The Divine Woman
The Divine Woman is an American silent film directed by Victor Sjöström and starring Greta Garbo. Produced and distributed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Only a single nine-minute reel and an additional 45-second excerpt are currently known to exist of this otherwise lost film; the only known complete copy of which was destroyed in the 1965 MGM vault fire.
The film grossed $541,000 in the USA and $390,000 internationally; its worldwide gross was $931,000 and generated MGM a profit of $354,000.
The film won the March 1928 Photoplay Award for the Best Pictures of the Month, as well as Best Performances of the Month for both Greta Garbo and Lars Hanson.
Origin
The film is adapted from the 1925 Broadway play Starlight by Gladys Unger, which starred Doris Keane. The plot is loosely based on stories of the early life of the French actress Sarah Bernhardt.Plot
Marianne is a poor French country girl who goes to Paris in the 1860s to seek her fortune as an actress. As she rises to success in the theatre, she must choose between the romantic attentions of two men. The first is Lucien, a poor but passionate young soldier who deserts the army to be with Marianne and goes to jail after stealing a dress to give her. Her other suitor is Henry Legrand, a wealthy middle-aged Paris producer who offers her fame and fortune.Cast
- Greta Garbo as Marianne
- Lars Hanson as Lucien
- Lowell Sherman as Henry Legrand
- Polly Moran as Mme. Pigonier
- Dorothy Cumming as Mme. Zizi Rouck, Marianne's Mother
- Johnny Mack Brown as Jean Lery
- Cesare Gravina as Gigi
- Paulette Duval as Paulette
- Jean De Briac as Stage Director
Existing reel