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Merle Oberon, 1933
A collection of old photographs, historic newspaper clippings and assorted excerpts highlighting the parallels of past and present. Featuring weird, funny and baffling headlines, articles and advertisements! Visit www.yesterdays-print.comĀ
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Merle Oberon, 1933
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Rita Hayworth, 1947
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The Bystander, England, November 20, 1929
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Clara Bow, 1927
Tatler, London, England, August 24, 1927
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The Sketch, London, England, January 10, 1923
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The Sketch, London, England, March 21, 1923
The Brooklyn Daily Eagle, New York, August 24, 1919
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The San Bernardino County Sun, California, July 9, 1939
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Boston Post, Massachusetts, August 28, 1921
Oakland Tribune, California, June 10, 1951
Ten to one, you know Hollywood’s Marilyn Monroe as Miss Atomic Bomb, or as Miss Cheesecake. Or as “The Shape,” or even Miss Flame Thrower, because she’s been that too.
You’d recognize her anywhere because she has one of the most-photographed figured in the curve-conscious film word. She has personality appeal, too - the kid that kept men movie-goers glued to their seats to see “The Asphalt Jungle” a second time. And Marilyn had only a bit part in it!
But: there’s another Marilyn! Behind the cheesecake, the girl with the smile and the figure is a scholar and a student. Here’s proof:
She’s Still Atomic
That’s Marilyn the scholar, who’s really a bright girl searching (as so many people are) for some meaning to life. Has it made her highbrow? Stuffy?
“Not a bit,” says Marilyn. “If the boys like me and want my pin-ups, I’m ever so happy. The cheesecake and sexy pictures are parts I enjoy - as long as I can do them honestly.”
And the future? “Acting - real acting,” she says. “Not just posing. There are things inside of me that I don’t know how to say except through acting.”
Oakland Tribune, California, May 6, 1951
“I love screaming for Bette Davis,” she adds. “For her, I can really let myself GO!!!”
Garrett Clipper, Indiana, August 5, 1929
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The Salina Daily Union, Kansas, December 18, 1922