Marlene Dietrich | Page 7 | the Fashion Spot

Marlene Dietrich

same source

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Dresses worn during the making of 'Judgment at Nuremberg' (1961)

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Evening dress by Madeleine Vionet, Paris (1930)
 

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"Marlene Dietrich, wearing a Charles James satin gown, c.1934."
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vintagetextile.com

Unfortunately, the following are scarcely larger than thumbnail-sized...

"Pink feathered dress, 1955" - "Spectacular white swan coat, 1957" - "Black tuxedo, 1954"

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parisvoice.com

...But still! :heart: :woot:
 
Thanks for reposting, thehepburn! Lovely!
Thanks for your photos too, jennifer! I want that white swan coat. :D

I found some photos of Marlene wearing some of the dresses...

(home.snafu.de)
 

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Luxury's Lap said:
Thanks for your photos too, jennifer! I want that white swan coat. :D
You're welcome but your finds take the cake...
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:p Now don't neglect this thread :D
 
:woot: pavement, that photobucket album is wonderful!! Thanks so much for sharing!

Here's a tobacco card of Dietrich from 1934...

(ebay)
 

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In my world history class, the textbook has a photo of Marlene Dietrich in "The Blue Angel" and I couldn't stop staring it. After finding out who she really is, I can't help be fascinated with her beauty. She looks harsh in her older yeaers, but most movie icons of the past do.

The photo I mentionied:
wrdiet1.jpg

(www.ricmusic.de)
 
Thanks for all the pictures guys!
I just wonder we tallked about this in VF thread,someone mentioned a documentary by Maximillian something and i wondered whats it about i never saw it and now i am very interested!
 
Emil, here is the link to the documentary Marlene by Maximillian Schell:
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0085905/
and a review from a viewer on Amazon:
This is surely one of the most fascinating documentaries ever made. Although Dietrich herself was never filmed (she refused to have her face shown), it is illuminating and you get a full sense of the woman she was. Schell reproduces her apartment where the interviews were held and uses film clips, song recordings, etc. and we hear Dietrich's impressions over these. Bernard, her assistant and secretary, is also interviewed. It is at times funny and poignant and always riveting. She comes across as an intelligent and outspoken woman and also a highly opinionated one with little patience. Many of her musings are very funny - on a certain biography of Von Sternberg, she says "It's the lousiest translation ever made - I burned it!" She often uses the term "kitsch" to describe tasteless things and when Schell shows a clip of her performing on stage in front of a loud pink backdrop she exclaims "Darling, I did not know the kitsch was there!" She also clashes with filmmaker Schell on several things, including how the documentary should be made. She didn't want to discuss her films ("This should not be a critical thing") and after Schell leaves in a huff one day - she says "You walked out of here like a prima donna - well, you are the first to walk out on me and the last!" Schell did eventually convince her to let them bring in a video tape machine and get her reactions to some of her work (as the assistants are clumsily setting up the equipment, she is yelling "amateurs, amateurs!") She obviously is bored to tears with "The Blue Angel" and dismisses it but offers her opinion that "The Scarlet Empress" was her best film. When pressed as to why, she flippantly says "Because it's the best film". In addition to her life's work, she and Schell discuss some of the people she worked with (on Spencer Tracy - "I loved him" and Orson Welles "The man's a genius and when you speak his name you should cross yourself.") They also talk about Germany during the war and Schell reads one of her favorite poems which causes her to cry. This is wonderful stuff and a must for fans!
I have a copy of it. Its a must for any Marlene fan.
Its funny Emil :lol: I knew you would come in here.
I am rewatching some Marlene right now. Just finished "Dishonored" and now am watching "Morocco"
 
moore cool pics of marlene :wub:
source - ebay
 

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to keep this thread alive...:heart:
some pics from - ebay
 

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:wub:
source - ebay
 

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