Samedi 06 août 2016 - 18:45 - TF1
Magazine - 50 mn inside
"Une Star, Une Photo"
Présentation: Nikos Aliagas, Sandrine Quétier
Sujet: dans les secrets de la photo culte de Marilyn dans sa robe blanche de Sept ans de réflexion.
Les clins d'oeils à Marilyn au Cinéma
- Introducing Dorothy Dandridge -
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Dans le téléfilm "Dorothy Dandridge, le destin d'une diva", biopic qui narre le destin de la première actrice star de cinéma noire à Hollywood, une courte scène montre Dorothy Dandridge (incarnée par Halle Berry), en compagnie de Ava Gardner (Jon Mack) et de Marilyn Monroe (Kerri Randles) à une fête privée dans une grande demeure à Hollywood. Cette scène semblant au premier abord incongrue, ne l'est en fait pas du tout ! Fait méconnu car peu relaté dans les biographies, Marilyn et Dorothy étaient très amies. Et Marilyn, Dorothy et Ava auraient souvent fréquenté ensemble les soirées hollywoodiennes au début de leurs carrières.
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In the TV movie "Introducing Dorothy Dandridge", a biopic that tells the story of the first black movie star actress in Hollywood, a short scene shows Dorothy Dandridge (played by Halle Berry), in the company of Ava Gardner (Jon Mack) and Marilyn Monroe (Kerri Randles) at a private party in a large mansion in Hollywood. This scene seems incongruous at first glance, but is in fact not at all! A little-known fact because it is rarely reported in biographies, Marilyn and Dorothy were very good friends. And Marilyn, Dorothy and Ava would often have attended Hollywood parties together at the beginning of their careers.
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Film: Dorothy Dandridge, Le Destin d'une Diva
Année: 1999
Pays: USA
Réalisateur: Martha Coolidge
Scénario: Shonda Rhimes, Scott, Abbott, d'après le livre de Earl Mills
Genre: biopic
Distribution: Halle Berry (Dorothy Dandridge), Brent Spiner (Earl Mills), Klaus Maria Brandauer (Otto Preminger), Obba Babatundé (Harold Nicholas), Loretta Devine (Ruby Dandridge), Cynda Williams (Vivian Dandridge)...
L'histoire: C'est avec sa soeur Vivian que Dorothy Dandridge fait ses débuts au Cotton Club, dans les années 40, en qualité de chanteuse et de danseuse. Lorsque le cinéma, incarné par Otto Preminger, lui fait les yeux doux, elle ne lui résiste guère. Solidement épaulée par Earl Mills, son manager, elle touche à la consécration dans «Carmen Jones». Si «Porgy and Bess», autre film musical, entretient sa renommée, «Island in the Sun» et «Tamango» véhiculent un message résolument antiraciste...
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> Sur le web: le film sur imdb
> Sur le blog: article Dorothy Dandridge
© All images are copyright and protected by their respective owners, assignees or others.
copyright text by GinieLand.
Clap !
n°11
pays magazine: France
paru le 13 août 2016
prix: 4,90 Euros.
article de 11 pages: "Dossier culte / L'autre Marilyn".
> site officiel clapmag.com
Carmel
n°?
pays magazine: Etats-Unis (Californie)
paru le 3 août 2016
prix: ?
article de 7 pages: "Artichoke Queen To Screen Icon".
> site officiel carmelmagazine.com
> version digitale sur e-digitaleditions.com
Artichoke Queen to Screen Icon
Marilyn Monroe’s Monterey Connection
BY Michael Chatfield • PHOTOGRAPHY BY Getty Images
carmelmagazine.com
Untold numbers of books, magazine and newspaper articles have been written about the all-too-short Greek tragedy of a life that was Marilyn Monroe’s. Her sad childhood, career struggles, failed high-profile relationships, alleged substance abuse and finally her still-mysterious death have all been chronicled, explored and analyzed by many who knew her, and more still who didn’t. In this age of the internet, just about every detail of the movie star’s life can be located: the addresses she lived, schools she attended, cars she drove, her astrological chart, the LA County Coroner’s autopsy report…you name it and it’s probably online. The veracity of that information is another story, however. We do know for sure that the woman born Norma Jeane Mortenson (later Baker, then Dougherty before becoming the Hollywood construct that was Marilyn Monroe) on June 1, 1926, died August 5, 1962, and even now—54 years later—her transcendent beauty, charisma and legend live on. Seems that people still can’t get enough Marilyn Monroe.
She was a Los Angeles native, perhaps the original California Golden Girl. Through determination, hard work and a little luck, she parlayed her natural assets into a spot at the highest reaches of the film acting business. Marilyn was a true star, one whose every move, every love affair, every setback and travesty was chronicled by the tabloid press of her day. Her face and figure were familiar all over the globe…and they still are today.
And Marilyn, like so many others then and now, succumbed several times to the tempting siren call of the Monterey Bay area. The Salinas Californian documented her first known visit of August 5, 1948: “…she came here to help promote a diamond sale at Carlyle’s Jewelers…the store had hired a starlet named Noreen Nash, but Nash had to cancel. So Monroe filled in. Patrons squeezed in. Marilyn flashed her brilliant smile. She chatted in an amiable way and autographed pictures of herself. That day the jewelry store sold lots of diamonds.”
No doubt. Diamonds, after all, are a girl’s best friend.
The starlet stayed around for about a week, staying at the Jeffrey Hotel on Main Street. While here, she evidently made appearances at several service club luncheons. It was at one of those meetings that representatives of Castroville, an agricultural town 15 miles from Salinas that— then and now—specializes in the growing of artichokes, had the bright idea to make the ambitious future movie star the “California Artichoke Queen. ”
There are many stories about this event, with many, many different versions and details of what occurred that day and why. In fact, if published photos of Marilyn wearing the Artichoke Queen sash didn’t exist, the whole seemingly implausible episode could easily be viewed as apocryphal, an urban myth.
One particularly far-fetched story claims that the California Artichoke & Vegetable Growers Corporation enlisted Monroe to “put some shine on an industry for decades controlled by New York mobster Ciro “the Artichoke” Terranova,” according to a 2011 Bloomberg article. Another says that Marilyn enjoyed her fresh artichoke hearts covered in sugar.
A few years later, Marilyn returned to Monterey County, this time to do what she had set her sights on doing: act in a Hollywood movie. Some scenes for the 1952 potboiler “Clash by Night” were filmed on Cannery Row, then a still-bustling sardine-processing district. She was by no means the international superstar she was to become: Marilyn’s salary for this film was $500 per week.
Still, that was an improvement. Three years earlier when she appeared in the Marx Brothers’ “Love Happy,” she was paid a paltry $100 per week. Incidentally, Groucho Marx told the story of how the movie’s producers asked three actresses vying for a part in that film to walk past the comic icon. The one Groucho decided was the best walker would be awarded the role. The third girl was Marilyn. He said about her : “How could you possibly choose anyone but that last one?”
Already established as a big box-office draw, actress Barbara Stanwyck is the star of “Clash by Night,” and Marilyn plays the role of Peggy, the girlfriend of Stanwyck’s character’s brother. We first see Peggy as she awakes for her shift in a cannery—she is luminously beautiful, in the way Hollywood depicts women in the morning— fully made up, every hair in place. The next scene has her sorting fish, then meeting her boyfriend after work, strolling down what was then Ocean View Boulevard, munching a candy bar. She’s dressed in work clothes, jeans and a man’s shirt, but somehow she manages to exude simmering sex appeal—even in that drab costume. Marilyn was never what one would call a virtuoso actress, but here, she is still very green. In commenting on Stanwyck’s patience and professionalism, the movie’s director Fritz Lang said: “When Marilyn missed her lines—which she did constantly—Barbara never said a word.”
In 2010, Vanity Fair published excerpts from the book “Fragments,” a compilation of Marilyn’s own writings. The book contains reams of letters, diaries and poetry jotted down during the course of her 36 years. This diary entry (grammatical errors are hers) is thought to date from the time of the filming of “Clash by Night.” It’s also around this time that the actress began dating one of the most famous baseball players of his time, recently retired New York Yankee (and Italian-American) Joe DiMaggio:
“caught a Greyhound Bus from Monterey to Salinas. On the Bus I was the person woman with about sixty Italian fishermen and I’ve never met sixty such charming gentlemen—they were wonderful. Some company was sending them downstate where their boats and (they hoped) fish were waiting for them. Some could hardly speak english not only do I love Greeks [illegible] I love Italians. they’re warm, lusty and friendly as hell—I’d love to go to Italy someday.”
Two years later—when Marilyn was a big star—she put in an appearance a little bit south of Monterey County. She and the Yankee Clipper tied the knot in a San Francisco civil ceremony on January 14, 1954, and proceeded south toward Los Angeles by automobile. The newlyweds spend their first night as man and wife at the Motel Inn in San Luis Obispo.
The next day, a reporter from the local newspaper spotted the celebrities having lunch at that establishment and phoned his newsroom to summon a photographer. San Luis Obispo Telegram-Tribune snapper Paul Nelson arrived on the scene and immediately spotted them. According to a November 13, 2013 story published by that paper (now the Tribune), Nelson said to DiMaggio, “I’m with the press. I would like to shoot your picture but I know you’re on your honeymoon. You name it.”
“My wife doesn’t have any make-up,” Joltin’ Joe replied. “I’d really rather not.” And that was that. Respecting their privacy, Nelson retreated. What a contrast that story illustrates. In today’s tabloid press, the couple would probably have a name like “Marjoe,” or “Monaggio” and be relentlessly hounded by paparazzi.
Had she lived, Marilyn Monroe would have celebrated her 90th birthday on June 1, 2016. As with many much-too-early celebrity deaths, it’s interesting to speculate on what kind of work she would have produced, if she had been able to tame her inner turmoil and sustain a stable, healthy life. We’ll never know.
But chances are, as do so many of the rich and famous, she most certainly would have come back to the Monterey Peninsula to relax and enjoy all the pleasures it has to offer.
video hommage pour Marilyn -
sur la chanson Beautiful chantée par Bethany Dillion
Dans le clip vidéo de sa nouvelle chanson, Ain't Your Mama (sortie en single le 07 avril 2016), réalisé par Cameron Duddy, Jennifer Lopez arbore plusieurs looks, interprétant divers personnages féminins inscrits dans une décennie bien précise. Le but de la vidéo, pour l'actrice-chanteuse, était de montrer la progression de la place de la femme dans la société à travers les décennies, mais qu'au final "les choses sont toujours pareilles". Les femmes sont toujours relayés au second plan et Jennifer lance un appel aux femmes de prendre le pouvoir.
Pour représenter la femme au foyer des années 1950s, Lopez arbore un look inspiré de Marilyn Monroe: perruque blonde à boucles crantés, vêtue d'une petite robe vichy et d'une robe bouffante fleurie.
La femme des années 1960s est une secrétaire rousse à la coiffure bouffante.
Celle des années 1970s est ouvrière dans une usine.
Puis, la working girl des années 1980s, en tailleur Thierry Mugler, et aux cheveux permanentés.
> Le clip video
Samedi 06 août 2016 - 18:45 - TF1
Magazine - 50 mn inside
"Une Star, Une Photo"
Présentation: Nikos Aliagas, Sandrine Quétier
Sujet: dans les secrets de la photo culte de Marilyn dans sa robe blanche de Sept ans de réflexion.