John Gilbert(1897-1936)
- Actor
- Writer
- Director
John Gilbert was born into a show-business family - his father was a
comic with the Pringle Stock Company. By 1915 John was an extra with
Thomas H. Ince's company and a lead player by 1917. In those days he was
assistant director, actor or screenwriter. He also tried his hand at
directing. By 1919 he was being noticed in films and getting better
roles. In 1921 he signed a three-year contract with Fox Films. His
popularity continued to soar and he was turning from villain to leading
man. In 1924 he signed with MGM which put him into His Hour (1924). In 1925 he
appeared in the very successful The Big Parade (1925) and was, by now, as popular as
Rudolph Valentino. Lillian Gish, who had a new contract with MGM, picked Gilbert to
co-star with her in La Bohème (1926). With the death of Valentino, his only
competition, John was on top of the world. Then came Greta Garbo, who
starred with him in Love (1927), Flesh and the Devil (1926) and A Woman of Affairs (1928). The screen chemistry
between these two was incredible and led to a torrid off-screen affair.
The studio publicity department worked overtime to publicize the
romance between the two, but when it came time to marry, John was left
at the altar. His performances after that were devoid of the sparkle
that he once had and he began to drink heavily. Added to that, the
whole industry was moving towards sound, and while his voice was not as
bad as some had thought, it did not match the image that he portrayed
on the screen. Even his characters had changed, in such films as
Redemption (1930) and Way for a Sailor (1930). He was no longer the person that bad things
happened to, but he now was the cause of bad things which happen. MGM
did little to help John adjust to the new sound medium, as studio chief
Louis B. Mayer and Gilbert had a fierce and nasty confrontation over Garbo.
John was still under contract to MGM for a very large salary, but the
money meant little to him. His contract ran out in 1933 after he
appeared in Fast Workers (1933) as a riveter.
Garbo tried to restore some of his image when she insisted that he play opposite her in Queen Christina (1933), but by then it was too late. He appeared in only one more film and died of a heart attack in January 1936.
Garbo tried to restore some of his image when she insisted that he play opposite her in Queen Christina (1933), but by then it was too late. He appeared in only one more film and died of a heart attack in January 1936.