Skip to content

Marlene Dietrich in Bedroom, 1948

Marlene Dietrich in Bedroom, 1948

Click for full-size.

Marlene Dietrich in Bedroom, 1948

by Avedon, Richard. (1923–2004) [Dietrich, Marlene (1901-1992)]

  • Used
Condition
Used; Like New/Used; Like New
Seller
Seller rating:
This seller has earned a 5 of 5 Stars rating from Biblio customers.
Brooklyn, NY and Newton, Massachusetts, United States
Item Price
A$61,976.00
Or just A$61,945.01 with a
Bibliophiles Club Membership
A$18.59 Shipping to USA
Standard delivery: 8 to 14 days

More Shipping Options

Payment Methods Accepted

  • Visa
  • Mastercard
  • American Express
  • Discover
  • PayPal

About This Item

Used; Like New/Used; Like New. Original silver gelatin photograph of the iconic singer and actress, as captured by the 25-year-old Richard Avedon for Harper's Bazaar, 1948 around the time of the filming of The Foreign Affair, and depicting the actress with her famous and very problematic African lenci doll. On the original photographer's mount, signed "Avedon" in black ink beneath the photograph and with the photographer's stamp to mount verso. A few areas of expert restoration and retouching, overall in very fine condition.  Print 10 7/16" x 11 7/16" ; mount 11 11/16" x 14 7/8". Framed to  26 x 19 inches (66.5 x 49 cm); 24 x 17 (61 x 43cm) overall. 
An extraordinary original early Avedon photograph with special provenance from the collection of Paul McMahon, a critic, photographer and artist who worked for more than 13 years touring with Marlene Dietrich as the icon's stage manager, announcer, dresser, secretary and escort. 

"Scholars of the German film star have debated many of the contradictions in her screen roles and in her life. [Judith] Mayne singles out one that other scholars have apparently shirked confronting: "The particular contradiction that I find the most challenging in relationship to Dietrich is that this icon of sophistication and glamour was the proud owner of a black doll, which she called her 'mascot' and carried with her everywhere during her career."  The chief source of information about the doll is a memoir that Dietrich's daughter, Maria, published in 1992. Drawing from that memoir, Mayne describes the central role that the doll had in Dietrich's life:"Marlene came home in a fury one day, desperately digging through trunks and accusing little Maria of having stolen her doll. Maria knew that her father, Rudolf Sieber, had been fixing the grass skirt of the doll; the father is thus identified as both maternal and as the devoted handmaiden to his wife's desires. Daughter Maria concluded that the doll was Dietrich's 'good-luck charm throughout her life - her professional one'."Mayne reports that this was not the only doll Dietrich owned, and that this doll was not a strictly private object. "Indeed, attentive viewers might well recognise the doll from Dietrich's films as well as from publicity postcards of the actress, often in the company of yet another one of Dietrich's dolls, a so-called Chinese coolie doll, made by Lenci." Mayne concentrates her analytical powers on the black doll, dismissing the Chinese coolie doll as probably just "a companion" to the other, and paying the other dolls scarcely a mention.The black doll appeared in at least four of Dietrich's films, including the one that made her famous, The Blue Angel. Mayne concentrates on that film. In so doing, she gives us her highly original - and, I must say, challenging - take on Dietrich, dolls, and fetishism:"It is perhaps easy (too easy) to see the doll in The Blue Angel as a classic fetish ... Fetishism, understood now more as the ambivalence of the ironist than the dread of the phallocrat, is, if not celebrated, then at the very least explored as offering an understanding of multiple identifications and positions ... [But] the racial dynamics of Dietrich's relationship with her dolls foreclose any simple celebration of fetishism as necessarily subversive."  (Marc Abrahams, "Hello Dolly," published The Guardian, December 6, 2004)

Reviews

(Log in or Create an Account first!)

You’re rating the book as a work, not the seller or the specific copy you purchased!

Details

Bookseller
Schubertiade US (US)
Bookseller's Inventory #
21247
Title
Marlene Dietrich in Bedroom, 1948
Author
Avedon, Richard. (1923–2004) [Dietrich, Marlene (1901-1992)]
Book Condition
New Used; Like New
Jacket Condition
Used; Like New
Quantity Available
1
Keywords
Theater :: Film :: Dance :: Unsigned Photo/Portrait :: Unsigned Photo :: Unsigned Photograph

Terms of Sale

Schubertiade

Net cash upon receipt of material ordered. We accept credit cards and Paypal payments through our website. We also accept cash, check, wire, and money orders with prior arrangement. Phone and Email orders welcomed:

As members of PADA, ABAA and ILAB, we guarantee that all items we sell are authentic and as represented and described. But our guarantee is more than that: as lovers and purveyors of rare books and documents that speak to us across time, this is a fundamental value of our business. We do not offer for sale any items which we do not believe in 100% as to do otherwise would be a betrayal of our values. We strive for accurate descriptions of all items and display photographs of everything we offer and are happy to provide further images on request by email and to answer any detailed questions about condition by phone or email prior to purchase. In the very rare instance where we may have overlooked a significant condition issue, we are always willing to accept a return within 3 days of receipt of an item. But we also sell all items - through our website and through direct negotiation by phone or email - subject to the following stipulation:

Unless sold "on approval" by advance agreement in writing, should a client at any point have authenticity concerns about an item purchased from us, we require any return request to be accompanied by THREE written opinions against the authenticity of the item in question. These opinions must be from recognized specialist dealers/authenticators in the relevant field of autographs/manuscripts, art, or books/music. If the claim is in regards to an autograph, at least one opinion must be from a member of the Professional Autograph Dealers Association (a guide by specialization is posted on the PADA website). We do not accept returns under any other circumstances. All purchases made from Schubertiade Music & Arts LLC (through the website, by phone or email, or through any other sales outlet) constitute the purchaser's consent to these terms.

In some circumstances by mutual agreement we may agree to accept back an item for other reasons, subject to a restocking fee of 25%

About the Seller

Schubertiade

Seller rating:
This seller has earned a 5 of 5 Stars rating from Biblio customers.
Biblio member since 2008
Brooklyn, NY and Newton, Massachusetts

About Schubertiade

Biblio's astonishingly poor platform does not permit us to paste a description of our business here. Please see the Schubertiade website at www.SchubertiadeMusic.com to learn more about us.

Glossary

Some terminology that may be used in this description includes:

Verso
The page bound on the left side of a book, opposite to the recto page.
New
A new book is a book previously not circulated to a buyer. Although a new book is typically free of any faults or defects, "new"...
Fine
A book in fine condition exhibits no flaws. A fine condition book closely approaches As New condition, but may lack the...
tracking-