I ought to have mentioned this earlier, but a large portion of LIFE magazine's photo archive is now online, with the help of its host site Google. Search for "Marlene Dietrich" and feast your eyes on the glory.
Link
13 December 2008
13 November 2008
Дитрих in Moscow
Can't catch the "Great Marlene: Story of the Star" exhibition at Moscow's Tsaritsyno Museum? Check out this link for the stage costumes, posters, and other memorabilia on display. Maria Riva's message for the exhibition opening highlighted that Dietrich "loved Russians and Russian culture." Indeed, I recall mentions of borsht quite a few times in Riva's biography.
30 July 2008
Sahara Hotel, Las Vegas. 1953.
Marlene Dietrich wears a gown of transparent black net, which veteran show buisiness people called the most revealing they could remember, for her night-club debut at the Sahara hotel, Las Vegas, here last night, Dec. 15, 1953.
The clinging gown, which supplied only a few scattered bangles and beads between Dietrich and her public, was reported to have cost $ 6.000.
That Hat! (Mostly) Paris 1959
01 January 2008
What about her liquor bills?
After her alma mater Paramount released Mommie Dearest, Dietrich had quite a bone to pick. Like most of her private exchanges, a letter Dietrich wrote to Peter Bankers in response to the film was recently purchased on the Christie's auction block for about $1,500.
Among its most catty slams: "Fay [sic] Dunaway should be ashamed of herself, but then she probably needed the money to pay her liquor bills."
On Christina Crawford, Dietrich says, "I am shocked that Paramount bought that filthy book and made that frightful bitch who wrote it rich."
I don't recall Dietrich having any fond feelings for her fellow Box Office Poison, yet she declares, "I did not know Joan Crawford, but nobody deserves that kind of slaughter."
All this makes me wonder what she would have said to Maria.
Source
Among its most catty slams: "Fay [sic] Dunaway should be ashamed of herself, but then she probably needed the money to pay her liquor bills."
On Christina Crawford, Dietrich says, "I am shocked that Paramount bought that filthy book and made that frightful bitch who wrote it rich."
I don't recall Dietrich having any fond feelings for her fellow Box Office Poison, yet she declares, "I did not know Joan Crawford, but nobody deserves that kind of slaughter."
All this makes me wonder what she would have said to Maria.
Source