Marilyn Monroe’s Long Island Affair
Marilyn Monroe’s Long Island Affair
By Spencer Rumsey
published on January 1, 2013
online longislandpress.com
Marilyn Monroe was already one of the most famous women in America when she posed for Eve Arnold, herself a pioneering photographer, at a Mt. Sinai playground and in a nearby marsh in 1955. (Eve Arnold/Magnum Photos)
When Marilyn Monroe came out to Fire Island in 1955 to spend the weekend with Lee and Paula Strasberg, who were mentoring her at their famed Actors Studio in Manhattan, she famously remarked, “What a lovely place this is—it’s got water all around it.”
But that wasn’t her first time on Long Island. In 1949 Monroe had visited the Town of Oyster Bay’s Tobay Beach with Andre de Dienes, a photographer friend who’d once been her lover in California when she was still using her real name, Norma Jeane, and struggling to get her footing in Hollywood as a model.
Then she was a budding starlet and she’d come east to promote the Marx Brothers’ forgettable last film, Love Happy, in which she tells Groucho that she needs his help because “some men are following me” and he lasciviously replies, “Really. I can’t imagine why.”
In de Dienes’ pin-up photograph, Monroe was 23 and full of promise. Her troubled childhood in orphanages and foster homes were long behind her. A bright future lay still ahead.
By the summer of 1955 Monroe had become one of the most famous women in America. Her marriage to Joe DiMaggio, the Yankee Clipper, was over, and she’d left Hollywood in a contract fight with 20th Century Fox. Her studio bosses had wanted her to do The Girl in Pink Tights. She balked and formed Marilyn Monroe Productions in New York.
The image of her skirt billowing in the breeze from the Lexington Avenue subway—a still from the 1954 movie The Seven Year Itch—had become “the shot seen ’round the world.” Adding to the attraction was her 1953 appearance as the nude centerfold in the first issue of Playboy magazine, because the enterprising publisher Hugh Hefner had paid $500 for the rights to Tom Kelley’s nude photos that he’d taken of her in 1949, paying her $50 to pose on a swath of crushed red velvet.
The news that the Hollywood star had been fully exposed broke in 1952 when Kelley’s photos turned up in a calendar illustration. Monroe showed her genius for self-publicity—and earned even more money for 20th Century Fox—by owning up to it. In answer to reporters’ breathless queries about what she’d been wearing during the shoot, she said she only had on “the radio.”
At the Strasberg’s place on Ocean Beach, Monroe was sharing a bedroom with their teenage daughter Susan, who was about to appear on Broadway in The Diary of Anne Frank. There were “a lot of theater people” at that part of the island, Susan Strasberg recalled. “They were sophisticates, which meant they stared at Marilyn Monroe from a distance instead of staring up close.”
Over the Labor Day weekend in 1955 Monroe was on the North Shore, staying at Norman and Hedda Rosten’s cottage in Port Jefferson. They were artistic college friends of Arthur Miller’s, who’d Monroe had been seeing since she moved to Manhattan even though they were both still married at the time. Late that September afternoon she left to do a photo shoot with famed photographer Eve Arnold, the second woman to join Magnum Photos, the world-renowned agency founded by Robert Capa and Henri Cartier-Bresson.
Arnold, who was then living in Miller Place, took Monroe to a playground in Mt. Sinai. Monroe brought along three bathing suits and a copy of James Joyce’s Ulysses, which she kept in her car.
“She said she loved the sound of it and would read it aloud to herself to try to make sense of it,” Arnold recalled, “but she found it hard going.”
Monroe had performed Molly Bloom’s sensual soliloquy to much acclaim at a small workshop at the Actors Studio. While Arnold was changing film, Monroe got the book out to read.
“So, of course, I photographed her,” Arnold explained. Soon it was 5 o’ clock, the golden hour, photographers say. “The timing for the marshes was just right,” Arnold wrote, “the light soft and shadowless and ranging from pale yellow through deep saffron.”
Monroe changed into a one-piece bathing suit with a leopard-skin print and waded in.
“She was intrepid,” Arnold enthused later. “She stood in [it], sat in it, lay in it until the light started to go and I called a halt. She climbed out, covered in mud, but she was exhilarated—and giggling.” Later, Arnold would insist that Monroe told her “she had loved the day and kept repeating that these were the best circumstances under which she had ever worked.”
An effervescent Marilyn Monroe manages to get a laugh out of her serious husband, Arthur Miller,
in this series of candid black and white photographs taken in July 1956 when they were the most curious couple in the country. (AP Photo/Julien’s Auctions)
Monroe’s career was nearing its apogee. In the summer of 1957 Monroe was married to Miller, who’d won a 1949 Pulitzer for his tragic play Death of a Salesman. They were living in a weather-worn farmhouse in Amagansett near the Rostens, who were renting a cottage in Springs. Also nearby was the abstract expressionist painter Willem de Kooning, who painted Monroe for his series Women. The image, which Monroe biographer Lois Banner likened to “a cross between a grinning child and a screaming fury,” did not appeal to Monroe’s playwright husband but she didn’t mind. The married couple was in a hopeful phase: He was writing in his studio near the main house and she was cooking and tending her garden. And she was pregnant.
But on Aug. 1, 1957 she cried out in pain. An ambulance rushed her to Manhattan where Monroe hoped that her own doctor could save her baby. He could not. Suffering from a painful uterine condition called endometriosis, she had an ectopic pregnancy, and it had to be terminated. She spent 10 days in the hospital, Miller by her side.
The loss was devastating. When the season was over, they moved back to Manhattan, he ensconced himself in a book-lined study at one end of the apartment struggling over a screenplay that would eventually become The Misfits while she was at the other end, strumming a ukulele and crooning, “I Wanna Be Loved By You.”
The next year they moved to a new house they had built in Connecticut, but they never could recreate the idyllic summer they’d shared on the South Fork. And Monroe’s happy times on Long Island faded into memory.
Marilyn Mon Amour
Marilyn Mon Amour
L'album intime de son premier photographe
Auteur: Andre De Dienes
Date de sortie: 1985
Relié 155 pages
Langue Français
Editeur: Filipacchi
Prix éditeur: 15 Euros
ISBN-10: 2850185957
ISBN-13: 9782850185953
Ou le commander ? sur priceminister
Description: On croyait tout connaître de la vie de Marilyn Monroe. On croyait avoir vu toutes les photos parues dans les centaines d'ouvrages publiés dans le monde. Et pourtant...en 1945 à Los Angeles un jeune photographe, André de Dienes cherche dans les agences un modèle pour des nus artistiques. Une jeune fille se présente, elle s'appelle Norma-Jeane Baker. Ébloui par sa fraîcheur , de Dienes tombe amoureux d'elle. Il commence à la photographier, l'emmène en voyage. Il l'aime, veut l'épouser. Elle veut faire carrière. Sous l'objectif de de Dienes, Norma-Jeane deviendra Marilyn. Il restera son ami, son photographe préféré. Cette extraordinaire histoire, personne ne la connaissait. André de Dienes en avait jalousement conservé le souvenir et les photos. Cet album célèbre une Marilyn inconnue, la métamorphose d'une débutante en une star éblouissante. André de Dienes nous révèle aussi l'émouvante intimité qui s'est établie au fil des années entre le photographe et son modéle. Marilyn mon amour, l'ultime hommage d'un homme amoureux à une femme inoubliable.
Marilyn Mon Amour
The Private Album of Andre De Dienes
Author: Andre De Dienes
Publication Date: 1986
Number of pages 160 pages
Language English
Publisher: Sidgwick & Jackson Ltd
Dimensions du produit: 31,5 x 25,4 x 2,3 cm
Price: ?
ISBN-10: 0283993375
ISBN-13: 978-0283993374
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Intox: Photo "fake" 3
En ce moment, on trouve une photo montage de Marilyn Monroe jeune à la plage, assise dans le sable. Ce montage est tellement bien fait qu'on croirait une vraie photographie, mais quand on connait bien les séances photos de Marilyn, on se rend compte que son visage est identique à celui d'une photo prise par André DeDienes en 1949, où elle pose en peignoir à la plage. La photo a été inversée, et le visage collé à un autre corps.
Il s'agit bien du même visage de Marilyn, voici la photo de Dedienes inversée, où on constate que la tête a été légèrement inclinée, et on distingue aussi la petite mèche de cheveux qui va sur la paupière; ce visage a été ajouté sur une photographie de Milton Greene qui représente l'actrice Janet Leigh en 1954 à la plage:
Bannière Décembre 2012
Le retour du froid -et même de la neige dans certains régions- est un prétexte pour la nouvelle bannière de ce mois de décembre 2012, dont le thème est "Norma Jeane dans la neige", photographiée par André De Dienes. Avec aussi un changement de l'image de fond, où vous pouvez découvrir une image animée d'un paysage de Noël.
Profiles in History 15/12/2012: photos
Profiles in History: Documents et Photos inédites aux enchèresPartie 2/ Vente aux enchères organisée par Profiles in History. Le site de vente aux enchères ArtFact propose de nombreux lots aux enchères concernant Marilyn Monroe. On y retrouve des obejts divers à l'effigie de la star (puzzle, tableaux...), des documents écrits (lettres, chèques, autographes signés par Marilyn), et surtout, des photographies, dont certaines totalement inédites; les lots sont présentés sur le site jusqu'au 29 novembre 2012 et la vente s'effectuera les 15 et 16 décembre 2012. Sur le site, faîtes une simple recherche "marilyn monroe" pour découvrir ces merveilleux lots que je vous propose ci-dessous:
> Photographies <
> Photo "Distortion" de Weegee (lot 236)
> par Andre De Dienes (lots 238, 132, 133):
> par Bert Stern (lots 348, 349, 874, 878):
> par George S. Zimbel (lot 1235):
> par Jean Howard (lots 112, 136, 137, 138, 139, 140):
> par John Florea (lot 144, 147, 148, 150, 151, 152, 153,
154, 155, 156, 157, 158, 159, 160, 161, 162, 163, 164, 165):
> par Ed Cronenweth (lot 149):
Julien's Auction 11/2012 - André De Dienes
lot n°554: MARILYN MONROE PHOTOGRAPH BY ANDRE DE DIENES
A black and white photograph of Marilyn Monroe, taken in 1945 by Andre de Dienes. Gelatin silver print, printed circa 1960. Photographer's stamp on the verso. Accompanied by a letter of authenticity from The Estate of Andre de Dienes.
20 by 16 inches
Estimate: $400 - $600
lot n°555: MARILYN MONROE PHOTOGRAPH BY ANDRE DE DIENES
A black and white photograph of Marilyn Monroe, taken in 1945 by Andre de Dienes. Gelatin silver print, printed circa 1960. Photographer's stamp on the verso. Accompanied by a letter of authenticity from The Estate of Andre de Dienes.
20 by 16 inches
Estimate: $400 - $600
lot n°556: MARILYN MONROE PHOTOGRAPH BY ANDRE DE DIENES
A black and white photograph of Marilyn Monroe, taken in 1946 by Andre de Dienes. Gelatin silver print, printed circa 1960. Photographer's stamp on the verso. Accompanied by a letter of authenticity from The Estate of Andre de Dienes. 20 by 16 inches
Estimate: $600 - $800
lot n°557: MARILYN MONROE PHOTOGRAPH BY ANDRE DE DIENES
A black and white photograph of Marilyn Monroe, taken in 1949 by Andre de Dienes. Gelatin silver print, printed circa 1960. Photographer's stamp on the verso. Accompanied by a letter of authenticity from The Estate of Andre de Dienes. 20 by 16 inches
Estimate: $400 - $600
lot n°558: MARILYN MONROE PHOTOGRAPH BY ANDRE DE DIENES
A black and white photograph of Marilyn Monroe, taken in 1949 by Andre de Dienes. Gelatin silver print, printed circa 1960. Photographer's stamp on the verso. Accompanied by a letter of authenticity from The Estate of Andre de Dienes.
20 by 16 inches
Estimate: $400 - $600
lot n°559: MARILYN MONROE PHOTOGRAPH BY ANDRE DE DIENES
A black and white photograph of Marilyn Monroe, taken in 1953 by Andre de Dienes. Gelatin silver print, printed circa 1960. Photographer's stamp on the verso. Accompanied by a letter of authenticity from The Estate of Andre de Dienes.
20 by 16 inches
Estimate: $400 - $600
lot n°560: MARILYN MONROE PHOTOGRAPH BY ANDRE DE DIENES
A black and white photograph of Marilyn Monroe, taken in 1953 by Andre de Dienes. Gelatin silver print, printed circa 1960. Photographer's stamp on the verso. Accompanied by a letter of authenticity from The Estate of Andre de Dienes.
20 by 16 inches
Estimate: $400 - $600
lot n°561: MARILYN MONROE PHOTOGRAPH BY ANDRE DE DIENES
A black and white photograph of Marilyn Monroe, taken in 1953 by Andre de Dienes. Gelatin silver print, printed circa 1960. Photographer's stamp on the verso. Accompanied by a letter of authenticity from The Estate of Andre de Dienes.
20 by 16 inches
Estimate: $400 - $600
1945 Beach Sitting - Bikini - Norma Jeane par André De Dienes
Norma Jeane sur une plage au Nord de Malibu, Californie, en 1945
photographiée par André De Dienes.
> Séance en bikini noir et blanc
1945 Beach Sitting - Yellow Bikini - Norma Jeane par André De Dienes
Norma Jeane sur une plage au Nord de Malibu, Californie, en 1945
photographiée par André De Dienes.
- Magazines -
Pageant - 06/1946 - USA
De Prins Reporter - 14/08/1948 - Hollande
© All images are copyright and protected by their respective owners, assignees or others.
copyright text by GinieLand.
Julien's Auction 03/2012 - André De Dienes
lot n°418: MARILYN MONROE VINTAGE ANDRE DE DIENES PHOTOGRAPH
A photograph of Marilyn Monroe taken by Andre de Dienes in 1953. Gelatin silver print, printed circa 1955. Artist's stamps on print verso.
24 by 20 inches
Estimate: $600 - $800
lot n°419: MARILYN MONROE ANDRE DE DIENES PHOTOGRAPH
A photograph of Marilyn Monroe taken by Andre de Dienes in 1949. Gelatin silver print, printed circa 1955. Dated and initialed in ink on print recto, artist's stamp on print verso.
24 by 20 inches
Estimate: $600 - $800
lot n°420: MARILYN MONROE VINTAGE ANDRE DE DIENES PHOTOGRAPH
A photograph of Marilyn Monroe taken by Andre de Dienes in 1953. Gelatin silver print, printed circa 1955. Signed by the artist in ink on print recto, artist's stamps on print verso.
24 by 20 inches
Estimate: $600 - $800
lot n°421: MARILYN MONROE VINTAGE ANDRE DE DIENES PHOTOGRAPH
A photograph of Marilyn Monroe taken by Andre de Dienes in 1953. Gelatin silver print, printed circa 1955. Signed in ink on print recto, artist's stamps on print verso.
24 by 20 inches
Estimate: $600 - $800
lot n°425: MARILYN MONROE ANDRE DE DIENES PHOTOGRAPH
A photograph of Marilyn Monroe taken by Andre de Dienes in 1945. Gelatin silver print, printed circa 1955. Artist's stamps on print verso.
24 by 20 inches
Estimate: $600 - $800
lot n°488: MARILYN MONROE PHOTOGRAPH BY ANDRE DE DIENES
A black and white photograph of Marilyn Monroe at home, taken by Andre de Dienes in 1949. Gelatin silver print, printed circa 2005 in a limited edition by One West Publishing. Stamped on verso by One West Publishing.
Number 6/10.
39 by 48 inches, matted
Estimate: $1 000 - $2 000
lot n°495: MARILYN MONROE PHOTOGRAPH BY ANDRE DE DIENES
A black and white photograph of Marilyn Monroe in bed, taken by Andre de Dienes in 1949. Gelatin silver print, printed circa 2005 in a limited edition by One West Publishing. Stamped on verso by One West Publishing.
Number 6/10.
39 by 48 inches, matted
Estimate: $1 000 - $2 000
lot n°497: MARILYN MONROE ANDRE DE DIENES PHOTOGRAPH
A photograph of Marilyn Monroe taken by Andre de Dienes in 1953. Gelatin silver print, printed circa 1955. Signed in ink on print recto, artist’s stamps on print verso.
24 by 20 inches
Estimate: $600 - $800