Van Dyke, who liked to drink... 1125 01:18:57,378 --> 01:19:02,179 ...and always wanted ice in his drinks, took a Frigidaire up into Alaska... 1126 01:19:02,349 --> 01:19:04,544 ...where there was ice right outside the boat. 1127 01:19:04,718 --> 01:19:06,879 You could go out and chop all you wanted. 1128 01:19:07,054 --> 01:19:11,013 But Van Dyke took the Frigidaire so he'd have ice for his liquor. 1129 01:19:11,191 --> 01:19:13,751 No matter what the film was or what part of the world... 1130 01:19:13,927 --> 01:19:16,589 ...they were gonna make it in or what the budget was... 1131 01:19:16,764 --> 01:19:19,733 ...Woody was gonna bring it in on or under budget. 1132 01:19:19,900 --> 01:19:22,425 He knew that's how you stay alive at MGM... 1133 01:19:22,603 --> 01:19:25,071 ...and that's how you get very popular with Mr. Mayer. 1134 01:19:25,239 --> 01:19:29,175 It better be pretty good too, but more important, it better be on budget. 1135 01:19:31,045 --> 01:19:35,948 It isn't long before Woody Van Dyke is known in Culver City as One-Take Woody. 1136 01:19:36,116 --> 01:19:40,109 His next stop, Africa and Trader Horn. 1137 01:19:50,130 --> 01:19:55,693 When I came to MGM, Trader Horn was already back at the studio. 1138 01:19:55,869 --> 01:20:00,829 They had sent it to Africa, the company, which Van Dyke directed... 1139 01:20:01,008 --> 01:20:03,169 ...and he shot crazy. 1140 01:20:03,344 --> 01:20:06,438 I mean, he just turned the film on everything he saw, I think... 1141 01:20:06,613 --> 01:20:08,547 ...without much regard to the continuity. 1142 01:20:08,716 --> 01:20:11,549 And they finally elected to bring everybody back. 1143 01:20:11,719 --> 01:20:15,849 You see, the original intent was to shoot the whole film in Africa. 1144 01:20:16,023 --> 01:20:21,359 And they cast in it two very regal tribe heads. 1145 01:20:21,528 --> 01:20:22,790 Kings, really. 1146 01:20:23,397 --> 01:20:26,457 And suddenly, when the film was ordered back to Hollywood... 1147 01:20:26,633 --> 01:20:28,464 ...it was necessary to take them along. 1148 01:20:28,635 --> 01:20:31,866 They were in the footage that had already been shot and recognizable. 1149 01:20:32,039 --> 01:20:35,167 Unfortunately for MGM, they quickly found out... 1150 01:20:35,342 --> 01:20:38,709 ...they did not wanna live among other Americans. 1151 01:20:38,879 --> 01:20:42,042 So they made them happy by erecting two tents... 1152 01:20:42,216 --> 01:20:46,516 ...on the backlot of the MGM studio, where they've got their food and liquor. 1153 01:20:46,687 --> 01:20:51,647 And ultimately, they even wanted women, and the studio had to deliver them too. 1154 01:20:56,730 --> 01:21:00,791 The American public is fascinated by tales of the dark continent... 1155 01:21:00,968 --> 01:21:03,732 ...with its scenes of charging rhinos and savage pygmies... 1156 01:21:03,904 --> 01:21:05,667 ...and the great white hunter. 1157 01:21:05,839 --> 01:21:07,431 In the footsteps of Trader Horn... 1158 01:21:07,608 --> 01:21:12,136 ...MGM embarks on the most popular African adventure movie of all time. 1159 01:21:12,312 --> 01:21:16,806 And yet Woody Van Dyke's cast and crew never leave Southern California. 1160 01:21:16,984 --> 01:21:18,611 The picture is so popular... 1161 01:21:18,786 --> 01:21:23,052 ...it spawns a seemingly endless series of films. 1162 01:21:23,223 --> 01:21:27,159 The hero is a gentleman named Tarzan. 1163 01:21:38,071 --> 01:21:41,563 Woody Van Dyke had made Trader Horn in Africa. 1164 01:21:42,042 --> 01:21:45,637 And he'd come back with a lot of film that they hadn't used. 1165 01:21:45,813 --> 01:21:49,977 Lions and tigers and action stuff, and really good stuff. 1166 01:21:50,150 --> 01:21:51,913 They didn't know what to do with it. 1167 01:21:57,491 --> 01:22:01,120 Now, I don't know who came up with the idea of making a Tarzan. 1168 01:22:01,295 --> 01:22:03,991 It might have been Edgar Rice Burroughs' office... 1169 01:22:04,164 --> 01:22:08,396 ...or it might have been MGM, but that was the nucleus of the idea. 1170 01:22:08,569 --> 01:22:10,196 I used to read the Tarzan books... 1171 01:22:10,370 --> 01:22:12,702 ...and they had a kind of a shrill yell for Tarzan. 1172 01:22:12,873 --> 01:22:15,307 And I never thought I'd ever make Tarzan. 1173 01:22:15,476 --> 01:22:18,843 But when I finally got it, we were trying to do yells like that... 1174 01:22:19,012 --> 01:22:23,278 ...and I remembered when I was a kid, I used to yodel in the picnics on Sunday. 1175 01:22:23,450 --> 01:22:25,645 So I said, "I know a yell." 1176 01:22:32,759 --> 01:22:36,251 It was a man who'd never seen a woman before. 1177 01:22:36,430 --> 01:22:38,557 So it was a fairy tale. 1178 01:22:38,732 --> 01:22:40,962 And yet it was two real people. 1179 01:22:42,302 --> 01:22:45,237 Don't. Let me go, let me go, let me go. 1180 01:22:45,405 --> 01:22:47,532 Let me go, let me go. 1181 01:22:47,708 --> 01:22:50,268 Let me go. Oh, no, let me go, let me go. 1182 01:22:50,444 --> 01:22:52,537 You let me go. 1183 01:22:52,713 --> 01:22:54,738 He didn't know what to do with a woman. 1184 01:22:54,915 --> 01:22:56,507 I guess he found out pretty quickly. 1185 01:22:56,683 --> 01:23:00,278 But he didn't know whether-- What it was when he found her. 1186 01:23:00,454 --> 01:23:02,012 Was it a monkey? 1187 01:23:02,189 --> 01:23:05,716 And she was able to teach him many things that he was unaware. 1188 01:23:05,893 --> 01:23:09,727 It was a lovely innocent concept and yet very sexy. 1189 01:23:10,230 --> 01:23:13,563 And they tried different things to make Jane look pretty sexy. 1190 01:23:14,468 --> 01:23:19,565 And first of all, they had the idea of wearing no bra... 1191 01:23:19,740 --> 01:23:21,037 ...no brassiere at all. 1192 01:23:21,208 --> 01:23:24,939 And that she would be always covered with a branch. 1193 01:23:25,112 --> 01:23:27,239 And they tried that, and that didn't work. 1194 01:23:27,414 --> 01:23:30,781 So then they made a costume, and it wasn't that bad at all. 1195 01:23:30,951 --> 01:23:36,355 There was a little leather bra and a thing with thongs on the side. 1196 01:23:36,523 --> 01:23:41,460 Well, it started such a furor that the letters just came in. 1197 01:23:41,628 --> 01:23:46,793 So it added up, like, to thousands of women who were objecting to my costume. 1198 01:23:46,967 --> 01:23:50,232 I think that was one of the things that started the Legion of Decency. 1199 01:23:51,305 --> 01:23:54,900 Cheetah certainly deserts us when we get near water, doesn't she? 1200 01:23:55,676 --> 01:23:56,734 Wait, Tarzan. 1201 01:24:01,648 --> 01:24:02,910 Now, in those days... 1202 01:24:03,083 --> 01:24:05,483 ...they took those things very seriously, the public did. 1203 01:24:05,652 --> 01:24:08,644 Do you know I was offered land in San Francisco to hide? 1204 01:24:09,356 --> 01:24:13,884 I was offered all kinds of places where I could go in my shame... 1205 01:24:14,061 --> 01:24:17,326 ...to hide from the cruel public who were ready to throw stones at me. 1206 01:24:17,497 --> 01:24:18,623 It's funny, you know. 1207 01:24:18,799 --> 01:24:21,461 We were unreal people and yet we were real. 1208 01:24:21,868 --> 01:24:24,462 When a man in the outside world meets a young lady... 1209 01:24:24,638 --> 01:24:28,597 ...he isn't allowed to behave at all the way you did, not at all. 1210 01:24:29,242 --> 01:24:30,334 What man do? 1211 01:24:30,744 --> 01:24:34,771 If he decides he wants her for his wife, he goes to see her father. 1212 01:24:34,948 --> 01:24:36,506 Why? 1213 01:24:36,683 --> 01:24:37,980 That's the way it's done. 1214 01:24:38,151 --> 01:24:40,210 Politely, with etiquette. 1215 01:24:40,387 --> 01:24:42,787 Too much talk. Tarzan way better. 1216 01:24:42,956 --> 01:24:44,651 Yes. 1217 01:24:45,025 --> 01:24:46,049 It is better. 1218 01:24:51,398 --> 01:24:55,357 One of the brightest stars in L.B. Mayer's galaxy is Jean Harlow. 1219 01:24:55,535 --> 01:24:58,504 Known throughout the world as the Platinum Venus... 1220 01:24:58,672 --> 01:25:04,167 ...she is MGM's resident sex symbol and a major source of studio income. 1221 01:25:05,846 --> 01:25:09,145 So gentlemen prefer blonds, do they? 1222 01:25:10,651 --> 01:25:13,119 Yes, they do. 1223 01:25:25,198 --> 01:25:26,961 Can you see through this? 1224 01:25:27,134 --> 01:25:29,796 I'm afraid you can, miss, but-- - I'll wear it. 1225 01:25:29,970 --> 01:25:32,768 With Jean, I think what you saw was what you got. 1226 01:25:32,939 --> 01:25:36,238 There didn't seem to be any subterfuge or subtlety about Jean. 1227 01:25:36,410 --> 01:25:38,844 She never wore a nightgown or anything. 1228 01:25:39,012 --> 01:25:41,412 She slept in the raw, and then she'd say: 1229 01:25:41,581 --> 01:25:43,173 "Oh, the maid may be embarrassed." 1230 01:25:43,350 --> 01:25:46,410 She'd take her nightgown, rumple it up. She'd say, "I put it here. 1231 01:25:46,586 --> 01:25:50,044 Then she'd think I slept in my nightgown." She was kind of sweet, you know? 1232 01:25:50,223 --> 01:25:51,656 She didn't wear any underwear. 1233 01:25:51,825 --> 01:25:55,761 She'd step into her white slacks and a white sweater, and off she'd go to work. 1234 01:25:55,929 --> 01:25:57,453 What the...? 1235 01:25:57,631 --> 01:26:00,031 Hey, hey. 1236 01:26:03,804 --> 01:26:06,602 How many times have I told you to let down those curtains? 1237 01:26:06,773 --> 01:26:08,900 Why? They've all gone off to work. 1238 01:26:10,010 --> 01:26:11,568 You heard me. Let them down. 1239 01:26:13,747 --> 01:26:15,214 What's the matter? 1240 01:26:15,382 --> 01:26:17,577 Afraid I'll shock the duchess? 1241 01:26:17,751 --> 01:26:21,346 Don't you suppose she's ever seen a French postcard? 1242 01:26:23,724 --> 01:26:27,683 You let those curtains down or this is the last bath you'll ever... 1243 01:26:29,830 --> 01:26:31,559 Get out of there. 1244 01:26:33,033 --> 01:26:35,058 - Say, what's the idea? - What? 1245 01:26:35,235 --> 01:26:36,964 Getting in that barrel. 1246 01:26:37,137 --> 01:26:42,268 Oh, I don't know. Maybe I'm going over Niagara Falls. Whoo! 1247 01:26:43,710 --> 01:26:46,201 She was a darling girl. 1248 01:26:46,379 --> 01:26:52,249 She was really a kind of a homebody girl. 1249 01:26:52,419 --> 01:26:57,288 She used to sit on her stepfather's lap on the set. 1250 01:26:57,457 --> 01:27:00,517 She was naive in a way. 1251 01:27:00,694 --> 01:27:02,491 Very sweet girl. 1252 01:27:05,866 --> 01:27:07,959 It's morning, September the 5th, 1932. 1253 01:27:08,135 --> 01:27:09,534 MGM producer Paul Bern... 1254 01:27:09,703 --> 01:27:12,968 ...husband of film siren Jean Harlow, was found shot through the head... 1255 01:27:13,140 --> 01:27:15,472 ...in the bathroom of his Benedict Canyon mansion. 1256 01:27:15,642 --> 01:27:19,976 The first call the gardener made after discovering the body was not to the police. 1257 01:27:20,147 --> 01:27:21,614 But to the studio front office. 1258 01:27:21,782 --> 01:27:24,717 And when L.B. Mayer arrived on the scene, his first thought... 1259 01:27:24,885 --> 01:27:28,651 ...was that one of his biggest stars had murdered her husband. 1260 01:27:29,256 --> 01:27:33,750 Paul Bern had come up from the New York theater. 1261 01:27:33,927 --> 01:27:35,690 And... 1262 01:27:35,862 --> 01:27:41,494 He came to Hollywood after a woman that he had known and lived with... 1263 01:27:41,668 --> 01:27:44,466 ...had been adjudged to be virtually insane. 1264 01:27:44,638 --> 01:27:46,868 I didn't know it at the time, I heard later... 1265 01:27:47,040 --> 01:27:51,534 ...that Jean Harlow and Paul Bern... 1266 01:27:51,711 --> 01:27:54,407 ...began to become very romantically attached... 1267 01:27:54,581 --> 01:27:56,378 ...began to think of marriage. 1268 01:27:57,117 --> 01:27:59,915 Now, Jean was very much younger than Paul... 1269 01:28:00,086 --> 01:28:03,317 ...and that seems to have been what affected the studio most... 1270 01:28:03,490 --> 01:28:05,082 ...many of whom were against it... 1271 01:28:05,258 --> 01:28:08,159 ...purely because they thought Paul was too old for her. 1272 01:28:08,328 --> 01:28:12,856 Two months after the marriage, Paul Bern was found dead... 1273 01:28:13,033 --> 01:28:15,263 ...in his home in Beverly Hills. 1274 01:28:15,435 --> 01:28:18,268 And I went up there, and Thalberg was there. 1275 01:28:18,438 --> 01:28:21,669 The police didn't come till much later that day. 1276 01:28:21,842 --> 01:28:24,709 Louis B. Mayer and Howard Strickling, the head of publicity... 1277 01:28:24,878 --> 01:28:26,937 ...had been there and gone. 1278 01:28:27,113 --> 01:28:33,143 Mayer found a paper in a diary... 1279 01:28:33,320 --> 01:28:35,015 ...and it had no date on it. 1280 01:28:35,188 --> 01:28:39,420 It was a note written to a woman as an apology for something... 1281 01:28:39,593 --> 01:28:42,255 ...and it was used as a suicide note. 1282 01:28:42,429 --> 01:28:44,693 And of course, I now feel differently. 1283 01:28:44,865 --> 01:28:48,767 I think the woman who had been in his life earlier... 1284 01:28:48,935 --> 01:28:54,339 ...had come down, had demanded things, and finally had shot and killed him. 1285 01:28:54,507 --> 01:28:57,101 Then she killed herself. 1286 01:28:57,277 --> 01:29:01,008 Three days after Paul Bern's death, his first wife, Dorothy Millette... 1287 01:29:01,181 --> 01:29:05,277 ...is found floating face down in a Northern California river... 1288 01:29:05,452 --> 01:29:07,579 ...dead of an apparent suicide. 1289 01:29:07,754 --> 01:29:09,551 It still is a mystery, really. 1290 01:29:09,723 --> 01:29:11,782 I mean, there were just a thousand rumors. 1291 01:29:11,958 --> 01:29:15,655 Howard Strickling calmed everything down as he could calm everything. 1292 01:29:16,196 --> 01:29:18,756 And I don't think that any of us... 1293 01:29:19,099 --> 01:29:24,002 ...really felt it our business to think even too much about it. 1294 01:29:24,170 --> 01:29:26,638 No gossip. That would be outside the studio domain. 1295 01:29:26,806 --> 01:29:29,798 As I say, we were a family. We didn't destroy each other. 1296 01:29:31,311 --> 01:29:33,836 It was a world unto itself. 1297 01:29:34,014 --> 01:29:40,385 And I would think that if MGM had a fault, they overprotected us. 1298 01:29:40,553 --> 01:29:44,216 If there was bad publicity or something, you took it up with Howard Strickling. 1299 01:29:44,391 --> 01:29:49,158 Life was taken care of and they spoiled us. 1300 01:29:49,729 --> 01:29:53,722 Messy incidents like the Paul Bern scandal, along with Jean Harlow's antics... 1301 01:29:53,900 --> 01:29:57,631 ...both on and off-screen have civic groups outraged. 1302 01:29:57,804 --> 01:29:59,704 The demand for censorship grows. 1303 01:29:59,873 --> 01:30:03,934 And a more rigid code of standards is adopted by the studios... 1304 01:30:04,110 --> 01:30:06,544 ...and enforced by the will Hays office. 1305 01:30:06,713 --> 01:30:10,114 The code sets up high standards of performance... 1306 01:30:10,283 --> 01:30:12,751 ...for motion-picture producers. 1307 01:30:12,919 --> 01:30:15,149 You want entertainment... 1308 01:30:15,322 --> 01:30:20,225 ...wholesome, interesting and vital. 1309 01:30:20,393 --> 01:30:24,591 Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer's production of Grand Hotel has plenty of sex in it... 1310 01:30:24,764 --> 01:30:27,665 ...but it all takes place behind closed doors. 1311 01:30:27,834 --> 01:30:31,531 The film is one of the cinematic highlights of the Depression era... 1312 01:30:31,705 --> 01:30:34,640 ...and is based on an obscure play written by a German author... 1313 01:30:34,808 --> 01:30:36,673 ...named Vicki Baum. 1314 01:30:43,883 --> 01:30:45,407 After securing the film rights... 1315 01:30:45,585 --> 01:30:48,053 ...Irving Thalberg defies conventional wisdom... 1316 01:30:48,221 --> 01:30:53,056 ...and casts several of Culver City's biggest names in the same picture. 1317 01:30:57,931 --> 01:31:00,661 What MGM's publicity department has been promising... 1318 01:31:00,834 --> 01:31:05,271 ...more stars than there are in heaven, this movie delivers. 1319 01:31:05,438 --> 01:31:09,272 The day-to-day production of this gloomy cosmopolitan melodrama was supervised... 1320 01:31:09,442 --> 01:31:12,240 ...by Mr. Thalberg's close friend and associate, Paul Bern... 1321 01:31:12,412 --> 01:31:15,074 ...shortly before his mysterious death. 1322 01:31:15,248 --> 01:31:19,617 Grand Hotel is Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer's first all-star blockbuster... 1323 01:31:19,786 --> 01:31:24,189 ...and the film receives the Best Picture Oscar of 1932. 1324 01:31:25,158 --> 01:31:26,921 Who are you? 1325 01:31:27,394 --> 01:31:30,124 Someone who could love you, that's all. 1326 01:31:30,630 --> 01:31:34,930 Someone who's forgotten everything else but you. 1327 01:31:35,802 --> 01:31:37,702 You could love me? 1328 01:31:37,871 --> 01:31:42,433 I've never seen anything in my life as beautiful as you are. 1329 01:31:52,452 --> 01:31:54,443 You must go now. 1330 01:31:57,457 --> 01:32:00,255 I'm not going. You know I'm not going. 1331 01:32:01,761 --> 01:32:04,229 Oh, please, let me stay. 1332 01:32:04,397 --> 01:32:05,921 But I want to be alone. 1333 01:32:06,099 --> 01:32:08,260 That isn't true, you don't wanna be alone. 1334 01:32:08,435 --> 01:32:10,369 You were in despair just now. 1335 01:32:10,537 --> 01:32:12,903 I can't leave you now. 1336 01:32:13,273 --> 01:32:15,468 You mustn't cry anymore. 1337 01:32:15,642 --> 01:32:17,576 You must forget. 1338 01:32:18,011 --> 01:32:21,777 Let me stay just for a little while. 1339 01:32:22,382 --> 01:32:24,850 Oh, please, let me stay. 1340 01:32:29,322 --> 01:32:32,086 For just a minute, then. 1341 01:32:32,959 --> 01:32:36,395 Irving was the great mind of the old MGM. 1342 01:32:36,563 --> 01:32:38,997 He would not slap anything at the audience. 1343 01:32:39,165 --> 01:32:42,032 It had to be as perfect as he could make it. 1344 01:32:42,202 --> 01:32:48,163 He believed that he understood... 1345 01:32:48,341 --> 01:32:51,674 ...and he did, what they wanted. 1346 01:32:51,845 --> 01:32:56,214 And what would fulfill their dreams. 1347 01:32:56,616 --> 01:32:57,776 And he did it. 1348 01:32:58,451 --> 01:33:00,442 Grand Hotel. 1349 01:33:00,620 --> 01:33:02,383 Always the same. 1350 01:33:02,555 --> 01:33:05,319 People come, people go. 1351 01:33:05,492 --> 01:33:07,016 Nothing ever happens. 1352 01:33:16,002 --> 01:33:18,061 Grand Hotel. 1353 01:33:23,243 --> 01:33:26,440 Three months after the triumphant opening of Grand Hotel... 1354 01:33:26,613 --> 01:33:28,410 ...Irving Thalberg collapses. 1355 01:33:28,581 --> 01:33:32,711 The man Vicki Baum refers to as the overheated dynamo... 1356 01:33:32,886 --> 01:33:35,821 ...is returning home from the studio's Christmas party... 1357 01:33:35,989 --> 01:33:38,355 ...when he is stricken with a heart attack. 1358 01:33:42,896 --> 01:33:44,158 With Irving convalescing... 1359 01:33:44,330 --> 01:33:48,164 ...Mr. Mayer has no choice but to assume control of all production. 1360 01:33:48,334 --> 01:33:50,996 He suddenly finds himself wielding absolute power... 1361 01:33:51,171 --> 01:33:54,663 ...over a vast organization operated almost entirely by men... 1362 01:33:54,841 --> 01:33:56,672 ...loyal to his stricken associate. 1363 01:33:57,277 --> 01:34:00,269 In desperation, he turns to outside producers. 1364 01:34:00,446 --> 01:34:03,677 When Irving finds out, he's furious. 1365 01:34:03,850 --> 01:34:08,810 Well, I think what happened is that Irving had had sole credit... 1366 01:34:08,988 --> 01:34:10,853 ...to operate that studio. 1367 01:34:11,024 --> 01:34:14,050 And everybody worked under him. 1368 01:34:14,227 --> 01:34:17,958 Consequently, when he had the heart attack... 1369 01:34:18,131 --> 01:34:19,792 ...L.B. had to take over. 1370 01:34:19,966 --> 01:34:22,059 That's when he brought in David Selznick... 1371 01:34:22,235 --> 01:34:24,567 ...Walter Wanger, Howard Hawks. 1372 01:34:24,737 --> 01:34:28,605 He brought in some very stalwart motion-picture makers. 1373 01:34:28,775 --> 01:34:32,074 But they were not under Thalberg. 1374 01:34:32,245 --> 01:34:36,841 Mr. Schenck made a whole new deal with Thalberg... 1375 01:34:37,016 --> 01:34:42,249 ...and Irving was supposedly no longer in charge of other producers. 1376 01:34:42,422 --> 01:34:45,152 Of course, we all leaned on him, anyway. 1377 01:34:45,325 --> 01:34:47,657 We all depended on him. 1378 01:34:47,827 --> 01:34:51,786 As long as Irving lives, we're all great men. 1379 01:34:52,232 --> 01:34:53,665 And that was the attitude. 1380 01:34:54,067 --> 01:34:56,433 He knew that they were scheming to get him out. 1381 01:34:56,603 --> 01:35:00,369 And as old Mayer said to me when he called me in: 1382 01:35:00,540 --> 01:35:02,974 "I'm doing it for the little fellow's good. 1383 01:35:03,142 --> 01:35:05,201 That's why we did it. We did it for his good. 1384 01:35:05,378 --> 01:35:06,572 He was killing himself." 1385 01:35:06,980 --> 01:35:10,939 And the crisis came when Irving and Charlie, my husband... 1386 01:35:11,117 --> 01:35:16,248 ...and Norma Shearer and I were going off to Europe for a holiday. 1387 01:35:16,422 --> 01:35:17,684 He had to leave the studio. 1388 01:35:17,857 --> 01:35:20,325 I think the doctors wanted to get him away from there. 1389 01:35:20,493 --> 01:35:23,758 Because he was being harassed and tormented. 1390 01:35:23,930 --> 01:35:25,659 He was having a struggle with them... 1391 01:35:25,832 --> 01:35:29,393 ...because the Depression had begun and they were of two minds. 1392 01:35:30,303 --> 01:35:32,635 Metro wanted to make the same number of pictures... 1393 01:35:32,805 --> 01:35:37,538 ...52 a year, one every week, and cut prices. 1394 01:35:37,710 --> 01:35:40,577 Irving said, "We will make fewer pictures... 1395 01:35:40,747 --> 01:35:46,151 ...but we will make them so good and so much above the average... 1396 01:35:46,319 --> 01:35:50,483 ...that people will have to spend their money to go to see them." 1397 01:35:50,657 --> 01:35:52,181 They didn't get together on that. 1398 01:35:52,358 --> 01:35:55,759 They thought that he was being extravagant. 1399 01:35:55,928 --> 01:35:57,327 But Irving didn't know that... 1400 01:35:57,497 --> 01:36:01,957 ...and we get to Europe, and that's when they changed their policy. 1401 01:36:02,135 --> 01:36:04,035 And one day... 1402 01:36:04,203 --> 01:36:08,299 ...Norma came knocking on our door and yelling: 1403 01:36:08,474 --> 01:36:13,275 "Charlie, Charlie, come help. Irving has had an attack." 1404 01:36:13,446 --> 01:36:15,937 Well, we all raced back to their room... 1405 01:36:16,115 --> 01:36:18,982 ...and here was that little, beautiful face... 1406 01:36:19,152 --> 01:36:25,057 ...ivory white and eyes closed. 1407 01:36:25,224 --> 01:36:27,249 And all he said was: 1408 01:36:27,427 --> 01:36:30,089 "They knifed me, Charlie. They knifed me." 1409 01:36:38,317 --> 01:36:40,251 In 1933, it can safely be said... 1410 01:36:40,419 --> 01:36:43,650 ...that Greta Garbo is the most famous movie star in the world. 1411 01:36:43,823 --> 01:36:46,758 To be like Garbo has become an international craze. 1412 01:36:46,926 --> 01:36:48,791 Fans hound her at every turn. 1413 01:36:48,961 --> 01:36:52,692 A young girl screams, "I love you," and throws herself in front of her car. 1414 01:36:52,865 --> 01:36:56,528 A Midwestern farmer dies and leaves her his entire fortune. 1415 01:36:56,702 --> 01:37:00,001 Desperate to find peace, she leaves for Sweden, vowing: 1416 01:37:00,173 --> 01:37:02,801 "Never again will I come back to America." 1417 01:37:02,975 --> 01:37:04,738 Still, she finds no refuge. 1418 01:37:04,911 --> 01:37:07,402 Her every move is scrutinized by the world's press. 1419 01:37:07,580 --> 01:37:11,710 A Swedish reporter criticizes her selfish desire to be left alone. 1420 01:37:11,884 --> 01:37:15,115 Miss Garbo finally returns to Hollywood... 1421 01:37:15,288 --> 01:37:17,916 ...and the relative safety of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 1422 01:37:18,090 --> 01:37:20,354 There, under the direction of Rouben Mamoulian... 1423 01:37:20,526 --> 01:37:23,495 ...she films Queen Christina. 1424 01:37:23,663 --> 01:37:25,893 This final scene provokes endless discussions... 1425 01:37:26,065 --> 01:37:30,058 ...among critics and film scholars as to its emotional significance. 1426 01:37:30,236 --> 01:37:32,500 The picture's director explains it quite simply: 1427 01:37:32,672 --> 01:37:35,607 "I told Garbo to think of nothing. 1428 01:37:35,775 --> 01:37:38,642 You must make your mind and your heart a complete blank. 1429 01:37:38,811 --> 01:37:41,371 I want the writing to be done by the audience. 1430 01:37:41,547 --> 01:37:44,948 You are nothing but a beautiful mask." 1431 01:37:45,117 --> 01:37:47,244 You can't pigeonhole Garbo. 1432 01:37:47,420 --> 01:37:50,753 She's hard to classify, because she was like Chaplin... 1433 01:37:50,923 --> 01:37:53,619 ...man, woman and child. 1434 01:37:53,793 --> 01:37:55,658 She was fascinating. 1435 01:37:55,828 --> 01:38:01,095 Extremely selfish, beautiful, strange. 1436 01:38:02,235 --> 01:38:04,135 She'd walk around Jack Gilbert's garden... 1437 01:38:04,303 --> 01:38:08,171 ...perfectly nude with a dressing gown over her back like this... 1438 01:38:08,341 --> 01:38:11,868 ...and the Japanese gardener would look at her. 1439 01:38:12,044 --> 01:38:15,343 You know, I've worked with people who made you feel this or that. 1440 01:38:15,514 --> 01:38:16,708 Nothing. 1441 01:38:16,882 --> 01:38:19,350 So I was so interested that I went to see the rushes. 1442 01:38:19,518 --> 01:38:22,043 And everything was on the screen. 1443 01:38:22,221 --> 01:38:25,850 Thoughts that I had never known she felt or thought. 1444 01:38:26,025 --> 01:38:29,085 So I realized then that her great love affair... 1445 01:38:29,262 --> 01:38:32,288 ...was the camera or the camera's love affair with her. 1446 01:38:32,465 --> 01:38:34,797 It was quite extraordinary. 1447 01:38:36,402 --> 01:38:40,600 It is Greta Garbo who bullies the studio into filming Anna Karenina. 1448 01:38:40,773 --> 01:38:43,901 The picture features Freddie Bartholomew and Fredric March... 1449 01:38:44,076 --> 01:38:46,738 ...and is a remake of Garbo's silent classic Love... 1450 01:38:46,912 --> 01:38:49,540 ...in which she costarred with John Gilbert. 1451 01:38:49,715 --> 01:38:52,445 However, Fredric March is no John Gilbert. 1452 01:38:52,618 --> 01:38:55,917 At least in Greta Garbo's eyes. 1453 01:38:56,088 --> 01:38:58,318 Reportedly, before shooting their love scenes... 1454 01:38:58,491 --> 01:39:01,858 ...Miss Garbo chews on a piece of garlic. 1455 01:39:02,695 --> 01:39:05,289 You're going away with me. 1456 01:39:06,999 --> 01:39:10,059 Yes, yes, Alexei. 1457 01:39:10,236 --> 01:39:13,262 Don't leave me ever again. 1458 01:39:13,439 --> 01:39:15,066 Oh, Anna. 1459 01:39:16,709 --> 01:39:18,904 Oh, hello, ladies and gentlemen. 1460 01:39:20,813 --> 01:39:24,544 First of all, I want to thank you for all the lovely letters you have sent me. 1461 01:39:24,717 --> 01:39:28,209 It's been great pleasure and honor to work with Miss Garbo and Mr. March... 1462 01:39:28,387 --> 01:39:30,617 ...in our new picture, Anna Karenina. 1463 01:39:32,658 --> 01:39:34,888 You didn't come in to kiss me good night. 1464 01:39:35,061 --> 01:39:38,189 You know I can't go to sleep until you've kissed me good night. 1465 01:39:38,364 --> 01:39:40,958 I'm sorry, darling. 1466 01:39:41,133 --> 01:39:42,930 I'm sleepy. 1467 01:39:44,303 --> 01:39:46,771 Sergei, will you always love me? 1468 01:39:46,939 --> 01:39:48,907 I played her son in Anna Karenina. 1469 01:39:49,075 --> 01:39:52,374 I remember my Aunt Cissy and perhaps others saying: 1470 01:39:52,545 --> 01:39:55,776 "Greta Garbo loves you, and she doesn't give autographs... 1471 01:39:55,948 --> 01:40:00,248 ...and she doesn't really talk to people, but she will you. 1472 01:40:00,419 --> 01:40:02,944 And you get her to sign this picture." 1473 01:40:03,122 --> 01:40:06,683 I knocked on her dressing room door and she came, and I said: 1474 01:40:06,859 --> 01:40:09,157 "Would you please sign this for me?" 1475 01:40:09,328 --> 01:40:12,559 And she said no and closed the door. 1476 01:40:13,599 --> 01:40:15,726 Anna Karenina is a critical tour de force... 1477 01:40:15,901 --> 01:40:18,961 ...for the picture's cast and the film's producer... 1478 01:40:19,138 --> 01:40:20,696 ...David O. Selznick. 1479 01:40:20,873 --> 01:40:23,865 David was a very charming, decent guy... 1480 01:40:24,043 --> 01:40:27,479 ...but he was very obsessed with his ambition. 1481 01:40:27,646 --> 01:40:31,673 And he insisted that every picture be a David Selznick production. 1482 01:40:32,451 --> 01:40:35,943 The first pictures he made were the first films ever made at MGM... 1483 01:40:36,122 --> 01:40:38,022 ...that carried the producer credit. 1484 01:40:38,190 --> 01:40:42,149 David was subjected to an enormous amount of criticism... 1485 01:40:42,328 --> 01:40:46,560 ...because he was the son-in-law of Louis B. Mayer... 1486 01:40:46,732 --> 01:40:49,462 ...and of course the nepotism was obvious. 1487 01:40:49,635 --> 01:40:53,594 They brought David in with a great deal of show. 1488 01:40:53,773 --> 01:40:55,866 They built a whole bungalow for him. 1489 01:40:56,041 --> 01:41:00,273 Thalberg had a bungalow. Now, David had to have one right alongside. 1490 01:41:00,446 --> 01:41:05,406 The famous remark around Hollywood was, "The son-in-law also rises." 1491 01:41:11,791 --> 01:41:14,555 His first film, which was Dinner at Eight... 1492 01:41:14,727 --> 01:41:18,993 ...was a great Broadway play by Edna Ferber and George S. Kaufman. 1493 01:41:19,165 --> 01:41:23,329 And just as Irving had made a smash hit out of Grand Hotel... 1494 01:41:23,502 --> 01:41:27,370 ...by putting big stars in every part... 1495 01:41:27,540 --> 01:41:32,307 ...now, David proceeded to cast Dinner at Eight the same way. 1496 01:41:37,683 --> 01:41:40,584 You've been acting very strangely lately, my fine lady... 1497 01:41:40,753 --> 01:41:42,482 ...and I'm not going to stand for it. 1498 01:41:42,655 --> 01:41:45,021 - Yeah, and so what? - So what? 1499 01:41:45,191 --> 01:41:48,285 I'm the works around here and I'll give you orders what to do. 1500 01:41:48,461 --> 01:41:51,453 Who do you think you're talking to, that first wife of yours? 1501 01:41:51,630 --> 01:41:52,654 Leave her out-- 1502 01:41:52,832 --> 01:41:56,324 That poor mealy-faced thing with a flat chest that didn't talk up to you? 1503 01:41:56,502 --> 01:41:57,526 Shut up. 1504 01:41:57,703 --> 01:42:01,264 Washing out your overalls and cooking and slaving in some lousy mining shack? 1505 01:42:01,440 --> 01:42:03,340 - No wonder she died. - I ought to sock you. 1506 01:42:03,509 --> 01:42:04,976 Well, you can't get me that way. 1507 01:42:05,144 --> 01:42:09,581 You're not gonna step on my face to get where you wanna go, you big windbag. 1508 01:42:09,748 --> 01:42:12,182 Listen, you little piece of scum, you. 1509 01:42:12,351 --> 01:42:15,047 I've got a notion to drop you back where I picked you up... 1510 01:42:15,221 --> 01:42:18,657 ...in the checkroom of the Hot 'n' Tot Club or wherever the joint was. 1511 01:42:18,824 --> 01:42:20,416 Oh, no, you won't. 1512 01:42:20,593 --> 01:42:23,926 And then you can go back to that sweet-smelling family of yours. 1513 01:42:24,096 --> 01:42:27,122 Back of the railroad tracks in Passaic, and get this... 1514 01:42:27,299 --> 01:42:31,395 ...if that sniveling, money-grubbing, whining old mother of yours... 1515 01:42:31,570 --> 01:42:33,970 ...comes fooling around my offices anymore... 1516 01:42:34,139 --> 01:42:38,098 ...I'm going to give orders to have her thrown down those 60 flights of stairs. 1517 01:42:38,844 --> 01:42:41,210 Irving Thalberg was very inconspicuous. 1518 01:42:41,380 --> 01:42:42,642 You didn't see much of him. 1519 01:42:43,315 --> 01:42:44,942 He very seldom came on the set. 1520 01:42:45,117 --> 01:42:47,176 You weren't really aware of his presence. 1521 01:42:47,353 --> 01:42:49,014 But David was into everything. 1522 01:42:49,188 --> 01:42:51,486 Scripts and rushes. 1523 01:42:51,657 --> 01:42:56,321 And you were very much aware of David as opposed to Thalberg. 1524 01:42:56,495 --> 01:42:59,328 I was reading a book the other day. 1525 01:43:00,499 --> 01:43:03,434 - Reading a book? - Yes, it's all about civilization or something. 1526 01:43:03,602 --> 01:43:04,830 A nutty kind of a book. 1527 01:43:05,004 --> 01:43:09,270 The guy said that machinery is going to take the place of every profession. 1528 01:43:09,441 --> 01:43:11,432 Oh, my dear. 1529 01:43:11,610 --> 01:43:14,841 That's something you need never worry about. 1530 01:43:15,848 --> 01:43:20,342 David Selznick the man was a person of... 1531 01:43:20,519 --> 01:43:24,148 ...in his behavior towards me, incredible patience. 1532 01:43:24,323 --> 01:43:27,588 I tried his patience greatly. 1533 01:43:27,760 --> 01:43:28,784 For whatever reason-- 1534 01:43:28,961 --> 01:43:32,522 I'm sure he wasn't doing it for any effect, the man was busy. 1535 01:43:32,698 --> 01:43:37,658 --but I was kept waiting a little while in his anteroom of his office at MGM. 1536 01:43:37,836 --> 01:43:41,067 And so I utilized the time to great advantage... 1537 01:43:41,240 --> 01:43:46,371 ...by carving my initials on his leather furniture. 1538 01:43:46,812 --> 01:43:49,007 David, come here. 1539 01:43:53,586 --> 01:43:57,545 If I have an obstinate horse or a dog to deal with, what do you think I do? 1540 01:43:58,190 --> 01:43:59,487 I don't know. 1541 01:44:01,026 --> 01:44:02,687 I beat him. 1542 01:44:04,697 --> 01:44:06,597 I make him wince and smart. 1543 01:44:06,765 --> 01:44:08,756 I say to myself, "I'll conquer that fellow." 1544 01:44:08,934 --> 01:44:12,097 And if it were to cost I'd do it. 1545 01:44:13,405 --> 01:44:15,373 Mr. Murdstone, sir, don't. Pray, don't... 1546 01:44:15,541 --> 01:44:20,638 Basil Rathbone, who played my wicked stepfather in David Copperfield... 1547 01:44:20,813 --> 01:44:25,944 ...had major concerns apparently because of press reaction and fan reaction certainly... 1548 01:44:26,118 --> 01:44:29,986 ...about being doomed to be the bad guy... 1549 01:44:30,155 --> 01:44:34,558 ...who whacked and beat and was ferociously ill-willed... 1550 01:44:34,727 --> 01:44:36,888 ...towards this sweet little boy. 1551 01:44:37,062 --> 01:44:38,962 He thought that was gonna ruin his career. 1552 01:44:39,131 --> 01:44:42,100 They would say, "Basil Rathbone's no good and I hate him." 1553 01:44:42,267 --> 01:44:47,500 And so he went out of his way to be nice to me to counter that. 1554 01:44:47,673 --> 01:44:49,265 I used to go to his house a lot... 1555 01:44:49,441 --> 01:44:53,775 ...we were having a lot of friendly pictures taken to prove he wasn't a bad guy. 1556 01:44:54,146 --> 01:44:55,909 Young friend, I counsel you. 1557 01:44:56,081 --> 01:44:58,447 Annual income, 20 pounds. 1558 01:44:58,617 --> 01:45:01,609 Annual expenditure, 19 pounds. 1559 01:45:01,787 --> 01:45:03,721 Result: happiness. 1560 01:45:03,889 --> 01:45:06,221 Annual income, 20 pounds. 1561 01:45:06,392 --> 01:45:10,522 Annual expenditure, 21 pounds. 1562 01:45:10,696 --> 01:45:13,426 Result: misery. 1563 01:45:14,199 --> 01:45:15,757 Farewell, Copperfield. 1564 01:45:15,934 --> 01:45:18,425 I shall be happy to improve your prospects... 1565 01:45:18,604 --> 01:45:21,095 ...in case anything turns up. 1566 01:45:21,273 --> 01:45:25,073 Which I may say I am hourly expecting. 1567 01:45:26,979 --> 01:45:32,508 David was very definitely inclined toward fine literary writing. 1568 01:45:32,685 --> 01:45:35,245 And many of the movies that he made at MGM... 1569 01:45:35,421 --> 01:45:37,446 ...were based on his feeling. 1570 01:45:37,623 --> 01:45:40,183 He did the Dickens pictures. 1571 01:45:40,359 --> 01:45:41,690 He did Viva Villa... 1572 01:45:41,860 --> 01:45:47,662 ...which was a very fine book that I had bought just before he arrived. 1573 01:45:48,033 --> 01:45:53,665 David was a very competent executive, competent producer, of course. 1574 01:45:53,839 --> 01:45:56,933 But he also had a great ego about himself. 1575 01:45:57,109 --> 01:45:58,838 And in the end, it tripped him up... 1576 01:45:59,011 --> 01:46:03,277 ...because Irving had the loyalty of all the workers at the studio. 1577 01:46:03,449 --> 01:46:05,576 And David felt that very keenly. 1578 01:46:05,751 --> 01:46:08,481 In fact, that was the reason why he left. 1579 01:46:08,654 --> 01:46:12,112 He wrote a lengthy memorandum to Louis B. Mayer... 1580 01:46:12,291 --> 01:46:16,250 ...explaining that MGM was Thalberg's studio. 1581 01:46:16,428 --> 01:46:19,329 That he had been an interloper, and he moved out... 1582 01:46:19,498 --> 01:46:24,026 ...formed his own company, ultimately making Gone with the Wind. 1583 01:46:26,939 --> 01:46:30,602 When Irving Thalberg returns to Culver City from his European sabbatical... 1584 01:46:30,776 --> 01:46:34,371 ...he finds a studio that is very different from the one he had left. 1585 01:46:34,546 --> 01:46:37,515 He is no longer in charge of MGM's entire output. 1586 01:46:37,683 --> 01:46:42,518 And the men he once supervised are now running their own production units. 1587 01:46:43,188 --> 01:46:45,452 The balance of power has shifted. 1588 01:46:45,624 --> 01:46:47,489 L.B. Mayer is now firmly in control... 1589 01:46:47,659 --> 01:46:51,322 ...and direct communication between the two partners is now rare. 1590 01:46:51,497 --> 01:46:54,557 Even Irving's comeback picture, Riptide... 1591 01:46:54,733 --> 01:46:58,032 ...which stars Norma Shearer, is a disappointment. 1592 01:46:58,203 --> 01:47:00,398 Around the lot, there are whispers. 1593 01:47:00,572 --> 01:47:03,564 Has the boy wonder lost his touch? 1594 01:47:16,255 --> 01:47:18,951 Mr. Thalberg has better luck with his second endeavor... 1595 01:47:19,124 --> 01:47:24,994 ...a remake of Erich von Stroheim's 1925 hit, The Merry Widow. 1596 01:47:25,164 --> 01:47:27,632 Irving delights in finally creating a sound version... 1597 01:47:27,800 --> 01:47:30,769 ...of the beloved Franz Lehár operetta. 1598 01:47:30,936 --> 01:47:35,100 In the parts originally played by silent stars Mae Murray and John Gilbert... 1599 01:47:35,274 --> 01:47:40,837 ...director Ernst Lubitsch casts Jeanette MacDonald and Maurice Chevalier. 1600 01:48:11,009 --> 01:48:14,274 Mr. Mayer and Mr. Thalberg had been trying to sign Maurice Chevalier... 1601 01:48:14,446 --> 01:48:16,607 ...to a studio contract for years. 1602 01:48:16,782 --> 01:48:20,878 He agrees to come to Metro for one picture and one picture only. 1603 01:48:21,053 --> 01:48:24,614 His charming personality is a refreshing presence on the lot... 1604 01:48:24,790 --> 01:48:27,782 ...and one of his biggest fans is Irving's wife. 1605 01:48:27,960 --> 01:48:30,622 Norma, I think, was a born flirt. 1606 01:48:30,796 --> 01:48:32,764 She flirted with life... 1607 01:48:32,931 --> 01:48:35,923 ...she flirted with every man that came on the set. 1608 01:48:36,101 --> 01:48:37,796 She and I became great friends. 1609 01:48:37,970 --> 01:48:42,373 And every afternoon, we would have eggnogs in her dressing room. 1610 01:48:42,541 --> 01:48:46,534 And she'd say, "Maureen," she'd say, "Let's go and visit Maurice." 1611 01:48:46,712 --> 01:48:48,236 So we would go and visit Maurice. 1612 01:48:48,413 --> 01:48:50,711 She would flounce around and Maurice would come. 1613 01:48:50,883 --> 01:48:52,350 "Oh, Norma, you look so lovely." 1614 01:48:52,517 --> 01:48:54,485 And she'd say, "Maureen has perfume on too. 1615 01:48:54,653 --> 01:48:56,518 Which perfume do you like best, Maurice?" 1616 01:48:56,688 --> 01:48:58,713 And he would say, "Why, yours, Norma. 1617 01:48:58,891 --> 01:49:00,688 Yours is the best perfume." 1618 01:49:01,426 --> 01:49:04,657 You're the freshest Fifi I ever met. 1619 01:49:04,830 --> 01:49:06,855 Very nice Fifi. 1620 01:49:07,032 --> 01:49:08,431 How nice? 1621 01:49:08,600 --> 01:49:11,194 Mm. Not too nice. 1622 01:49:11,370 --> 01:49:14,703 Your right eye says yes and your left eye says no. 1623 01:49:14,873 --> 01:49:17,808 Fifi, you're cockeyed. 1624 01:49:25,050 --> 01:49:27,848 When the Marx Brothers are turned loose on the MGM lot... 1625 01:49:28,020 --> 01:49:30,147 ...Hollywood is convinced they are washed up. 1626 01:49:30,322 --> 01:49:32,847 It is Irving Thalberg, over the strenuous objections... 1627 01:49:33,025 --> 01:49:36,620 ...of L.B. Mayer, who rescues their sagging careers. 1628 01:49:38,664 --> 01:49:41,758 Chico used to play bridge every night with Thalberg. 1629 01:49:42,367 --> 01:49:45,029 He was the most feared man... 1630 01:49:46,405 --> 01:49:49,499 ...of any producer in any major studio. 1631 01:49:49,675 --> 01:49:52,075 And he wasn't feared because he wasn't a nice guy... 1632 01:49:52,244 --> 01:49:55,577 ...but he was so powerful because he was so talented... 1633 01:49:55,747 --> 01:49:58,773 ...and he was so great at his own business. 1634 01:49:58,951 --> 01:50:00,976 Paging Mr. Driftwood. 1635 01:50:01,153 --> 01:50:05,146 Mr. Driftwood. Mr. Driftwood. 1636 01:50:05,891 --> 01:50:07,017 Mr. Driftwood? 1637 01:50:07,192 --> 01:50:10,389 Boy, do me a favor and stop yelling my name all over this restaurant. 1638 01:50:10,562 --> 01:50:13,292 - Do I go around yelling your name? - Mr. Driftwood. 1639 01:50:13,465 --> 01:50:15,899 Is your voice changing or is somebody else paging me? 1640 01:50:16,068 --> 01:50:17,296 Mr. Driftwood. 1641 01:50:17,469 --> 01:50:19,630 Why, Mrs. Claypool, hello. 1642 01:50:19,805 --> 01:50:22,433 Mr. Driftwood, you invited me to dine with you at 7:00. 1643 01:50:22,607 --> 01:50:25,508 - It is now 8:00 and no dinner. - What do you mean no dinner? 1644 01:50:25,677 --> 01:50:29,169 I just had the biggest meals I ever ate, and no thanks to you either. 1645 01:50:29,348 --> 01:50:31,714 I've been sitting right here since 7:00. 1646 01:50:31,883 --> 01:50:33,077 Yes, with your back to me. 1647 01:50:33,251 --> 01:50:35,515 I invite a woman, I expect her to look at my face. 1648 01:50:35,687 --> 01:50:38,485 - That's the price she has to pay. - Your check, sir. 1649 01:50:39,825 --> 01:50:41,759 Nine dollars and 40 cents? This is an outrage. 1650 01:50:41,927 --> 01:50:43,189 I wouldn't pay it. 1651 01:50:43,362 --> 01:50:46,559 After Duck Soup, we signed up with Thalberg. 1652 01:50:46,965 --> 01:50:50,560 Now he says, "Come to the office tomorrow morning at 11:00... 1653 01:50:50,736 --> 01:50:53,705 ...and we'll have an initial talk about what we're gonna do." 1654 01:50:54,740 --> 01:50:56,002 We started to talk about... 1655 01:50:56,174 --> 01:50:58,802 ...I think, it was Night at the Opera, the first picture. 1656 01:50:58,977 --> 01:51:00,968 And then at 11:30 or 12:00, he'd say: 1657 01:51:01,146 --> 01:51:05,674 "Look, I have to go over and talk to Bob Sherwood for a few minutes. I'll be back." 1658 01:51:05,851 --> 01:51:07,876 He did this two or three times. 1659 01:51:08,053 --> 01:51:10,146 And he didn't come back till around 2:00. 1660 01:51:10,322 --> 01:51:12,290 So around the fourth time he did this... 1661 01:51:12,457 --> 01:51:16,291 ...we lit a fire in the fireplace, a huge fireplace... 1662 01:51:16,461 --> 01:51:21,398 ...and we sent to the commissary, and we got eight baked potatoes. 1663 01:51:22,100 --> 01:51:24,432 And we lit the fire, we had a roaring fire going... 1664 01:51:24,603 --> 01:51:26,935 ...we took off all our clothes. 1665 01:51:27,406 --> 01:51:28,498 And when he came back... 1666 01:51:28,673 --> 01:51:32,837 ...we were sitting in front of the fireplace, roasting these baked potatoes. 1667 01:51:33,879 --> 01:51:37,337 And after that, he loved us, because nobody ever cracked a joke around him. 1668 01:51:37,516 --> 01:51:38,983 Everybody was so afraid of him. 1669 01:51:39,151 --> 01:51:41,619 Even Mayer was afraid of him. 1670 01:51:52,664 --> 01:51:53,688 Peanuts, peanuts. 1671 01:51:53,865 --> 01:51:56,095 Get your fresh-roasted peanuts, folks. 1672 01:51:56,268 --> 01:52:02,537 They're nice and hot. Get your peanuts. Here you are. Peanuts, peanuts? 1673 01:52:02,707 --> 01:52:04,174 Peanuts. 1674 01:52:07,345 --> 01:52:09,813 Screenwriter Charles MacArthur once remarked: 1675 01:52:09,981 --> 01:52:12,415 "Entertainment is Irving's god. 1676 01:52:12,584 --> 01:52:17,351 He doesn't know how to rest, play or even breathe without a script in his hand." 1677 01:52:17,522 --> 01:52:22,619 This relentless pursuit of excellence leads him to Mutiny on the Bounty. 1678 01:52:22,794 --> 01:52:26,286 When Irving proposes filming the epic, Mr. Mayer is vehemently against it... 1679 01:52:26,465 --> 01:52:29,662 ...decreeing, "A mutineer is no proper hero." 1680 01:52:29,835 --> 01:52:32,895 Charles Laughton lets it be known that he's subject to seasickness. 1681 01:52:33,071 --> 01:52:36,666 Clark Gable flat out refuses to appear in the picture, stating: 1682 01:52:36,842 --> 01:52:39,106 "I'll be damned if I'll shave off my moustache... 1683 01:52:39,277 --> 01:52:42,440 ...just because the British Navy didn't allow them." 1684 01:52:42,614 --> 01:52:44,343 Murdering butcher. 1685 01:52:44,516 --> 01:52:46,780 I've had enough of this blood ship. 1686 01:52:46,952 --> 01:52:50,080 He's not master of life and death on a quarterdeck above the angels. 1687 01:52:50,255 --> 01:52:52,280 McCoy, Quintal. 1688 01:52:52,457 --> 01:52:54,049 I'm sick of blood. 1689 01:52:54,226 --> 01:52:56,626 Bloody backs, bloody faces. 1690 01:52:56,795 --> 01:52:59,127 Bligh, you've given your last command on this ship. 1691 01:52:59,297 --> 01:53:01,424 We'll be men again if we hang for it. 1692 01:53:01,600 --> 01:53:03,158 - Are you ready for anything? - Aye. 1693 01:53:03,335 --> 01:53:05,269 - Release those men. - Taking the ship? 1694 01:53:05,437 --> 01:53:06,734 - Mutiny? - We're with you. 1695 01:53:06,905 --> 01:53:07,929 Yes, mutiny. 1696 01:53:08,106 --> 01:53:10,631 Pass the word and seize the arms chest. 1697 01:53:11,443 --> 01:53:13,377 Well, I enjoyed Mutiny on the Bounty. 1698 01:53:13,545 --> 01:53:17,311 It was a very big picture and it... 1699 01:53:17,482 --> 01:53:19,541 In a way, it was... 1700 01:53:19,718 --> 01:53:23,484 It was shot so well by the director... 1701 01:53:23,655 --> 01:53:29,787 ...that I used to just go to a cupboard, and I'd take out a piece and put it in. 1702 01:53:29,961 --> 01:53:34,830 Casting me adrift 3500 miles from a port of call... 1703 01:53:35,000 --> 01:53:38,026 ...you're sending me to my doom, eh? 1704 01:53:38,203 --> 01:53:41,195 Well, you're wrong, Christian. 1705 01:53:41,373 --> 01:53:45,207 I'll take this boat as she floats to England if I must. 1706 01:53:45,911 --> 01:53:49,677 I'll live to see you, all of you... 1707 01:53:49,848 --> 01:53:53,716 ...hanging from the highest yardarm in the British fleet. 1708 01:53:53,885 --> 01:53:55,614 Mr. Thalberg had been in the East... 1709 01:53:55,787 --> 01:53:58,585 ...and he hadn't seen the picture cut or anything. 1710 01:53:58,757 --> 01:54:00,725 And there he was in a preview. 1711 01:54:00,892 --> 01:54:02,257 And he was very... 1712 01:54:02,427 --> 01:54:04,691 He was happy about it and very... 1713 01:54:04,863 --> 01:54:07,127 And it went over so well that night. 1714 01:54:07,299 --> 01:54:12,066 It was just a real boost for him. 1715 01:54:13,438 --> 01:54:14,928 Mutiny on the Bounty. 1716 01:54:15,106 --> 01:54:18,507 The picture's director, Frank Lloyd, its editor, Margaret Booth... 1717 01:54:18,677 --> 01:54:22,010 ...the film's composer, its three writers, along with Clark Gable... 1718 01:54:22,180 --> 01:54:26,810 ...Charles Laughton and Franchot Tone will all be nominated for Academy Awards. 1719 01:54:26,985 --> 01:54:29,044 To the voyage of The Bounty. 1720 01:54:29,221 --> 01:54:32,281 As president of The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences... 1721 01:54:32,457 --> 01:54:36,518 ...it's a pleasure to present this to you for producing the best picture of 1935... 1722 01:54:36,695 --> 01:54:38,754 ...Mutiny on the Bounty. 1723 01:54:38,930 --> 01:54:42,798 Mr. Capra, it is obvious, but nevertheless true... 1724 01:54:43,335 --> 01:54:46,930 ...for me to say that I'm happy that Mutiny on the Bounty won this award. 1725 01:54:47,105 --> 01:54:50,939 And the several thousand men and women who played in this picture... 1726 01:54:51,109 --> 01:54:53,407 ...I am sure, will share this happiness with me. 1727 01:54:54,079 --> 01:54:56,843 Irving Thalberg is back on top. 1728 01:54:57,782 --> 01:55:00,649 He turns his attention to Romeo and Juliet. 1729 01:55:00,819 --> 01:55:05,381 Mayer, again unhappy with the idea, calls Shakespeare box-office poison. 1730 01:55:05,557 --> 01:55:06,990 Mr. Thalberg retorts: 1731 01:55:07,158 --> 01:55:09,888 "I've never had any picture closer to my heart." 1732 01:55:10,061 --> 01:55:12,256 'Tis almost morning. 1733 01:55:12,430 --> 01:55:17,299 I would have you gone and yet no further than a wanton's bird... 1734 01:55:17,469 --> 01:55:21,132 ...who lets it hop from her hand and with a silk thread plucks it back again... 1735 01:55:21,306 --> 01:55:23,206 ...so loving and jealous of his liberty. 1736 01:55:23,375 --> 01:55:24,865 I would I were thy bird. 1737 01:55:25,277 --> 01:55:27,370 Sweet, so would I. 1738 01:55:27,712 --> 01:55:31,113 Yet I should kill thee with much cherishing. 1739 01:55:32,250 --> 01:55:33,842 Good night. 1740 01:55:34,986 --> 01:55:36,647 Good night. 1741 01:55:38,590 --> 01:55:41,821 Parting is such sweet sorrow... 1742 01:55:42,661 --> 01:55:47,462 ...that I shall say good night till it be morrow. 1743 01:55:53,672 --> 01:55:56,436 Romeo and Juliet is hailed as a masterpiece by the critics. 1744 01:55:56,608 --> 01:55:57,905 Time Magazine says: 1745 01:55:58,076 --> 01:56:02,103 "Producer Irving Thalberg does everything but call William Shakespeare from his grave. 1746 01:56:02,280 --> 01:56:05,977 This proves that the cinema has at last grown up." 1747 01:56:06,151 --> 01:56:10,178 But only three weeks after the picture's triumphant premiere... 1748 01:56:10,355 --> 01:56:12,755 ...Irving Thalberg is gone. 1749 01:56:22,667 --> 01:56:24,294 It was terrible. 1750 01:56:24,869 --> 01:56:27,565 It's appalling and... 1751 01:56:28,873 --> 01:56:30,738 It was so sudden, you know. 1752 01:56:30,909 --> 01:56:34,072 It was not right. 1753 01:56:34,245 --> 01:56:36,713 It wasn't fair for a young man. 1754 01:56:36,881 --> 01:56:38,473 He was so young. 1755 01:56:40,218 --> 01:56:41,242 Terrible. 1756 01:56:41,419 --> 01:56:45,150 Your life to be taken when he was so famous. 1757 01:56:45,323 --> 01:56:48,224 It was just a shocking thing. 1758 01:56:49,527 --> 01:56:51,654 Because he was a genius... 1759 01:56:51,830 --> 01:56:54,298 ...and there isn't anybody today to equal him... 1760 01:56:54,466 --> 01:56:57,435 ...or ever will be, and I've worked with all of them. 1761 01:56:57,602 --> 01:57:00,696 I think Hollywood went into a state of shock. 1762 01:57:00,872 --> 01:57:03,739 We all knew he was ill, but nobody thought he was that ill... 1763 01:57:03,908 --> 01:57:06,138 ...and it affected the studio tremendously... 1764 01:57:06,311 --> 01:57:10,475 ...because I was told by Eddie Mannix... 1765 01:57:10,648 --> 01:57:13,310 ...who was the studio manager... 1766 01:57:13,852 --> 01:57:17,788 ...that when Mayer drove away from the synagogue... 1767 01:57:18,356 --> 01:57:22,349 ...he nudged him in the ribs and said, "Isn't God good to me?" 1768 01:57:22,527 --> 01:57:26,691 It's a pretty murderous line in a way, and yet I understand it... 1769 01:57:26,865 --> 01:57:30,266 ...because I think in their last couple of years together... 1770 01:57:30,435 --> 01:57:33,962 ...Irving and L.B. were not getting along that closely. 1771 01:57:34,139 --> 01:57:37,905 And suddenly, God had removed his rival. 1772 01:57:38,076 --> 01:57:41,102 So it's a kind of tough comment. 1773 01:57:41,279 --> 01:57:43,008 But it was a tough time. 1774 01:57:43,915 --> 01:57:48,978 It must have been a terrible thing to live with for Mr. Mayer. 1775 01:57:49,154 --> 01:57:55,150 There wasn't a soul in that community who didn't hold him a little responsible. 1776 01:57:55,927 --> 01:57:57,690 Possibly, he wasn't. 1777 01:57:57,862 --> 01:58:01,263 The handling of Irving may have been impossible. 1778 01:58:01,433 --> 01:58:05,233 Irving was a workhorse, would not give up work. 1779 01:58:05,403 --> 01:58:11,899 This thing had such a grip on his own spirit, mind, heart. 1780 01:58:12,544 --> 01:58:14,409 It killed him. 1781 01:58:14,579 --> 01:58:16,706 He died of genius. 1782 01:58:22,854 --> 01:58:27,416 "As long as Irving lives, we are all great men." 1783 01:58:27,592 --> 01:58:30,584 This quote echoes throughout the canyons of Los Angeles... 1784 01:58:30,762 --> 01:58:33,822 ...as Hollywood holds its breath and asks: 1785 01:58:33,998 --> 01:58:39,595 "Can Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer survive without its greatest creative force?" 1786 01:58:57,555 --> 01:58:59,819 Irving Thalberg's last words were to his wife. 1787 01:58:59,991 --> 01:59:03,017 "Don't let the children forget me," he said. 1788 01:59:03,194 --> 01:59:06,527 He was laid to rest this morning, September the 16th, 1936. 1789 01:59:06,698 --> 01:59:09,166 He was 37 years of age. 1790 01:59:09,334 --> 01:59:11,165 Today, the show stopped. 1791 01:59:11,336 --> 01:59:15,295 For the first time in its history, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer is closed. 1792 01:59:15,473 --> 01:59:17,873 Warner Bros., Columbia, Paramount... 1793 01:59:18,042 --> 01:59:22,103 ...Universal, R.K.O., Fox, the entire industry... 1794 01:59:22,280 --> 01:59:26,944 ...shuts down and pays silent tribute to the man they called... 1795 01:59:27,118 --> 01:59:29,109 ...the boy wonder. 162030

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