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  • Movie icon Marilyn Monroe’s last home is on the market for $6.9 million. The four-bedroom, three-bathroom house is set in the luxurious Brentwood neighborhood of LA and is described as an “authentic 1929 Hacienda”. With its swimming pool, citrus grove and guest home, the 2,624-square-foot property is steeped in Hollywood glamour. Listing agent Lisa Optican of Mercer Vine said of the estate, which is located on 5th Helena Drive: “When you walk the house and grounds, you’re immediately struck by its serenity and warmth. “It’s an absolute oasis in the heart of one of the best neighborhoods in Los Angeles.” Monroe bought the home for $75,000, shortly before her death in 1962 aged 36. According to a report in The Los Angeles Times at the time, the starlet was found dead in a bedroom of the home lying face down with a telephone receiver in her hand. The Some Like It Hot star talked about the home - which last sold for $5.1 million in November 2012 - in a 1962 with Life Magazine, which was accompanied by a photoshoot inside. "Anybody who likes my house, I’m sure I’ll get along with," she told the publication’s then-associate editor Richard Meryman. In Meryman’s essay about the interview, published just months before Monroe’s death, he described the house as “a small, three-bedroom house built in Mexican style,” adding that it was “the first home entirely her own she had ever had." "She exulted in it,” he went on. “On a special trip to Mexico she had carefully searched in roadside stands and shops and even factories to find just the right things to put in it. The large items had not arrived - nor was she ever to see them installed.”. 25 Apr 2017 Pictured: Monroe bought the property for $75,000 shortly before her death. Photo credit: Lisa Optican/Mercer Vine / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA31564_010.jpg
  • Movie icon Marilyn Monroe’s last home is on the market for $6.9 million. The four-bedroom, three-bathroom house is set in the luxurious Brentwood neighborhood of LA and is described as an “authentic 1929 Hacienda”. With its swimming pool, citrus grove and guest home, the 2,624-square-foot property is steeped in Hollywood glamour. Listing agent Lisa Optican of Mercer Vine said of the estate, which is located on 5th Helena Drive: “When you walk the house and grounds, you’re immediately struck by its serenity and warmth. “It’s an absolute oasis in the heart of one of the best neighborhoods in Los Angeles.” Monroe bought the home for $75,000, shortly before her death in 1962 aged 36. According to a report in The Los Angeles Times at the time, the starlet was found dead in a bedroom of the home lying face down with a telephone receiver in her hand. The Some Like It Hot star talked about the home - which last sold for $5.1 million in November 2012 - in a 1962 with Life Magazine, which was accompanied by a photoshoot inside. "Anybody who likes my house, I’m sure I’ll get along with," she told the publication’s then-associate editor Richard Meryman. In Meryman’s essay about the interview, published just months before Monroe’s death, he described the house as “a small, three-bedroom house built in Mexican style,” adding that it was “the first home entirely her own she had ever had." "She exulted in it,” he went on. “On a special trip to Mexico she had carefully searched in roadside stands and shops and even factories to find just the right things to put in it. The large items had not arrived - nor was she ever to see them installed.”. 25 Apr 2017 Pictured: An aerial view of Marilyn Monroe's former home. Photo credit: Lisa Optican/Mercer Vine / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA31564_001.jpg
  • Movie icon Marilyn Monroe’s last home is on the market for $6.9 million. The four-bedroom, three-bathroom house is set in the luxurious Brentwood neighborhood of LA and is described as an “authentic 1929 Hacienda”. With its swimming pool, citrus grove and guest home, the 2,624-square-foot property is steeped in Hollywood glamour. Listing agent Lisa Optican of Mercer Vine said of the estate, which is located on 5th Helena Drive: “When you walk the house and grounds, you’re immediately struck by its serenity and warmth. “It’s an absolute oasis in the heart of one of the best neighborhoods in Los Angeles.” Monroe bought the home for $75,000, shortly before her death in 1962 aged 36. According to a report in The Los Angeles Times at the time, the starlet was found dead in a bedroom of the home lying face down with a telephone receiver in her hand. The Some Like It Hot star talked about the home - which last sold for $5.1 million in November 2012 - in a 1962 with Life Magazine, which was accompanied by a photoshoot inside. "Anybody who likes my house, I’m sure I’ll get along with," she told the publication’s then-associate editor Richard Meryman. In Meryman’s essay about the interview, published just months before Monroe’s death, he described the house as “a small, three-bedroom house built in Mexican style,” adding that it was “the first home entirely her own she had ever had." "She exulted in it,” he went on. “On a special trip to Mexico she had carefully searched in roadside stands and shops and even factories to find just the right things to put in it. The large items had not arrived - nor was she ever to see them installed.”. 25 Apr 2017 Pictured: A view of the garden, complete with terracotta paving. Photo credit: Lisa Optican/Mercer Vine / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA31564_003.jpg
  • Movie icon Marilyn Monroe’s last home is on the market for $6.9 million. The four-bedroom, three-bathroom house is set in the luxurious Brentwood neighborhood of LA and is described as an “authentic 1929 Hacienda”. With its swimming pool, citrus grove and guest home, the 2,624-square-foot property is steeped in Hollywood glamour. Listing agent Lisa Optican of Mercer Vine said of the estate, which is located on 5th Helena Drive: “When you walk the house and grounds, you’re immediately struck by its serenity and warmth. “It’s an absolute oasis in the heart of one of the best neighborhoods in Los Angeles.” Monroe bought the home for $75,000, shortly before her death in 1962 aged 36. According to a report in The Los Angeles Times at the time, the starlet was found dead in a bedroom of the home lying face down with a telephone receiver in her hand. The Some Like It Hot star talked about the home - which last sold for $5.1 million in November 2012 - in a 1962 with Life Magazine, which was accompanied by a photoshoot inside. "Anybody who likes my house, I’m sure I’ll get along with," she told the publication’s then-associate editor Richard Meryman. In Meryman’s essay about the interview, published just months before Monroe’s death, he described the house as “a small, three-bedroom house built in Mexican style,” adding that it was “the first home entirely her own she had ever had." "She exulted in it,” he went on. “On a special trip to Mexico she had carefully searched in roadside stands and shops and even factories to find just the right things to put in it. The large items had not arrived - nor was she ever to see them installed.”. 25 Apr 2017 Pictured: The manicured garden has a citrus grove and is well maintained. Photo credit: Lisa Optican/Mercer Vine / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA31564_011.jpg
  • Movie icon Marilyn Monroe’s last home is on the market for $6.9 million. The four-bedroom, three-bathroom house is set in the luxurious Brentwood neighborhood of LA and is described as an “authentic 1929 Hacienda”. With its swimming pool, citrus grove and guest home, the 2,624-square-foot property is steeped in Hollywood glamour. Listing agent Lisa Optican of Mercer Vine said of the estate, which is located on 5th Helena Drive: “When you walk the house and grounds, you’re immediately struck by its serenity and warmth. “It’s an absolute oasis in the heart of one of the best neighborhoods in Los Angeles.” Monroe bought the home for $75,000, shortly before her death in 1962 aged 36. According to a report in The Los Angeles Times at the time, the starlet was found dead in a bedroom of the home lying face down with a telephone receiver in her hand. The Some Like It Hot star talked about the home - which last sold for $5.1 million in November 2012 - in a 1962 with Life Magazine, which was accompanied by a photoshoot inside. "Anybody who likes my house, I’m sure I’ll get along with," she told the publication’s then-associate editor Richard Meryman. In Meryman’s essay about the interview, published just months before Monroe’s death, he described the house as “a small, three-bedroom house built in Mexican style,” adding that it was “the first home entirely her own she had ever had." "She exulted in it,” he went on. “On a special trip to Mexico she had carefully searched in roadside stands and shops and even factories to find just the right things to put in it. The large items had not arrived - nor was she ever to see them installed.”. 25 Apr 2017 Pictured: A close up view of the fireplace. Photo credit: Lisa Optican/Mercer Vine / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA31564_005.jpg
  • Movie icon Marilyn Monroe’s last home is on the market for $6.9 million. The four-bedroom, three-bathroom house is set in the luxurious Brentwood neighborhood of LA and is described as an “authentic 1929 Hacienda”. With its swimming pool, citrus grove and guest home, the 2,624-square-foot property is steeped in Hollywood glamour. Listing agent Lisa Optican of Mercer Vine said of the estate, which is located on 5th Helena Drive: “When you walk the house and grounds, you’re immediately struck by its serenity and warmth. “It’s an absolute oasis in the heart of one of the best neighborhoods in Los Angeles.” Monroe bought the home for $75,000, shortly before her death in 1962 aged 36. According to a report in The Los Angeles Times at the time, the starlet was found dead in a bedroom of the home lying face down with a telephone receiver in her hand. The Some Like It Hot star talked about the home - which last sold for $5.1 million in November 2012 - in a 1962 with Life Magazine, which was accompanied by a photoshoot inside. "Anybody who likes my house, I’m sure I’ll get along with," she told the publication’s then-associate editor Richard Meryman. In Meryman’s essay about the interview, published just months before Monroe’s death, he described the house as “a small, three-bedroom house built in Mexican style,” adding that it was “the first home entirely her own she had ever had." "She exulted in it,” he went on. “On a special trip to Mexico she had carefully searched in roadside stands and shops and even factories to find just the right things to put in it. The large items had not arrived - nor was she ever to see them installed.”. 25 Apr 2017 Pictured: The property is described as an “authentic 1929 Hacienda”. Photo credit: Lisa Optican/Mercer Vine / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA31564_006.jpg
  • Movie icon Marilyn Monroe’s last home is on the market for $6.9 million. The four-bedroom, three-bathroom house is set in the luxurious Brentwood neighborhood of LA and is described as an “authentic 1929 Hacienda”. With its swimming pool, citrus grove and guest home, the 2,624-square-foot property is steeped in Hollywood glamour. Listing agent Lisa Optican of Mercer Vine said of the estate, which is located on 5th Helena Drive: “When you walk the house and grounds, you’re immediately struck by its serenity and warmth. “It’s an absolute oasis in the heart of one of the best neighborhoods in Los Angeles.” Monroe bought the home for $75,000, shortly before her death in 1962 aged 36. According to a report in The Los Angeles Times at the time, the starlet was found dead in a bedroom of the home lying face down with a telephone receiver in her hand. The Some Like It Hot star talked about the home - which last sold for $5.1 million in November 2012 - in a 1962 with Life Magazine, which was accompanied by a photoshoot inside. "Anybody who likes my house, I’m sure I’ll get along with," she told the publication’s then-associate editor Richard Meryman. In Meryman’s essay about the interview, published just months before Monroe’s death, he described the house as “a small, three-bedroom house built in Mexican style,” adding that it was “the first home entirely her own she had ever had." "She exulted in it,” he went on. “On a special trip to Mexico she had carefully searched in roadside stands and shops and even factories to find just the right things to put in it. The large items had not arrived - nor was she ever to see them installed.”. 25 Apr 2017 Pictured: A view of the kitchen and central island. Photo credit: Lisa Optican/Mercer Vine / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA31564_007.jpg
  • Movie icon Marilyn Monroe’s last home is on the market for $6.9 million. The four-bedroom, three-bathroom house is set in the luxurious Brentwood neighborhood of LA and is described as an “authentic 1929 Hacienda”. With its swimming pool, citrus grove and guest home, the 2,624-square-foot property is steeped in Hollywood glamour. Listing agent Lisa Optican of Mercer Vine said of the estate, which is located on 5th Helena Drive: “When you walk the house and grounds, you’re immediately struck by its serenity and warmth. “It’s an absolute oasis in the heart of one of the best neighborhoods in Los Angeles.” Monroe bought the home for $75,000, shortly before her death in 1962 aged 36. According to a report in The Los Angeles Times at the time, the starlet was found dead in a bedroom of the home lying face down with a telephone receiver in her hand. The Some Like It Hot star talked about the home - which last sold for $5.1 million in November 2012 - in a 1962 with Life Magazine, which was accompanied by a photoshoot inside. "Anybody who likes my house, I’m sure I’ll get along with," she told the publication’s then-associate editor Richard Meryman. In Meryman’s essay about the interview, published just months before Monroe’s death, he described the house as “a small, three-bedroom house built in Mexican style,” adding that it was “the first home entirely her own she had ever had." "She exulted in it,” he went on. “On a special trip to Mexico she had carefully searched in roadside stands and shops and even factories to find just the right things to put in it. The large items had not arrived - nor was she ever to see them installed.”. 25 Apr 2017 Pictured: A bedroom in the property, complete with original corner fireplace. Photo credit: Lisa Optican/Mercer Vine / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA31564_008.jpg
  • Movie icon Marilyn Monroe’s last home is on the market for $6.9 million. The four-bedroom, three-bathroom house is set in the luxurious Brentwood neighborhood of LA and is described as an “authentic 1929 Hacienda”. With its swimming pool, citrus grove and guest home, the 2,624-square-foot property is steeped in Hollywood glamour. Listing agent Lisa Optican of Mercer Vine said of the estate, which is located on 5th Helena Drive: “When you walk the house and grounds, you’re immediately struck by its serenity and warmth. “It’s an absolute oasis in the heart of one of the best neighborhoods in Los Angeles.” Monroe bought the home for $75,000, shortly before her death in 1962 aged 36. According to a report in The Los Angeles Times at the time, the starlet was found dead in a bedroom of the home lying face down with a telephone receiver in her hand. The Some Like It Hot star talked about the home - which last sold for $5.1 million in November 2012 - in a 1962 with Life Magazine, which was accompanied by a photoshoot inside. "Anybody who likes my house, I’m sure I’ll get along with," she told the publication’s then-associate editor Richard Meryman. In Meryman’s essay about the interview, published just months before Monroe’s death, he described the house as “a small, three-bedroom house built in Mexican style,” adding that it was “the first home entirely her own she had ever had." "She exulted in it,” he went on. “On a special trip to Mexico she had carefully searched in roadside stands and shops and even factories to find just the right things to put in it. The large items had not arrived - nor was she ever to see them installed.”. 25 Apr 2017 Pictured: The front room with original features including beamed ceiling and a tiled fireplace. Photo credit: Lisa Optican/Mercer Vine / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA31564_004.jpg
  • Movie icon Marilyn Monroe’s last home is on the market for $6.9 million. The four-bedroom, three-bathroom house is set in the luxurious Brentwood neighborhood of LA and is described as an “authentic 1929 Hacienda”. With its swimming pool, citrus grove and guest home, the 2,624-square-foot property is steeped in Hollywood glamour. Listing agent Lisa Optican of Mercer Vine said of the estate, which is located on 5th Helena Drive: “When you walk the house and grounds, you’re immediately struck by its serenity and warmth. “It’s an absolute oasis in the heart of one of the best neighborhoods in Los Angeles.” Monroe bought the home for $75,000, shortly before her death in 1962 aged 36. According to a report in The Los Angeles Times at the time, the starlet was found dead in a bedroom of the home lying face down with a telephone receiver in her hand. The Some Like It Hot star talked about the home - which last sold for $5.1 million in November 2012 - in a 1962 with Life Magazine, which was accompanied by a photoshoot inside. "Anybody who likes my house, I’m sure I’ll get along with," she told the publication’s then-associate editor Richard Meryman. In Meryman’s essay about the interview, published just months before Monroe’s death, he described the house as “a small, three-bedroom house built in Mexican style,” adding that it was “the first home entirely her own she had ever had." "She exulted in it,” he went on. “On a special trip to Mexico she had carefully searched in roadside stands and shops and even factories to find just the right things to put in it. The large items had not arrived - nor was she ever to see them installed.”. 25 Apr 2017 Pictured: A view of the peanut-shaped swimming pool. Photo credit: Lisa Optican/Mercer Vine / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA31564_009.jpg
  • Movie icon Marilyn Monroe’s last home is on the market for $6.9 million. The four-bedroom, three-bathroom house is set in the luxurious Brentwood neighborhood of LA and is described as an “authentic 1929 Hacienda”. With its swimming pool, citrus grove and guest home, the 2,624-square-foot property is steeped in Hollywood glamour. Listing agent Lisa Optican of Mercer Vine said of the estate, which is located on 5th Helena Drive: “When you walk the house and grounds, you’re immediately struck by its serenity and warmth. “It’s an absolute oasis in the heart of one of the best neighborhoods in Los Angeles.” Monroe bought the home for $75,000, shortly before her death in 1962 aged 36. According to a report in The Los Angeles Times at the time, the starlet was found dead in a bedroom of the home lying face down with a telephone receiver in her hand. The Some Like It Hot star talked about the home - which last sold for $5.1 million in November 2012 - in a 1962 with Life Magazine, which was accompanied by a photoshoot inside. "Anybody who likes my house, I’m sure I’ll get along with," she told the publication’s then-associate editor Richard Meryman. In Meryman’s essay about the interview, published just months before Monroe’s death, he described the house as “a small, three-bedroom house built in Mexican style,” adding that it was “the first home entirely her own she had ever had." "She exulted in it,” he went on. “On a special trip to Mexico she had carefully searched in roadside stands and shops and even factories to find just the right things to put in it. The large items had not arrived - nor was she ever to see them installed.”. 25 Apr 2017 Pictured: The property is located on 5th Helena Drive, Brentwood. Photo credit: Lisa Optican/Mercer Vine / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA31564_002.jpg
  • July 14, 1952 - New York, NY, U.S. - Actress and starlet MARILYN MONROE posing for Parade magazine. (Credit Image: © Keystone Press Agency/Keystone USA via ZUMAPRESS.com)
    19520714_sha_k09_381.jpg
  • Sep.19 1955 - New York, NY, U.S. - MARILYN MONROE wearing glass shoes and a one piece bathing suit while posing at a photo shoot. (Credit Image: © Keystone Press Agency/Keystone USA via ZUMAPRESS.com)
    19551921_sha_k09_392.jpg
  • Jan. 1, 1952 - Los Angeles, CA, U.S. - The most endlessly talked-about and mythologized figure in Hollywood history, MARILYN MONROE remains the ultimate superstar. Innocent, vulnerable, and impossibly alluring, she defined the very essence of screen sexuality. Rising from pin-up girl to international superstar, she was a gifted comedienne whom the camera adored.  (Credit Image: © Keystone Press Agency/Keystone USA via ZUMAPRESS.com)
    19520101_nin_k09_610.jpg
  • Nov. 19, 1956 - London, England, U.K. - American actress MARILYIN MONROE portrayed during her visit in London. The most endlessly talked-about and mythologized figure in Hollywood history, Marilyn remains the ultimate superstar. Innocent, vulnerable, and impossibly alluring, she defined the very essence of screen sexuality and the camera adored her.  (Credit Image: © Keystone Press Agency/Keystone USA via ZUMAPRESS.com)
    19561119_nin_k09_617.jpg
  • Marilyn Monroe's 'Happy Birthday Mr. President' Kleid beim Presse-Preview der Ausstellung 'Marilyn: Character not Image' im MANA Contemporary in Jersey City <br />
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*** Marilyn: Character not Image exhibition in Jersey City; September 22nd, 2016 ***
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  • Marilyn Monroe's 'Happy Birthday Mr. President' Kleid beim Presse-Preview der Ausstellung 'Marilyn: Character not Image' im MANA Contemporary in Jersey City - hier Kuratorin Whoopi Goldberg<br />
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*** Marilyn: Character not Image exhibition in Jersey City; September 22nd, 2016 ***
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  • Marilyn Monroe's 'Happy Birthday Mr. President' Kleid beim Presse-Preview der Ausstellung 'Marilyn: Character not Image' im MANA Contemporary in Jersey City <br />
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*** Marilyn: Character not Image exhibition in Jersey City; September 22nd, 2016 ***
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  • Marilyn Monroe's 'Happy Birthday Mr. President' Kleid beim Presse-Preview der Ausstellung 'Marilyn: Character not Image' im MANA Contemporary in Jersey City <br />
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*** Marilyn: Character not Image exhibition in Jersey City; September 22nd, 2016 ***
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  • Marilyn Monroe's 'Happy Birthday Mr. President' Kleid beim Presse-Preview der Ausstellung 'Marilyn: Character not Image' im MANA Contemporary in Jersey City <br />
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*** Marilyn: Character not Image exhibition in Jersey City; September 22nd, 2016 ***
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  • Marilyn Monroe's 'Happy Birthday Mr. President' Kleid beim Presse-Preview der Ausstellung 'Marilyn: Character not Image' im MANA Contemporary in Jersey City <br />
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*** Marilyn: Character not Image exhibition in Jersey City; September 22nd, 2016 ***
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  • Marilyn Monroe's 'Happy Birthday Mr. President' Kleid beim Presse-Preview der Ausstellung 'Marilyn: Character not Image' im MANA Contemporary in Jersey City - hier Kuratorin Whoopi Goldberg<br />
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*** Marilyn: Character not Image exhibition in Jersey City; September 22nd, 2016 ***
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  • Marilyn Monroe's 'Happy Birthday Mr. President' Kleid beim Presse-Preview der Ausstellung 'Marilyn: Character not Image' im MANA Contemporary in Jersey City <br />
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*** Marilyn: Character not Image exhibition in Jersey City; September 22nd, 2016 ***
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  • Marilyn Monroe's 'Happy Birthday Mr. President' Kleid beim Presse-Preview der Ausstellung 'Marilyn: Character not Image' im MANA Contemporary in Jersey City <br />
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*** Marilyn: Character not Image exhibition in Jersey City; September 22nd, 2016 ***
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  • Marilyn Monroe's 'Happy Birthday Mr. President' Kleid beim Presse-Preview der Ausstellung 'Marilyn: Character not Image' im MANA Contemporary in Jersey City <br />
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*** Marilyn: Character not Image exhibition in Jersey City; September 22nd, 2016 ***
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  • Marilyn Monroe's 'Happy Birthday Mr. President' Kleid beim Presse-Preview der Ausstellung 'Marilyn: Character not Image' im MANA Contemporary in Jersey City - hier Kuratorin Whoopi Goldberg<br />
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*** Marilyn: Character not Image exhibition in Jersey City; September 22nd, 2016 ***
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  • Marilyn Monroe's 'Happy Birthday Mr. President' Kleid beim Presse-Preview der Ausstellung 'Marilyn: Character not Image' im MANA Contemporary in Jersey City - hier Kuratorin Whoopi Goldberg<br />
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*** Marilyn: Character not Image exhibition in Jersey City; September 22nd, 2016 ***
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  • Marilyn Monroe's 'Happy Birthday Mr. President' Kleid beim Presse-Preview der Ausstellung 'Marilyn: Character not Image' im MANA Contemporary in Jersey City - hier Kuratorin Whoopi Goldberg<br />
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*** Marilyn: Character not Image exhibition in Jersey City; September 22nd, 2016 ***
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  • Marilyn Monroe's 'Happy Birthday Mr. President' Kleid beim Presse-Preview der Ausstellung 'Marilyn: Character not Image' im MANA Contemporary in Jersey City - hier Kuratorin Whoopi Goldberg<br />
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*** Marilyn: Character not Image exhibition in Jersey City; September 22nd, 2016 ***
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  • Marilyn Monroe's 'Happy Birthday Mr. President' Kleid beim Presse-Preview der Ausstellung 'Marilyn: Character not Image' im MANA Contemporary in Jersey City <br />
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*** Marilyn: Character not Image exhibition in Jersey City; September 22nd, 2016 ***
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  • Marilyn Monroe's 'Happy Birthday Mr. President' Kleid beim Presse-Preview der Ausstellung 'Marilyn: Character not Image' im MANA Contemporary in Jersey City - hier Kuratorin Whoopi Goldberg<br />
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*** Marilyn: Character not Image exhibition in Jersey City; September 22nd, 2016 ***
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  • Marilyn Monroe's 'Happy Birthday Mr. President' Kleid beim Presse-Preview der Ausstellung 'Marilyn: Character not Image' im MANA Contemporary in Jersey City <br />
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*** Marilyn: Character not Image exhibition in Jersey City; September 22nd, 2016 ***
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  • Marilyn Monroe's 'Happy Birthday Mr. President' Kleid beim Presse-Preview der Ausstellung 'Marilyn: Character not Image' im MANA Contemporary in Jersey City <br />
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*** Marilyn: Character not Image exhibition in Jersey City; September 22nd, 2016 ***
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  • Marilyn Monroe's 'Happy Birthday Mr. President' Kleid beim Presse-Preview der Ausstellung 'Marilyn: Character not Image' im MANA Contemporary in Jersey City - hier Kuratorin Whoopi Goldberg<br />
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*** Marilyn: Character not Image exhibition in Jersey City; September 22nd, 2016 ***
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  • Marilyn Monroe's 'Happy Birthday Mr. President' Kleid beim Presse-Preview der Ausstellung 'Marilyn: Character not Image' im MANA Contemporary in Jersey City - hier Kuratorin Whoopi Goldberg<br />
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*** Marilyn: Character not Image exhibition in Jersey City; September 22nd, 2016 ***
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  • Marilyn Monroe's 'Happy Birthday Mr. President' Kleid beim Presse-Preview der Ausstellung 'Marilyn: Character not Image' im MANA Contemporary in Jersey City <br />
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*** Marilyn: Character not Image exhibition in Jersey City; September 22nd, 2016 ***
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  • Marilyn Monroe's 'Happy Birthday Mr. President' Kleid beim Presse-Preview der Ausstellung 'Marilyn: Character not Image' im MANA Contemporary in Jersey City <br />
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*** Marilyn: Character not Image exhibition in Jersey City; September 22nd, 2016 ***
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  • Marilyn Monroe's 'Happy Birthday Mr. President' Kleid beim Presse-Preview der Ausstellung 'Marilyn: Character not Image' im MANA Contemporary in Jersey City <br />
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*** Marilyn: Character not Image exhibition in Jersey City; September 22nd, 2016 ***
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  • Marilyn Monroe's 'Happy Birthday Mr. President' Kleid beim Presse-Preview der Ausstellung 'Marilyn: Character not Image' im MANA Contemporary in Jersey City - hier Kuratorin Whoopi Goldberg<br />
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*** Marilyn: Character not Image exhibition in Jersey City; September 22nd, 2016 ***
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  • MARILYN MONROE. Credit: Album
    20190505_zva_a90_604.jpg
  • MARILYN MONROE.  1948. Credit: Album
    20190506_zva_a90_214.jpg
  • RELEASE DATE: December 23, 2011 <br />
TITLE: My Week With Marylin <br />
STUDIO: Dimension Films <br />
DIRECTOR: Simon Curtis <br />
PLOT: Colin Clark, an employee of Sir Laurence Olivier's, documents the tense interaction between Olivier and Marilyn Monroe during production of The Prince and the Showgirl <br />
PICTURED: MICHELLE WILLIAMS as Marilyn Monroe and DOUGRAY SCOTT as Arthur Miller <br />
(Credit Image: © Dimension Films/Entertainment Pictures/ZUMAPRESS.com)
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  • RELEASE DATE: December 23, 2011 <br />
TITLE: My Week With Marylin <br />
STUDIO: Dimension Films <br />
DIRECTOR: Simon Curtis <br />
PLOT: Colin Clark, an employee of Sir Laurence Olivier's, documents the tense interaction between Olivier and Marilyn Monroe during production of The Prince and the Showgirl <br />
PICTURED: MICHELLE WILLIAMS as Marilyn Monroe <br />
(Credit Image: © Dimension Films/Entertainment Pictures/ZUMAPRESS.com)
    20111101_sha_l90_802.jpg
  • 20 December 2017 - Carabao League Cup Football (Quarter-Final) - Chelsea v Bournemouth - A tattoo of Marilyn Monroe decorates the leg of Kenedy of Chelsea - Photo: Charlotte Wilson / Offside
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  • Kobe Bryant Dies In Helicopter Crash ---- Los Angeles Lakers shooting guard Kobe Bryant attends his hand and footprint ceremony at the Grauman’s Chinese Theater in Hollywood, CA, USA on February 19, 2011. Bryant become the first athlete to have his hands and feet imprinted at the legendary Graumans Chinese Theater. He joins over 200 stars including Marilyn Monroe, Brad Pitt, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Will Smith, Harrison Ford or John Wayne who have had their hand and footprint ceremonies. Photo by Lionel Hahn/Abaca USA/ABACAPRESS.COM
    264354_008.jpg
  • Kobe Bryant Dies In Helicopter Crash ---- Los Angeles Lakers shooting guard Kobe Bryant attends his hand and footprint ceremony at the Grauman’s Chinese Theater in Hollywood, CA, USA on February 19, 2011. Bryant become the first athlete to have his hands and feet imprinted at the legendary Graumans Chinese Theater. He joins over 200 stars including Marilyn Monroe, Brad Pitt, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Will Smith, Harrison Ford or John Wayne who have had their hand and footprint ceremonies. Photo by Lionel Hahn/Abaca USA/ABACAPRESS.COM
    264354_002.jpg
  • Kobe Bryant Dies In Helicopter Crash ---- Los Angeles Lakers shooting guard Kobe Bryant attends his hand and footprint ceremony at the Grauman’s Chinese Theater in Hollywood, CA, USA on February 19, 2011. Bryant become the first athlete to have his hands and feet imprinted at the legendary Graumans Chinese Theater. He joins over 200 stars including Marilyn Monroe, Brad Pitt, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Will Smith, Harrison Ford or John Wayne who have had their hand and footprint ceremonies. Photo by Lionel Hahn/Abaca USA/ABACAPRESS.COM
    264354_010.jpg