I’ll love you all my life. I know that now. All my life. Camille (1936) dir. George Cukor
A week before Garbo’s death, my wife and I were in New York on our way to Florida. Garbo sounded bright and friendly as usual, but I could hear that she was very weak. She still managed to comment on the shipping accident between Norway and Denmark a few days earlier, in which so many people had died. She was appalled that that kind of thing could happen. Garbo made a note of my room number at the hotel and promised to ring when she felt better. That was on the Sunday evening. Three days later, on the Wednesday, she was taken to New York Hospital by ambulance. She died at the hospital after another three days - on 15 April 1990 - at the age of eighty-four years and seven months. (Conversations with Greta Garbo by Sven Broman)
Greta Garbo as Camille, 1936, photo by Clarence Sinclair Bull
“You who are so young–where can you have learned all you know about women like me?”
[3/10] Crucial Movies: Camille (1936)
Too much wine has made you sentimental. - Camille (1936) dir. George Cukor
Let me love you. Let me live for you.
Greta Garbo in photos by Clarence Sinclair Bull to promote Camille (George Cukor, 1936)
I’d begun to think you didn’t love me.
Greta Garbo on the set of Camille, 1936
Greta Garbo as Marguerite Gautier in Camille (George Cukor, 1936)
“When one may not have long to live, why shouldn’t one have fancies?”
Greta Garbo photographed by Clarence Sinclair Bull for Camille, 1936.
Greta Garbo in Camille (George Cukor, 1936)
By request dasherzallerdinge
Greta Garbo and Robert Taylor in Camille (George Cukor, 1936)
To die for….