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Divine Marilyn Monroe
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DIVINE MARILYN

Marilyn Monroe
1926 - 1962

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Identités

Norma Jeane Mortenson
Norma Jeane Baker
Norma Jeane Dougherty
Marilyn Monroe
Marilyn DiMaggio
Marilyn Miller
Jean Norman
Mona Monroe
Zelda Zonk

Archives
norman rosten
24 mars 2014

1/07/1956 Cérémonie Juive Mariage Marilyn et Arthur

Durant la semaine précédente (du 24 au 29 juin 1956) passée à Roxbury dans la propriété de Arthur Miller, Marilyn Monroe a demandé à Augusta Miller, la mère d'Arthur, de lui apprendre des recettes de plats typiquement juifs.
Par ailleurs, Marilyn insiste pour que les Miller téléphonent à un rabbin de la branche réformée du judaïsme, Robert Goldburg, qui accepte de lui donner une brève instruction religieuse et de célébrer la cérémonie nuptiale.
During the previous week (24 to 29 June 1956) into Roxbury, at the home of Arthur Miller, Marilyn Monroe asked to Augusta Miller, Arthur's mother, to teach her recipes from typical Jewish meals.
Furthermore, Marilyn insists for that Miller phone to a rabbi of the reformed branch of Judaism, Robert Goldburg, who agrees to give her a brief religious instruction and to celebrate the wedding ceremony.

Le dimanche 1er juillet 1956, soit deux jours après la cérémonie civile du mariage, est célébré le mariage juif de Marilyn Monroe et Arthur Miller. C'est Marilyn qui avait insisté pour obtenir cette cérémonie religieuse. La cérémonie du mariage est gardée secrète jusqu'au dernier moment.
On Sunday 1st of July 1956, two days after the civil marriage ceremony, is celebrated the Jewish Wedding Ceremony of Marilyn Monroe and Arthur Miller. This is Marilyn who has insisted to obtain that religious ceremony. The wedding ceremony is kept secret until the last moment.


1956-07-01-Marilyn_Monroe_Certificate_of_Conversion_to_Judaism1Plus tôt dans la journée, Marilyn Monroe se convertie au judaïsme -pour ce mariage- dans la ville de Lewisboro, dans l'Etat de New York: elle promet au rabbin Robert Goldburg, que tous ses enfants seraient élevés dans la foi judaïque et prête serment: "Je déclare, en la présence de Dieu et des témoins assemblés ici, rechercher le compagnonnage d'Israël".
Parmi les témoins se trouvent Arthur Miller, Kermit Miller le frère d'Arthur, et Milton H. Greene. Le rabbin lui remet un certificat de conversion (cf document ci-contre).
Earlier that day, Marilyn Monroe is converted to Judaism -for this marriage- in the town of Lewisboro in the State of New York: she promises to Rabbi Robert Goldburg, that all her children would be raised in the Jewish faith and oath "I declare, in the presence of God and witnesses assembled here, to seek companionship of Israel."
Among the witnesses are Arthur Miller, Kermit Miller the Arthur's brother, and Milton H. Greene. The rabbi gives her a certificate of conversion (see document).


1956-07-01-Ketubah_JewishPrenuptialAgreementArthur Miller et Marilyn Monroe vont signer le Ketubah, un accord prénuptial traditionnellement juif, définissant les droits et les responsabilités de l'époux envers la mariée. Ce document (cf ci-contre), richement coloré, est imprimé sur deux oblongues de feuilles et on peut y lire: "Je suis à mon bien-aimé, et mon bien-aimé est à moi. Aucun homme sans femme, aucune femme sans homme, et ni sans Dieu". Ce certificat témoigne que Arthur Miller et Marilyn Monroe ont été unis dans le mariage dans la ville de Lewisboro, à  Westchester, le 1er Juillet 1956, 22 Tamouz 5716, conformément au rite d'Israël et en conformité avec les lois de l'État de New York. Signé par le Rabbin Robert E. Goldburg et par les témoins: le frère d'Arthur, Kermit Miller, ainsi que du professeur d'art dramatique de Marilyn, Lee Strasberg.
Arthur Miller and Marilyn Monroe’s ketubah, traditionally a special Jewish prenuptial agreement, outlining the rights and responsibilities of the groom in relation to the bride. This beautiful, richly colored document (see above) is printed on two oblong 8 ½ in. x 11 in. leaves and reads, “I am my beloved’s, and my beloved is mine. No man without woman; no woman without man; and neither without God". This Testimonial witnesses that Arthur Miller and Marilyn Monroe were united in marriage in the city of Lewisboro, Westchester on July 1, 1956, 22nd of Tammuz 5716, In accordance with the rite of Israel and in compliance with the laws of the State of New York. Signed by Rabbi Robert E. Goldburg and witnessed by Arthur’s brother, Kermit Miller, as well as Marilyn’s acting coach, Lee Strasberg.


L'après-midi, les invités (amis et famille) attendent sur la terrasse en dalles de la propriété de l'agent littéraire de Miller, Kay Brown, une ancienne ferme, située à Waccabuc, près de Katonah, dans le Comté de Westchester, dans l'Etat de New York, pendant que les futurs mariés arrivent de Roxbury, où se trouve la propriété de Miller. Les invités sont au nombre de 25 (ou 30 selon les sources) et ne sont composés que d'amis très proches et de la famille de Miller: les enfants (Jane et Robert) et parents (Isadore et Augusta Miller) d'Arthur, son frère Kermit Miller, sa soeur Joan Copeland, son cousin Morty Miller et leurs conjoints respectifs, les Strasberg (Lee et Paula), les Greene (Milton et Amy, ainsi que Cecilia, la mère de Milton et Kitty Owen, la cuisinière des Greene), les Rosten (Norman et Hedda), mais aussi Jay Kanter (l'agent de Marilyn), le scénariste George Axelrod et le couturier John Moore. Il fait très chaud ce jour là, les hommes retirent leurs vestes et les femmes portent des petites robes d'été. De longues tables recouvertes de nappes blanches et des chaises pliantes sont installées dans le jardin, près de la baie vitrée de la maison. Comme à son habitude, Marilyn est en retard.
In the afternoon, the guests (friends and family) waiting on the flagstone terrace of the white home of literary agent of Miller, Kay Brown, a former farmhouse, located in Waccabuc, near Katonah, in Westchester County in the State of New York, while the bride and groom come from Roxbury, where there is the Miller's home. Guests are 25 (or 30 depending on the sources) and are composed of only close friends and Miller's family: children (Jane and Robert) and parents (Isadore and Augusta Miller) of Arthur, his brother Kermit Miller, his sister Joan Copeland, his cousin Morty Miller and their respective spouses, the Strasbergs (Lee and Paula) , the Greenes (Milton and Amy, and Cecilia, Milton's mother, and Kitty owen, cooker of the Greene), the Rostens (Norman and Hedda) and also Jay Kanter (Marilyn's publicist), the scriptwriter George Axelrod and the fashion designer John Moore. It is a heat day, so men remove their jackets and women wear little summer dresses. Long tables covered with white tablecloths and folding chairs are set in a large bay window. As usual, Marilyn is late.

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> Paula Strasberg
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 > Amy Greene (à gauche
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> Milton Greene
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> Milton Greene avec Cecilia (sa mère) et Kitty Owen (sa cuisinière)
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> Jay Kanter et Milton Greene
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 1956-07-01-wed_miller-dressPuis Marilyn et Arthur arrivent: elle est vêtue d'un simple blue jean et se précipite dans une chambre à l'étage où la dame d'honneur, Hedda Rosten, l'aide à se changer avec la robe de mariée beige en mousseline de soie, signée des créateurs John Moore et Norman Norell, avec des fronces sur les manches et le corsage et une ceinture de satin sous le buste. Amy Greene a prêté son voile qu'elle a fait tremper dans du café une semaine auparavant, afin de renforcer l'aspect de douceur d'ombres beige du voile en auréole. (cf illustration de Michelle Shin ci-contre). Le costume qu'Arthur porte a été acheté par Milton et fourni par Jack Walker, un ami proche de Greene, qui a couru au magasin de mercerie pour hommes Mannie Walker. Miller le porte avec une cravate et a mis une fleur à sa boutonnière. Les autres dames d'honneur sont Judy Kantor et Amy Greene, qui a aidé Marilyn à se coiffer et se maquiller.

Then Marilyn and Arthur arrive: she is wearing a simple blue jeans and rushes into a room upstairs where matron of honor, Hedda Rosten, help her to change with the wedding chiffon beige dress, by the designers John Moore and Norman Norell, with ruching on the sleeves and bodice and a satin sash under the bust. Amy Greene has loaned her veil that she had soaked veil in coffee a week before, to enhance the appearance of smooth beige shadows of halo veil (see illustration below against Michelle Shin). The suit Arthur wears is actually purchased by Milton and provides by Jack Walker, dear friend of the Greene’s, who runs the Mannie Walker men’s haberdashery store. Miller wears a tie and put a flower in his buttonhole.
The other matrons of honor are Judy Kantor and Amy Greene, who helped Marilyn to make hair and makeup.

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Cependant, Marilyn semble perturbée depuis deux jours (en fait, depuis le mariage civil du vendredi): elle est nerveuse, anxieuse et se renferme sur elle-même, comme l'ont constaté Milton et Amy Greene. Milton avait d'ailleurs téléphoné à Irving Stein, l'avocat de Marilyn pour lui demander de "se tenir prêt en cas de difficulté de dernière minute". Pendant que Marilyn se prépare dans la chambre, Milton en profite pour discuter avec elle: "Je ne t'ai pas vu sourire de toute la journée. Tu es bien sûre de ce que tu fais ? (...) Tu veux vraiment de ce mariage ? Tu n'y es pas obligée, tu sais. Si tu veux tout arrêter, ce n'est pas compliqué", lui dit Milton. Des larmes commencent à couler sur le visage de Marilyn et Amy la réconforte en lui précisant: "On peut te mettre dans une voiture pour sortir doucement par la porte de derrière. Nous, on se débrouillera avec les invités. Le mariage civil pourrait certainement être annulé avant que le rituel religieux ne vint apporter sa solennité à l'union". Et Marilyn de répondre calmement: "Non, je crois que je ne veux pas me marier".
Milton sort de la chambre et s'apprête à renvoyer tout le monde, mais Marilyn le rappele: "Non, Milton ! On a invité tous ces gens, on ne peut pas faire ça, on ne peut pas les décevoir !"
D'après Amy, Marilyn avait vu un mauvais présage dans la mort accidentelle de la journaliste Maria Scherbatoff (le 29 juin, lors de la conférence de presse donnée avec Miller à Roxbury): "Mais elle savait aussi, présage ou pas, qu'elle commettait une terrible erreur en acceptant ce mariage". D'ailleurs, un autre ami de Marilyn confie: "Elle n'était pas sûre de l'aimer, mais elle n'était pas sûre non plus de ne pas l'aimer. Au cœur de sa confusion, cependant, était son sentiment qu'elle était dépassée avec cet homme. Son insécurité allait crescendo à cette époque. Elle ne pouvait pas s'empêcher de se demander ce que cet intellectuel voulait d'elle, et cela la rendait folle. Cherchait-il juste une femme trophée, comme Joe ? C'est ce qui se passait vraiment ici."

However, Marilyn seems disturbed for two days (in fact, since the civil marriage on Friday ): she is nervous, anxious and contains about herself, as noted by Milton and Amy Greene. Milton has also phoned to Irving Stein, Marilyn's lawyer, asking him to "be ready in case of trouble of last minute." While Marilyn prepares herself in the bedroom, Milton tooks the opportunity to discuss with her: "I have not seen you smile all the day. You're very sure of what you do ? ( ... ) Do you really want to this marriage ? You are not required on it, you know. If you want to stop everything, it's not complicated, " says Milton. Tears begin to flow on the face of Marilyn and Amy comforts her by saying "We can put you in a car to go out softly by the door behind the house. We will attend the guests. Civil marriage certainly could be canceled before the religious ritual come to bring solemnity to the union." And Marilyn answers calmly, "No, I think I don't want to marry." Milton leaves the room and is about to oust everyone but Marilyn recalls him: "No, Milton ! We have invited all these people, we can't do that, we can't let down them !"
According to Amy, Marilyn saw a bad omen in the car accidental of journalist Maria Scherbatoff whi diead (on June 29, just before the press conference with Miller in Roxbury): "But she also knew, omen or not, that she was making a terrible mistake by accepting this marriage." Moreover, another friend of Marilyn says:
"She wasn't sure that she loved him, but she wasn't sure she didn't. At the core of her confusion, though, was her sense that she was in over her head with this man. Her insecurity were running wild by this time. She couldn't help but Wonder what this intellectual wanted with her, and it was driving her crazy. Was he just looking for a trophy wife, as Joe had ? What was really going on here".


Pendant ce temps, le Rabbin Robert Goldberg et les invités patientent dans le living-room. Milton Greene accompagne Marilyn à la sortie de la chambre pour la mener au bras de Lee Strasberg, qui joue ainsi le rôle du père de substitution de la mariée en la menant à l'autel. La cérémonie, qui a lieu devant la cheminée de marbre du living-room, ne dure qu'à peine 10 minutes et se célèbre selon le rituel juif. Les époux boivent le vin rouge: Marilyn soulève son voile pour déposer ses lèvres sur la coupe. Elle prononce un "je le veux" d'une voix douce et tremblante. Ils s'échangent les alliances: au cours des deux jours précédents, Miller avait acheté un anneau d'or chez Cartier qui portait l'inscription: "A. à M., juin 1956. Maintenant Pour Toujours." Puis, Miller casse son verre en l'écrasant de ses pieds, en souvenir de la destruction de Jérusalem, et la foule s'écrie: "Mazel Tov!"
Meanwhile, Rabbi Robert Goldberg and guests wait in the living room. Milton Greene accompanies Marilyn from the bedroom and lead her to the arm of Lee Strasberg, who plays the role of a surrogate father to the bride, leading her to the altar. The ceremony, which takes place in front of the marble fireplace in the living-room, lasts just 10 minutes and is celebrated according to the Jewish ritual. The couple drink red wine: Marilyn raised her veil to submit her lips on the cup. She delivers an "I do " in a soft, tremulous voice. They shall exchange alliances: in the previous two days, Miller has bought a gold ring from Cartier's which bore the inscription: "A. to M., June 1956, Now For Ever." Then Miller crushes his glass under his feet, in remembrance of the destruction of Jerusalem, and the crowd cried "Mazel Tov!"

--- En attendant la mariée / Waiting for the bride ---

> Kermit Miller, Arthur Miller et Lee Strasberg
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 > Kitty Owen et Cecilia Greene
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> Hedda Rosten, le Rabbin Goldberg et Arthur Miller
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--- La cérémonie / The ceremony ---
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Ensuite, le repas du mariage prend des airs bucoliques, avec l'organisation d'un lunch en plein air dans le jardin.
Au menu: homard, dinde et champagne, ainsi que la pièce montée (les Miller s'étaient adressés à huit pâtissiers avant d'en trouver un qui accepte de la confectionner en quelques heures). Marilyn et Arthur coupent ensemble les tranches, et s'embrassent sans retenue. Arthur Miller, habituellement stoïque, se montre très attentionnée et enchanté de sa nouvelle épouse; et Marilyn semble très heureuse. Depuis plusieurs mois, les proches de Miller ont observé une aisance physique qui l'avait complètement transformé. Norman Rosten dira: "Le conte de fées était devenu réalité. Le Prince était apparu, la Princesse était sauve." Marilyn écrira au dos d'une photographie du mariage: "Espoir, Espoir, Espoir."
Then, the wedding meal takes bucolic aspect, with the organization of a lunch outside, in the garden.
On the menu: lobster, turkey and champagne and the wedding cake (Millers had approached eight pastry before finding one who agrees to make it in a few hours). Marilyn and Arthur cut the slices together, and kiss each other without restraint. Arthur Miller, usually stoic, is very caring and delighted with his new wife, and Marilyn seems very happy. For several months, Miller's closest friends have observed a physical ease that has completely transformed him. Norman Rosten will say that "The fairy tale came true. The Prince appeared, the Princess was safe." Marilyn wrote on the back of the wedding photography "Hope, Hope, Hope."

--- Dans la maison / In the house ---

> Kitty Owen (cuisinière des Greene) et Marilyn
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> Lee Strasberg et Marilyn
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 --- Sur la terrasse / On the terrace ---

> Marilyn, Arthur et Joan Copeland (soeur d'Arthur) 
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> Arthur, Marilyn et Kermit Miller (frère d'Arthur)
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> Arthur, Marilyn et Cecilia (mère de Milton Greene)
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> Paula et Lee Strasberg, Marilyn et Arthur
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> Marilyn et Arthur
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 --- Le repas / The Lunch ---

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> La pièce montée
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> captures

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1956-wed_miller-cap03-1  1956-wed_miller-cap03-2  1956-wed_miller-cap03-3 
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1956-wed_miller-cap06-1  1956-wed_miller-cap06-2  1956-wed_miller-cap06-3 

> videos film footage
 


> photo de presse
1956-07-01-wed_miller-press-1 


.photographies de Milton H. Greene
.sources
:

Marilyn Monroe, biographie de Barbara Leaming
Les vies secrètes de Marilyn Monroe
, d'Anthony Summers
Marilyn Monroe, encyclopédie d'Adam Victor
Les trésors de Marilyn Monroe, de Jenna Glatzer
Marilyn Monroe et les caméras, Georges Belmont 
Life Remembering Marilyn
Marilyn in Fashion
de Nickens and Zeno


 © All images are copyright and protected by their respective owners, assignees or others.
copyright text by GinieLand.  

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27 février 2014

21/06/1956 Conférence de presse Sutton Place

La déposition de Arthur Miller devant la commission des activités antiaméricaines a lieu le 21 juin 1956 à Washington et débute peu avant 10 heures. Miller s'y présente, vêtu d'un costume bleu marine, avec son avocat Joseph L. Rauh et fait face aux questions de Richard Arens, le représentant de l'HUAC (House Un-American Committee) et à Francis Walter, le Président de la cour; Miller affirme s'être inscrit à un cours de formation marxiste en 1939 mais dit ignorer avoir présenté une demande d'inscription au parti communiste. Il déclare alors qu'il n'avait jamais été communiste, mais il reconnaît avoir été associé par le passé avec un certain nombre de groupes communistes. Il déclare avoir été présent à cinq ou six réunions d'auteurs communistes à New York en 1947.
Mais il a toujours refusé de nommer les personnes qu'il avait rencontrées à des réunions communistes et déclare devant les parlementaires: "Je ne protège pas des communistes ni le parti communiste, j'essaie juste de me protéger moi-même (...) Je ne saurais attirer des ennuis à d'autres personnes en les nommant. C'étaient des écrivains, des poètes, autant que je sache; et la vie d'écrivain, malgré ce qu'il semble parfois, n'est pas facile. Je vous demande de ne pas me poser cette question. Je vous dirai tout ce que vous voulez sur moi. Je vais prendre la responsabilité pour tout ce que j'ai fait, mais je ne peux pas prendre la  responsabilité pour un autre être humain. (...) Je pense que cela serait une catastrophe et une calamité si le parti communiste dirigeait notre pays."
Il déclare aussi qu’il avait dénoncé la Commission quand elle enquêtait sur les « Dix d’Hollywood » (les scénaristes mis sur la liste noire à cause de leurs opinions politiques considérées dangereuses) ; qu’il s’était opposé à la loi Smith, laquelle considérait hors la loi quiconque prônait le renversement du gouvernement car pour Miller "la littérature ne peut exister: un homme doit pouvoir écrire une pièce ou un poème sur quelque sujet que ce soit."
Ses déclarations sont reproduites dans la presse et, pour le plus grand plaisir de Marilyn, il devient une sorte de modèle de lutte contre la censure et la répression.
Immédiatement, Francis Walter menace de citation à comparaître, mais il propose en alternative à Joseph Rauh d'abandonner les charges si Marilyn Monroe acceptait d’être photographiée en serrant la main à Walter; Miller rejete l'offre et dénonce une telle proposition.

Arthur Miller's testimony before the Committee on Un-American Activities helds on June 21, 1956 in Washington and begins shortly before 10:00 am. Miller presents, wearing a navy blue suit, with his attorney Joseph L. Rauh, and faced the questions from Richard Arens, the HUAC counsel (House Un-American Committee) and Francis Walter, the chairman; Miller says he enrolled in a course of training Marxist in 1939 but says to ignore have submitted an application for registration of the Communist Party. He testifies then that he had never been a Communist, but he acknowledges that he had been associated in the past with a number of Communist-front groups. He testifies he was present at five or six meetings of Communist authors in New York in 1947.
But Miller always refused to name the people he met at Communist's meetings and declare before parliamentarians: "
(...) I am not protecting the Communists or the Communist Party, I am trying to and I will protect my sense of myself. (...) I could not use the name of another person and bring trouble on him. There were writers, poets, as far as I could see, and the life of a writer, despite what is sometimes seems, is pretty tough. I wouldn't make it any tougher for anybody. I ask not to ask me that question. I will tell you anything about myself, as I have. I will take the responsability for everything I have ever done, but I cannot take responsability for another human being. (...) I think it would be a disaster and a calamity if the Communist Party ever took over this country".
He also says that he has denounced the Commission when they investigated against the "Hollywood Ten" (the writers put on the blacklist because of their political views considered dangerous), and that he was opposed against the Smith Act, which considered outlaws anyone advocating the overthrow of the government as to Miller "literature can not exist: a man must be able to write a play or a poem on any subject whatsoever"
His statements are reproduced in the press and, to the delight of Marilyn, he becomes a kind of model of struggle against censorship and repression.
Immediately, Francis Walter threats of subpoena, but he offers an alternative to Joseph Rauh to drop the charges if Marilyn Monroe agreed to be photographed shaking hands with Walter; Miller rejects the offer and denounces such a proposal.

> Arthur et son avocat Joseph L. Rauh
1956-06-21_am-washington-miller-1  1956-06-21_am-washington-miller-3  1956-06-21_am-washington-miller-2

A 12h30, pendant une pause, Arthur Miller, fumant une cigarette, répond aux questions des journalistes. Ils lui demandent pourquoi il désirait un passeport (qui lui avait été retiré) pour se rendre en Angleterre: "Mon objectif est double. D'abord, pour la mise en scène en Angleterre de ma pièce 'Vue du pont'; je veux participer aux discussions; puis cela me permettra d'être là-bas avec la femme qui sera alors mon épouse." Face à l'insistance des reporters, il finit par avouer vouloir épouser "sous peu" Marilyn Monroe, et que la cérémonie aura lieu soit à New York, soit dans le Connecticut où "j'ai mon refuge".
Arthur sera de retour à New York tard dans la soirée.
Un mois après cette audience, la Chambre des représentants accuse Miller de mépris envers le Congrès (risquant une condamnation d'un an de prison). Miller fait appel et sera acquitté deux ans plus tard.

At 12:30 pm, outside the caucus room, Arthur Miller, smoking a cigarette, answers to journalists who ask him why he wanted a passport (which was taken back to him) to go in England: "The objective is double. I have a production which is in the talking stage in England of 'A View from the Bridge', and I will be there with the woman who will then be my wife". At the insistence of reporters, he finally admitted wanting to marry Marilyn Monroe within a couple of days, and that the ceremony will occur either in New York or Connecticut where "I have a hideaway cabin".
Arthur returns to New York later in that evening.
One month after the audience, the House of Representatives accuses Miller of contempt for Congress (possibly to be condamned for one year in prison). Miller appeales and will be acquitted two years later.

 1956-miller-washington 

 > captures
1956-06-21_am-washington-miller-cap1  1956-06-21_am-washington-miller-cap2  1956-06-21_am-washington-miller-cap3 

> video

> photo de presse
1956-06-21_am-washington-miller-press1a  1956-06-21_am-washington-miller-press1b 


Marilyn Monroe souhaitait accompagner Miller à Washington, mais il lui a demandé de rester plutôt à New York; Marilyn l'attend alors dans son appartement de Sutton Place.
Les reporters vont assiéger l'immeuble de Marilyn dès le matin.
Marilyn Monroe wanted to accompany Miller to Washington, but he asked her to stay rather in New York; Marilyn then waits in her apartment in Sutton Place.
Reporters will besiege the building of Marilyn in the morning.

Quand les reporters croisent Marilyn, ils lui demandent de commenter la déposition d'Arthur Miller devant le Congrès mais elle préfère échapper à la question en répondant: "Je ne connais pas grand chose à la politique. Il va falloir que je lui (Miller) parle mais je pense qu'il est très fatigué." Deux ans plus tard, quand Miller sera acquitté, elle dira n'avoir jamais douté du résultat car "j'ai étudié Thomas Jefferson pendant des années et que, selon Thomas Jefferson, cette affaire devait se résoudre ainsi..."
Marilyn préfère jouer les ignorantes et les ingénues face à la presse, mais elle a toujours soutenu Miller et s'est initiée à la politique. Il semble que le fait que Marilyn ait soutenu Miller ait joué en la faveur de ce dernier. La presse le présente alors comme "l'amant persécuté du sex-symbol national". On dit même qu'elle l'aurait aidé dans les frais onéreux de dépenses pour sa défense.
Elle dira à l'écrivain anglais W.J. Weatherby en 1960: "Certains de ces salopards d'Hollywood voulaient que je laisse tomber Arthur, ils disaient que cette histoire allait ruiner ma carrière. Ce sont des trouillards, ils veulent que vous soyez comme eux."
When reporters meet Marilyn, they ask her to comment on the testimony of Arthur Miller before the Congress but she prefers to avoid the question, answering: "I do not know much about politics. I'm going to have him (Miller) talk but I think he is very tired." Two years later, when Miller will be discharged, she will say she never doubted about the results because " I studied Thomas Jefferson for years and, according to Thomas Jefferson, this case should be resolved as well ..."
Marilyn prefers to play an ignorant and naive person to the press , but she has always supported Miller and was learned politics. It seems that the fact Marilyn has supported Miller has played in his favor. The press then appears him as "the persecuted lover of the national sex symbol." It is even said that she would have helped him in the expensive costs of expenses for his defense.
She will tell to the English writer W.J. Weatherby in 1960 : "Some of those Hollywood bastards wanted me to drop Arthur, they said that this story would ruin my career. They are cowards, they want you to be like them. "


Quand à l'annonce de Miller d'un mariage imminent avec Marilyn, il existe différentes versions:
> Arthur Miller affirme dans son autobiographie que le mariage était prévu depuis longtemps avant sa comparution devant la commission. D'ailleurs, la veille, le 20 juin, le New York Post révélait le mariage imminent.
> L'autre version, qui est celle la plus reprise dans les biographies, est que Marilyn ignorait les projets de mariage et aurait appris la nouvelle en regardant la télévision. Elle aurait ainsi appelé, en étant quasiment affolée, Norman et Hedda Rosten qui vivent à Brooklyn: "Tu as appris ça ? Il a dit à tout le monde qu'il se mariait avec Marilyn Monroe. Avec moi ! C'est incroyable, il ne me l'a jamais vraiment demandé ! Il faut que tu viennes tout de suite. J'ai besoin d'être soutenue moralement. Je devrais même dire: au secours ! Je suis assiégée, bloquée dans mon appartement. Il y a des journalistes qui essaient de rentrer. Il y en a partout dans l'immeuble."
Les Rosten se sont demandés si Miller n'utilisait pas Marilyn pour se faire valoir, mais ils ne préfèrent pas révéler leur pensée à Marilyn, de peur de la peiner. D'ailleurs, même Rupert Allan, son attaché de presse, affirme que "Marilyn admira Miller à partir de ce jour, bien que sa façon d'annoncer le mariage l'ait perturbée... Je crois qu'il l'a utilisée."
Un ouvrier serait venu réparer la climatisation dans l'appartement de Marilyn et il semblerait qu'en bavardant avec lui, elle lui aurait confirmé qu'elle se marierait avec Miller. Il le répéta vite aux journalistes.
Miller va appeler Marilyn pour lui dire qu'il lui parlerait de tout ça de visu. Ensuite, c'est Hedda Hopper, une fervente anti-communiste et vipère d'Hollywood, qui l'appele de Los Angeles et Marilyn lui confirme la nouvelle: "Je suis très heureuse de mon imminent mariage. Je vais me marier entre maintenant et le 13 juillet. Je ne sais pas encore où ni la date exacte." Elle lui dit aussi avoir reçu un appel de Spyros Skouras, ce qui était faux, afin de faire croire que son union avec Miller était soutenue par les studios de la Fox.
Une conférence de presse est organisée l'après-midi dans le hall de l'immeuble et Marilyn répond ainsi aux questions des nombreux journalistes présents. Certaines réponses de Marilyn font rire l'assistance: une journaliste lui demande "Quand allez-vous avoir des enfants ?" et Marilyn de répondre: "Mais je ne suis pas encore mariée ma chère !"

About the announcement of Miller of an imminent marriage with Marilyn, there are different versions:
> First, Arthur Miller says in his autobiography that the wedding was planned long before his appearance before the commission. In fact, the day before, on June 20 , the New York Post has revealed the upcoming marriage.
>
The other version, which is the most repeated in biographies, is that Marilyn -
in tight beige toreador pants- didn't know the wedding plans and would heard the news in watching TV. She latter calls, being almost hysterical, Norman and Hedda Rosten in Brooklyn Heights: "Do you learn that ? He announced it before the whole world ! He told the whole world he was marrying Marilyn Monroe. Me ! Can you believe it ? That's unbelievable, he has never really asked me ! You have to come down right away, both of you. I need moral support. I mean, help ! I'm surrounded here, locked in my apartment. There are newspapermen trying to get in, crawling all over the place, in the foyer, in the halls. I told the elevator men to let you through."
The Rosten wondered if Miller did not use Marilyn to make him better before the commission, but they prefer to don't reveal their thoughts to Marilyn, for fear of pain her. Moreover, even Rupert Allan, the press secretary, says that "Marilyn admired Miller from this day, although his way of announcing the marriage was disturbed her... I think he used her. "
An air-conditioner repairman, who was working in Marilyn's eight-floor apartment, repeats to reporters that by chatting with Marilyn, she confirms that she would marry Miller.
Miller later calls to Marilyn to tell her that he would speak of that when he will come back. Then, that's Hedda Hopper, a fervent anti-communist and an Hollywood viper, who calls from Los Angeles and Marilyn to confirm the news: "I'm very happy about my forthcoming marriage. I'm marrying between now and July 13. I don't know where and I don't know the exact date."; she tells also to Hedda that she has received a call from Spyros Skouras, that was in fact wrong, in order to make believe that the union with Miller was supported by Fox studios.
A press conference is organised in the afternoon in the lobby of the building and
Marilyn answers to the questions from the many reporters. Some Marilyn's answers make fun the reporters: when a female journalist ask her "When are you going to have some children ?", Marilyn answers: "Well, I'm not married yet dear !"

> Conférence de presse improvisée dans le hall
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1956-06-21_pm-sutton_place-various-1 

> photo de Frank Mastro
1956-MONROE__MARILYN_-_1956_JUNE_21_FRANK_MASTRO_PIC_DURING_ART  1956-MONROE__MARILYN_-_1956_JUNE_21_FRANK_MASTRO_PIC_DURING_001 

> photos de presse 
1956-06-21_pm-sutton_place-press-1  1956-06-21_pm-sutton_place-press-1a  1956-06-21_pm-sutton_place-press-2 
1956-06-21_pm-sutton_place-press-3a  1956-06-21_pm-sutton_place-press-3b 


> captures
1956-06-21_pm-sutton_place-cap02-01  1956-06-21_pm-sutton_place-cap02-02  1956-06-21_pm-sutton_place-cap02-03 
1956-06-21_pm-sutton_place-cap02-04  1956-06-21_pm-sutton_place-cap02-05  1956-06-21_pm-sutton_place-cap02-06 
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> video 1

> video 2

> video 3


sources:
Marilyn Monroe, biographie de Barbara Leaming
Les vies secrètes de Marilyn Monroe
, d'Anthony Summers
Marilyn Monroe, encyclopédie d'Adam Victor
Les trésors de Marilyn Monroe, de Jenna Glatzer
Marilyn Monroe et les caméras, Georges Belmont
article du nytimes.com


 © All images are copyright and protected by their respective owners, assignees or others.
copyright text by GinieLand.  

19 février 2014

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-long-island-photo-shoot 
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.

marilyn-monroe-pull-quote-new2By 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.”

marilyn-monroe-long-island-playgroundOver 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.”

Marilyn-Monroe-photographs
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.

30 janvier 2014

1955 Marilyn et Norman Rosten

Marilyn Monroe et Norman Rosten - vers 1955
Marilyn Monroe and Norman Rosten - circa 1955

mm_et_norman_rosten-mag-Daily_News_NewYork-1962-08-11-saturday-p1 

Elle signe le livre d'or du White Barn Theatre, à Norwalk, Connecticut.
She signs the guestbook of the White Barn Theatre, in Norwalk, Connecticut.
1950s-mm 


 © All images are copyright and protected by their respective owners, assignees or others.
copyright text by GinieLand. 

30 juin 2013

Mai 1957 Marilyn à Amagansett, Long Island 2

Photos privées de Marilyn Monroe en mai 1957,
à Amagansett, Long Island. Photographies de Sam Shaw.

Private photographs of Marilyn Monroe in 1957, May,
in Amagansett, Long Island; by Sam Shaw.


1957_05_amagansett_05 1957_05_amagansett_06


> A la plage / On the beach
1957_summer-by_shaw-private  1955_long_island_mm1 

- Avec Norman Rosten
1957_05_amagansett_01 1957_05_amagansett_02 

- Avec les enfants d'Arthur Miller, Jane et Robert
1957_05_amagansett_03 1957_05_amagansett_04


> Série de photographies prises par Marilyn Monroe
 
Les enfants d'Arthur et le chien Hugo
Snapshots taken by Marilyn herself
Arthur's children and the dog Hugo
1957s_amagansett_pic_by_mm_Millerfamilya
1957s_amagansett_pic_by_mm_Millerfamilyd_hugo_millers_children 1957s_amagansett_pic_by_mm_Millerfamilyb  1957s_amagansett_pic_by_mm_Millerfamilyc


© All images are copyright and protected by their respective owners, assignees or others.
copyright text by GinieLand.

30 novembre 2012

Profiles in History 15/12/2012: documents et objets

Profiles in History: Documents et Photos inédites aux enchères
profilesinhistory_catalogue_coverPartie 1/ 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 objets divers à l'effigie de la star (puzzle, tableaux...), des documents écrits (lettres, chèques, autographes signés par Marilyn), et 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. Voici les lots sur les documents papiers et les divers objets:

> Documents écrits <

> Autographe (lot 119) 
"To Kirk, Best Luck Always, Marilyn Monroe
Le photographe Kirk Crivello a obtenu cette photo signée en rencontrant Marilyn au Mocambo nighclub de Hollywood en 1951.
lot119_H3882_L40408943

> Autographe (lot 417) 
"To Teddy, From all I hear you sound - nice! Marilyn Monroe"
lot417_H3257_L40281864  

> Lettre 2 pages de Marilyn à Norman Rosten (lot 189)
non datée (circa 1954-55)
 lot189_H3257_L40185531  mm_letter_to_rosten-waldorf2 

Marilyn Monroe écrit à son ami proche à propos de sa dépressione et son désir d'avoir un enfant (et seulement un garçon plutôt qu'une fille, tel un désir "freudien"):
Dear Norman, It feels a little funny to be writing the name Norman since my own name is Norma and it feels like I’m writing my own name almost, However--
First, thanks for letting Sam and me visit you and Hedda last Saturday.  It was nice.  I enjoyed meeting your wife - she seemed so warm to me. Thanks the most for your book of poetry--with which I spent all Sunday morning in bed with. It touched me - I use to think if I had ever had a child I would have wanted only a son, but after reading  - Songs for Patricia - I know I would have loved a little girl just as much but maybe the former feeling was only Freudian for something...anyway Frued [sic]
I use to write poetry sometimes but usually I was very depressed at those times and the few (about two) people said that it depressed them, in fact one cried but it was an old friend I’d known for years.  So anyway thanks. And my best to Hedda & Patricia and you--  Marilyn M.”

> Lettre 3 pages de DiMaggio à Marilyn (lot 292)
du 15 juillet 1952
lot292_H3257_L40183716 lot292_H3257_L40183717 

Dear Marilyn, I just got through talking with you--and I don’t know what else to say than I have already said. However, it bothers me (call it guilt or what have you) to think about what happened the day I left for New York. I definately [sic] am punishing myself. I have always felt that I’ve been able to ‘take’ it, but in this particular instance, I find myself rather cold. It annoys me no end to think that I have ‘bit’ your feelings: you of all people, would be the last one I’d hurt! It has never been my nature to do that to anyone, and I’m certainly not going to start now. I’d rather take an ‘airship’--bow out gracefully is what I mean--rather than give you any misieres [sic; i.e., plural of misery], and please don’t get the idea I am saying these things because I want things to change -on the contrary, I have among other things great respect for you. For the time that I know you--you have done nothing but good--for me and some of your acquaintances--you have done nothing but take the worse of things when other people are involved in rough spots, and in our mild mannered way, people have taken advantage of you. I know all these things about you, and a lot more. I guess I could also mention how much you try, in everything that you do. Especially when you were here and went shopping just to please me. So you see Marilyn, I appreciate you as a real, solid, human soul, with tremendous inner feelings.
What you have already read has been put mildly and very brief.
I am handing you the ‘deck’ of cards now--you schuffle [sic] them and deal; all I ask is you forgive me. Love Joe.

> Chèque de $138.25 à City Collector (lot 75)
du 14 octobre 1959
lot75_H3331_L39990712  

> Chèque de $14.25 à Colonial Trust Company (lot 76)
du 28 octobre 1960
lot76_H3331_L39990711 

> Autographe Dimaggio & Marilyn (lot 1240)
de 1954
"Best wishes, Joe DiMaggio" / "Love & Kisses, Marilyn Monroe
lot1240_H4129_L40420483 

> Photos d'école signée par Norma Jeane (lot 1241)
de 1941 Ralph Waldo Emerson Junior High School
"To a swell, nice & perfect girl[?], Norma Jeane Baker."
lot1241_H4129_L40420471 lot1241_H4129_L40420473 
lot1241_H4129_L40420475

> Script 'The Misfits' de Clark Gable (lot 329)
Gable a donné son scrpt à Arthur Rosson le dernier jour de tournage
lot329_H3257_L40281685
 lot329_H3257_L40281686


> Objets divers <

> Caméra 'Mitchell BNC #206' pour The Misfits (lot 418) 
(Seven Arts Prod., 1961)
This Mitchell BNC #206 was used as the principal first unit camera on Marilyn Monroe's final completed film The Misfits.

lot418_H3257_L40281871lot418_H3257_L40281877lot418_H3257_L40281876
lot418_H3257_L40281872
lot418_H3257_L40281873lot418_H3257_L40281874

16 août 2011

12/12/1955 Première de The Rose Tattoo

Le 12 décembre 1955, Marilyn Monroe se rend à la première du film de Daniel Mann The Rose Tattoo (La Rose Tatouée) à l'Astor Theatre de New York, avec dans les rôles principaux, Anna Magnani et Burt Lancaster, pourtant absents à cette première new-yorkaise. Marilyn, resplendissante dans une robe noire assortie de longs gants noirs et d'un fourreau blanc, portant de longues boucles d'oreilles, pose avec malice et glamour devant les photographes et les caméramen venus spécialement filmer l'arrivée des stars.

On December 12, 1955, Marilyn Monroe goes to the premiere of Daniel Mann's movie The Rose Tattoo at the Astor Theater in New York, with Anna Magnani and Burt Lancaster in the main roles, not present at this premiere. Marilyn, resplendent in a black dress matched with long black gloves and a white sheath, wearing long earrings, poses with mischief and glamor in front of the photographers and the cameramen who came specially to film the arrival of the celebrities.

 


  L'arrivée de Marilyn

1955_12_12_astor_theater_01_arrive_020_1  1955_12_12_astor_theater_01_arrive_021_1  1955_12_12_astor_theater_01_arrive_022_1
1955_12_12_astor_theater_cap_1_3 
1955_12_12_astor_theater_01_arrive_010_1 1955_12_12_astor_theater_cap_1_1
1955_12_12_astor_theater_01_arrive_010_1a 1955_12_12_astor_theater_01_arrive_030_2 1955_12_12_astor_theater_01_arrive_030_1
1955_12_12_astor_theater_01_arrive_040_1 1955_12_12_astor_theater_01_arrive_040_1a 1955_12_12_astor_theater_cap_1_2
1955_12_12_astor_theater_01_arrive_050_1 1955_12_12_astor_theater_01_arrive_060_1 1955_12_12_astor_theater_01_arrive_060_1a 1955 


 Photographie de Peter Haas
1955-by_PETER_HAAS_ROSE_TATTOO_PREMIER319  


 Photographie de Paul Slade
1955-rose_tatoo-166710962 


  video de l'arrivée de Marilyn


 Captures
1955_12_12_astor_theater_cap_010_1 1955_12_12_astor_theater_cap_011_1 1955_12_12_astor_theater_cap_012_1
1955_12_12_astor_theater_cap_013_1 1955_12_12_astor_theater_cap_014_1 1955_12_12_astor_theater_cap_015_1
1955_12_12_astor_theater_cap_016_1 1955_12_12_astor_theater_cap_017_1 1955_12_12_astor_theater_cap_018_1
1955_12_12_astor_theater_cap_019_1 1955_12_12_astor_theater_cap_020_1 1955_12_12_astor_theater_cap_021_1
1955_12_12_astor_theater_cap_022_1 1955_12_12_astor_theater_cap_023_1 1955_12_12_astor_theater_cap_024_1


 Dans le hall du cinéma

  1955_12_12_astor_theater_02_hall_010_1a 1955_12_12_astor_theater_02_hall_020_1
1955_rosetatoo 
1955_12_12_astor_theater_02_hall_010_1
1955_12_12_astor_theater_02_hall_050_1 1955_12_12_astor_theater_02_hall_040_1 
1955_12_12_astor_theater_02_hall_060_1 
lot89018f  1955-rose_tatoo-fmf_mhg_rose_tattoo  


 1955-12-12-rose_tatoo-collection_frieda_hull-246219_0a 1955-12-12-rose_tatoo-collection_frieda_hull-246219_0c 1955-12-12-rose_tatoo-collection_frieda_hull-246219_0b 
1955-12-12-rose_tatoo-collection_frieda_hull-246219_0d  1955-12-12-rose_tatoo-collection_frieda_hull-246219_0e 
 1955-12-12-rose_tatoo-collection_frieda_hull-246219_0  1955-12-12-rose_tatoo-collection_frieda_hull-246220_0
- de la collection de Frieda Hull, une fan des Monroe Six
-from the personal collection of Frieda Hull, one of the 'Monroe Six'
 


Après la projection du film, les célébrités se rendent à une soirée tenue au Sheraton Astor Hotel, dans le but de récolter des fonds pour l'Actors Studio (100 000 dollars seront obtenus), lors d'un dîner et d'une soirée dansante où les reporters sont nombreux. Marilyn est escortée par Marlon Brando, avec qui elle vit alors une aventure amoureusement secrète à cette période. Parmi les invités, se trouvent Lee, Paula et Susan Strasberg, le couple Rosten, Arthur Jacobs, Jayne Mansfield et Arthur Miller, qui sera photographiée publiquement pour la première fois au côté de Marilyn.

After the screening of the film, the celebrities go to a party held at the Sheraton Astor Hotel, with the aim of raising funds for the Actors Studio (100,000 dollars will be obtained), with a dinner and a dance party where reporters are numerous. Marilyn is escorted by Marlon Brando, with whom she then lives a lovingly secret adventure during this period. Among the guests are Lee, Paula and Susan Strasberg, the Rosten couple, Arthur Jacobs, Jayne Mansfield and Arthur Miller, who will be pictured publicly for the first time alongside Marilyn.

 Marilyn & Marlon Brando

1955_12_12_astor_theater_03_brando_010_1 1955_12_12_astor_theater_03_brando_011_1 1955_12_12_astor_theater_03_brando_020_1
1955_12_12_astor_theater_03_brando_031_1 1955_rose_tatoo_mb_3 1955_rose_tatoo_mb_4
1955_rose_tatoo_mb_2 1955-actors 1955_12_12_astor_theater_03_brando_030_1b  
1955_12_12_astor_theater_03_brando_030_1 1955_rose_tatoo_mb_1 1955_12_12_astor_theater_03_brando_040_1
1955-rose_tatoo-z__57   1955_12_12_astor_theater_03_brando_040_1a
1955_12_12_astor_theater_03_brando_050_1 1955_12_12_astor_theater_03_brando_050_2 1955_12_12_astor_theater_03_mm_020_1a 
1955_12_12_astor_theater_03_brando_060_1  1955_12_12_astor_theater_03_brando_070_1a  1955_12_12_astor_theater_03_brando_070_1
1955_12_12_astor_theater_03_mm_010_1 1955_12_12_astor_theater_03_mm_020_1 1955_12_12_astor_theater_03_mm_030_1 


  Marilyn et Marlon Brando en interview pour la BBC

1955_12_12_astor_theater_04_interview_040_1a  1955_12_12_astor_theater_04_interview_040_1
1955_rose2 
1955-rose-62 The Man Behind Marilyn aa  
1955_rose_tatoo_interv_1  1955_12_12_astor_theater_04_interview_010_1  
1955_12_12_astor_theater_04_interview_020_1  1955_12_12_astor_theater_04_interview_030_1 1955_rose_tatoo_interv_2

-photographie de Nate Cutler >>
1955-rose_tatoo-by_nate_cutler-473d4219d070b7c 

-photographie de Sid Caesar >>
1955-rose_tatoo-by_sid_caesar-4638

- L'interview -


 >> Marilyn au dîner
1955_12_12_astor_theater_05_mm_010_1   1955_12_12_astor_theater_05_mm_010_1a 
  1955_12_12_astor_theater_05_mm_020_1 
1955-rose-62 The Man Behind Marilyn a  1955_rosetatoo_1 
1955_12_12_astor_theater_05_party_050_1  1955_12_12_astor_theater_05_party_051_1  1955_12_12_astor_theater_05_party_052_1  

 >> Marilyn avec l'écrivain Bill Denby et sa soeur Dorothy Denby
photographie de Max Peter Haas

MONROE__MARILYN_-_1955_DEC_13_ROSE_TATOO_PREMIERE_BIL_12132  MONROE__MARILYN_-_1955_DEC_13_ROSE_TATOO_PREMIERE_BIL_94954  

 >> Marilyn avec les Strasberg
1955_12_12_astor_theater_05_party_010_1a 
1955_12_12_astor_theater_05_party_010_1 

  >> Marilyn avec Susan Strasberg et Jayne Mansfield
1955_12_12_astor_theater_05_party_020_1  1955_rosetatoo 
1955_12_12_astor_theater_05_party_030_1 
lot1117-H3257-L78860433 1955_12_12_astor_theater_05_party_040_1 

> Helen Hayes et Joan Crawford
1955-rose_tatoo-Helen Hayes_ Joan Crawford 

  >> Marilyn danse dans les bras de Marlon Brando
1955_12_12_astor_theater_06_brando_010_1 
1955_12_12_astor_theater_06_brando_010_1a  1955_12_12_astor_theater_06_brando_020_1  


>> Photos de Roy Schatt: Marilyn et Arthur Miller
1955_12_12_by_roy_schatt_with_miller_2 
1955_12_12_by_roy_schatt_with_miller_1  1955_12_12_by_roy_schatt_with_miller_1a  

>> Photo de Phil Stern 
1955_mm_by_phil_stern   


Séance "Actors Studio"
- Milton H Greene -

1955-12-12-NY-premiere_rose_tattoo-by_mhg-010-1-ACS-01 
1955-12-12-NY-premiere_rose_tattoo-by_mhg-010-2-ACS_23  1955-12-12-NY-premiere_rose_tattoo-by_mhg-010-3-ACS-07  1955-12-12-NY-premiere_rose_tattoo-by_mhg-011-1-ACS_20 
1955-12-12-NY-premiere_rose_tattoo-by_mhg-011-2-ACS-02  1955-12-12-NY-premiere_rose_tattoo-by_mhg-012-1-ACS_19  1955-12-12-NY-premiere_rose_tattoo-by_mhg-013-1-ACS_22 
1955-12-12-NY-premiere_rose_tattoo-by_mhg-014-1-ACS-06  1955-12-12-NY-premiere_rose_tattoo-by_mhg-014-2-ACS_18  1955-12-12-NY-premiere_rose_tattoo-by_mhg-014-3-ACS_24 
1955-12-12-NY-premiere_rose_tattoo-by_mhg-020-1-ACS-05   1955_12_12_by_mhg_marilyn_monroe_ACS_21  
1955_12_12_by_mhg_marilyn_monroe_ACS_a  1955_12_12_by_mhg_marilyn_monroe_ACS_b  
  1955_12_12_by_mhg_marilyn_monroe_ACS_03  1955_12_12_by_mhg_marilyn_monroe_ACS_03a  H3257_L44538773  

1955-12-12-NY-premiere_rose_tattoo-by_mhg-030-1 
1955_rose_tatoo_by_greene_1 1955_rose_tatoo_by_greene_2 1955_rose_tatoo_by_greene_3 1955_rose_tatoo_by_greene_4
1955_rose_tatoo_by_greene_5 1955_rose_tatoo_by_greene_6 1955_rose_tatoo_by_greene_7 1955_rose_tatoo_by_greene_8  


 dans la presse

1955_12_12_astor_theater_mag_noiretblanc_1967  mag_italie_1994 
1955-rose-Blondes At Bay b  1955-rose_tatoo-article


All photos are copyright and protected by their respective owners. 
copyright text by GinieLand.  

Enregistrer

21 février 2011

Marilyn among friends

Marilyn among friends
Auteurs
:
Sam Shaw, Norman Rosten

book_marilyn_among_friends_1987Date de sortie: mai 1987
Relié 224 pages
Langue: anglais

Éditeur: Bloomsbury Publishing
ISBN-10: 0747500126
ISBN-13: 978-0747500124

Prix éditeur: livre épuisé, non reédité: jusqu'à 60 Euros d'occasion
Ou le commander ? sur amazon.fr

Livre reédité en 1992
chez l'éditeur Outlet

book_marilyn_among_friends_1992

Présentation:
Le photographe Sam Shaw, ami de Marilyn Monroe, a pris de nombreuses photos d'elle, dont les plus célèbres de la scène de la robe dans le film Sept ans de réflexion. Deux cents photographies sont publiées dans ce livre: Marilyn se maquillant, à la plage, au téléphone, sur les tournages, dans la rue, avec Bogart, avec Gable, avec DiMaggio, avec Miller, avec leur chien le basset Hugo. Le texte qui accompagne les clichés est rédigé par les descriptions de Norman Rosten (poète/dramaturge/auteur de romans) au temps où il fréquentait par amitié Marilyn, racontant des souvenirs de ses amis, de ses marris et fans, et imaginant une conversation avec Marilyn.

Vous avez le livre ?
Apportez votre critique, votre avis ou votre note (/10)

4 février 2011

1957 Vacances à Long Island

Photos privées de Marilyn Monroe et Arthur Miller en mai 1957,
à Amagansett, Long Island, chez les Rosten.

Private photographs of Marilyn Monroe and Arthur Miller in 1957, May,
in Amagansett, Long Island, at Rosten's.

1957_long_island_010_1 1957_long_island_020_1 1957_long_island_1
1957_long_island_030_1
1957-05-MM_AM 1957_long_island_040_1
1950s-arnold-lot1114-H3257-L78860406  
1957_long_island_050_1
1957-05-MM_AM 

> Marilyn avec Stefan Lorant
1957-long_island-1 
1957-Marilyn_with_Stefan_Lorant 


© All images are copyright and protected by their respective owners, assignees or others.
copyright text by GinieLand.

Enregistrer

2 février 2011

Août 1955 Vacances à Long Island

Marilyn Monroe en vacances chez les Rosten,
à Amagansett, East Hampton (Etat de New York) l'été 1955.
Marilyn Monroe in holiday at the Rosten's
in Amagansett, East Hampton (New York), in the summer of 1955.


> Marilyn joue au badminton avec Hedda, Norman et leur fille Patricia.
Marilyn plays badminton with Hedda, Norman and their daughter Patricia

1955-08-new_york-amagansett-with_hedda_norman_rosten-01-1 
1955-08-new_york-amagansett-with_hedda_norman_rosten-01-1a 1955-08-new_york-amagansett-with_hedda_norman_rosten-01-1b 1955-08-new_york-amagansett-with_hedda_norman_rosten-01-1c 
 1955_long_island_photo_3 1955_long_island_cap_1 1955_long_island_photo_1 
1955_long_island_photo_2  

 

-captures-
1955-08-new_york-amagansett-with_hedda_norman_rosten-cap-1 1955-08-new_york-amagansett-with_hedda_norman_rosten-cap-2 1955-08-new_york-amagansett-with_hedda_norman_rosten-cap-3 
1955-08-new_york-amagansett-with_hedda_norman_rosten-cap-4 1955-08-new_york-amagansett-with_hedda_norman_rosten-cap-5 1955-08-new_york-amagansett-with_hedda_norman_rosten-cap-6 

 > video


> Marilyn tient la main de la petite Patricia Rosten et de Hedda Rosten
Marilyn holds the hand of the little Patricia Rosten and Hedda Rosten
1955_09_long_island_mm_with_hedda_rosten_01 1955_09_long_island_mm_with_hedda_rosten_02
 
1955_09_long_island_mm_with_patricia_rosten_1  


> Marilyn et Hedda Rosten
Marilyn with Hedda Rosten
1955_09_long_island_mm_with_hedda_rosten_03  


> Moments de détente à Long Island
Relaxing moments in Long Island

1955-09-long_island-rostens 
1955_sept_48824384 1955_sept_longisland_rosten_weekend The_Milwaukee_Sentinel_16_Dic_1956 


© All images are copyright and protected by their respective owners, assignees or others.
copyright text by GinieLand.

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