fbpx
Wikipedia

Marlene Dietrich

Marie Magdalene "Marlene" Dietrich[1] (/mɑːrˈlnə ˈdtrɪx/, German: [maʁˈleːnə ˈdiːtʁɪç] (listen); 27 December 1901 – 6 May 1992)[2] was a German and American[3][4][5] actress and singer whose career spanned from the 1910s to the 1980s.[6]

Marlene Dietrich
Dietrich in 1951
Born
Marie Magdalene Dietrich

(1901-12-27)27 December 1901
Berlin, Germany
Died6 May 1992(1992-05-06) (aged 90)
Paris, France
Resting placeStädtischer Friedhof III
NationalityGerman until 1939, American
Occupations
  • Actress
  • singer
Years active1919–1984
Spouse
Rudolf Sieber
(m. 1923; died 1976)
ChildrenMaria Riva
Relatives
Signature

In 1920s Berlin, Dietrich performed on the stage and in silent films. Her performance as Lola-Lola in Josef von Sternberg's The Blue Angel (1930) brought her international acclaim and a contract with Paramount Pictures. She starred in many Hollywood films, including six iconic roles directed by Sternberg: Morocco (1930) (her only Academy Award nomination), Dishonored (1931), Shanghai Express and Blonde Venus (both 1932), The Scarlet Empress (1934), The Devil Is a Woman (1935), Desire (1936), and Destry Rides Again (1939). She successfully traded on her glamorous persona and exotic looks, and became one of the era's highest-paid actresses. Throughout World War II, she was a high-profile entertainer in the United States. Although she delivered notable performances in several post-war films, including Billy Wilder's A Foreign Affair (1948), Alfred Hitchcock's Stage Fright (1950), Billy Wilder's Witness for the Prosecution (1957), Orson Welles's Touch of Evil (1958), and Stanley Kramer's Judgment at Nuremberg (1961), she spent most of the 1950s to the 1970s touring the world as a marquee live-show performer.

Dietrich was known for her humanitarian efforts during World War II, housing German and French exiles, providing financial support and even advocating their American citizenship. For her work on improving morale on the front lines during the war, she received several honors from the United States, France, Belgium, and Israel. In 1999, the American Film Institute named Dietrich the ninth greatest female screen legend of classic Hollywood cinema.[7]

Early life

 
Location of Marlene Dietrich's birthplace in Rote Insel in Berlin
 
Dietrich's birthplace in Leberstraße 65, Berlin-Schöneberg

She was born Marie Magdalene Dietrich at Leberstraße 65 in the neighborhood of Rote Insel in Schöneberg, now a district of Berlin. Her mother, Wilhelmina Elisabeth Josefine (née Felsing), was from an affluent Berlin family who owned a jewelry and clock-making firm. Her father, Louis Erich Otto Dietrich, was a police lieutenant. Dietrich had one sibling, Elisabeth, who was one year older. Dietrich's father died in 1907.[8] His best friend, Eduard von Losch, an aristocratic first lieutenant in the Grenadiers, courted Wilhelmina and married her in 1914, but he died in July 1916 from injuries sustained during the First World War.[1] Von Losch never officially adopted the Dietrich sisters, so Dietrich's surname was never von Losch, as has sometimes been claimed.[9]

Dietrich's family nicknamed her "Lena", "Lene", or "Leni" (IPA: [leːnɛ]).[10] Aged about 11, she combined her first two names to form the name "Marlene". Dietrich attended the Auguste-Viktoria Girls' School from 1907 to 1917[11] and graduated from the Victoria-Luise-Schule (today Goethe-Gymnasium [de]) in Berlin-Wilmersdorf in 1918.[12] She studied the violin[13] and became interested in theater and poetry as a teenager. A wrist injury[14] curtailed her dreams of becoming a concert violinist, but by 1922 she had her first job playing violin in a pit orchestra for silent films at a Berlin cinema. She was fired after only four weeks.[15]

The earliest professional stage appearances by Dietrich were as a chorus girl on tour with Guido Thielscher's Girl-Kabarett vaudeville-style entertainments and in Rudolf Nelson revues in Berlin.[16] In 1922, Dietrich auditioned unsuccessfully for theatrical director and impresario Max Reinhardt's drama academy;[17] however, she soon found herself working in his theatres as a chorus girl and playing small roles in dramas.

Career beginnings

Dietrich's film debut was a small part in the film The Little Napoleon (1923).[18] She met her future husband Rudolf Sieber on the set of Tragedy of Love in 1923. Dietrich and Sieber were married in a civil ceremony in Berlin on 17 May 1923.[19] Her only child, daughter Maria Elisabeth Sieber, was born on 13 December 1924.[20]

Dietrich continued to work on stage and in film both in Berlin and Vienna throughout the 1920s. On stage, she had roles of varying importance in Frank Wedekind's Pandora's Box,[21] William Shakespeare's The Taming of the Shrew[21] and A Midsummer Night's Dream,[22] and George Bernard Shaw's Back to Methuselah[23] and Misalliance.[24] It was in musicals and revues such as Broadway, Es Liegt in der Luft, and Zwei Krawatten, however, that she attracted the most attention. By the late 1920s, Dietrich was also playing sizable parts on screen, including roles in Café Elektric (1927), I Kiss Your Hand, Madame (1928), and The Ship of Lost Souls (1929).[25]

Career

Association with von Sternberg

 
Dietrich in her breakthrough role in The Blue Angel (1930)
 
Josef von Sternberg used butterfly lighting to enhance Dietrich's features in Shanghai Express (1932). This became the inspiration of the cover of rock band Queen's album Queen II which was integrated into the music video of their single "Bohemian Rhapsody".

In 1929, Dietrich landed her breakthrough role of Lola-Lola, a cabaret singer who caused the downfall of a hitherto respectable schoolmaster (played by Emil Jannings), in the UFA production of The Blue Angel (1930) shot at Babelsberg film studios.[26][27] Josef von Sternberg directed the film and thereafter took credit for having "discovered" Dietrich. The film introduced Dietrich's signature song "Falling in Love Again", which she recorded for Electrola. She made further recordings in the 1930s for Polydor and Decca Records.

In 1930, on the strength of The Blue Angel's international success, and with encouragement and promotion from Josef von Sternberg, who was established in Hollywood, Dietrich moved to the United States under contract to Paramount Pictures, the U.S. film distributor of The Blue Angel. The studio sought to market Dietrich as a German answer to Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer's Swedish-born star Greta Garbo. Sternberg welcomed her with gifts, including a green Rolls-Royce Phantom II. The car later appeared in their first U.S. film Morocco.[28]

Dietrich starred in six films directed by von Sternberg at Paramount between 1930 and 1935. Von Sternberg worked effectively with Dietrich to create the image of a glamorous and mysterious femme fatale. He encouraged her to lose weight and coached her intensively as an actress. She willingly followed his, sometimes imperious, direction in a way that a number of other performers resisted.[29]

In Morocco (1930) with Gary Cooper, Dietrich was again cast as a cabaret singer. The film is best remembered for the sequence in which she performs a song dressed in a man's white tie and kisses another woman, both provocative for the era. The film earned Dietrich her only Academy Award nomination.

Morocco was followed by Dishonored (1931) with Victor McLaglen, a major success with Dietrich cast as a Mata Hari-like spy. Shanghai Express (1932) with Anna May Wong, which was dubbed by the critics "Grand Hotel on wheels", was another major success, earning $1.5 million in worldwide rentals.[30] Dietrich and von Sternberg again collaborated on the romance Blonde Venus (1932) with Cary Grant. Dietrich worked without von Sternberg for the first time in three years in the romantic drama Song of Songs (1933), playing a naïve German peasant, under the direction of Rouben Mamoulian. Dietrich and Sternberg's last two films, The Scarlet Empress (1934) with John Davis Lodge and The Devil Is a Woman (1935)—the most stylized of their collaborations—were their lowest-grossing films. Dietrich later remarked that she was at her most beautiful in The Devil Is a Woman.

Von Sternberg is known for his exceptional skill in lighting and photographing Dietrich to optimum effect. He had a signature use of light and shadow, including the impact of light passed through a veil or slatted window blinds (as for example in Shanghai Express). This combined with the scrupulous attention to set design and costumes makes the films they made together among cinema's most visually stylish.[31] Critics still vigorously debate how much of the credit belonged to von Sternberg and how much to Dietrich, but most would agree that neither consistently reached such heights again after Paramount fired von Sternberg and the two ceased working together.[32] The collaboration of one actress and director creating seven films is still unmatched in motion pictures, with the possible exception of Katharine Hepburn and George Cukor, who made ten films together over a much longer period but which were not created for Hepburn the way the last six von Sternberg/Dietrich collaborations were.[33][34]

The later 1930s

Dietrich's first film after the end of her partnership with von Sternberg was Frank Borzage's Desire (1936) with Gary Cooper, a commercial success that gave Dietrich an opportunity to try her hand at romantic comedy. Her next project, I Loved a Soldier (1936), ended in shambles when the film was scrapped several weeks into production due to script problems, scheduling confusion and the studio's decision to fire the producer Ernst Lubitsch.[35]

Extravagant offers lured Dietrich away from Paramount to make her first color film The Garden of Allah (1936) for independent producer David O. Selznick, for which she received $200,000, and to Britain for Alexander Korda's production, Knight Without Armour (1937), at a salary of $450,000, which made her one of the best paid film stars of the time. While both films performed decently at the box office, her vehicles were costly to produce and her public popularity had declined. By this time, Dietrich placed 126th in box office rankings, and American film exhibitors proclaimed her "box office poison" in May 1938, a distinction she shared with Greta Garbo, Joan Crawford, Mae West, Katharine Hepburn, Norma Shearer, Dolores del Río, and Fred Astaire among others.[36]

While in London, Dietrich later said in interviews, she was approached by Nazi Party officials and offered lucrative contracts, should she agree to return to be a foremost film star in Nazi Germany. She refused their offers and applied for U.S. citizenship in 1937.[37] She returned to Paramount to make Angel (1937), another romantic comedy directed by Ernst Lubitsch; the film was poorly received, leading Paramount to buy out the remainder of Dietrich's contract.

 
James Stewart and Marlene Dietrich in Destry Rides Again (1939)

Dietrich, with encouragement from Josef von Sternberg, accepted producer Joe Pasternak's offer to play against type in her first film in two years: that of the cowboy saloon girl, Frenchie, in the western-comedy Destry Rides Again (1939), with James Stewart. This was a significantly less well paid role than she had been accustomed to. The bawdy role revived her career and "See What the Boys in the Back Room Will Have", a song she introduced in the film, became a hit when she recorded it for Decca. She played similar types in Seven Sinners (1940) and The Spoilers (1942), both with John Wayne.

World War II

 
Dietrich and Rita Hayworth serve food to soldiers at the Hollywood Canteen (17 November 1942)
 
Dietrich with airmen of the 401st Bomb Group (29 September 1944)
 
Marlene Dietrich and U.S. Army Technician Fourth Grade Earl E. McFarland in Belgium (24 November 1944)
 
Dietrich and U.S. soldiers somewhere in France during her second USO tour (1944)

Dietrich was known to have strong political convictions and the mind to speak them. In the late 1930s, Dietrich created a fund with Billy Wilder and several other exiles to help Jews and dissidents escape from Germany. In 1937, her entire salary for Knight Without Armor ($450,000) was put into escrow to help the refugees. In 1939, she became an American citizen and renounced her German citizenship.[2] In December 1941, the U.S. entered World War II, and Dietrich became one of the first public figures to help sell war bonds. She toured the U.S. from January 1942 to September 1943 (appearing before 250,000 troops on the Pacific Coast leg of her tour alone) and was reported to have sold more war bonds than any other star.[38][39]

During two extended tours for the USO in 1944 and 1945,[38] she performed for Allied troops in Algeria, Italy, the UK, France and Heerlen in the Netherlands,[40] then entered Germany with Generals James M. Gavin and George S. Patton. When asked why she had done this, in spite of the obvious danger of being within a few kilometers of German lines, she replied, "aus Anstand"—"out of decency".[41] Wilder later remarked that she was at the front lines more than Dwight Eisenhower. Her revue, with Danny Thomas as her opening act for the first tour, included songs from her films, performances on her musical saw (a skill taught to her by Igo Sym that she had originally acquired for stage appearances in Berlin in the 1920s) and a "mindreading" act that her friend Orson Welles had taught her for his Mercury Wonder Show. Dietrich would inform the audience that she could read minds and ask them to concentrate on whatever came into their minds. Then she would walk over to a soldier and earnestly tell him, "Oh, think of something else. I can't possibly talk about that!" American church papers reportedly published stories complaining about this part of Dietrich's act. [34][38]

In 1944, the Morale Operations Branch of the Office of Strategic Services (OSS) initiated the Musak project, musical propaganda broadcasts designed to demoralize enemy soldiers.[42] Dietrich, the only performer who was made aware that her recordings would be for OSS use, recorded a number of songs in German for the project, including "Lili Marleen", a favorite of soldiers on both sides of the conflict.[43] Major General William J. Donovan, head of the OSS, wrote to Dietrich, "I am personally deeply grateful for your generosity in making these recordings for us."[44]

At the war's end in Europe, Dietrich reunited with her sister Elisabeth and her sister's husband and son. They had resided in the German village of Belsen throughout the war years, running a cinema frequented by Nazi officers and officials who oversaw the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp. Dietrich's mother remained in Berlin during the war; her husband moved to a ranch in the San Fernando Valley of California. Dietrich vouched for her sister and her sister's husband, sheltering them from possible prosecution as Nazi collaborators.[45] However, Dietrich later omitted the existence of her sister and her sister's son from all accounts of her life, completely disowning them and claiming to be an only child.[46]

Dietrich received the Medal of Freedom in November 1947, for her "extraordinary record entertaining troops overseas during the war".[47] She said this was her proudest accomplishment.[42] She was also awarded the Légion d'honneur by the French government for her wartime work.[48]

Later film career

While Dietrich never fully regained her former screen profile, she continued performing in motion pictures, including appearances for directors such as Mitchell Leisen in Golden Earrings (1947), Billy Wilder in A Foreign Affair (1948) and Alfred Hitchcock in Stage Fright (1950). Her appearances in the 1950s included films such as Fritz Lang's Rancho Notorious, (1952) and Wilder's Witness for the Prosecution (1957). She appeared in Orson Welles's Touch of Evil (1958). Dietrich had a kind of platonic love for Welles, whom she considered a genius.[49] Her last substantial film role was in Judgment at Nuremberg (1961) directed by Stanley Kramer; she also presented the narrative for the documentary Black Fox: The Rise and Fall of Adolf Hitler which won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature in 1962.[50] She cut the ceremonial ribbon to celebrate the grand opening of the Paris Theater in New York City in 1948.[51]

Stage and cabaret

 
Dietrich often performed parts of her show in top hat and tails. Caricature by Hans Georg Pfannmüller showing Dietrich during a cabaret performance in 1954.

From the early 1950s until the mid-1970s, Dietrich worked almost exclusively as a cabaret artist, performing live in large theatres in major cities worldwide.

In 1953, Dietrich was offered $30,000 per week[52] to appear live at the Sahara Hotel[53] on the Las Vegas Strip. The show was short, consisting only of a few songs associated with her.[53] Her daringly sheer "nude dress"—a heavily beaded evening gown of silk soufflé, which gave the illusion of transparency—designed by Jean Louis, attracted a lot of publicity.[53] This engagement was so successful that she was signed to appear at the Café de Paris in London the following year; her Las Vegas contracts were also renewed.[54]

Dietrich employed Burt Bacharach as her musical arranger starting in the mid-1950s; together, they refined her nightclub act into a more ambitious theatrical one-woman show with an expanded repertoire.[55] Her repertoire included songs from her films as well as popular songs of the day. Bacharach's arrangements helped to disguise Dietrich's limited vocal range—she was a contralto[56]—and allowed her to perform her songs to maximum dramatic effect;[55] together, they recorded four albums and several singles between 1957 and 1964.[57] In a TV interview in 1971, she credited Bacharach with giving her the "inspiration" to perform during those years.[58]

Bacharach then felt he needed to devote his full-time to songwriting. But she had also come to rely on him in order to perform, and wrote about his leaving in her memoir:

From that fateful day on, I have worked like a robot, trying to recapture the wonderful woman he helped make out of me. I even succeeded in this effort for years, because I always thought of him, always longed for him, always looked for him in the wings, and always fought against self-pity ... He had become so indispensable to me that, without him, I no longer took much joy in singing. When he left me, I felt like giving everything up. I had lost my director, my support, my teacher, my maestro.[59]

She often performed the first part of her show in one of her body-hugging dresses and a swansdown coat, and change to top hat and tails for the second half of the performance.[60] This allowed her to sing songs usually associated with male singers, like "One for My Baby" and "I've Grown Accustomed to Her Face".[55]

"She ... transcends her material," according to Peter Bogdanovich. "Whether it's a flighty old tune like 'I Can't Give You Anything But Love, Baby' ... a schmaltzy German love song, 'Das Lied ist Aus' or a French one 'La Vie en Rose', she lends each an air of the aristocrat, yet she never patronises ... A folk song, 'Go 'Way From My Window' has never been sung with such passion, and in her hands 'Where Have All the Flowers Gone?' is not just another anti-war lament but a tragic accusation against us all."[61]

Francis Wyndham offered a more critical appraisal of the phenomenon of Dietrich in concert. He wrote in 1964: "What she does is neither difficult nor diverting, but the fact that she does it at all fills the onlookers with wonder ... It takes two to make a conjuring trick: the illusionist's sleight of hand and the stooge's desire to be deceived. To these necessary elements (her own technical competence and her audience's sentimentality) Marlene Dietrich adds a third—the mysterious force of her belief in her own magic. Those who find themselves unable to share this belief tend to blame themselves rather than her."[62]

Her use of body-sculpting undergarments, nonsurgical temporary facelifts (tape),[63] expert makeup and wigs,[64] combined with careful stage lighting,[54] helped to preserve Dietrich's glamorous image as she grew older.

 
Dietrich in Jerusalem during a tour in Israel, 1960
Marlene Dietrich discusses her film and cabaret career in an interview recorded in Paris, 1959.

Dietrich's return to West Germany in 1960 for a concert tour received a mixed reception—despite a consistently negative press, vociferous protest by Germans who felt she had betrayed her homeland, and two bomb threats, her performance attracted huge crowds. During her performances at Berlin's Titania Palast theatre, protesters chanted, "Marlene Go Home!"[65] On the other hand, Dietrich was warmly welcomed by other Germans, including Berlin Mayor Willy Brandt, who was, like Dietrich, an opponent of the Nazis who had lived in exile during their rule.[65] The tour was an artistic triumph, but a financial failure.[65] She was left emotionally drained by the hostility she encountered, and she left convinced never to visit again. East Germany, however, received her well.[66] She also undertook a tour of Israel around the same time, which was well-received; she sang some songs in German during her concerts, including, from 1962, a German version of Pete Seeger's anti-war anthem "Where Have All the Flowers Gone", thus breaking the unofficial taboo against the use of German in Israel.[64] She would become the first woman and German to receive the Israeli Medallion of Valor in 1965, "in recognition for her courageous adherence to principle and consistent record of friendship for the Jewish people". Dietrich in London, a concert album, was recorded during the run of her 1964 engagement at the Queen's Theatre.[67]

She performed on Broadway twice (in 1967 and 1968) and received a Special Tony Award in 1968. In November 1972, I Wish You Love, a version of Dietrich's Broadway show titled An Evening with Marlene Dietrich, was filmed in London.[68] She was paid $250,000 for her cooperation but was unhappy with the result. The show was broadcast in the UK on the BBC and in the U.S. on CBS in January 1973.[69]

Dietrich continued with a busy performance schedule until September 1975.[70] When Clive Hirschhorn asked her why she continued to perform, she said, "Do you think this is glamorous? That this is a great life, and that I do it for my health? Well, it isn't. It's hard work. And who would work if they didn't have to?"[71]

In her 60s and 70s, Dietrich's health declined: she survived cervical cancer in 1965[72] and suffered from poor circulation in her legs.[64] Dietrich became increasingly dependent on painkillers and alcohol.[64] A stage fall at the Shady Grove Music Fair in Maryland in 1973 injured her left thigh, necessitating skin grafts to allow the wound to heal.[73] She fractured her right leg in August 1974.[74]

Paris years

Dietrich's show business career largely ended on 29 September 1975, when she fell from the stage and broke a thigh bone during a performance in Sydney, Australia.[75] The following year, her husband, Rudolf Sieber, died of cancer on 24 June 1976.[76] Dietrich's final on-camera film appearance was a brief appearance in Just a Gigolo (1979), starring David Bowie and directed by David Hemmings, in which she sang the title song.

 
Dietrich's gravestone in Berlin. The inscription reads "Hier steh ich an den Marken meiner Tage" (literally: "Here I am standing at the border stones of my days"), a line from the sonnet "Abschied vom Leben" ("Farewell to Life") by Theodor Körner.

Dietrich withdrew to her apartment at 12 Avenue Montaigne in Paris. She spent the final 13 years of her life mostly bedridden, allowing only a select few—including family and employees—to enter the apartment. During this time, she was a prolific letter-writer and phone-caller. Her autobiography Nehmt nur mein Leben (Take Just My Life), was published in 1979.[77]

In 1982, Dietrich agreed to participate in a documentary film about her life, Marlene (1984), but refused to be filmed. The film's director, Maximilian Schell, was allowed only to record her voice. Schell used his interviews with her as the basis for the film, set to a collage of film clips from her career. The film won several European film prizes and received an Academy Award nomination for Best Documentary in 1984. Newsweek named it "a unique film, perhaps the most fascinating and affecting documentary ever made about a great movie star".[78]

In 1988, Dietrich recorded spoken introductions to songs for a nostalgia album by Udo Lindenberg.[79]

In an interview with the German magazine Der Spiegel in November 2005, Dietrich's daughter and grandson said Dietrich was politically active during these years.[80] She kept in contact with world leaders by telephone, including Ronald Reagan, Mikhail Gorbachev, and Margaret Thatcher, running up a monthly bill of over US$3,000. In 1989, her appeal to save the Babelsberg Studios from closure was broadcast on BBC Radio, and she spoke on television via telephone on the occasion of the fall of the Berlin Wall later that year. Also in spring 1990, she spoke on French forces radio station addressing her fellow Berliners in Germany about her then most recent conversation with former French president Mitterrand regarding his promise to her that Berlin would be the capital city of a united Germany later on—at that point in time, a quite appealing but non-official French presidential statement.

Death and estate

 
Dietrich and Robert W. Service on the set of The Spoilers (1942) in which they shared a brief scene (with Service unbilled as a Yukon poet patterned after Service himself)

On 6 May 1992, Dietrich died of kidney failure at her flat in Paris at age 90. Her funeral was a requiem mass conducted at the Roman Catholic church of La Madeleine in Paris on 14 May 1992.[81] Dietrich's funeral service was attended by approximately 1,500 mourners in the church itself—including ambassadors from Germany, Russia, the US, the UK, and other countries—with thousands more outside. Her closed coffin, draped in the French flag, rested beneath the altar and was adorned with a simple bouquet of white wildflowers and roses from the French President François Mitterrand. Three medals, including France's Legion of Honour and the U.S. Medal of Freedom, were displayed at the foot of the coffin, military style, for a ceremony symbolising the sense of duty Dietrich embodied in her career as an actress, and in her personal fight against Nazism. The officiating priest remarked: "Everyone knew her life as an artist of film and song, and everyone knew her tough stands ... She lived like a soldier and would like to be buried like a soldier".[82][83] By coincidence, her picture was used in the Cannes Film Festival poster that year which was pasted up all over Paris.[84]

In her will Dietrich expressed the wish to be buried in her birthplace Berlin, near her family. Her body was flown there to fulfill her wish on 16 May 1992.[85] Her coffin was draped in an American flag befitting her status as an American. As her coffin traveled through Berlin bystanders threw flowers onto it, a fitting tribute because Dietrich loved flowers, even saving the flowers thrown to her at the end of her performances for use in subsequent shows. Dietrich was interred at the Städtischer Friedhof III, Schöneberg, close by the grave of her mother Josefine von Losch, and near the house where she was born.[82]

On 24 October 1993, the largest portion of Dietrich's estate was sold to the Stiftung Deutsche Kinemathek—after U.S. institutions showed no interest—where it became the core of the exhibition at the Filmmuseum Berlin. The collection includes: over 3,000 textile items from the 1920s to the 1990s, including film and stage costumes as well as over a thousand items from Dietrich's personal wardrobe; 15,000 photographs, by Sir Cecil Beaton, Horst P. Horst, George Hurrell, Lord Snowdon and Edward Steichen; 300,000 pages of documents, including correspondence with Burt Bacharach, Yul Brynner, Maurice Chevalier, Noël Coward, Jean Gabin, Ernest Hemingway, Karl Lagerfeld, Nancy and Ronald Reagan, Erich Maria Remarque, Josef von Sternberg, Orson Welles and Billy Wilder; as well as other items like film posters and sound recordings.[86] The Marlene Dietrich Collection was sold to the Stiftung Deutsche Kinemathek for US$5 million, by Dietrich's heirs.[87]

The contents of Dietrich's Manhattan apartment, along with other personal effects such as jewelry and items of clothing, were sold by public auction by Sotheby's in Los Angeles in November 1997. Her former apartment located at 993 Park Avenue was sold for $615,000 in 1998.[88]

Personal life

 
Dietrich in the Kurhaus of Scheveningen in 1963

Dietrich's professional image was carefully crafted and maintained while her personal life was mostly hidden from the public. She was fluent in German, English, and French. Dietrich, who was bisexual, enjoyed the thriving gay bars and drag balls of 1920s Berlin.[89][90] Bars included the Mali und Igel, run by Elsa Conrad.[91] She also defied conventional gender roles through her boxing at Turkish trainer and prizefighter Sabri Mahir's boxing studio in Berlin, which opened to women in the late 1920s. In May 1923 Dietrich married assistant director Rudolf Sieber, who later became an assistant director at Paramount Pictures in France, responsible for foreign language dubbing. Their only child, Maria Riva, was born in Berlin on 13 December 1924. Riva later became an actress, primarily working in television. When Maria gave birth to a son (John, later a famous production designer) in 1948, Dietrich was dubbed "the world's most glamorous grandmother". After Dietrich's death, Riva published a candid biography of her mother, titled Marlene Dietrich (1992).

 
Dietrich and Rudolf Sieber on their wedding day, 17 May 1923

Throughout her career, Dietrich had numerous affairs, some short-lived, some lasting decades, often overlapping and almost all known to her husband, to whom she was in the habit of passing the intimate letters from her lovers, sometimes with biting comments.[92] When Dietrich arrived in Hollywood and filmed Morocco (1930), she had an affair with Gary Cooper, even though he was having another affair with Mexican actress Lupe Vélez.[93] Vélez once said, "If I had the opportunity to do so, I would tear out Marlene Dietrich's eyes."[94] Another of her affairs was with actor John Gilbert, known for his professional and personal connection to Greta Garbo. Gilbert's untimely death was one of the most painful events of her life.[95] Dietrich also had a brief affair with Douglas Fairbanks Jr., even though he was married to Joan Crawford at the time.[96] During the production of Destry Rides Again, Dietrich started a love affair with co-star James Stewart, which ended after filming stopped. According to writer/director Peter Bogdanovich, Marlene Dietrich told him during an aircraft flight that she became pregnant as a result of the affair, but had a surreptitious abortion without telling Stewart.[97] In 1938, Dietrich met and began a relationship with writer Erich Maria Remarque, and in 1941, the French actor Jean Gabin. The relationship ended in 1948.[98]

In Paris, Dietrich had an affair with Suzanne Baulé, known as Frede, a coach and cabaret hostess whom she met in 1936 at the Monocle, a women's nightclub on Boulevard Edgar-Quinet in Paris. The two women remained friends until the 1970s, as can be seen in the correspondence kept in the Marlene Dietrich archives in Berlin. In the early 1930s, Dietrich also had an affair with Cuban-American writer Mercedes de Acosta, who claimed to also be Greta Garbo's lover. Sewing circle was a phrase used by Dietrich[99] to describe the underground, closeted lesbian and bisexual film actresses and their relationships in Hollywood. In the supposed "Marlene's Sewing Circle" [100] are mentioned the names of other close friends such as Ann Warner (the wife of Jack L. Warner, one of the owners of the Warner studios), Lili Damita (an old friend of Marlene's from Berlin and the wife of Errol Flynn), Claudette Colbert,[101] and Dolores del Río (whom Dietrich considered the most beautiful woman in Hollywood).[102][103] The French singer Edith Piaf was also one of Dietrich's closest friends during her stay in Paris in the 1950s, with Dietrich serving as Piaf's matron of honor at her wedding to Jacques Pills in 1952; there were rumors of something more than friendship between them.[104][105]

When Dietrich was in her 50s she had a relationship with actor Yul Brynner, which lasted more than a decade. Dietrich's love life continued into her 70s. Her lovers included Errol Flynn,[106] George Bernard Shaw, John F. Kennedy, Joe Kennedy,[107] Michael Todd, Michael Wilding, John Wayne, Kirk Douglas, and Frank Sinatra.[108] Dietrich maintained her husband and his mistress first in Europe and later on a ranch in the San Fernando Valley, near Hollywood.[109]

Dietrich was raised in the German Lutheran tradition of Christianity, but she abandoned it as a result of her experiences as a teenager during World War I, after hearing preachers from both sides invoking God as their support. "I lost my faith during the war and can't believe they are all up there, flying around or sitting at tables, all those I've lost."[110] Quoting Goethe in her autobiography, she wrote, "If God created this world, he should review his plan."[111]

Legacy

Dietrich was an icon to fashion designers and screen stars. Edith Head remarked that Dietrich knew more about fashion than any other actress. Marlene Dietrich favoured Dior. In an interview with The Observer in 1960, she said, "I dress for the image. Not for myself, not for the public, not for fashion, not for men. If I dressed for myself I wouldn't bother at all. Clothes bore me. I'd wear jeans. I adore jeans. I get them in a public store—men's, of course; I can't wear women's trousers. But I dress for the profession."[112] In 2017, Swarovski commissioned a $60,000 Art Deco-styled dress in the style of her famous "nude dress", from Berlin-based fashion tech company ElektroCouture to honor Dietrich 25 years after her death. It contains 2,000 crystals in addition to 150 LED lights.[113] ElektroCouture owner Lisa Lang said that the dress was inspired by electrical diagrams and correspondence that took place between the actress and fashion designer Jean Louis in 1958: "She wanted a dress that glows, she wanted to be able to control it herself from the stage and she knew she could have died of an electric stroke had it ever been realized." The dress created by Lang's company was featured in French-German broadcaster Arte's documentary Das letzte Kleid der Marlene Dietrich ('The Last Dress of Marlene Dietrich').[114]

Her public image included openly defying sexual norms, and she was known for her androgynous film roles and her bisexuality.[115]

A significant volume of academic literature, especially since 1975, analyzes Dietrich's image, as created by the film industry, within various theoretical frameworks, including that of psycho-analysis. Emphasis is placed, inter alia, on the "fetishistic" manipulation of the female image.[116]

 
Commemorative plaque at the house where she was born in Berlin

In 1992, a plaque was unveiled at Leberstraße 65 in Berlin-Schöneberg, the site of Dietrich's birth. A postage stamp bearing her portrait was issued in Germany on 14 August 1997.

The main-belt asteroid 1010 Marlene, discovered by German astronomer Karl Reinmuth at Heidelberg Observatory in 1923, was named in her honor.[117]

For some Germans, Dietrich remained a controversial figure for having sided with the Allies during World War II. In 1996, after some debate, it was decided not to name a street after her in Berlin-Schöneberg, her birthplace.[118] However, on 8 November 1997, the central Marlene-Dietrich-Platz was unveiled in Berlin to honour her. The commemoration reads: Berliner Weltstar des Films und des Chansons. Einsatz für Freiheit und Demokratie, für Berlin und Deutschland ("Berlin world star of film and song. Dedication to freedom and democracy, to Berlin and Germany").

Dietrich was made an honorary citizen of Berlin on 16 May 2002. Translated from German, her memorial plaque reads

Berlin Memorial Plaque


"Where have all the flowers gone"
Marlene Dietrich
27 December 1901 – 6 May 1992
Actress and Singer
She was one of the few German actresses who attained international significance.
Despite tempting offers by the Nazi regime, she emigrated to the USA and became an American citizen.
In 2002, the city of Berlin posthumously made her an honorary citizen.

"I am, thank God, a Berliner."

Funded by the GASAG Berlin Gasworks Corporation.

The U.S. Government awarded Dietrich the Medal of Freedom for her war work. Dietrich has been quoted as saying this was the honor of which she was most proud in her life. They also awarded her with the Operation Entertainment Medal. The French Government made her a Chevalier (later upgraded to Commandeur) of the Légion d'honneur and a Commandeur of the Ordre des Arts et des Lettres. Her other awards include the Medallion of Honor of the State of Israel, the Fashion Foundation of America award and a Chevalier de l'Ordre de Leopold (Belgium).[119]

Dietrich is referenced in a number of popular 20th century songs, including Rodgers and Hart's "The Most Beautiful Girl in the World" (1935), Peter Sarstedt's "Where Do You Go To, My Lovely?" (1969), Suzanne Vega's "Marlene On The Wall" (1985), Peter Murphy (musician)'s "Marlene Dietrich's Favourite Poem" (1989), and Madonna's "Vogue" (1990). She is the inspiration for the song "Blue Heaven" from Public Service Broadcasting's 2021 album Bright Magic and the 2021 Black Midi album Cavalcade contains the song 'Marlene Dietrich'.[120]

In 2000 a German biopic ,Marlene, was made, directed by Joseph Vilsmaier and starring Katja Flint as Dietrich.[121]

On 27 December 2017, she was given a Google Doodle on the 116th anniversary of her birth.[122] The doodle was designed by American drag artist Sasha Velour, who cites Dietrich as a big inspiration due to her "gender-bending" fashion and political views.[123] Sasha portrayed Marlene during her time at competitive reality series RuPaul's Drag Race.

On 14 May 2020, she was part of an Entertainment Weekly cover celebrating LBGTQ celebrities.[124]

Works

Filmography

Discography

Radio

Noteworthy appearances include:

  • Lux Radio Theater: The Legionnaire and the Lady with Clark Gable (1 August 1936)
  • Lux Radio Theater: Desire with Herbert Marshall (22 July 1937)
  • Lux Radio Theater: Song of Songs with Douglas Fairbanks, Jr (20 December 1937)
  • The Chase and Sanborn Hour with Edgar Bergen and Don Ameche (2 June 1938)
  • Lux Radio Theater: Manpower with Edward G Robinson and George Raft (15 March 1942)
  • The Gulf Screen Guild Theater: Pittsburgh with John Wayne (12 April 1943)
  • Theatre Guild on the Air: Grand Hotel with Ray Milland (24 March 1948)
  • Studio One: Arabesque (29 June 1948)
  • Theatre Guild on the Air: The Letter with Walter Pidgeon (3 October 1948)
  • Ford Radio Theater: Madame Bovary with Claude Rains (8 October 1948)
  • Screen Director's Playhouse: A Foreign Affair with Rosalind Russell and John Lund (5 March 1949)
  • MGM Theatre of the Air: Anna Karenina (9 December 1949)[125]
  • MGM Theatre of the Air: Camille (6 June 1950)
  • Lux Radio Theater: No Highway in the Sky with James Stewart (21 April 1952)
  • Screen Director's Playhouse: A Foreign Affair with Lucille Ball and John Lund (1 March 1951)
  • The Big Show starring Tallulah Bankhead (2 October 1951)
  • Marlene Dietrich in conversation with J.W. Lambert and Carl Wildman recorded after her season at the Queen's Theatre, London, BBC radio, 12 August 1965 (a shorter version had been broadcast on 2 April).
  • The Child, with Godfrey Kenton, radio play by Shirley Jenkins, produced by Richard Imison for the BBC on 18 August 1965
  • Dietrich's appeal to save the Babelsberg Studio was broadcast on BBC radio

Dietrich made several appearances on Armed Forces Radio Services shows like The Army Hour and Command Performance during the war years. In 1952, she had her own series on American ABC entitled, Cafe Istanbul. During 1953–54, she starred in 38 episodes of Time for Love on CBS (which debuted 15 January 1953).[126] She recorded 94 short inserts, "Dietrich Talks on Love and Life", for NBC's Monitor in 1958. Dietrich gave many radio interviews worldwide on her concert tours. In 1960, her show at the Tuschinski in Amsterdam was broadcast live on Dutch radio. Her 1962 appearance at the Olympia in Paris was also broadcast.

  • Desert Island Discs, Dietrich asked to choose eight recordings, broadcast Monday 4 January 1965

Writing

  • Dietrich, Marlene (1962). Marlene Dietrich's ABC. Doubleday.
  • Dietrich, Marlene (1979). Nehmt nur mein Leben: Reflexionen (in German). Goldmann. ISBN 978-3-442-06327-7.
  • Dietrich, Marlene (1989). Marlene. Salvator Attanasio (translator). Grove Press. ISBN 978-0-8021-1117-3.
  • Dietrich, Marlene (1990). Some Facts About Myself. Helnwein, Gottfried [Conception and photographs]. ISBN 978-3-89322-226-1.
  • Dietrich, Marlene (2005). Nachtgedanken. Riva, Maria [Edited by]. ISBN 978-3-570-00874-4.

Painting/Drawing

  • 1941: Max Ernst finished the picture Marlene in oil who bears her facial features.[127]

See also

References

Notes

  1. ^ a b Born as Maria Magdalena, not Marie Magdalene, according to Dietrich's biography by her daughter, Maria Riva (Riva 1993); however, Dietrich's biography by Charlotte Chandler cites "Marie Magdalene" as her birth name (Chandler 2011, p. 12).
  2. ^ a b Flint, Peter B. (7 May 1992). "Marlene Dietrich, 90, Symbol of Glamour, Dies". The New York Times.
  3. ^ "Marlene Dietrich to be US Citizen". Painesville Telegraph. 6 March 1937.
  4. ^ "Citizen Soon". Telegraph Herald. 10 March 1939.
  5. ^ "Seize Luggage of Marlene Dietrich". Lawrence Journal-World. 14 June 1939.
  6. ^ . The Cinema Museum, London. Archived from the original on 6 January 2018. Retrieved 5 January 2018.
  7. ^ "AFI's 50 Greatest American Screen Legends". American Film Institute. Retrieved 30 August 2014.
  8. ^ Bach 2011, p. 19.
  9. ^ . Our Queer History. 9 February 2016. Archived from the original on 15 August 2016. Retrieved 1 June 2016.
  10. ^ Sonneborn, Liz (14 May 2014). A to Z of American Women in the Performing Arts. ISBN 978-1-4381-0790-5.
  11. ^ Bach 1992, p. 20.
  12. ^ Bach 1992, p. 26.
  13. ^ Bach 1992, p. 32.
  14. ^ Bach 1992, p. 39.
  15. ^ Bach 1992, p. 42.
  16. ^ Bach 1992, p. 44.
  17. ^ Bach 1992, p. 49.
  18. ^ Bach 1992, p. 491.
  19. ^ Bach 2011, p. 62.
  20. ^ Bach 1992, p. 65.
  21. ^ a b Bach 1992, p. 480.
  22. ^ Bach 1992, p. 482.
  23. ^ Bach 1992, p. 483.
  24. ^ Bach 1992, p. 488.
  25. ^ "Ship of Lost Men (Das Schiff der verlorenen Menschen)". Amazon. Retrieved 17 May 2013.
  26. ^ "100th anniversary of Studio Babelsberg". www.studiobabelsberg.com. Retrieved 6 May 2018.
  27. ^ "filmportal: The Blue Angel". www.filmportal.de. Retrieved 6 May 2018.
  28. ^ . Bonhams. Archived from the original on 23 February 2019. Retrieved 18 April 2015.
  29. ^ See e.g., Thomson (1975), p. 587: "He was not an easy man to be directed by. Many actors—notably [Emil] Jannings and William Powell—reacted violently to him. Dietrich adored him, and trusted him. ... "
  30. ^ Block, Alex Ben; Wilson, Lucy Autry (30 March 2010). George Lucas's blockbusting: A Decade-by-Decade Survey of Timeless Movies Including Untold Secrets of Their Financial and Cultural Success. It Books. pp. 164–165. ISBN 978-0-06-196345-2.
  31. ^ See, for example, Thomson (1975). The entry for Dietrich: "With him [von Sternberg] Dietrich made seven masterpieces [i.e., Blue Angel in Germany and the six in Hollywood], films that are still breathtakingly modern, which have no superior for their sense of artificiality suffused with emotion and which visually combine decadence and austerity, tenderness and cruelty, gaiety and despair."
  32. ^ See, for example, the entries for Dietrich and Sternberg in Thomson (1975).
  33. ^ Nightingale, Benedict (1 February 1979). "After Making Nine Films Together, Hepburn Can Practically Direct Cukor; Hepburn Helps Cukor Direct The Corn Is Green'". The New York Times.
  34. ^ a b Spoto 1992.
  35. ^ Bach 1992, pp. 210–211.
  36. ^ "How Joan Crawford Survived Box Office Poison twice!". 29 July 2015.
  37. ^ Helm, Toby (24 June 2000). . The Daily Telegraph. Archived from the original on 13 November 2022. Retrieved 18 May 2013.
  38. ^ a b c Sudendorf, Werner.
  39. ^ . MarleneDietrich.org. 2000. Archived from the original on 25 September 2011. Retrieved 20 February 2010.
  40. ^ "Rijckheyt – centrum voor regionale geschiedenis". www.rijckheyt.nl (in Dutch).
  41. ^ "A Soldier Lovingly Remembers Marlene Dietrich". Sister Celluloid. 27 December 2014.
  42. ^ a b . Central Intelligence Agency. 23 October 2008. Archived from the original on 21 August 2014. Retrieved 20 March 2010.
  43. ^ McIntosh 1998, p. 58.
  44. ^ McIntosh 1998, p. 59.
  45. ^ Marlene Dietrich: Her Own Song. TCM documentary. 2001.
  46. ^ Helm, Toby (24 June 2000). "Film star felt ashamed of Belsen link". The Telegraph. Retrieved 28 May 2017.
  47. ^ "Miss Dietrich to Receive Medal" (PDF). The New York Times. 18 November 1947.
  48. ^ "Marlene Dietrich : Biography". Who's Who – The People Lexicon (in German). www.whoswho.de. Retrieved 5 January 2013. Chevalier de la Légion d'Honneur and Officier de la Légion d'Honneur
  49. ^ Bach 1992, p. 462.
  50. ^ . Movies & TV Dept. The New York Times. 2011. Archived from the original on 21 May 2011. Retrieved 8 November 2008.
  51. ^ "Netflix to Keep New York's Paris Theatre Open". The Hollywood Reporter. 25 November 2019. Retrieved 23 December 2019.
  52. ^ Bach 1992, p. 369.
  53. ^ a b c Bach 1992, p. 368.
  54. ^ a b Bach 1992, p. 371.
  55. ^ a b c Bach 1992, p. 395.
  56. ^ Carpenter, Cassie (9 August 2011). . L.A Slush. Archived from the original on 12 January 2012.
  57. ^ O'Connor 1991, p. 154.
  58. ^ "Marlene Dietrich 1971 Copenhagen Interview" on YouTube, 1/2 hour video
  59. ^ Dietrich, Marlene. Marlene, Grove Press (1989) ebook
  60. ^ Bach 1992, p. 394.
  61. ^ Morley 1978, p. 69.
  62. ^ O'Connor 1991, p. 133.
  63. ^ "How one night in Montreal changed the life of Marlene Dietrich". Montreal Gazette. 2 May 2012.
  64. ^ a b c d Bach 1992, p. 406.
  65. ^ a b c Bach 1992, p. 401.
  66. ^ Chesnoff, Richard Z. (7 March 1966). "A Candid Portrait of Marlene Dietrich". Montreal Gazette.
  67. ^ Bach 1992, p. 526.
  68. ^ . Marlene Dietrich Collection Berlin. Archived from the original on 24 September 2008. Retrieved 11 October 2008.
  69. ^ Roberts, Paul G. Style Icons Vol 4 Sirens. Fashion Industry Broadcast, 2015 p. 39.
  70. ^ "Marlene Dietrich Concert Setlists". setlist.fm. Retrieved 12 July 2018.
  71. ^ "Marlene Dietrich". IMDb. Retrieved 12 July 2018.
  72. ^ Bach 1992, p. 416.
  73. ^ Bach 1992, p. 436.
  74. ^ Bach 1992, p. 437.
  75. ^ "Act follows suggestion of song's title". Toledo Blade. Ohio. 7 November 1973. p. 37.
  76. ^ Voss, Joan. . Senior Connection. Archived from the original on 24 July 2015. Retrieved 24 July 2015.
  77. ^ Nehmt nur mein Leben ... : Reflexionen / Marlene Dietrich. Library of Congress Online Catalogue. Bertelsmann. 1979. ISBN 978-3-570-02311-2. Retrieved 11 October 2016.
  78. ^ . Atlas International. Archived from the original on 5 January 2009. Retrieved 26 January 2009.
  79. ^ Bach 1992, p. 528.
  80. ^ "Der Himmel war grün, wenn sie es sagte". Der Spiegel (in German). 13 November 2005.
  81. ^ "I have given up belief in a God." Allen Smith, Warren (2002). Celebrities in Hell: A Guide to Hollywood's Atheists, Agnostics, Skeptics, Free Thinkers, and More. Barricade Books Inc. p. 130. ISBN 978-1-56980-214-4.
  82. ^ a b "Obituary of Maria Magdalene "Marlene" Dietrich". The Message Newsjournal. Retrieved 9 June 2013.
  83. ^ "Marlene Dietrich Funeral". Associated Press Images. Retrieved 2 December 2012.
  84. ^ "15 Most Inspiring Cannes Film Festival Posters". 22 April 2013. Retrieved 12 September 2015.
  85. ^ "Obituary for Marlene Magdelene Dietrich". The Message Newsjournal. Retrieved 9 June 2013.
  86. ^ "Marlene Dietrich: Berlin". Archived from the original on 3 January 2013. Retrieved 18 May 2007.
  87. ^ Reif, Rita (15 September 1993). "Berlin Buys Collection of Dietrich Memorabilia". The New York Times.
  88. ^ Swanson, Carl (5 April 1998). . The New York Observer. Archived from the original on 11 August 2014.
  89. ^ Bourke, Amy (29 May 2007). . Pink News. Archived from the original on 29 June 2011. Retrieved 3 January 2009.
  90. ^ Kennison, Rebecca (2002). "Clothes Make the (Wo)man: Marlene Dietrich and "Double Drag"". Journal of Lesbian Studies. 6 (2): 147–156. doi:10.1300/J155v06n02_19. PMID 24807670. S2CID 27704118.
  91. ^ Kraß, Andreas; Sluhovsky, Moshe; Yonay, Yuval (31 December 2021). Queer Jewish Lives Between Central Europe and Mandatory Palestine: Biographies and Geographies. transcript Verlag. ISBN 978-3-8394-5332-2.
  92. ^ Riva 1994, p. 344.
  93. ^ . Archived from the original on 11 February 2012.
  94. ^ "Marlene Dietrich". Revista Vanidades de México. 46 (12): 141. 2006. ISSN 1665-7519.
  95. ^ Bach 1992, pp. 207, 211.
  96. ^ Bach 1992, p. 223.
  97. ^ Riva 1994, pp. 456, 500
  98. ^ . Archived. Archived from the original on 27 September 2015.
  99. ^ Freeman, David (7 January 2001). "Closet Hollywood: A gossip columnist discloses some secrets about movie idols". The New York Times. Retrieved 18 April 2011.
  100. ^ Madsen, Axel (2002). The Sewing Circle: Sappho's Leading Ladies. New York: Kensington Books. p. 3. ISBN 978-0-7582-0101-0.
  101. ^ Moser, Margaret (2011). Movie Stars Do the Dumbest Things. Macmillan. p. 73. ISBN 978-1-4299-7837-8.
  102. ^ Bach 1992, p. 240.
  103. ^ Riva 1994, pp. 489, 675.
  104. ^ Bach 1992, pp. 316, 380.
  105. ^ Carly Maga (17 September 2019). "Edith Piaf, 'the kind of women everybody's trying to be right now'". Toronto Star. from the original on 18 September 2019. Retrieved 12 December 2019. The latter was notably present at Piaf's 1952 wedding to singer Jacques Pills, but the women's relationship began in the 1940s as Piaf was first trying to break into American entertainment and Dietrich took the sparrow under her wing, so to speak.
  106. ^ McNulty, Thomas (2004). Errol Flynn: The Life and Career. McFarland. ISBN 978-0-7864-1750-6.
  107. ^ "It Happened in the Hotel du Cap". Vanity Fair. March 2009. Retrieved 26 December 2020.
  108. ^ Riva 1994, passim.
  109. ^ Riva 1994, p. 612.
  110. ^ Bach 2011.
  111. ^ Nugent, Michael (15 September 2010). . Michaelnugent.com. Archived from the original on 1 December 2010. Retrieved 27 September 2010.
  112. ^ "From the Observer archive, 6 March 1960: Marlene Dietrich's wardrobe secrets". The Guardian. 4 March 2012. Retrieved 11 September 2016.
  113. ^ Knowles, Kitty (1 May 2018). "ElektroCouture: Inside The Fashion House Behind Swarovski's $60,000 Light-Up Dress". Forbes. Retrieved 30 January 2019.
  114. ^ Tran, Quynh (10 April 2017). "Marlene Dietrich's Fashion Tech Vision". Women's Wear Daily. Retrieved 30 January 2019.
  115. ^ Gammel 2012, p. 373.
  116. ^ Weber, Caroline (September–November 2007). "Academy Award: A new volume analyzes Dietrich in and out of the seminar room". Bookforum.
  117. ^ Schmadel, Lutz D. (2007). "(1010) Marlene". Dictionary of Minor Planet Names – (1010) Marlene. Springer Berlin Heidelberg. p. 87. doi:10.1007/978-3-540-29925-7_1011. ISBN 978-3-540-00238-3.
  118. ^ . Archived from the original on 22 December 2008.
  119. ^ . marlenedietrich.org.uk. Archived from the original on 28 May 2013. Retrieved 18 May 2013.
  120. ^ "Black Midi: Cavalcade review – freakish parade of prog-jazz extremity". The Guardian. 28 May 2021.
  121. ^ Rentschler, Eric (2007). "An Icon between the Fronts". In Schindler, Stephan K; Koepnick, Lutz Peter (eds.). The Cosmopolitan Screen: German Cinema and the Global Imaginary, 1945 to the present. University of Michigan Press. p. 207. ISBN 978-0-472-06966-8.
  122. ^ "Marlene Dietrich: Why Google honours her today". www.aljazeera.com. Retrieved 27 December 2017.
  123. ^ "Marlene Dietrich's 116th Birthday". Retrieved 18 August 2019.
  124. ^ "Pride Forever: EW's LGBTQ issue celebrates new storytellers, enduring icons, and Hollywood history". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved 14 May 2020.
  125. ^ Morse, Leon (22 October 1949). "The MGM Theater of the Air". Billboard. Retrieved 25 December 2014.
  126. ^ Kirby, Walter (11 January 1953). "Better Radio Programs for the Week". The Decatur Daily Review. The Decatur Daily Review. p. 42. Retrieved 19 June 2015 – via Newspapers.com.  
  127. ^ "Max Ernst – Marlene". De.wahooart.com. Retrieved 23 August 2021.

Sources

Further reading

External links

  • Official website
  • Marlene Dietrich at the Internet Broadway Database  
  • Marlene Dietrich at IMDb
  • Marlene Dietrich FBI Files
  • Spring, Kelly. . National Women's History Museum. 2017.

marlene, dietrich, black, midi, song, cavalcade, black, midi, album, marie, dietrich, redirects, here, german, soprano, marie, dietrich, soprano, marie, magdalene, marlene, dietrich, ɑːr, german, maʁˈleːnə, ˈdiːtʁɪç, listen, december, 1901, 1992, german, ameri. For the Black Midi song see Cavalcade Black Midi album Marie Dietrich redirects here For the German soprano see Marie Dietrich soprano Marie Magdalene Marlene Dietrich 1 m ɑːr ˈ l eɪ n e ˈ d iː t r ɪ x German maʁˈleːne ˈdiːtʁɪc listen 27 December 1901 6 May 1992 2 was a German and American 3 4 5 actress and singer whose career spanned from the 1910s to the 1980s 6 Marlene DietrichDietrich in 1951BornMarie Magdalene Dietrich 1901 12 27 27 December 1901Berlin GermanyDied6 May 1992 1992 05 06 aged 90 Paris FranceResting placeStadtischer Friedhof IIINationalityGerman until 1939 AmericanOccupationsActresssingerYears active1919 1984SpouseRudolf Sieber m 1923 died 1976 wbr ChildrenMaria RivaRelativesJ Michael Riva grandson Peter Riva grandson SignatureIn 1920s Berlin Dietrich performed on the stage and in silent films Her performance as Lola Lola in Josef von Sternberg s The Blue Angel 1930 brought her international acclaim and a contract with Paramount Pictures She starred in many Hollywood films including six iconic roles directed by Sternberg Morocco 1930 her only Academy Award nomination Dishonored 1931 Shanghai Express and Blonde Venus both 1932 The Scarlet Empress 1934 The Devil Is a Woman 1935 Desire 1936 and Destry Rides Again 1939 She successfully traded on her glamorous persona and exotic looks and became one of the era s highest paid actresses Throughout World War II she was a high profile entertainer in the United States Although she delivered notable performances in several post war films including Billy Wilder s A Foreign Affair 1948 Alfred Hitchcock s Stage Fright 1950 Billy Wilder s Witness for the Prosecution 1957 Orson Welles s Touch of Evil 1958 and Stanley Kramer s Judgment at Nuremberg 1961 she spent most of the 1950s to the 1970s touring the world as a marquee live show performer Dietrich was known for her humanitarian efforts during World War II housing German and French exiles providing financial support and even advocating their American citizenship For her work on improving morale on the front lines during the war she received several honors from the United States France Belgium and Israel In 1999 the American Film Institute named Dietrich the ninth greatest female screen legend of classic Hollywood cinema 7 Contents 1 Early life 1 1 Career beginnings 2 Career 2 1 Association with von Sternberg 2 2 The later 1930s 2 3 World War II 2 4 Later film career 2 5 Stage and cabaret 2 6 Paris years 3 Death and estate 4 Personal life 5 Legacy 6 Works 6 1 Filmography 6 2 Discography 6 3 Radio 6 4 Writing 6 5 Painting Drawing 7 See also 8 References 8 1 Notes 8 2 Sources 9 Further reading 10 External linksEarly life Edit Location of Marlene Dietrich s birthplace in Rote Insel in Berlin Dietrich s birthplace in Leberstrasse 65 Berlin Schoneberg She was born Marie Magdalene Dietrich at Leberstrasse 65 in the neighborhood of Rote Insel in Schoneberg now a district of Berlin Her mother Wilhelmina Elisabeth Josefine nee Felsing was from an affluent Berlin family who owned a jewelry and clock making firm Her father Louis Erich Otto Dietrich was a police lieutenant Dietrich had one sibling Elisabeth who was one year older Dietrich s father died in 1907 8 His best friend Eduard von Losch an aristocratic first lieutenant in the Grenadiers courted Wilhelmina and married her in 1914 but he died in July 1916 from injuries sustained during the First World War 1 Von Losch never officially adopted the Dietrich sisters so Dietrich s surname was never von Losch as has sometimes been claimed 9 Dietrich s family nicknamed her Lena Lene or Leni IPA leːnɛ 10 Aged about 11 she combined her first two names to form the name Marlene Dietrich attended the Auguste Viktoria Girls School from 1907 to 1917 11 and graduated from the Victoria Luise Schule today Goethe Gymnasium de in Berlin Wilmersdorf in 1918 12 She studied the violin 13 and became interested in theater and poetry as a teenager A wrist injury 14 curtailed her dreams of becoming a concert violinist but by 1922 she had her first job playing violin in a pit orchestra for silent films at a Berlin cinema She was fired after only four weeks 15 The earliest professional stage appearances by Dietrich were as a chorus girl on tour with Guido Thielscher s Girl Kabarett vaudeville style entertainments and in Rudolf Nelson revues in Berlin 16 In 1922 Dietrich auditioned unsuccessfully for theatrical director and impresario Max Reinhardt s drama academy 17 however she soon found herself working in his theatres as a chorus girl and playing small roles in dramas Career beginnings Edit Dietrich s film debut was a small part in the film The Little Napoleon 1923 18 She met her future husband Rudolf Sieber on the set of Tragedy of Love in 1923 Dietrich and Sieber were married in a civil ceremony in Berlin on 17 May 1923 19 Her only child daughter Maria Elisabeth Sieber was born on 13 December 1924 20 Dietrich continued to work on stage and in film both in Berlin and Vienna throughout the 1920s On stage she had roles of varying importance in Frank Wedekind s Pandora s Box 21 William Shakespeare s The Taming of the Shrew 21 and A Midsummer Night s Dream 22 and George Bernard Shaw s Back to Methuselah 23 and Misalliance 24 It was in musicals and revues such as Broadway Es Liegt in der Luft and Zwei Krawatten however that she attracted the most attention By the late 1920s Dietrich was also playing sizable parts on screen including roles in Cafe Elektric 1927 I Kiss Your Hand Madame 1928 and The Ship of Lost Souls 1929 25 Career EditAssociation with von Sternberg Edit Dietrich in her breakthrough role in The Blue Angel 1930 Josef von Sternberg used butterfly lighting to enhance Dietrich s features in Shanghai Express 1932 This became the inspiration of the cover of rock band Queen s album Queen II which was integrated into the music video of their single Bohemian Rhapsody In 1929 Dietrich landed her breakthrough role of Lola Lola a cabaret singer who caused the downfall of a hitherto respectable schoolmaster played by Emil Jannings in the UFA production of The Blue Angel 1930 shot at Babelsberg film studios 26 27 Josef von Sternberg directed the film and thereafter took credit for having discovered Dietrich The film introduced Dietrich s signature song Falling in Love Again which she recorded for Electrola She made further recordings in the 1930s for Polydor and Decca Records In 1930 on the strength of The Blue Angel s international success and with encouragement and promotion from Josef von Sternberg who was established in Hollywood Dietrich moved to the United States under contract to Paramount Pictures the U S film distributor of The Blue Angel The studio sought to market Dietrich as a German answer to Metro Goldwyn Mayer s Swedish born star Greta Garbo Sternberg welcomed her with gifts including a green Rolls Royce Phantom II The car later appeared in their first U S film Morocco 28 Dietrich starred in six films directed by von Sternberg at Paramount between 1930 and 1935 Von Sternberg worked effectively with Dietrich to create the image of a glamorous and mysterious femme fatale He encouraged her to lose weight and coached her intensively as an actress She willingly followed his sometimes imperious direction in a way that a number of other performers resisted 29 In Morocco 1930 with Gary Cooper Dietrich was again cast as a cabaret singer The film is best remembered for the sequence in which she performs a song dressed in a man s white tie and kisses another woman both provocative for the era The film earned Dietrich her only Academy Award nomination Morocco was followed by Dishonored 1931 with Victor McLaglen a major success with Dietrich cast as a Mata Hari like spy Shanghai Express 1932 with Anna May Wong which was dubbed by the critics Grand Hotel on wheels was another major success earning 1 5 million in worldwide rentals 30 Dietrich and von Sternberg again collaborated on the romance Blonde Venus 1932 with Cary Grant Dietrich worked without von Sternberg for the first time in three years in the romantic drama Song of Songs 1933 playing a naive German peasant under the direction of Rouben Mamoulian Dietrich and Sternberg s last two films The Scarlet Empress 1934 with John Davis Lodge and The Devil Is a Woman 1935 the most stylized of their collaborations were their lowest grossing films Dietrich later remarked that she was at her most beautiful in The Devil Is a Woman Von Sternberg is known for his exceptional skill in lighting and photographing Dietrich to optimum effect He had a signature use of light and shadow including the impact of light passed through a veil or slatted window blinds as for example in Shanghai Express This combined with the scrupulous attention to set design and costumes makes the films they made together among cinema s most visually stylish 31 Critics still vigorously debate how much of the credit belonged to von Sternberg and how much to Dietrich but most would agree that neither consistently reached such heights again after Paramount fired von Sternberg and the two ceased working together 32 The collaboration of one actress and director creating seven films is still unmatched in motion pictures with the possible exception of Katharine Hepburn and George Cukor who made ten films together over a much longer period but which were not created for Hepburn the way the last six von Sternberg Dietrich collaborations were 33 34 The later 1930s Edit Dietrich s first film after the end of her partnership with von Sternberg was Frank Borzage s Desire 1936 with Gary Cooper a commercial success that gave Dietrich an opportunity to try her hand at romantic comedy Her next project I Loved a Soldier 1936 ended in shambles when the film was scrapped several weeks into production due to script problems scheduling confusion and the studio s decision to fire the producer Ernst Lubitsch 35 Extravagant offers lured Dietrich away from Paramount to make her first color film The Garden of Allah 1936 for independent producer David O Selznick for which she received 200 000 and to Britain for Alexander Korda s production Knight Without Armour 1937 at a salary of 450 000 which made her one of the best paid film stars of the time While both films performed decently at the box office her vehicles were costly to produce and her public popularity had declined By this time Dietrich placed 126th in box office rankings and American film exhibitors proclaimed her box office poison in May 1938 a distinction she shared with Greta Garbo Joan Crawford Mae West Katharine Hepburn Norma Shearer Dolores del Rio and Fred Astaire among others 36 While in London Dietrich later said in interviews she was approached by Nazi Party officials and offered lucrative contracts should she agree to return to be a foremost film star in Nazi Germany She refused their offers and applied for U S citizenship in 1937 37 She returned to Paramount to make Angel 1937 another romantic comedy directed by Ernst Lubitsch the film was poorly received leading Paramount to buy out the remainder of Dietrich s contract James Stewart and Marlene Dietrich in Destry Rides Again 1939 Dietrich with encouragement from Josef von Sternberg accepted producer Joe Pasternak s offer to play against type in her first film in two years that of the cowboy saloon girl Frenchie in the western comedy Destry Rides Again 1939 with James Stewart This was a significantly less well paid role than she had been accustomed to The bawdy role revived her career and See What the Boys in the Back Room Will Have a song she introduced in the film became a hit when she recorded it for Decca She played similar types in Seven Sinners 1940 and The Spoilers 1942 both with John Wayne World War II Edit Dietrich and Rita Hayworth serve food to soldiers at the Hollywood Canteen 17 November 1942 Dietrich with airmen of the 401st Bomb Group 29 September 1944 Marlene Dietrich and U S Army Technician Fourth Grade Earl E McFarland in Belgium 24 November 1944 Dietrich and U S soldiers somewhere in France during her second USO tour 1944 Dietrich was known to have strong political convictions and the mind to speak them In the late 1930s Dietrich created a fund with Billy Wilder and several other exiles to help Jews and dissidents escape from Germany In 1937 her entire salary for Knight Without Armor 450 000 was put into escrow to help the refugees In 1939 she became an American citizen and renounced her German citizenship 2 In December 1941 the U S entered World War II and Dietrich became one of the first public figures to help sell war bonds She toured the U S from January 1942 to September 1943 appearing before 250 000 troops on the Pacific Coast leg of her tour alone and was reported to have sold more war bonds than any other star 38 39 During two extended tours for the USO in 1944 and 1945 38 she performed for Allied troops in Algeria Italy the UK France and Heerlen in the Netherlands 40 then entered Germany with Generals James M Gavin and George S Patton When asked why she had done this in spite of the obvious danger of being within a few kilometers of German lines she replied aus Anstand out of decency 41 Wilder later remarked that she was at the front lines more than Dwight Eisenhower Her revue with Danny Thomas as her opening act for the first tour included songs from her films performances on her musical saw a skill taught to her by Igo Sym that she had originally acquired for stage appearances in Berlin in the 1920s and a mindreading act that her friend Orson Welles had taught her for his Mercury Wonder Show Dietrich would inform the audience that she could read minds and ask them to concentrate on whatever came into their minds Then she would walk over to a soldier and earnestly tell him Oh think of something else I can t possibly talk about that American church papers reportedly published stories complaining about this part of Dietrich s act 34 38 In 1944 the Morale Operations Branch of the Office of Strategic Services OSS initiated the Musak project musical propaganda broadcasts designed to demoralize enemy soldiers 42 Dietrich the only performer who was made aware that her recordings would be for OSS use recorded a number of songs in German for the project including Lili Marleen a favorite of soldiers on both sides of the conflict 43 Major General William J Donovan head of the OSS wrote to Dietrich I am personally deeply grateful for your generosity in making these recordings for us 44 At the war s end in Europe Dietrich reunited with her sister Elisabeth and her sister s husband and son They had resided in the German village of Belsen throughout the war years running a cinema frequented by Nazi officers and officials who oversaw the Bergen Belsen concentration camp Dietrich s mother remained in Berlin during the war her husband moved to a ranch in the San Fernando Valley of California Dietrich vouched for her sister and her sister s husband sheltering them from possible prosecution as Nazi collaborators 45 However Dietrich later omitted the existence of her sister and her sister s son from all accounts of her life completely disowning them and claiming to be an only child 46 Dietrich received the Medal of Freedom in November 1947 for her extraordinary record entertaining troops overseas during the war 47 She said this was her proudest accomplishment 42 She was also awarded the Legion d honneur by the French government for her wartime work 48 Later film career Edit While Dietrich never fully regained her former screen profile she continued performing in motion pictures including appearances for directors such as Mitchell Leisen in Golden Earrings 1947 Billy Wilder in A Foreign Affair 1948 and Alfred Hitchcock in Stage Fright 1950 Her appearances in the 1950s included films such as Fritz Lang s Rancho Notorious 1952 and Wilder s Witness for the Prosecution 1957 She appeared in Orson Welles s Touch of Evil 1958 Dietrich had a kind of platonic love for Welles whom she considered a genius 49 Her last substantial film role was in Judgment at Nuremberg 1961 directed by Stanley Kramer she also presented the narrative for the documentary Black Fox The Rise and Fall of Adolf Hitler which won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature in 1962 50 She cut the ceremonial ribbon to celebrate the grand opening of the Paris Theater in New York City in 1948 51 Stage and cabaret Edit Dietrich often performed parts of her show in top hat and tails Caricature by Hans Georg Pfannmuller showing Dietrich during a cabaret performance in 1954 From the early 1950s until the mid 1970s Dietrich worked almost exclusively as a cabaret artist performing live in large theatres in major cities worldwide In 1953 Dietrich was offered 30 000 per week 52 to appear live at the Sahara Hotel 53 on the Las Vegas Strip The show was short consisting only of a few songs associated with her 53 Her daringly sheer nude dress a heavily beaded evening gown of silk souffle which gave the illusion of transparency designed by Jean Louis attracted a lot of publicity 53 This engagement was so successful that she was signed to appear at the Cafe de Paris in London the following year her Las Vegas contracts were also renewed 54 Dietrich employed Burt Bacharach as her musical arranger starting in the mid 1950s together they refined her nightclub act into a more ambitious theatrical one woman show with an expanded repertoire 55 Her repertoire included songs from her films as well as popular songs of the day Bacharach s arrangements helped to disguise Dietrich s limited vocal range she was a contralto 56 and allowed her to perform her songs to maximum dramatic effect 55 together they recorded four albums and several singles between 1957 and 1964 57 In a TV interview in 1971 she credited Bacharach with giving her the inspiration to perform during those years 58 Bacharach then felt he needed to devote his full time to songwriting But she had also come to rely on him in order to perform and wrote about his leaving in her memoir From that fateful day on I have worked like a robot trying to recapture the wonderful woman he helped make out of me I even succeeded in this effort for years because I always thought of him always longed for him always looked for him in the wings and always fought against self pity He had become so indispensable to me that without him I no longer took much joy in singing When he left me I felt like giving everything up I had lost my director my support my teacher my maestro 59 She often performed the first part of her show in one of her body hugging dresses and a swansdown coat and change to top hat and tails for the second half of the performance 60 This allowed her to sing songs usually associated with male singers like One for My Baby and I ve Grown Accustomed to Her Face 55 She transcends her material according to Peter Bogdanovich Whether it s a flighty old tune like I Can t Give You Anything But Love Baby a schmaltzy German love song Das Lied ist Aus or a French one La Vie en Rose she lends each an air of the aristocrat yet she never patronises A folk song Go Way From My Window has never been sung with such passion and in her hands Where Have All the Flowers Gone is not just another anti war lament but a tragic accusation against us all 61 Francis Wyndham offered a more critical appraisal of the phenomenon of Dietrich in concert He wrote in 1964 What she does is neither difficult nor diverting but the fact that she does it at all fills the onlookers with wonder It takes two to make a conjuring trick the illusionist s sleight of hand and the stooge s desire to be deceived To these necessary elements her own technical competence and her audience s sentimentality Marlene Dietrich adds a third the mysterious force of her belief in her own magic Those who find themselves unable to share this belief tend to blame themselves rather than her 62 Her use of body sculpting undergarments nonsurgical temporary facelifts tape 63 expert makeup and wigs 64 combined with careful stage lighting 54 helped to preserve Dietrich s glamorous image as she grew older Dietrich in Jerusalem during a tour in Israel 1960 source source Marlene Dietrich discusses her film and cabaret career in an interview recorded in Paris 1959 Dietrich s return to West Germany in 1960 for a concert tour received a mixed reception despite a consistently negative press vociferous protest by Germans who felt she had betrayed her homeland and two bomb threats her performance attracted huge crowds During her performances at Berlin s Titania Palast theatre protesters chanted Marlene Go Home 65 On the other hand Dietrich was warmly welcomed by other Germans including Berlin Mayor Willy Brandt who was like Dietrich an opponent of the Nazis who had lived in exile during their rule 65 The tour was an artistic triumph but a financial failure 65 She was left emotionally drained by the hostility she encountered and she left convinced never to visit again East Germany however received her well 66 She also undertook a tour of Israel around the same time which was well received she sang some songs in German during her concerts including from 1962 a German version of Pete Seeger s anti war anthem Where Have All the Flowers Gone thus breaking the unofficial taboo against the use of German in Israel 64 She would become the first woman and German to receive the Israeli Medallion of Valor in 1965 in recognition for her courageous adherence to principle and consistent record of friendship for the Jewish people Dietrich in London a concert album was recorded during the run of her 1964 engagement at the Queen s Theatre 67 She performed on Broadway twice in 1967 and 1968 and received a Special Tony Award in 1968 In November 1972 I Wish You Love a version of Dietrich s Broadway show titled An Evening with Marlene Dietrich was filmed in London 68 She was paid 250 000 for her cooperation but was unhappy with the result The show was broadcast in the UK on the BBC and in the U S on CBS in January 1973 69 Dietrich continued with a busy performance schedule until September 1975 70 When Clive Hirschhorn asked her why she continued to perform she said Do you think this is glamorous That this is a great life and that I do it for my health Well it isn t It s hard work And who would work if they didn t have to 71 In her 60s and 70s Dietrich s health declined she survived cervical cancer in 1965 72 and suffered from poor circulation in her legs 64 Dietrich became increasingly dependent on painkillers and alcohol 64 A stage fall at the Shady Grove Music Fair in Maryland in 1973 injured her left thigh necessitating skin grafts to allow the wound to heal 73 She fractured her right leg in August 1974 74 Paris years Edit Dietrich s show business career largely ended on 29 September 1975 when she fell from the stage and broke a thigh bone during a performance in Sydney Australia 75 The following year her husband Rudolf Sieber died of cancer on 24 June 1976 76 Dietrich s final on camera film appearance was a brief appearance in Just a Gigolo 1979 starring David Bowie and directed by David Hemmings in which she sang the title song Dietrich s gravestone in Berlin The inscription reads Hier steh ich an den Marken meiner Tage literally Here I am standing at the border stones of my days a line from the sonnet Abschied vom Leben Farewell to Life by Theodor Korner Dietrich withdrew to her apartment at 12 Avenue Montaigne in Paris She spent the final 13 years of her life mostly bedridden allowing only a select few including family and employees to enter the apartment During this time she was a prolific letter writer and phone caller Her autobiography Nehmt nur mein Leben Take Just My Life was published in 1979 77 In 1982 Dietrich agreed to participate in a documentary film about her life Marlene 1984 but refused to be filmed The film s director Maximilian Schell was allowed only to record her voice Schell used his interviews with her as the basis for the film set to a collage of film clips from her career The film won several European film prizes and received an Academy Award nomination for Best Documentary in 1984 Newsweek named it a unique film perhaps the most fascinating and affecting documentary ever made about a great movie star 78 In 1988 Dietrich recorded spoken introductions to songs for a nostalgia album by Udo Lindenberg 79 In an interview with the German magazine Der Spiegel in November 2005 Dietrich s daughter and grandson said Dietrich was politically active during these years 80 She kept in contact with world leaders by telephone including Ronald Reagan Mikhail Gorbachev and Margaret Thatcher running up a monthly bill of over US 3 000 In 1989 her appeal to save the Babelsberg Studios from closure was broadcast on BBC Radio and she spoke on television via telephone on the occasion of the fall of the Berlin Wall later that year Also in spring 1990 she spoke on French forces radio station addressing her fellow Berliners in Germany about her then most recent conversation with former French president Mitterrand regarding his promise to her that Berlin would be the capital city of a united Germany later on at that point in time a quite appealing but non official French presidential statement Death and estate Edit Dietrich and Robert W Service on the set of The Spoilers 1942 in which they shared a brief scene with Service unbilled as a Yukon poet patterned after Service himself On 6 May 1992 Dietrich died of kidney failure at her flat in Paris at age 90 Her funeral was a requiem mass conducted at the Roman Catholic church of La Madeleine in Paris on 14 May 1992 81 Dietrich s funeral service was attended by approximately 1 500 mourners in the church itself including ambassadors from Germany Russia the US the UK and other countries with thousands more outside Her closed coffin draped in the French flag rested beneath the altar and was adorned with a simple bouquet of white wildflowers and roses from the French President Francois Mitterrand Three medals including France s Legion of Honour and the U S Medal of Freedom were displayed at the foot of the coffin military style for a ceremony symbolising the sense of duty Dietrich embodied in her career as an actress and in her personal fight against Nazism The officiating priest remarked Everyone knew her life as an artist of film and song and everyone knew her tough stands She lived like a soldier and would like to be buried like a soldier 82 83 By coincidence her picture was used in the Cannes Film Festival poster that year which was pasted up all over Paris 84 In her will Dietrich expressed the wish to be buried in her birthplace Berlin near her family Her body was flown there to fulfill her wish on 16 May 1992 85 Her coffin was draped in an American flag befitting her status as an American As her coffin traveled through Berlin bystanders threw flowers onto it a fitting tribute because Dietrich loved flowers even saving the flowers thrown to her at the end of her performances for use in subsequent shows Dietrich was interred at the Stadtischer Friedhof III Schoneberg close by the grave of her mother Josefine von Losch and near the house where she was born 82 On 24 October 1993 the largest portion of Dietrich s estate was sold to the Stiftung Deutsche Kinemathek after U S institutions showed no interest where it became the core of the exhibition at the Filmmuseum Berlin The collection includes over 3 000 textile items from the 1920s to the 1990s including film and stage costumes as well as over a thousand items from Dietrich s personal wardrobe 15 000 photographs by Sir Cecil Beaton Horst P Horst George Hurrell Lord Snowdon and Edward Steichen 300 000 pages of documents including correspondence with Burt Bacharach Yul Brynner Maurice Chevalier Noel Coward Jean Gabin Ernest Hemingway Karl Lagerfeld Nancy and Ronald Reagan Erich Maria Remarque Josef von Sternberg Orson Welles and Billy Wilder as well as other items like film posters and sound recordings 86 The Marlene Dietrich Collection was sold to the Stiftung Deutsche Kinemathek for US 5 million by Dietrich s heirs 87 The contents of Dietrich s Manhattan apartment along with other personal effects such as jewelry and items of clothing were sold by public auction by Sotheby s in Los Angeles in November 1997 Her former apartment located at 993 Park Avenue was sold for 615 000 in 1998 88 Personal life Edit Dietrich in the Kurhaus of Scheveningen in 1963 Dietrich s professional image was carefully crafted and maintained while her personal life was mostly hidden from the public She was fluent in German English and French Dietrich who was bisexual enjoyed the thriving gay bars and drag balls of 1920s Berlin 89 90 Bars included the Mali und Igel run by Elsa Conrad 91 She also defied conventional gender roles through her boxing at Turkish trainer and prizefighter Sabri Mahir s boxing studio in Berlin which opened to women in the late 1920s In May 1923 Dietrich married assistant director Rudolf Sieber who later became an assistant director at Paramount Pictures in France responsible for foreign language dubbing Their only child Maria Riva was born in Berlin on 13 December 1924 Riva later became an actress primarily working in television When Maria gave birth to a son John later a famous production designer in 1948 Dietrich was dubbed the world s most glamorous grandmother After Dietrich s death Riva published a candid biography of her mother titled Marlene Dietrich 1992 Dietrich and Rudolf Sieber on their wedding day 17 May 1923 Throughout her career Dietrich had numerous affairs some short lived some lasting decades often overlapping and almost all known to her husband to whom she was in the habit of passing the intimate letters from her lovers sometimes with biting comments 92 When Dietrich arrived in Hollywood and filmed Morocco 1930 she had an affair with Gary Cooper even though he was having another affair with Mexican actress Lupe Velez 93 Velez once said If I had the opportunity to do so I would tear out Marlene Dietrich s eyes 94 Another of her affairs was with actor John Gilbert known for his professional and personal connection to Greta Garbo Gilbert s untimely death was one of the most painful events of her life 95 Dietrich also had a brief affair with Douglas Fairbanks Jr even though he was married to Joan Crawford at the time 96 During the production of Destry Rides Again Dietrich started a love affair with co star James Stewart which ended after filming stopped According to writer director Peter Bogdanovich Marlene Dietrich told him during an aircraft flight that she became pregnant as a result of the affair but had a surreptitious abortion without telling Stewart 97 In 1938 Dietrich met and began a relationship with writer Erich Maria Remarque and in 1941 the French actor Jean Gabin The relationship ended in 1948 98 In Paris Dietrich had an affair with Suzanne Baule known as Frede a coach and cabaret hostess whom she met in 1936 at the Monocle a women s nightclub on Boulevard Edgar Quinet in Paris The two women remained friends until the 1970s as can be seen in the correspondence kept in the Marlene Dietrich archives in Berlin In the early 1930s Dietrich also had an affair with Cuban American writer Mercedes de Acosta who claimed to also be Greta Garbo s lover Sewing circle was a phrase used by Dietrich 99 to describe the underground closeted lesbian and bisexual film actresses and their relationships in Hollywood In the supposed Marlene s Sewing Circle 100 are mentioned the names of other close friends such as Ann Warner the wife of Jack L Warner one of the owners of the Warner studios Lili Damita an old friend of Marlene s from Berlin and the wife of Errol Flynn Claudette Colbert 101 and Dolores del Rio whom Dietrich considered the most beautiful woman in Hollywood 102 103 The French singer Edith Piaf was also one of Dietrich s closest friends during her stay in Paris in the 1950s with Dietrich serving as Piaf s matron of honor at her wedding to Jacques Pills in 1952 there were rumors of something more than friendship between them 104 105 When Dietrich was in her 50s she had a relationship with actor Yul Brynner which lasted more than a decade Dietrich s love life continued into her 70s Her lovers included Errol Flynn 106 George Bernard Shaw John F Kennedy Joe Kennedy 107 Michael Todd Michael Wilding John Wayne Kirk Douglas and Frank Sinatra 108 Dietrich maintained her husband and his mistress first in Europe and later on a ranch in the San Fernando Valley near Hollywood 109 Dietrich was raised in the German Lutheran tradition of Christianity but she abandoned it as a result of her experiences as a teenager during World War I after hearing preachers from both sides invoking God as their support I lost my faith during the war and can t believe they are all up there flying around or sitting at tables all those I ve lost 110 Quoting Goethe in her autobiography she wrote If God created this world he should review his plan 111 Legacy EditDietrich was an icon to fashion designers and screen stars Edith Head remarked that Dietrich knew more about fashion than any other actress Marlene Dietrich favoured Dior In an interview with The Observer in 1960 she said I dress for the image Not for myself not for the public not for fashion not for men If I dressed for myself I wouldn t bother at all Clothes bore me I d wear jeans I adore jeans I get them in a public store men s of course I can t wear women s trousers But I dress for the profession 112 In 2017 Swarovski commissioned a 60 000 Art Deco styled dress in the style of her famous nude dress from Berlin based fashion tech company ElektroCouture to honor Dietrich 25 years after her death It contains 2 000 crystals in addition to 150 LED lights 113 ElektroCouture owner Lisa Lang said that the dress was inspired by electrical diagrams and correspondence that took place between the actress and fashion designer Jean Louis in 1958 She wanted a dress that glows she wanted to be able to control it herself from the stage and she knew she could have died of an electric stroke had it ever been realized The dress created by Lang s company was featured in French German broadcaster Arte s documentary Das letzte Kleid der Marlene Dietrich The Last Dress of Marlene Dietrich 114 Her public image included openly defying sexual norms and she was known for her androgynous film roles and her bisexuality 115 A significant volume of academic literature especially since 1975 analyzes Dietrich s image as created by the film industry within various theoretical frameworks including that of psycho analysis Emphasis is placed inter alia on the fetishistic manipulation of the female image 116 Commemorative plaque at the house where she was born in Berlin In 1992 a plaque was unveiled at Leberstrasse 65 in Berlin Schoneberg the site of Dietrich s birth A postage stamp bearing her portrait was issued in Germany on 14 August 1997 The main belt asteroid 1010 Marlene discovered by German astronomer Karl Reinmuth at Heidelberg Observatory in 1923 was named in her honor 117 For some Germans Dietrich remained a controversial figure for having sided with the Allies during World War II In 1996 after some debate it was decided not to name a street after her in Berlin Schoneberg her birthplace 118 However on 8 November 1997 the central Marlene Dietrich Platz was unveiled in Berlin to honour her The commemoration reads Berliner Weltstar des Films und des Chansons Einsatz fur Freiheit und Demokratie fur Berlin und Deutschland Berlin world star of film and song Dedication to freedom and democracy to Berlin and Germany Dietrich was made an honorary citizen of Berlin on 16 May 2002 Translated from German her memorial plaque reads Berlin Memorial Plaque Where have all the flowers gone Marlene Dietrich 27 December 1901 6 May 1992 Actress and Singer She was one of the few German actresses who attained international significance Despite tempting offers by the Nazi regime she emigrated to the USA and became an American citizen In 2002 the city of Berlin posthumously made her an honorary citizen I am thank God a Berliner Funded by the GASAG Berlin Gasworks Corporation The U S Government awarded Dietrich the Medal of Freedom for her war work Dietrich has been quoted as saying this was the honor of which she was most proud in her life They also awarded her with the Operation Entertainment Medal The French Government made her a Chevalier later upgraded to Commandeur of the Legion d honneur and a Commandeur of the Ordre des Arts et des Lettres Her other awards include the Medallion of Honor of the State of Israel the Fashion Foundation of America award and a Chevalier de l Ordre de Leopold Belgium 119 Dietrich is referenced in a number of popular 20th century songs including Rodgers and Hart s The Most Beautiful Girl in the World 1935 Peter Sarstedt s Where Do You Go To My Lovely 1969 Suzanne Vega s Marlene On The Wall 1985 Peter Murphy musician s Marlene Dietrich s Favourite Poem 1989 and Madonna s Vogue 1990 She is the inspiration for the song Blue Heaven from Public Service Broadcasting s 2021 album Bright Magic and the 2021 Black Midi album Cavalcade contains the song Marlene Dietrich 120 In 2000 a German biopic Marlene was made directed by Joseph Vilsmaier and starring Katja Flint as Dietrich 121 On 27 December 2017 she was given a Google Doodle on the 116th anniversary of her birth 122 The doodle was designed by American drag artist Sasha Velour who cites Dietrich as a big inspiration due to her gender bending fashion and political views 123 Sasha portrayed Marlene during her time at competitive reality series RuPaul s Drag Race On 14 May 2020 she was part of an Entertainment Weekly cover celebrating LBGTQ celebrities 124 Works EditFilmography Edit Main article Marlene Dietrich filmography Discography Edit Main article Marlene Dietrich discography Radio Edit Noteworthy appearances include Lux Radio Theater The Legionnaire and the Lady with Clark Gable 1 August 1936 Lux Radio Theater Desire with Herbert Marshall 22 July 1937 Lux Radio Theater Song of Songs with Douglas Fairbanks Jr 20 December 1937 The Chase and Sanborn Hour with Edgar Bergen and Don Ameche 2 June 1938 Lux Radio Theater Manpower with Edward G Robinson and George Raft 15 March 1942 The Gulf Screen Guild Theater Pittsburgh with John Wayne 12 April 1943 Theatre Guild on the Air Grand Hotel with Ray Milland 24 March 1948 Studio One Arabesque 29 June 1948 Theatre Guild on the Air The Letter with Walter Pidgeon 3 October 1948 Ford Radio Theater Madame Bovary with Claude Rains 8 October 1948 Screen Director s Playhouse A Foreign Affair with Rosalind Russell and John Lund 5 March 1949 MGM Theatre of the Air Anna Karenina 9 December 1949 125 MGM Theatre of the Air Camille 6 June 1950 Lux Radio Theater No Highway in the Sky with James Stewart 21 April 1952 Screen Director s Playhouse A Foreign Affair with Lucille Ball and John Lund 1 March 1951 The Big Show starring Tallulah Bankhead 2 October 1951 Marlene Dietrich in conversation with J W Lambert and Carl Wildman recorded after her season at the Queen s Theatre London BBC radio 12 August 1965 a shorter version had been broadcast on 2 April The Child with Godfrey Kenton radio play by Shirley Jenkins produced by Richard Imison for the BBC on 18 August 1965 Dietrich s appeal to save the Babelsberg Studio was broadcast on BBC radioDietrich made several appearances on Armed Forces Radio Services shows like The Army Hour and Command Performance during the war years In 1952 she had her own series on American ABC entitled Cafe Istanbul During 1953 54 she starred in 38 episodes of Time for Love on CBS which debuted 15 January 1953 126 She recorded 94 short inserts Dietrich Talks on Love and Life for NBC s Monitor in 1958 Dietrich gave many radio interviews worldwide on her concert tours In 1960 her show at the Tuschinski in Amsterdam was broadcast live on Dutch radio Her 1962 appearance at the Olympia in Paris was also broadcast Desert Island Discs Dietrich asked to choose eight recordings broadcast Monday 4 January 1965Writing Edit Dietrich Marlene 1962 Marlene Dietrich s ABC Doubleday Dietrich Marlene 1979 Nehmt nur mein Leben Reflexionen in German Goldmann ISBN 978 3 442 06327 7 Dietrich Marlene 1989 Marlene Salvator Attanasio translator Grove Press ISBN 978 0 8021 1117 3 Dietrich Marlene 1990 Some Facts About Myself Helnwein Gottfried Conception and photographs ISBN 978 3 89322 226 1 Dietrich Marlene 2005 Nachtgedanken Riva Maria Edited by ISBN 978 3 570 00874 4 Painting Drawing Edit 1941 Max Ernst finished the picture Marlene in oil who bears her facial features 127 See also EditList of German speaking Academy Award winners and nominees List of people from BerlinReferences EditNotes Edit a b Born as Maria Magdalena not Marie Magdalene according to Dietrich s biography by her daughter Maria Riva Riva 1993 however Dietrich s biography by Charlotte Chandler cites Marie Magdalene as her birth name Chandler 2011 p 12 a b Flint Peter B 7 May 1992 Marlene Dietrich 90 Symbol of Glamour Dies The New York Times Marlene Dietrich to be US Citizen Painesville Telegraph 6 March 1937 Citizen Soon Telegraph Herald 10 March 1939 Seize Luggage of Marlene Dietrich Lawrence Journal World 14 June 1939 Marlene Dietrich The Ultimate Gay Icon The Cinema Museum London The Cinema Museum London Archived from the original on 6 January 2018 Retrieved 5 January 2018 AFI s 50 Greatest American Screen Legends American Film Institute Retrieved 30 August 2014 Bach 2011 p 19 Marlene Dietrich German American actress and singer Our Queer History 9 February 2016 Archived from the original on 15 August 2016 Retrieved 1 June 2016 Sonneborn Liz 14 May 2014 A to Z of American Women in the Performing Arts ISBN 978 1 4381 0790 5 Bach 1992 p 20 Bach 1992 p 26 Bach 1992 p 32 Bach 1992 p 39 Bach 1992 p 42 Bach 1992 p 44 Bach 1992 p 49 Bach 1992 p 491 Bach 2011 p 62 Bach 1992 p 65 a b Bach 1992 p 480 Bach 1992 p 482 Bach 1992 p 483 Bach 1992 p 488 Ship of Lost Men Das Schiff der verlorenen Menschen Amazon Retrieved 17 May 2013 100th anniversary of Studio Babelsberg www studiobabelsberg com Retrieved 6 May 2018 filmportal The Blue Angel www filmportal de Retrieved 6 May 2018 The Ex Marlene Dietrich Multiple Best in Show Winning 1930 Rolls Royce Phantom Bonhams Archived from the original on 23 February 2019 Retrieved 18 April 2015 See e g Thomson 1975 p 587 He was not an easy man to be directed by Many actors notably Emil Jannings and William Powell reacted violently to him Dietrich adored him and trusted him Block Alex Ben Wilson Lucy Autry 30 March 2010 George Lucas s blockbusting A Decade by Decade Survey of Timeless Movies Including Untold Secrets of Their Financial and Cultural Success It Books pp 164 165 ISBN 978 0 06 196345 2 See for example Thomson 1975 The entry for Dietrich With him von Sternberg Dietrich made seven masterpieces i e Blue Angel in Germany and the six in Hollywood films that are still breathtakingly modern which have no superior for their sense of artificiality suffused with emotion and which visually combine decadence and austerity tenderness and cruelty gaiety and despair See for example the entries for Dietrich and Sternberg in Thomson 1975 Nightingale Benedict 1 February 1979 After Making Nine Films Together Hepburn Can Practically Direct Cukor Hepburn Helps Cukor Direct The Corn Is Green The New York Times a b Spoto 1992 Bach 1992 pp 210 211 How Joan Crawford Survived Box Office Poison twice 29 July 2015 Helm Toby 24 June 2000 Film star felt ashamed of Belsen link The Daily Telegraph Archived from the original on 13 November 2022 Retrieved 18 May 2013 a b c Sudendorf Werner Thanks Soldier MarleneDietrich org 2000 Archived from the original on 25 September 2011 Retrieved 20 February 2010 Rijckheyt centrum voor regionale geschiedenis www rijckheyt nl in Dutch A Soldier Lovingly Remembers Marlene Dietrich Sister Celluloid 27 December 2014 a b A Look Back Marlene Dietrich Singing For A Cause Central Intelligence Agency 23 October 2008 Archived from the original on 21 August 2014 Retrieved 20 March 2010 McIntosh 1998 p 58 McIntosh 1998 p 59 Marlene Dietrich Her Own Song TCM documentary 2001 Helm Toby 24 June 2000 Film star felt ashamed of Belsen link The Telegraph Retrieved 28 May 2017 Miss Dietrich to Receive Medal PDF The New York Times 18 November 1947 Marlene Dietrich Biography Who s Who The People Lexicon in German www whoswho de Retrieved 5 January 2013 Chevalier de la Legion d Honneur and Officier de la Legion d Honneur Bach 1992 p 462 NY Times Black Fox The Rise and Fall of Adolf Hitler Movies amp TV Dept The New York Times 2011 Archived from the original on 21 May 2011 Retrieved 8 November 2008 Netflix to Keep New York s Paris Theatre Open The Hollywood Reporter 25 November 2019 Retrieved 23 December 2019 Bach 1992 p 369 a b c Bach 1992 p 368 a b Bach 1992 p 371 a b c Bach 1992 p 395 Carpenter Cassie 9 August 2011 Cassie s Corner Marlene Dietrich s Top 10 Badass One Liners L A Slush Archived from the original on 12 January 2012 O Connor 1991 p 154 Marlene Dietrich 1971 Copenhagen Interview on YouTube 1 2 hour video Dietrich Marlene Marlene Grove Press 1989 ebook Bach 1992 p 394 Morley 1978 p 69 O Connor 1991 p 133 How one night in Montreal changed the life of Marlene Dietrich Montreal Gazette 2 May 2012 a b c d Bach 1992 p 406 a b c Bach 1992 p 401 Chesnoff Richard Z 7 March 1966 A Candid Portrait of Marlene Dietrich Montreal Gazette Bach 1992 p 526 I Wish You Love Production Schedule Marlene Dietrich Collection Berlin Archived from the original on 24 September 2008 Retrieved 11 October 2008 Roberts Paul G Style Icons Vol 4 Sirens Fashion Industry Broadcast 2015 p 39 Marlene Dietrich Concert Setlists setlist fm Retrieved 12 July 2018 Marlene Dietrich IMDb Retrieved 12 July 2018 Bach 1992 p 416 Bach 1992 p 436 Bach 1992 p 437 Act follows suggestion of song s title Toledo Blade Ohio 7 November 1973 p 37 Voss Joan Marlene Dietrich Senior Connection Archived from the original on 24 July 2015 Retrieved 24 July 2015 Nehmt nur mein Leben Reflexionen Marlene Dietrich Library of Congress Online Catalogue Bertelsmann 1979 ISBN 978 3 570 02311 2 Retrieved 11 October 2016 Marlene Atlas International Archived from the original on 5 January 2009 Retrieved 26 January 2009 Bach 1992 p 528 Der Himmel war grun wenn sie es sagte Der Spiegel in German 13 November 2005 I have given up belief in a God Allen Smith Warren 2002 Celebrities in Hell A Guide to Hollywood s Atheists Agnostics Skeptics Free Thinkers and More Barricade Books Inc p 130 ISBN 978 1 56980 214 4 a b Obituary of Maria Magdalene Marlene Dietrich The Message Newsjournal Retrieved 9 June 2013 Marlene Dietrich Funeral Associated Press Images Retrieved 2 December 2012 15 Most Inspiring Cannes Film Festival Posters 22 April 2013 Retrieved 12 September 2015 Obituary for Marlene Magdelene Dietrich The Message Newsjournal Retrieved 9 June 2013 Marlene Dietrich Berlin Archived from the original on 3 January 2013 Retrieved 18 May 2007 Reif Rita 15 September 1993 Berlin Buys Collection of Dietrich Memorabilia The New York Times Swanson Carl 5 April 1998 Recent Transactions in the Real Estate Market The New York Observer Archived from the original on 11 August 2014 Bourke Amy 29 May 2007 Bisexual side of Dietrich show Pink News Archived from the original on 29 June 2011 Retrieved 3 January 2009 Kennison Rebecca 2002 Clothes Make the Wo man Marlene Dietrich and Double Drag Journal of Lesbian Studies 6 2 147 156 doi 10 1300 J155v06n02 19 PMID 24807670 S2CID 27704118 Krass Andreas Sluhovsky Moshe Yonay Yuval 31 December 2021 Queer Jewish Lives Between Central Europe and Mandatory Palestine Biographies and Geographies transcript Verlag ISBN 978 3 8394 5332 2 Riva 1994 p 344 History on Film Actors Gary Cooper Archived from the original on 11 February 2012 Marlene Dietrich Revista Vanidades de Mexico 46 12 141 2006 ISSN 1665 7519 Bach 1992 pp 207 211 Bach 1992 p 223 Riva 1994 pp 456 500 Marlene Dietrich und Jean Gabin Ein ungleiches Liebespaar Archived Archived from the original on 27 September 2015 Freeman David 7 January 2001 Closet Hollywood A gossip columnist discloses some secrets about movie idols The New York Times Retrieved 18 April 2011 Madsen Axel 2002 The Sewing Circle Sappho s Leading Ladies New York Kensington Books p 3 ISBN 978 0 7582 0101 0 Moser Margaret 2011 Movie Stars Do the Dumbest Things Macmillan p 73 ISBN 978 1 4299 7837 8 Bach 1992 p 240 Riva 1994 pp 489 675 Bach 1992 pp 316 380 Carly Maga 17 September 2019 Edith Piaf the kind of women everybody s trying to be right now Toronto Star Archived from the original on 18 September 2019 Retrieved 12 December 2019 The latter was notably present at Piaf s 1952 wedding to singer Jacques Pills but the women s relationship began in the 1940s as Piaf was first trying to break into American entertainment and Dietrich took the sparrow under her wing so to speak McNulty Thomas 2004 Errol Flynn The Life and Career McFarland ISBN 978 0 7864 1750 6 It Happened in the Hotel du Cap Vanity Fair March 2009 Retrieved 26 December 2020 Riva 1994 passim Riva 1994 p 612 Bach 2011 Nugent Michael 15 September 2010 Dead Atheists Society Michaelnugent com Archived from the original on 1 December 2010 Retrieved 27 September 2010 From the Observer archive 6 March 1960 Marlene Dietrich s wardrobe secrets The Guardian 4 March 2012 Retrieved 11 September 2016 Knowles Kitty 1 May 2018 ElektroCouture Inside The Fashion House Behind Swarovski s 60 000 Light Up Dress Forbes Retrieved 30 January 2019 Tran Quynh 10 April 2017 Marlene Dietrich s Fashion Tech Vision Women s Wear Daily Retrieved 30 January 2019 Gammel 2012 p 373 Weber Caroline September November 2007 Academy Award A new volume analyzes Dietrich in and out of the seminar room Bookforum Schmadel Lutz D 2007 1010 Marlene Dictionary of Minor Planet Names 1010 Marlene Springer Berlin Heidelberg p 87 doi 10 1007 978 3 540 29925 7 1011 ISBN 978 3 540 00238 3 The German Hollywood Connection Dietrich s Street Archived from the original on 22 December 2008 The Legendary Lovely Marlene marlenedietrich org uk Archived from the original on 28 May 2013 Retrieved 18 May 2013 Black Midi Cavalcade review freakish parade of prog jazz extremity The Guardian 28 May 2021 Rentschler Eric 2007 An Icon between the Fronts In Schindler Stephan K Koepnick Lutz Peter eds The Cosmopolitan Screen German Cinema and the Global Imaginary 1945 to the present University of Michigan Press p 207 ISBN 978 0 472 06966 8 Marlene Dietrich Why Google honours her today www aljazeera com Retrieved 27 December 2017 Marlene Dietrich s 116th Birthday Retrieved 18 August 2019 Pride Forever EW s LGBTQ issue celebrates new storytellers enduring icons and Hollywood history Entertainment Weekly Retrieved 14 May 2020 Morse Leon 22 October 1949 The MGM Theater of the Air Billboard Retrieved 25 December 2014 Kirby Walter 11 January 1953 Better Radio Programs for the Week The Decatur Daily Review The Decatur Daily Review p 42 Retrieved 19 June 2015 via Newspapers com Max Ernst Marlene De wahooart com Retrieved 23 August 2021 Sources Edit Bach Steven 1992 Marlene Dietrich Life and Legend William Morrow and Company Inc ISBN 978 0 688 07119 6 Bach Steven 2011 Marlene Dietrich Life and Legend University of Minnesota Press ISBN 978 0 8166 7584 5 Chandler Charlotte 2011 Marlene Dietrich a personal biography Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 1 4391 8835 4 Gammel Irene 2012 Lacing up the Gloves Women Boxing and Modernity Cultural and Social History 9 3 369 390 doi 10 2752 147800412X13347542916620 S2CID 146585456 McIntosh Elizabeth P 1998 Sisterhood of Spies The Women of the OSS London Dell ISBN 978 0 440 23466 1 Morley Sheridan 1978 Marlene Dietrich Sphere Books ISBN 978 0 7221 6163 0 O Connor Patrick 1991 The Amazing Blonde Woman Dietrich s Own Style London Bloomsbury Publishing ISBN 978 0 7475 1264 6 Riva Maria 1993 Marlene Dietrich 1st ed Knopf ISBN 978 0 394 58692 2 Riva Maria 1994 Marlene Dietrich Ballantine Books ISBN 978 0 345 38645 8 Spoto Donald 1992 Blue Angel The Life of Marlene Dietrich Doubleday ISBN 978 0 385 42553 7 Thomson David 1975 A Biographical Dictionary of the Cinema London Secker and Warburg ISBN 978 0 436 52010 5 Further reading EditCarr Larry 1970 Four Fabulous Faces The Evolution and Metamorphosis of Swanson Garbo Crawford and Dietrich Doubleday and Company ISBN 978 0 87000 108 6 Phillips James 2019 Sternberg and Dietrich The Phenomenology of Spectacle Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 091524 7 Riva David J 2006 A Woman at War Marlene Dietrich Remembered Wayne State University Press ISBN 978 0 8143 3249 8 Walker Alexander 1984 Dietrich Harper amp Row ISBN 978 0 06 015319 9 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Marlene Dietrich Wikiquote has quotations related to Marlene Dietrich Official website Marlene Dietrich at the Internet Broadway Database Marlene Dietrich at IMDb Marlene Dietrich FBI Files Spring Kelly Marlene Dietrich National Women s History Museum 2017 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Marlene Dietrich amp oldid 1153023614, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.