Marilyn Monroe & President Abraham Lincoln
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The 16th president of the United States, the man who led the Union to victory in the American Civil War and abolished slavery was a hero to Marilyn ever since she wrote an essay on him in Junior High School.
Soon after meeting Arthur Miller in 1950, Marilyn wrote a letter in which she confessed "Most people can admire their fathers, but I never had one. I need someone to admire." Miller wrote back "If you want someone to admire, why not Abraham Lincoln?" Marilyn went out and bought a large framed portrait and a biography written by Carl Sanburg, with whom she later became friends.
She reputedly also kept a copy of Lincoln's Gettysburg Address for inspiration. On screen in Bus Stop (1956), Don Murray, playing country boy Bo Decker, tries to get Marilyn to become "attracted to his mind" by reciting her the Gettysburg Address.
For years, Marilyn gave her framed photo of Lincoln pride of place in her homes at Doheny Drive in Beverly Hills, at the Waldorf-Astoria suite in New York and later in a smaller version on her nightstand at the East 57th street apartment she shared with Arthur Miller.
More than one biographer has asserted that until the relationship soured, Marilyn identified Arthur with Lincoln. She saw both of them as honorable men, committed to their principles, erudite, and cultured.
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The following items are currently on exhibit at The National Museum of American History:
President Lincoln’s Top Hat
Mill’s Mask of Lincoln
Clothing owned by President Lincoln and First Lady Mary Lincoln
The Lincoln Memorial
I took the following photos at the Lincoln Memorial, located at the west end of the National Mall:
The White House
First Lady Jackie Kennedy
It’s widely believed that Marilyn had affairs with President John F. Kennedy and Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy. Even press articles from 1962 hint at an affair between the President and Hollywood’s reigning queen. If this was actually the case, then Marilyn Monroe would have been “the other woman” to First Lady Jackie Kennedy.
On exhibit at the The National Museum of American History is Jackie Kennedy’s inaugural gown, which she actually designed herself. It was made by Ethel Frankau at Bergdorf Goodman. The gown is off-white, sleeveless, and made of silk chiffon with a beaded overblouse and a floor-sweeping cape.
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Marilyn Monroe & Pucci
The bright colors and easy fashions of the house of Pucci were a favorite of Marilyn’s. She had an entire wardrobe of Pucci clothing and was photographed many times in the late 50s and early 60s wearing the brand. Below, Marilyn wears a lime green Pucci blouse as she rehearses her now famous rendition of “Happy Birthday Mr. President,” performed for John F. Kennedy at Madison Square Garden on May 19, 1962.
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Marilyn Spotting
What trip would be complete without a Marilyn spotting in a local shop or boutique?