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Marilyn Among Friends

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  • 192 pages
  • 7 hours of reading

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Photographer Shaw, a friend of Marilyn Monroe, took many photos of her, including the famous billowing-skirt shots for the film The Seven-Year Itch . Two hundred of his pictures, most of them never before published, are shown Marilyn at the makeup table, on the phone, on the beach, on the set, on the streetMarilyn with Bogart, with Gable, with DiMaggio, with Miller, with her basset hound Hugo. The text is affectionate but pretentious , with descriptions of the times Rosten (poet/playwright/novelist) spent with her, stories of her friends, husbands and admirers, and imagined conversations with the star. It is pleasant to note that there are no tales of CIA murder plots, Kennedy trysts and the like, but describing Marilyn as ``the ethereal, virginal nymph dancing innocently among trees'' is rather like calling William Howard Taft ``puckish.'' Avid fans will love this book.

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Marilyn Among Friends, Sam Shaw, Norman Rosten

Language
Released
1992
product-detail.submit-box.info.binding
(Hardcover),
Book condition
Good
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€10.99

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Title
Marilyn Among Friends
Language
English
Publisher
Magna Books
Released
1992
Format
Hardcover
Pages
192
ISBN10
1854223003
ISBN13
9781854223005
Series
Rating
4.4 out of 5
Description
Photographer Shaw, a friend of Marilyn Monroe, took many photos of her, including the famous billowing-skirt shots for the film The Seven-Year Itch . Two hundred of his pictures, most of them never before published, are shown Marilyn at the makeup table, on the phone, on the beach, on the set, on the streetMarilyn with Bogart, with Gable, with DiMaggio, with Miller, with her basset hound Hugo. The text is affectionate but pretentious , with descriptions of the times Rosten (poet/playwright/novelist) spent with her, stories of her friends, husbands and admirers, and imagined conversations with the star. It is pleasant to note that there are no tales of CIA murder plots, Kennedy trysts and the like, but describing Marilyn as ``the ethereal, virginal nymph dancing innocently among trees'' is rather like calling William Howard Taft ``puckish.'' Avid fans will love this book.