Spiral153 wrote:
Just curious, what makes people think that Garbo was an Aspie?
I know she was a very private and reclusive person, but that could've been due to a lot of different reasons.
Yes, it could have been. For me it was a number of things that slowly added up as I read about her. One is that she was not an actress or movie star - she was an icon. Even other A-listers treated her differently - they didn't see her as one of them.
She has a remote quality in most of her acting - I don't know how much of it was posed and how much of it was her.
One biographer compared her to a unicorn - I have never seen any other performer referred to that way. Normally biographers talk about how their subject is a regular person, just like you and me, but of course smarter, more creative, more talented, more ambitious, etc. No one says things like that about Garbo, so far as I've seen. They talk about her like she's a separate species, which is weird.
I also noticed as I read that she was very isolated. The social life she had seemed to be the social life people gave her. People adopted her, invited her to dinner parties, invited her to Onassis' yacht, set her up with friends. She didn't reciprocate - she never had dinner parties. I got the impression that if people hadn't invited her places, she wouldn't have had a social life.
I also found the first time I saw Ninotchka that her eye contact shifted in and out at a different pace from Ina Claire's when they were talking to each other, but I need to go back and have another look at that.
I'm going to write this up and try to get it published. I'll have a much clearer argument when I'm done. But basically, if you're curious, have a quick look at the bios in the library, and do a quick comparison with other actresses. (Of course, as I gather more information, I may change my mind. But I wasn't expecting her to strike me as autistic when I started reading so there's a case of sorts no matter what.)