Hollywood honours Marilyn Monroe, 100 years after her birth

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Participants dressed as Marilyn Monroe walk near the Forever Marilyn statue during the Marilyn Monroe 100th birthday celebration on May 30 in Palm Springs, California.

Participants dressed as Marilyn Monroe near the Forever Marilyn statue in Palm Springs, California, on May 30.

PHOTO: AFP

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LOS ANGELES – Marilyn Monroe’s home town of Hollywood kicked off on June 1 a series of special events marking the 100th anniversary of the movie icon’s birth.

At the historic Chinese Theatre, where her handprints are immortalised alongside Gentlemen Prefer Blondes (1953) co-star Jane Russell’s, fans planned to sing Happy Birthday – echoing her famed sultry serenade to former American president John F. Kennedy.

One hundred roses and a cake will be placed at the site, a symbol of Hollywood’s golden age and a popular tourist hot spot.

Tributes to Tinseltown’s legendary daughter began on May 31, with the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures opening Marilyn Monroe: Hollywood Icon, an exhibit celebrating her film career and life cut short.

After gaining fame in the 1950s, the actress-model died of an overdose at her Brentwood home in August 1962, aged 36.

The museum will host special screenings of her prolific filmography throughout June, including The Asphalt Jungle (1950), Niagara (1953), The Seven Year Itch (1955), Some Like It Hot (1959) and The Misfits (1961).

The exhibit, which runs until February 2027, includes hundreds of original pieces, some rarely on display – such as Monroe’s famed pink dress worn during her iconic performance of Diamonds Are A Girl’s Best Friend in Gentlemen Prefer Blondes.

On June 4, Julien’s Auctions will put nearly 200 pieces of Monroe memorabilia under the hammer as part of its special 100 Years Of Marilyn sale. The items include unpublished photographs, a script with notes from her final production, the unfinished short film Something’s Got To Give, and personal items such as handwritten recipes and her Elizabeth Arden lipstick.

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Born in Los Angeles on June 1, 1926, Monroe had an unstable childhood spent between orphanages and foster homes. She married for the first time at age 16.

She had her first brush with show business in 1944 while working in a factory, when a photographer arrived to capture photos of women working on production lines during World War II.

Launching into the world of modelling soon after, she divorced her husband and made a history-defining decision: dyeing her brown hair platinum blonde.

She landed her first contract with Fox and, by the age of 30, had established herself as a global star.

Behind the scenes, she founded her own production company, attended the prestigious Actors Studio in New York and even defied the studios. In the 1950s, while under contract with 20th Century Fox, she refused to act in the adaptation of the musical The Girl In Pink Tights, deeming the script mediocre and her salary – three times less than that of co-star Frank Sinatra’s – unfair.

Over half a century before the #MeToo movement shook the global entertainment industry, Monroe denounced the Hollywood “wolves” preying on female talent. AFP

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