Marilyn monroe why is she an icon
At the age of 16 in Marilyn Monroe was married to James Dougherty but she soon got divorced because her husband was against modelling carrier and after divorce, she moved on her own.
She quit working at the factory in January when she met a photographer from first motion pictures and began modelling. She signed her first her contract with Blue Book Agency in August and from there she never looked behind and gave a boost to her carrier. She changed her name from Norma Jeane Mortenson to Marilyn Monroe in March in an effort to create a screen name for her movie carrier.
Monroe was the fastest rising star of Monroe was talented, funny, glamorous and one of the unforgettable women in the history of acting. Monroe had sung 50 songs and became a beloved artist of her time.
Many continued to believe Monroe is the icon of popular culture. Some of her mega-hit music include. In a short life span of her 36 years, she established herself as the most iconic and remarkable actress of Hollywood.
Monroe always dreamt of becoming an actress like Jean Harlow and Lana Turner. In Monroe had a successful carrier as a model. In that year she signed her first movie contract. She started showing in movies in and most of her early films were either uncredited or she was in minor roles. Her first major role was in B feature Ladies of the Chorus in There has never been another Marilyn Monroe.
It is a name, an image, that gets invoked from time to time. Any young celebrity who qualifies as 'troubled' Britney Spears, Lindsay Lohan, even Amy Winehouse , gets the nod, but the comparison doesn't take. N o matter how beautiful, how messed-up, how fragile, they might be, there was only ever one Marilyn. Hers was a unique combination of vulnerability, wistfulness, difficulty and unashamed provocation.
The fascination is obvious - it's the way she looks, the way she smiles, the expression of those eyes, the wry, funny, self-aware things she says, the hourglass figure and perfect blonde curls, the tragic love stories and even more tragic life story.
It's also the fact that our appreciation of her talent only grows. In the 54 years since her death, it is now obvious to all that Marilyn, who never got close to an Oscar nomination, was a very fine and subtle actress. Her performances in Gentlemen Prefer Blondes, The Seven Year Itch and Some Like it Hot have set the bar forever for a certain type of role; the overt come-hither look that hides an inner layer of innocence, at the core of which there is a whole other kind of knowingness.
It's also the fact that, despite the films, the interviews, the thousands of photographs and scores of books and articles, there is still something fundamentally unknowable about Marilyn. For all that she was the most exposed star of her generation, she managed to keep enough back to remain elusive. Even, it seems, to herself. Marilyn had more than a little 'conciet' in fact, she probably created around herself the most irresistible iconography ever, one that was forever sealed when she died, of a prescription drug overdose, at the age of just 36 in And yet, even though she knew so much about camera angles, she knew so little about the inner workings of her delicate psychology that at one stage she had three different psychiatrists on the go, often spending sessions of four or five hours with them.
In the years since Marilyn died, she has begun to escape the 'dumb blonde' persona that constrained her during her life. Thanks to a steady drip of candid rather than studio-staged photographs, interviews and films clips, we have seen Marilyn alone, absorbed in Ulysses or the poetry of Heinrich Heine, walking along a beach at sunset, asleep on set or silently musing. And Marilyn still looks fresh and modern, a star for any age. Receive today's headlines directly to your inbox every morning and evening, with our free daily newsletter.
Enter email address This field is required Sign Up. The New York Times obituary at the time of her death read that her life "ended as it began, in misery and tragedy", and although she wasn't always truthful about her early years, it is pretty clear that she did indeed know plenty of 'misery and tragedy'. Gladys suffered badly with mental illness, as did many of her family.
Diagnosed as paranoid schizophrenia, she was unable to care for her baby. Her father had left Gladys before the birth, and Marilyn was never sure exactly who he was.
She spent her childhood in many different foster homes. In one, she was sexually abused, by a lodger, at the age of She was found dead by her housekeeper in the bedroom of her home in California at the age of thirty-six.
The cause of death was ruled to be an overdose of barbiturates. Conspiracy theories surrounding the circumstances of her death abound to this day. Joe DiMaggio had re-entered her life as her marriage to Miller was ending. He resigned his job with a military post-exchange supplier on August 1, to ask her to remarry him. A previously unpublished photo of the then unknown actress, this photo depicts Marilyn reading.
Although Marilyn was often perceived as the "dumb blonde", she had over books in her own personal library and loved to read.
The photographer Ed Clark claimed that the photos were "overdeveloped" and "poorly printed" and decided not to print them until Time Magazine released the photos on what would have been the actress' 83rd birthday Kang provides a vivid and dedicated interpretation of each facial element and in so doing, bestows life to his subject so that they appear to be living, breathing individuals.
Another piece of artwork by Kang depicts a very different version of Marilyn Monroe that no one had ever seen or imagined.
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