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Marilyn Monroe exhibit exposes film legend’s private side
Showbiz Desk
LONG
BEACH, United States — “To Marilyn, I hope this helps keep you on time.
All my love, Joe.” That is the inscription inside a compact topped with
a little watch that was given to legendary actress Marilyn Monroe by her
second husband, Joe DiMaggio — one of hundreds of pieces of Marilyn
memorabilia on show for the first time in the world aboard the floating
museum Queen Mary here.
Around 350 personal effects and other objects collected by a lucky
Marilyn fan are now on display on the retired ocean liner anchored south
of Los Angeles for the first time since the blonde bombshell died in
1962, at the age of 36.
“Marilyn was known to be late all the time, so Joe offered her that
gift,” Queen Mary Vice President Felton Hyche told that while admiring
the gold compact.
The star of “Gentlemen Prefer Blondes” and baseball star DiMaggio
married in 1954, instantly becoming one of the most talked-about couples
in the world.
Mementos of their nine-month marriage in the exhibition include a huge
garnet engagement ring, the marriage license bearing Marilyn’s real
name, Norma Jeane Mortenson, and the glamorous nightgown she wore on
their wedding night.
Other objects belie the misunderstanding that doomed their brief union,
including a tennis racket that DiMaggio gave Marilyn — “She was a
terrible tennis player,” said Hyche — and a mink coat bearing the
initials MD, for Marilyn DiMaggio, which reportedly angered the young
actress, who was proud of her stage name.
But the highlight of the exhibit is Marilyn’s wardrobe, including the
pink gown she wore when singing “Diamonds are a Girl’s Best Friend,” and
the blue jeans and blouse she was partial to when she relaxed, all of
which the show’s organizers decided not to place behind glass.
“People enter the room and they’re like, ‘I want to touch it!’ We really
have to tell them they’re not allowed to do that,” said Emily
Orcutt-Clenard, one of the guides of the exhibit.
Asked about one of Marilyn’s wigs, the guide bluntly dashed one of the
myths about the sex-symbol: “Marilyn wasn’t a blonde; she was more
between brown and red.”
In a section titled “The Private Marilyn,” more personal items are on
display, such as the panties she used to sign with her name — “She
didn’t want her underwear lost among the studio’s laundry,” explained
Hyche.
Also on show are Marilyn’s nylon stockings, bra and hair rollers, still
clinging onto a few strands of her hair.
Other personal effects include several pieces of jewellery, a Bulova
wristwatch, a pair of opera glasses and a small statue of the Virgin
Mary she always kept with her.
Hanging in the passageways of the stately ocean liner are famous
photographs of the movie star, including a large blowup of Marilyn in a
white bathrobe from the set of “The Seven Year Itch,” which had rubbed
DiMaggio the wrong way.
“DiMaggio went really mad on the set. He was jealous,” explained Hyche.
Other pictures showcase Marilyn’s sexy figure, including some that were
purchased by Hugh Hefner for the first issue of his Playboy magazine in
1953. |