$1,000 increase sends 10 girls to university for a year
Artist: Jack Cardiff
Title: Marilyn Monroe in Prince and the Showgirl
Year created: 1957
Medium: Premium photographic matte paper
Edition:: Original 35mm Negative/Photograph
Height (inches): 22
Width (inches): 17
This piece is unframed.
Includes a certificate of authenticity.
Description of piece:
1957 ORIGINAL Collectors Negative (8" x 10') which is in an extra large format of the time, featuring Marilyn Monroe getting dressed in The Prince & the Showgirl as captured by noted photographer Milton H. Greene on the set. The print size that is included along with the negative is 22" x 17". Greene's work with Marilyn Monroe (whom he first met after shooting her for a layout for Look in 1953) changed the course of his career. The two struck up a friendship and, when Monroe left Los Angeles to study acting with Lee Strasberg in New York City, she stayed with Greene, his wife Amy and young son Joshua in Connecticut. Together with Greene, Monroe formed Marilyn Monroe Productions, a production company in an effort to gain control of her career. Greene would go on to produce Bus Stop (1956) and The Prince and the Showgirl (1957). The two also collaborated on some 53 photo sessions. Greene's photograph for one such sitting in 1954 featuring Monroe in a ballet tutu was chosen by Time Life as one of the three most popular images of the 20th century. This image by Greene is the actual one that made the publicity still at the time.
Artist bio:
Greene initially established himself in high fashion photography in the 1940s and 1950s. His fashion shots appeared in Harper's Bazaar and Vogue. Greene then turned to portraits of celebrities. He photographed many high-profile personalities in the 1950s and 1960s, including Elizabeth Taylor, Frank Sinatra, Audrey Hepburn, Grace Kelly, Ava Gardner, Sammy Davis, Jr., Catherine Deneuve, Marlene Dietrich, Judy Garland, among numerous others. Greene's work with Marilyn Monroe (whom he first met after shooting her for a layout for Look in 1953) changed the course of his career. The two struck up a friendship and, when Monroe left Los Angeles to study acting with Lee Strasberg in New York City, she stayed with Greene, his wife Amy and young son Joshua in Connecticut. Together with Greene, Monroe formed Marilyn Monroe Productions, a production company in an effort to gain control of her career. Greene would go on to produce Bus Stop (1956) and The Prince and the Showgirl (1957). The two also collaborated on some 53 photo sessions, some of which became well known, including "The Black Sitting". Greene's photograph for one such sitting in 1954 featuring Monroe in a ballet tutu was chosen by Time Life as one of the three most popular images of the 20th century. Monroe and Greene's friendship ended after the production of The Prince and the Showgirl in 1957 where Marilyn fired Greene.
$1,000 increase sends 10 girls to university for a year
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