For Marilyn Monroe's birthday, a thread of my favourite portraits
One of Eve Arnold's shots from the set of The Misfits, 1960
For Marilyn Monroe's birthday, a thread of my favourite portraits
With Simone Signoret, Arthur Miller & Yves Montand, by Bruce Davidson, 1960
Bert Stern for Vogue, July 1962
One of the last shots taken before her death.
For Marilyn Monroe's birthday, a thread of my favourite portraits
Lawrence Schiller
With Director George Cukor on the set of Something's Got to Give, 1962
For Marilyn Monroe's birthday, a thread of my favourite portraits
Willy Rizzo
Beverly Hills, 1962
For Marilyn Monroe's birthday, a thread of my favourite portraits
Gordon Parks, 1956
For Marilyn Monroe's birthday, a thread of my favourite portraits
Arnold Newman
Carl Sandburg and Marilyn Monroe, 1962
For Marilyn Monroe's birthday, a thread of my favourite portraits
Elliott Erwitt
With Thelma Ritter & Montgomery Clift on the set of The Misfits, 1961
For Marilyn Monroe's birthday, a thread of my favourite portraits
Bert Stern
Marilyn Monroe Black Dress, 1962
For Marilyn Monroe's birthday, a thread of my favourite portraits
Douglas Kirkland, 1961
Douglas Kirkland shoots Marilyn Monroe, 1961
The Port Erie, Ontario-born photographer was 27 years old
For Marilyn Monroe's birthday, a thread of my favourite portraits
George Silk for Life magazine
With Edith Sitwell
For Marilyn Monroe's birthday, a thread of my favourite portraits
A spectacular shot by Richard Avedon. In the accompanying text, Truman Capote called her "an untidy divinity."
For Marilyn Monroe's birthday, a thread of my favourite portraits
Ray Nolan
Cinematographer Milton R. Krasner makes sure that Marilyn Monroe is lit properly, on the set of All About Eve, 1950. All eyes were on Marilyn, early in her career.
For Marilyn Monroe's birthday, a thread of my favourite portraits
Sam Shaw
Richard Avedon and Marilyn Monroe on the set of The Seven Year Itch, 1954
For Marilyn Monroe's birthday, a thread of my favourite portraits
Alfred Eisenstaedt, 1953
For Marilyn Monroe's birthday, a thread of my favourite portraits
Cecil Beaton
bromide print, 22 February 1956 @NPGLondon
For Marilyn Monroe's birthday, a thread of my favourite portraits
Ed Pfizenmaier
Cecil Beaton shoots Marilyn
2 1/4 inch square contact print, 22 February 1956 @NPGLondon
For Marilyn Monroe's birthday, a thread of my favourite portraits
Philippe Halsman, 1959 #Jump!
For Marilyn Monroe's birthday, a thread of my favourite portraits
Ed Feingersh
Five Drops No 5
March 24, 1955
For Marilyn Monroe's birthday, a thread of my favourite portraits
Ed Feingersh
Ambassador Hotel, March 1955
For Marilyn Monroe's birthday, a thread of my favourite portraits
Ed Feingersh, March 24, 1955
For Marilyn Monroe's birthday, a thread of my favourite portraits
Ernst Haas
On the set of The Misfits, 1960
For Marilyn Monroe's birthday, a thread of my favourite portraits
Sam Shaw, 1957
For Marilyn Monroe's birthday, a thread of my favourite portraits
George S. Zimbel
On the set of The Seven Year Itch, September 1954
For Marilyn Monroe's birthday, a thread of my favourite portraits
Eve Arnold
On the set of The Misfits, 1960
"But cult value does not give way without resistance. It retires into an ultimate retrenchment: the human countenance."
- Walter Benjamin
For Marilyn Monroe's birthday, a thread of my favourite portraits
Arnold Newman, 1962 @si_npg
For Marilyn Monroe's birthday, a thread of my favourite portraits
Philippe Halsman
Marilyn Entering the Closet, 1952 @si_npg
For Marilyn Monroe's birthday, a thread of my favourite portraits
Milton Greene for Picture Post, 1956
And here's Marilyn Monroe with photographer Milton Greene, in a great 1955 shot by Gene Lester
For Marilyn Monroe's birthday, a thread of my favourite portraits
With Tony Curtis on the set of Some Like It Hot
Photo: Richard C. Miller, 1958
For Marilyn Monroe's birthday, a thread of my favourite portraits
William Claxton
With Ray Charles at a recording session for Frank Sinatra's Come Swing With Me, Hollywood, 1961
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A stunning self-portrait by Lee Miller
modern archival-toned gelatin silver print from original negative, 1939 @NPGLondon
Leonora Carrington by Lee Miller
modern archival-toned gelatin silver print from original negative, 1939 @NPGLondon
Humphrey Jennings by Lee Miller
gelatin silver print, 1942 @NPGLondon
I didn't know Jennings; he's a documentary filmmaker. Lindsay Anderson in 1954 called him "the only real poet that British cinema has yet produced."
But Miller seems more interested in the smoke...
Celebrate the Betty Freeman Centennial 💯🎂
The great patron of modern music was also a very fine photographer.
"A camera is like a golf club: this inert thing until you use it."
Her 1988 portrait of Alfred Brendel
Celebrate the Betty Freeman Centennial 💯🎂🎉
"She was our Prince Esterhazy, & L.A. was her Grand Palais where, instead of Haydn, the likes of Boulez, Birtwistle, & Lachenmann displayed their wares."
- Russell Platt
📷 With John Cage
Betty Freeman
John Adams rehearsing at Royce Hall, UCLA
February 1989 #Freeman100
Nelson Riddle's partnership with Nat King Cole in the 1950s was nearly as fruitful as the collaboration with Sinatra. It began with his arrangement for "Mona Lisa" in 1958, which Les Baxter took credit for. #Riddle100
Another big hit for Nat King Cole & Nelson Riddle, "Unforgettable", recorded in 1951 #Riddle100
The first Cole/Riddle LP was the 10" Nat King Cole Sings For Two In Love, also from 1951. Standards from Nat King Cole, including the Gershwins' Our Love Is Here to Stay, which was one of a few songs that was really special for Dixie & me. #Riddle100
Remembering Nobel laureate Saint-John Perse on his birthday
📷 Sergio Larrain, 1959
"The reader has to allow the images to fall into his memory successively without questioning the reasonableness of each at the moment; so that, at the end, a total effect is produced."
- TS Eliot
Sergio Larrain's photograph of Saint-John Perse with his wife Dorothy Milburn Russell, in the Hotel Cambon, Washington DC, 1959
Saint-John Perse is awarded the Grand Prix National des Lettres by André Malraux, 1959.
Remembering Fred Allen on his birthday
A great shot by George Silk for Life, 1950
Allen is one of my heroes. He seems terribly sad, resting backstage during a TV rehearsal. The great radio comedian didn't enjoy television much; he said he didn't like furniture that talked.
I'm reading Fred Allen's 1954 book Treadmill to Oblivion. Love the Hirschfeld illustrations! You can borrow the book from archive.org: archive.org/details/treadm…
Another Hirschfeld illustration from Fred Allen's Treadmill to Oblivion. Today we're celebrating the great radio comedian's birthday.