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Two-Faced Woman
Two-Faced Woman
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Two-Faced Woman
Original film poster
Directed byGeorge Cukor
Written byS.N. Behrman
Salka Viertel
George Oppenheimer
Produced byGottfried Reinhardt
StarringGreta Garbo
Melvyn Douglas
Constance Bennett
Roland Young
Ruth Gordon
CinematographyJoseph Ruttenberg
Edited byGeorge Boemler
Music byBronislau Kaper
Production
company
Distributed byLoew's, Inc.
Release date
  • November 30, 1941 (1941-11-30)
Running time
90 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$1,247,000[1]
Box office$1,800,000[1]

Two-Faced Woman is a 1941 American romantic comedy film directed by George Cukor and starring Greta Garbo in her final film role, Melvyn Douglas, Constance Bennett, and Roland Young. The movie was distributed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer.

Garbo plays a wife who pretends to be her own fictitious twin sister in order to recapture the affections of her estranged husband (Douglas), who has left her for a former girlfriend (Bennett). The film is generally regarded as the box-office flop that ended Garbo's career in an unsuccessful attempt to modernize or "Americanize" her image in order to increase her shrinking fan base in the United States. By mutual agreement, Garbo's contract with MGM was terminated shortly after Two-Faced Woman was released, and it became her last film.

Plot

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Following a whirlwind romance and marriage, Ski instructor Karin Borg (Greta Garbo) learns, to her chagrin, that her new husband Larry Blake (Melvyn Douglas), editor of a fashion magazine, expects her to be a dutiful, submissive wife and not the independent woman she was when they met. They separate and Larry returns to New York City, where he takes up again with playwright Griselda Vaughn (Constance Bennett), with whom he was involved before his marriage.

Karin travels to New York to thwart the romance and win her husband back by masquerading as her spurious twin sister Katherine Borg, a wild, amoral "modern" woman. Larry is fascinated by Karin, in the guise of Katherine, but he quickly discovers the truth. He continues to play along, nearly seducing his wife's purported twin sister, but stopping short each time. Karin and Larry eventually reunite during a chase on the ski slopes, and all is forgiven.

Cast

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Production

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Before Garbo's previous film, Ninotchka (1939) was completed, MGM scheduled Madame Curie as her next picture. Pleased with the financial and critical success of Ninotchka, MGM decided to pair Garbo and Douglas in another romantic comedy. George Cukor, who had directed Garbo in Camille (1936), which is generally regarded as her best film, was assigned to direct. Constance Bennett, a major leading lady of the 1930s whose career was waning, was cast in a supporting role through the efforts of her friend Cukor. The screenplay by S.N. Behrman, Salka Viertel, and George Oppenheimer was based on a 1925 Constance Talmadge silent film titled Her Sister from Paris, which in turn was based on a play by German playwright Ludwig Fulda.

MGM used the film to promote a new image of Garbo as modern and glamorous, hoping to increase her appeal to filmgoers in the United States. Much of the income from Garbo's earlier pictures had come from their popularity in the European market, which was now unavailable due to World War II. Garbo hated the script for Two-Faced Woman and did not want to make the film; she was disappointed that Madame Curie had been shelved (MGM made the film with Greer Garson in 1943) and was very uncomfortable with the attempt to portray her as a modern "American" woman. Garbo strongly objected to a scene where she is wearing a bathing suit and swimming; she pleaded with director Cukor to have the scene cut, but Cukor, who shared Garbo's reservations about the film, told her it had to remain in the picture. The script also called for Garbo to dance in an elaborate ballroom rhumba scene. Garbo, who was not a natural dancer and disliked dancing in general, was forced to take lessons and once hid from her dance instructor in a tree at her home. She later said that she was embarrassed by the film and that it "was not good and it could never be made good." Garbo recalled that Melvyn Douglas, her co-star, disliked the film as well and his distaste for it was obvious during the production.

Two-Faced Woman was produced by Gottfried Reinhardt, with music by Bronislau Kaper, cinematography by Joseph Ruttenberg, art direction by Cedric Gibbons, and costume design by Adrian.

Censorship controversy and changes to original version

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Garbo and Douglas in Two-Faced Woman (1941)

MGM originally scheduled Two-Faced Woman for release in November 1941. The film received a Production Code seal of approval, but the National Legion of Decency rated the film as "C" for condemned — unusual at that time for a major Hollywood release — citing its alleged "immoral and un-Christian attitude toward marriage and its obligations: impudently suggestive scenes, dialogue, and situations: suggestive costumes." The film also was condemned by the archbishop of New York, the first time a particular film had been singled out. These condemnations strongly discouraged Catholics from seeing the film. Two-Faced Woman was banned in several cities, including Boston and Providence, Rhode Island. Other cities including Omaha, Chicago, and Milwaukee ordered that some scenes be cut.

MGM responded to the negative criticism of Two-Faced Woman by withdrawing the original cut of the film. Certain scenes were reshot and edited before the official release date. George Cukor refused to participate in the reshooting. Most notably, a new scene was added to the film in which Larry Blake determines almost immediately that Katherine is actually his estranged wife Karin, posing as her spurious twin sister and chooses to play along with her pretense rather than actually consider having an affair with his sister-in-law. The Legion of Decency amended its rating for the modified film from a "C", meaning condemned, to "B", meaning morally objectionable in part.

In addition to censorship-related changes, the studio also cut a number of Constance Bennett's scenes and changed the ending because some felt that Bennett had upstaged Garbo in many of their scenes together. Even with the cuts, Leonard Maltin wrote in 2014 that Bennett "steal[s] the film with her hilarious performance."

The revised version of Two-Faced Woman was released in early January 1942. The original, uncensored version of the film still exists, and was shown in 2004 at a George Cukor retrospective at the National Film Theatre in London, but has not been issued commercially in either the United States or Europe or shown on Turner Classic Movies (owned by WarnerMedia which holds the rights to the pre-1986 MGM film library).

Reception

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Upon the amended film's release in January 1942, Garbo received some of the worst reviews of her career. Despite the negative notices, Garbo was awarded The National Board of Review of Motion Pictures Best Acting Award. John Mosher of The New Yorker wrote of Garbo that "one can feel only that the archbishop who opposed the showing of the film was her one true friend. Of Garbo's folly there is little really to say. Just condolences might be enough."[2] Theodore Strauss of The New York Times wrote: "It is hardly necessary to sit in judgment upon such delicate matters of public interest, inasmuch as the film decisively condemns itself by shoddy workmanship. Miss Garbo's current attempt to trip the light fantastic is one of the awkward exhibitions of the season, George Cukor's direction is static and labored, and the script is a stale joke, repeated at length. Considering the several talents that have combined to create this dismal jape, put down Two-Faced Woman as one of the more costly disappointments of the year."[3] The review apparently missed the point that Garbo's role is to impersonate her fictional twin sister who unlike her is a novice to dancing. A scathing review in Time proclaimed the film was "almost as shocking as seeing your mother drunk."[4]

Even those reviews that praised Garbo's performance, still panned the film in general. Variety wrote: "That the experiment of converting Miss Garbo into a comedienne is not entirely successful is no fault of hers. Had the script writers and the director, George Cukor, entered into the same spirit of the thing with as much enthusiasm, lack of self-consciousness and abandon as the star, the result would have been a smash hit...Just how some of the lines of dialog escaped the scissors is as much of a mystery as how the screen writers...so completely flopped in providing a reasonably satisfactory finale."[5] Harrison's Reports called Garbo's performance "brilliant...yet if it were not for her charms and fine acting ability there would be little to recommend, for the story is weak and somewhat silly."[6] Film Daily declared Garbo "a delightful comedienne" but called it "unfortunate that the combined talents" of the scriptwriters "do not measure up to those of Miss Garbo's. George Cukor's direction is not as keen as it could be and tends to let the film ramble."[7]

Due to the film's critical failure, many sources have said that the film also did poorly at the box office. According to MGM records, it earned $875,000 in the United States and Canada, and $925,000 in other markets, resulting in an initial loss of $62,000.[1] Despite the previous success of Ninotchka, audiences had difficulty accepting Garbo as a comedienne. Attendance also was likely impacted by the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, which occurred three weeks before the film was re-released.[8] A few sources have challenged the general perception that the picture was a financial failure, with at least one stating that it eventually made back five times its budget.

Later in 1942, Garbo and MGM mutually agreed to terminate her contract with the studio. Contrary to popular belief, Garbo did not retire from acting because of the poor reception to Two-Faced Woman; she fully intended to return to films following the end of World War II. Since she was no longer under a studio contract, she was able to be highly selective over any roles offered to her; for various reasons, several later film projects which interested her did not come to fruition, leaving Two-Faced Woman as her final film.

References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia

Two-Faced Woman is a 1941 American romantic comedy film directed by George Cukor and starring Greta Garbo in her final screen appearance, with Melvyn Douglas as her co-lead. The plot centers on Karin, a ski instructor who marries urban magazine editor Larry but later impersonates a fictional vivacious twin sister, Katherine, to provoke jealousy and reaffirm his commitment after he flirts with an ex-lover. Produced by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer amid efforts to lighten Garbo's dramatic image into screwball comedy, the film encountered script rewrites, multiple directors, and censorship scrutiny over its risqué elements, including implied premarital sex. Upon release, it drew criticism for Garbo's unconvincing comedic turn and strained dual role, resulting in poor critical reception and underwhelming box office performance relative to her star power, factors that aligned with her subsequent retirement from acting. Despite later reevaluations praising its bold humor and Cukor's direction, the movie remains notable as a commercial misfire that marked the end of Garbo's Hollywood era.

Synopsis

Plot Summary

Karin, a ski instructress at a in , meets Blake, a New York magazine publisher vacationing there, and marries him after a whirlwind romance, with Larry agreeing to relinquish his hectic urban career. However, Larry soon departs for New York alone to attend to urgent business matters, leaving Karin behind. Suspecting his upon following him to the , Karin witnesses with his , the sophisticated Vaughn. Determined to test his , she fabricates the of an identical twin named and transforms herself into a worldly, flirtatious to entice . As "Katherine," Karin draws 's romantic , culminating in an intimate where he discerns her but proceeds, which disrupts her scheme and prompts her return to the ski resort. pursues her there, publicly exposes the impersonation to resolve the ensuing misunderstandings involving mutual acquaintances, and reaffirms his commitment, leading to their .

Cast

Principal Cast

starred as Karin Blake, who impersonates her fictitious twin to test her husband's , in what was her sole screen portrayal involving a dual character through differentiation via , , and behavioral shifts, achieved without contemporary . Melvyn Douglas played Larry Blake, the magazine editor husband, leveraging his prior comedic roles to provide levity contrasting Garbo's dramatic reputation in this romantic comedy.
ActorRole
Constance BennettGriselda Vaughn
Roland YoungO. O. Miller
Robert SterlingDick "Dickie" Williams
These supporting roles contributed to the film's ensemble, with Bennett as Larry's sophisticated associate, Young as a publishing executive, and Sterling as a young suitor, all integral to the comedic intrigue.

Production

Development and Pre-production

The project originated from Salka Viertel's story "The Twins," which MGM developed as a potential vehicle to entice Greta Garbo back to the screen after her extended hiatus following Ninotchka (1939), with the aim of shifting her persona toward screwball comedy to appeal more directly to American audiences and counter her established image of enigmatic European glamour. The working title remained The Twins during early phases, drawing on mistaken-identity tropes to facilitate Garbo's portrayal of dual personalities in a lighthearted marital farce. The screenplay was penned by S. N. Behrman, Salka Viertel, and George Oppenheimer, incorporating comedic elements inspired by Ludwig Fulda's play Die Zwillingsschwestern while emphasizing witty and situational humor to "Americanize" Garbo's character. George Cukor was hired to , selected for his proven with sophisticated comedies such as The Philadelphia Story (1940) and his prior work with Garbo on Camille (1936), which she reportedly favored for this venture. Garbo formalized her commitment on , , signing a with for a of $150,000—reduced from her prior $250,000 amid European disruptions affecting studio finances—with proceeding under a budgeted $1,247,000 to support the genre pivot intended to reinvigorate her stardom.

Filming

Principal photography commenced on June 18, 1941, with initial exterior scenes for the ski lodge and Alpine sequences captured at Sugar Bowl near Norden, California, and additional skiing exteriors filmed near Reno, Nevada, as well as in the broader Truckee area, where over 100 actors and technicians were mobilized. The production prioritized these outdoor shoots early due to logistical demands of the mountainous terrain and seasonal conditions, before transitioning to interior scenes at Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer's Culver City studios. An incomplete script at the start necessitated on-set rewrites and refilming of certain sequences, such as the characters' arrival in New York, to refine the comedic structure amid Garbo's transition from dramatic roles. Director George Cukor navigated these adjustments by overseeing multiple script revisions during shoots to maintain coherence and a comedic tone, though Garbo later voiced over the deviations from the original story, feeling her remained unfinished. Principal filming wrapped on , 1941, with only additional work anticipated at that before the assembly.

Post-production

The editing of Two-Faced Woman was completed by George Boemler, a editor who handled of into the final cut. composed the film's original musical score, integrating orchestral elements to support the romantic comedy's lighthearted . technical work finalized the sound mixing and necessary for dual-role as twin sisters Karin and , relying on her distinct vocal characterizations and on-set makeup differentiation rather than extensive .

Release

Initial Release

Two-Faced Woman had its in on , 1941, followed by a wide U.S. in December 1941 through distributor Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. The film's version ran approximately 94 minutes. MGM's campaign positioned the picture as a showcase for Greta Garbo's debut in comedic roles, diverging from her established dramatic persona, with trailers accentuating the romantic plot and twin disguise premise to appeal to broader audiences. International rollout faced restrictions from the United States' entry into on , 1941, shortly after the domestic , confining distribution largely to Allied territories during the conflict.

Censorship Controversy and Revisions

The rated Two-Faced Woman as Class C, deeming it "morally objectionable" in a statement released on , 1941, citing its "immoral and un-Christian attitude toward and its obligations" as well as "impudently suggestive scenes" that portrayed and in a comedic light. This condemnation reflected broader Catholic concerns over the film's light treatment of marital fidelity, with the Legion viewing the protagonist's scheme—impersonating a fictitious twin sister to test her husband's loyalty—as endorsing philandering rather than critiquing it. Although the Production Code Administration (PCA), enforcer of the , had initially approved the film for emphasizing marriage's preservation, external from the Legion prompted to withdraw prints shortly after previews, leading to reshoots and edits that excised approximately nine minutes of content, including suggestive with innuendos (such as metaphors implying sexual pursuits) and sequences implying or flirtatious interactions bordering on incestuous between familial characters. These alterations addressed specific objections to comedic elements that between and , with cuts removing overt implications of extramarital and adding clarifying scenes, such as the discovering the twin via a phone call earlier in the narrative. MGM rushed a re-edited version for on , , after the original , toning down the film's provocative edge to secure a Legion "B" rating (objectionable in part) and avert boycotts from Catholic organizations and conservative audiences who prioritized depictions upholding traditional marital vows. Defenders, including some studio executives, contended the original was satirical—mocking philandering without approval—but the revisions demonstrably shifted emphasis toward resolution and to enhance commercial prospects, as evidenced by the Legion's upgraded rating and partial recovery in bookings despite initial bans in cities like Boston and Providence. This self-censorship underscored the era's regulatory dynamics, where Catholic moral oversight wielded significant influence over Hollywood output beyond formal Hays Code enforcement.

Reception

Critical Reception

Upon its release on December 31, 1941, Two-Faced Woman received predominantly negative reviews from major critics, who faulted the script's and to convincingly transition into territory. Variety described the film as a "daring piece of showmanship" featuring "wild, and occasionally very risque" elements, including bedroom and boudoir scenes reliant on double entendres, but criticized the screenplay for lacking the necessary "spirit and abandon," resulting in uneven execution that prevented it from becoming a smash hit despite Garbo's enthusiastic performance. While some reviewers acknowledged the novelty of Garbo's attempt to shed her dramatic persona—praising Melvyn Douglas as an "excellent foil" and isolated aspects like visual elegance—most highlighted her comedic stiffness and the film's miscasting in emulating lighter fare such as It Happened One Night (1934). An empirical assessment of contemporaneous notices shows a majority negative consensus, with outliers including the National Board of Review's Best Acting Award to Garbo for her dual-role efforts in the uncensored cut.

Box Office Performance

Two-Faced Woman was produced with a budget of approximately $1.25 million. Domestic film rentals totaled $1.425 million, per MGM ledger records, falling short of the robust returns expected from a Greta Garbo vehicle and marking it as a financial disappointment for the studio despite recouping production costs domestically. Released in late 1941 amid the U.S. entry into World War II following the Pearl Harbor attack on December 7, the film struggled during the holiday season against competition from war-oriented productions that captured heightened public interest in patriotic themes. International earnings proved negligible, constrained by wartime disruptions to global distribution, resulting in overall limited profitability and contributing to MGM's subsequent caution toward high-prestige projects involving aging stars like Garbo.

Legacy

Impact on Greta Garbo's Career

Two-Faced Woman, released on December 31, 1941, served as Greta Garbo's final film, culminating her 16-year tenure with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer that began with Torrent in 1926. The production's commercial underperformance, earning approximately $1.3 million domestically against a backdrop of escalating production costs amid wartime constraints, prompted MGM to reduce her salary to $150,000 for the role and ultimately led to the mutual termination of her contract in 1942. This failure crystallized perceptions within the studio system that Garbo's dramatic persona—honed through box-office successes like Grand Hotel (1932), which grossed over $2.5 million, and Queen Christina (1933)—did not translate effectively to lighter comedic fare beyond the satirical success of Ninotchka (1939). The film's critical and audience rejection reinforced a causal link between Garbo's attempted pivot to romantic comedy and the erosion of her market viability, as reviewers noted the mismatch between her brooding intensity and the script's frothy demands, attributing partial fault to directorial and writing choices rather than her performance alone. At age 35, Garbo announced her retirement shortly after the release, declining to pursue further MGM projects despite a brief one-picture contract signed on December 20, 1942, which dissolved without production due to unmaterialized roles. This marked the end of her active screen career, with no subsequent firm commitments from studios, as empirical records indicate her selective rejections of offers prioritized personal seclusion over professional revival. Post-retirement, Garbo received sporadic proposals, such as a role in Graham Greene's The Stranger's Hand (1954), which she declined, alongside invitations from directors like Billy Wilder, underscoring a lack of binding agreements or renewed interest sufficient to override her disinterest following the film's fallout. The episode thus catalyzed her permanent withdrawal, shifting her legacy from evolving star to enigmatic recluse, unmoored from Hollywood's expectations.

Retrospective Assessments

In subsequent decades, revivals of Greta Garbo's oeuvre prompted reevaluations of Two-Faced Woman, with 1960s retrospectives screening the film alongside her successes to contextualize her career arc, though its comedic misfires persisted as a point of critique. Later airings on Turner Classic Movies from the 1990s onward exposed audiences to the revised print, fostering niche appreciation for Garbo's rare venture into screwball comedy and vulnerability, even as structural flaws remained evident. Scholarly examinations, such as those in film histories of George Cukor, highlight the picture's navigation of Hays Code-era constraints on marital fidelity and female agency, interpreting the protagonist's dual personas as a negotiation of gender expectations under censorship pressures. These analyses underscore causal links between the Legion of Decency's 1941 condemnations—citing implied adultery—and MGM's rushed reshoots adding 13 minutes of moralizing footage by December 1941, yet overinterpret the film's deceptive tropes as subversive rather than culminating in normative reconciliation of husband and wife. Such perspectives, often from academia, occasionally minimize the era's ethical objections by framing them solely as outdated prudery, disregarding the empirical basis in public backlash that empirically doomed the film's viability. Preservation status confirms most extant copies derive from the 1942 reissue, with original negative elements altered to include explicit fidelity affirmations absent in the November 1941 cut; rare uncut previews have surfaced in archival screenings but evade commercial home video or broadcast release. DVD editions from Warner Bros. in the early 2000s replicate this edited iteration, with liner notes detailing the interventions to comply with moral watchdogs, preserving historical alterations over hypothetical restorations. Retrospective consensus upholds the film's commercial flop—grossing under $1 million domestically against a $1.4 million —as unaltered by time, with reflecting rejection of its tone amid Garbo's dramatic . Niche accrues to Cukor's direction for salvaging wit from S.N. Behrman's script amid production chaos, yet narratives downplaying the moral controversy's in revisions lack evidentiary support, as contemporary affirm the Legion's influence extended beyond initial reviews to mandate changes. A 2018 San Francisco Chronicle exchange posited the work as "unfairly maligned" due to these additions, advocating for uncut access, though broader empirical reassessments affirm its status as Garbo's weakest entry without revisionist inflation.

References

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