Showing posts with label Marilyn Monroe. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Marilyn Monroe. Show all posts

The most unforgettable dresses of all time

Tuesday, December 6, 2011

From Pretty Woman and Atonement to The Seven Year Itch, the most unforgettable dresses of all time



By Daisy Dumas

Last updated at 5:42 AM on 6th December 2011


From yard upon yard of blood-red silk silk to strategically placed gold safety-pins, there are some dresses that capture a timeless place in fashion consciousness.

Burned into the collective memory, these dresses are the essences of feminine design, creative genius and natural beauty - brought alive, each and every time, by the piece de resistance - the woman wearing them.

Now, some of the world's favourite, most memorable dresses, have been collected into one fashion lover's bible, 100 Unforgettable Dresses, by fashion editor Hal Rubenstein.


Pretty Woman
Transformation: Marilyn Vance-Straker's stunning red gown for Julia Roberts' 1990 hit movie, Pretty Woman

Calling upon his not inconsiderable expertise in the industry, Mr Rubenstein, fashion director of InStyle magazine, has chosen a wealth of gowns that encapsulate the last nine decades.



 
Dipping into Hollywood blockbusters, defining Silver Screen moments, red-carpet sashays and even TV sitcoms, he proves that there are some frocks that have serious staying power when it comes to fantasy and design.

3 months before she died, Marilyn in Jean Louis dress
1955 Seven Year Itch
Happy Birthday: Marilyn Monroe looked as if she was coated in sparkles when she sang to the President in 1962, and in the Travilla gown for the now-iconic Seven Year Itch marketing shot


The Hollywood rags-to-riches fairytale, Pretty Woman, is perhaps captured best by one dress - the bright red show-stopping gown by Marilyn Vance-Straker, that signals the completion of Julia Roberts' Vivian's transformation from streetwalker to head-turning sophisticate.
The power of that stunning wardrobe choice is part-and-parcel of the story - its classic elegance comes alive in its role in the 1990 box office hit.
Royal wedding
Diana wedding
Royal weddings: The Duchess of Cambridge in her Alexander McQueen gown earlier this year, and Princess Diana in her 1981 Elizabeth Emanuel gown

Marilyn Monroe's 1962 'happy birthday' gown, by Jean Louis, a flesh-coloured soufflé mesh that was embellished with 2,500 sequins and beads that made her look like she was 'coated in nothing but glitter' could not have been omitted from the tome.
There are, of course, the classics - from the second most marketed screen image of all time, Marilyn Monroe's white, blowing William Travilla Seven Year Itch dress to Coco Chanel's original little black dress.
Grace Jones
20 feet and counting: Grace Jones makes a Keith Haring dress her very own in 1987 at a New Year's Eve party
1954 Grace Kelly in 'Rear Window'
Fit for a princess: Grace Kelly, demure as ever, in an Edith Head cocktail dress for movie, Rear View, in 1954
There is a place for the eccentrically playful style of Grace Jones, whose 1987 New Year's ensemble was a piece of living art.
The Keith Haring gown, worn with a naked, painted torso, extended twenty feet or so, and unfurled as the singer rose on a special hidden lift.
And from one Grace to another, Grace Kelly makes the list several times over, her beauty perhaps best brought alive by the Edith Head cocktail dress as worn in Alfred Hitchcock's 1954 film, Rear Window.
SATC
Carrie Bradshaw: Sarah Jessica-Parker is surrounded by sage green frothiness for a scene in Sex and the City, 2005. The shredded tulle gown is by Donatella Versace

Modern classics, such as Diane Von Furstenberg's wrap dress are casual creations that flatter any form. Or, as the designer herself puts it: 'I'm proudest of two things in my life: my children, and that I've never met a woman who doesn't look good in my dress.'

Diplomatically astute is the white, frothy Jason Wu gown that Michelle Obama wore to the inauguration ball in 2009. She is credited with putting the young designer on the map, while the dress cemented her position as a beacon of style.

Safety pin
2001 Valentino Oscar Erin
That Dress: If ever one dress can be said to be responsible for fame and career, it is Liz Hurley's 1994 Versace safety pin dress, while Julia Roberts wore 1982 Valentino when she won her 2001 Oscar for Erin Brockovich

Princess Diana 1994
Cindy Crawford Versace 1992
'Revenge dress': Princess Diana looked a million dollars on the day Prince Charles admitted publicly to his affair, while Cindy Crawford captures the supermodel style of an era in Versace, 1992

Then there are the one-pieces that propelled individuals from the quotidian to the stratospheric. Take Liz Hurley's career-enhancing, asset-adoring safety pin dress, known as That Dress, by Gianni Versace.

Worn in 1994 to the world premiere of Four Weddings and a Funeral in London, the black and gold number is never far from editorial spreads even now, 17 years later.





1964 My Fair Lady
By Geroge, she's got it! Cecil Beaton and Audrey Hepburn both won from their working relationship. Here, the actress wears the costumier-designed Ascot race scene dress for the 1964 production of My Fair Lady




Keira Knightley Atonement
Robbie and Cecilia: 2007's Atonement sees Keira Knightley in stunning emerald, designed by Jacqueline Durran
Princess Diana wore a flesh-baring, overtly sexy and powerful dress on the evening that prince Charles publicly admitted to having an affair with Camilla Parker-Bowles. The dress was a message of defiance, or, as Mr Rubenstein puts it: a 'revenge dress.'
There's a whole section dedicated to Audrey Hepburn, her inimitably coy poise lapping up the flattering lines of Givenchy, Cecil Beaton and the sparkling 'metalwork' of Paco Rabanne's disco-ball like dress.
Tilda Swinton
January 20, 2009
Etherial beauty: Other-worldly Tilda Swinton captivates in Alber Elbaz for Lanvin, 2008, while Michelle Obama marks an historic moment with a Jason Wu gown, propelling the young designer towards fashion stardom


Stylish: 100 Unforgettable Dresses by Hal Rubenstein is published by Harper Design
Stylish: 100 Unforgettable Dresses by Hal Rubenstein is published by Harper Design

Within days of Atonement hitting screens in 2007, Kiera Knightley's emerald gown had a posse of admiring fans, its design sexier than any mid-1930s dress would have been. It was a hit with modern audiences far and wide and second-hand copies have been sold for as much as $46,000.

Alexander McQueen's 2006 hologram gown sits alongside Lady Gaga's Armani satellite dress and Valentino's definitive bright red creations are warranted a section to themselves.

Wedding dresses make the cut, too, with the nuptial gowns of Grace Kelly, Princess Diana and the Duchess of Cambridge all featuring.

Sex and the City's Sarah Jessica Parker is pictured, surrounded by ruffled discs, wearing the over-the-top sage green shredded tulle Donatella Versace gown from the series.

What the book really does, though, is confirm what any designer worth his or her mettle has always known: that a dress is rendered unforgettable only because of the woman bringing it alive.

Or, as Versace put it: 'On a hanger, no dress is sexy. It's just fabric on a hanger. My clothes only come alive on the woman who knows how to be sexy in them.'


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/article-2070449/From-Pretty-Woman-Atonement-The-Seven-Year-Itch-unforgettable-dresses-time.html#ixzz1fk07RKU6

Amazing new Marilyn Monroe 3D photos as she arrives in helicopter for star-filled party

Thursday, December 1, 2011

Living the high life: Marilyn Monroe arrives in helicopter for star-filled party in never-before-seen 3D pictures


  • Marilyn leaps out of pictures when seen through 3D viewer

By Daily Mail Reporter

Last updated at 3:04 PM on 1st December 2011

She had appeared in just a few films when these stunning pictures were taken of her in 1952.

But Marilyn Monroe already oozed the glamour and sex appeal of a huge Hollywood icon.

Now these unseen images - taken by an amateur photographer at a party for legendary crooner Ray Anthony - are set to fetch up to £60,000 at auction.

Marilyn Monroe poses next to a helicopter as she arrives at legendary crooner Ray Anthony's party
Stunning: Marilyn Monroe poses next to a helicopter as she arrives at legendary crooner Ray Anthony's party


Playful: Ray Anthony grabs a laughing Marilyn as they exit the helicopter
Playful: Ray Anthony grabs a laughing Marilyn as they exit the helicopter

Amazingly, the colour pictures, which show a 25-year-old Marilyn living the high life as she steps out of a helicopter, were shot in 3D, meaning when seen through a special viewer they leap out of the page.

They were taken by Lani Carlson, who was working as a sound engineer at the launch party for the hit song 'Marilyn', written by Ervin Drake and Jimmy Shirl.


In one shot Marilyn can be seen posing for admirers under the hot San Diego sun, wearing a vibrant pink cocktail dress and standing in front of a giant sheet of music.

Another shows her receiving a playful welcome from Mr Anthony.


Musical interlude: Marilyn pretends to play the trumpet with Ray
Musical interlude: Marilyn pretends to play the trumpet with Ray. The pictures were taken by a sound engineer working at the party




Hot pink: Marilyn adjusts her dress in the hot San Diego sun
Hot pink: Marilyn adjusts her dress in the hot San Diego sun. The shots were taken on a David White Stereo Realist Camera, a dual-lens point and shoot that creates a 3D effect when seen through a special viewer

Catherine Williamson, director of entertainment at Bonhams, said: 'They are, simply put, quality images that have never been seen before of one of the world's most recognisable and glamorous movie stars.

'They were taken at an early stage of her career. She had appeared in a couple of films but it was before some of the bigger breakout movies that really made her name like The Seven Year Itch.

'What is really special about these is the stunning colours they have retained and that they are 3D.

'When viewed under the correct viewer you can see Marilyn in glorious three-dimension.'


Impressed: Marilyn and Ray watch a drummer play while they stand under a giant music sheet for the song 'Marilyn'
Impressed: Marilyn and Ray watch a drummer play while they stand under a giant music sheet for the song 'Marilyn'




Alone: Marilyn poses by herself with her song, which was written by Ervin Drake and Jimmy Shirl
Alone: Marilyn poses by herself with her song, which was written by Ervin Drake and Jimmy Shirl





Ready for their close-up: The stunning pictures are set to fetch up to £60,000
Ready for their close-up: The stunning pictures are set to fetch up to £60,000

Mr Carlson said he decided to sell the images, which measure 1.5 inches by four inches, so that they could be enjoyed by Marilyn fans the world over. He is also selling the copyright to them.

They were taken on a David White Stereo Realist Camera, a dual-lens point and shoot that creates a three-dimensional effect when seen through a special viewer.

Miss Williamson added: 'It wasn't this guy's profession but he was a great amateur photographer.

'He was just the sound man at this huge celeb party, but because of the great access that afforded him, he simply took advantage and went roaming with his new camera.

In demand: Marilyn strolls with Ray as more photographers try to grab a shot of the screen icon
In demand: Marilyn strolls with Ray as more photographers try to grab a shot of the screen icon


Four-legged friend: The Some Like It Hot star greets a dog with a shake of his paw
Four-legged friend: The Some Like It Hot star greets a dog with a shake of his paw




He'll be lucky! Marilyn flirts with the helicopter pilot
He should be so lucky! Marilyn flirts with the helicopter pilot




'He is still alive but has decided that he has had enough enjoyment from them and has decided to share them with other people.

'Understandably, this is something that many film fanatics and fans of Marilyn will be interested in owning.'

She estimates that the collection will sell for between $70,000 (£45,000) and $90,000 (£57,000).

The 3D images will go under the hammer alongside the copyright to all ten stills on December 14 at Bonhams' Entertainment Memorabilia auction in Los Angeles.


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2068571/Marilyn-Monroe-unseen-pictures-Ray-Anthonys-party.html#ixzz1fKBZk5fE

Legendary photographer Terry O'Neill relives his amazing career

Sunday, November 27, 2011

'Bunny girls, tips from Sinatra and the day I turned down Marilyn,' legendary photographer Terry O'Neill relives his amazing career



By Angela Levin

Last updated at 10:02 PM on 26th November 2011



While Junior never turned his back on music he has spent the past 30 years as carer to his family.
While Junior never turned his back on music he has spent the past 30 years as carer to his family.

Terry O’Neill was fast asleep in his Mayfair flat when the phone rang in the early hours. He woke with a start and answered it, anxious not to wake his wife, actress Vera Day. He knew it would be Peter Sellers. ‘Why can’t I attract girls?’ moaned the actor, who often called at 2am to be cheered up.

‘Peter’s problem was always the same,’ says Terry, ‘but I felt so sorry for him and always went round to his place in Chelsea, even in the middle of the night. Peter had everything – a fantastic career and money but he didn’t have the one thing he truly wanted – someone to love. “I can’t figure out how you get the girls and I can’t,” he would say to me.

‘I felt like his psychiatrist, telling him that not only did he fall for the wrong girls, he handled romance badly, going bananas over a woman the moment he met her. He’d even propose within a few weeks.

‘His romance with Liza Minnelli in 1973 is one I particularly remember. She was quite keen on him, but was soon overwhelmed by Peter’s behaviour and ended it. He begged me for some magic chat-up lines.’

Despite Peter’s needy behaviour, Terry remained his confidante until his death of a heart attack in 1980.

Maybe Sellers thought some of Terry’s legendary confidence with women would rub off on him – Terry’s girlfriends have included Marilyn Monroe’s glamorous PR assistant, and Sixties model Jean Shrimpton. Terry has married three times: first to actress Vera Day, then to Hollywood star Faye Dunaway and currently to Laraine Ashton, the former owner of a London modelling agency.

Sellers was not the only famous friend of Romford-born Terry – his intimates included Raquel Welch, Frank Sinatra, Ava Gardner and Michael Caine, who all considered him more than someone who made them look good.

The photograph on the front cover of Raquel Welch was taken at the height of her career when everyone was clamouring to take pictures of her. The shot of her in shorts and a tied shirt was taken in Fox Studios in 1970 when she was filming Myra Breckinridge.

Terry says: ‘I was lucky that we were friends and I could photograph her whenever I liked.’

Indeed, anyone who was anyone hired Terry O’Neill.

Along with contemporaries Terence Donovan and David Bailey, his iconic shots captured the heady feel of Swinging Sixties London. Terry snapped British bands that would become household names – from The Rolling Stones and The Beatles to the Dave Clark Five.

Popular culture was unstoppable and the rich and famous appeared in Terry’s new style of reportage shots that took his subjects out of the studio.

With his East End charm, wit and good looks, Terry also gained unprecedented access to Hollywood stars, who found him easy to work with. He photographed celebrities at home or relaxing on film sets, giving us a tantalising glimpse into their private selves.

However, despite his fame, Terry has rarely given interviews, preferring to stay behind the lens.

In recent years, Terry, 73, has recovered from serious illness and has now decided to catalogue decades of stunning photographs – many shown here have never been published before. He has also chosen to give an interview for the first time about his work photographing the famous faces of the Sixties and Seventies.


Cowgirl: This unseen picture of Raquel Welch was taken at Fox Studios in 1970 when she was filming Myra Breckinridge
Cowgirl: This unseen picture of Raquel Welch was taken at Fox Studios in 1970 when she was filming Myra Breckinridge

‘For decades I was so busy taking pictures that I never bothered about the negatives,’ he says. ‘It’s only recently that I’ve realised what an amazing collection I have.’

Terry has a new London exhibition opening next month and has also launched a mobile phone app of his photographs of the world’s most beautiful women.

As many people knew, Terry was at ease with women – and they him. The world’s most stunning actresses – Elizabeth Taylor, Brigitte Bardot and Audrey Hepburn among them – not only clamoured for Terry to take their picture but also to be their friend. While Terry’s approach is informal and instinctive, he was acutely aware of the vulnerability of his movie-star subjects.

‘Nearly all of them become quite neurotic when they reach the top because they know how easy it is to go down again,’ says Terry. ‘But they recognise that I see them for who they are, and that makes them relax.’

So what makes a beautiful woman? ‘You can’t put your finger on it,’ he says. ‘The line “something in the way she moves” in The Beatles’ Something captures it best. It’s certainly not big boobs or a particular feature.


Picture of Ava Gardner taken by Terry


From cosy chats to a spat with Frank


From cosy chats to a spat with Frank

‘The most stunning woman to photograph was Ava Gardner, who as well as being spectacular looking, was also untameable and adopted a take-it-or-leave-it attitude to all the men in Hollywood. I have taken thousands of pictures of beautiful women. I see their souls through the eye of the lens, acknowledge it with a click and then move on.’

However, the one iconic beauty he did not photograph was Marilyn Monroe. Terry turned the chance down because he was in love with someone else.

‘I was in a relationship with Pat Newcombe, her PR, and I knew taking Marilyn’s photograph would spoil it. So I declined.’ He laughs. ‘I don’t regret it because it’s harder to find a good woman than a beautiful one.’


Diamonds are forever: A sneaky shot of Sean Connery when he was filming the Bond movie in Las Vagas
Diamonds are forever: A sneaky shot of Sean Connery when he was filming the Bond movie in Las Vagas

Terry’s fondness for women has its roots in his childhood when his ‘big pin-up’ growing up in Essex was the Queen, whom he considered very beautiful. Indeed, he was so anxious when invited to photograph her in 1992 that he armed himself with some jokes to calm his nerves.

Terry was born into an Irish Catholic family in 1938. His mother had wanted her son to become a priest, but Terry had other ideas. Aged ten he made himself a drum kit from biscuit tins. He adored jazz so he joined a local band and left school at 14 hoping for a musical career.

This never happened, but in 1959 he was offered a job by the British airline BOAC as a photographer snapping people on their travels. BOAC gave him a cheap Agfa Select 35mm camera, which Terry first had to work out how to use. A stroke of luck and his creative instinct led him to photograph a sleeping figure in a waiting room. It was Rab Butler, the then Home Secretary. The Daily Sketch [a national tabloid, bought by Associated Newspapers in 1952, that merged with the Daily Mail in 1971] published it and, seeing his eye for pictures, offered him a job.


Making hay with Jean Shrimpton

Terry recalls: ‘After about three months at the Sketch, a journalist mentioned a struggling young group called The Beatles and said I should hear them and take their picture. But it took three months before it got into the paper. To everyone’s amazement the paper sold out.

‘I used to sit with The Beatles for hours in the Ad Lib club, Leicester Square. John Lennon was the bright spark. He also had a quirky sense of humour. We used to discuss how long any interest in them might last and what they’d do afterwards. Ringo said he’d like to work in a bank and John thought he might become a tailor.’

When Terry was asked to photograph another band, the pictures were rejected as the band was ‘too ugly’. It was The Rolling Stones.

‘I took the Dave Clark Five next and they then ran the pictures side by side with the headline Beauty and the Beast. It was Brian Jones, who became addicted to drugs and died in July 1969, who used to run The Rolling Stones. Mick was always good at pulling women, but I have never understood why he is so attractive to them.’


My cheeky little snap of Bardot

Terry had broken away from the formal studio shot of the Fifties and adopted his trademark relaxed approach. A journalist friend suggested he tried photographing pin-ups. One was actress Vera Day, who he married when he was 21. Vera was known as the British Marilyn Monroe and in 1957 had had a small part in the film The Prince And The Showgirl starring Monroe. Monroe was jealous when she saw her and insisted Vera wore a brown wig. The marriage lasted 13 years and they had a son and a daughter.

I was far too young to get married,’ says Terry. ‘I had no idea that my career would take off. I was born to work and have never been interested in holidays. We grew apart. It’s a huge regret that we divorced and entirely my fault.’

In the Sixties and Seventies the nature of photography changed – much of it due to Terry’s imaginative use of his camera.

‘It was an era when photographers were king and important to a star,’ he says. ‘Now the managers have taken over, so everything ends up contrived.’

Terry was not only at the heart of Swinging London, but when he was sent on his first assignment to the United States in 1962, aged 24, he was astonished to find he was the man everyone wanted to meet.

‘We stayed in Hugh Hefner’s Playboy Mansion in Los Angeles, which was also the headquarters of Playboy magazine. Bunny girls knocked on my door all night. Fred Astaire and Shirley MacLaine invited me to dinner. They wanted me to tell them about The Beatles and The Rolling Stones.’

By 1964, Terry was working on five assignments a day, but he left the Daily Sketch to go freelance – and his career went into orbit.

But it wasn’t until Terry met Frank Sinatra, who he describes as ‘magnetic’, in the late Sixties that he says he really learnt how to take pictures. He had been commissioned to take photographs of Raquel Welch in 1968’s Lady In Cement, a film she was making with Sinatra in Miami.

Terry says: ‘I mentioned this to Ava Gardner, whose photo I had just taken, and she offered to write a letter to Sinatra about me. I went on the set and Sinatra walked towards me surrounded by bodyguards. He read the letter and said, “Right, he is with me.” He then ignored me for three weeks while also letting me take whatever shot I wanted.’

Terry realised the secret of being a good photographer was to blend into the background. ‘I saw how a room would become alive when Sinatra walked in. Also, how much success comes from self-belief. Just being with someone like that made me want to do my best work. He was also appearing at night at the famous Fontainebleu club.


Audrey Hepburn


THE LOOK OF LOVE

Terry says: ‘You couldn’t take a bad picture of Audrey Hepburn – she was a thoroughly professional and conscientious actress. She was comfortable in her own skin, but equally I felt that she was a woman’s woman.
‘Although she was an exceptionally lovely person, I didn’t find her sexy and I don’t think she appealed to men much. I was taking shots of her in 1965 while she was filming Two For The Road with Albert Finney. Audrey’s marriage to the actor Mel Ferrer was in trouble and Finney was divorced.
‘Hepburn and Finney had a brief affair. Their relationship gave her a special radiance, which is reflected in the photographs.’

‘When the warm-up act was on, Sinatra would peep through the curtains to assess the audience. It taught me that you should always do your homework.’

Terry’s highly personal encounters with the stars also included a run-in with Richard Burton in 1972 while in Hollywood working on Bluebeard.

‘I had met a beautiful woman who Richard also found attractive. She paid me a visit and, at 10.30pm, we heard a banging on the hotel room door. Richard started pleading with her to go with him. He left and came back two hours later, drunk. He stayed for hours. He was married to Elizabeth Taylor, but determined to chase a woman he fancied.’

Terry first met his second wife, Faye Dunaway, in 1970 when she was filming the Western Doc. ‘I met her again when she won an Oscar for her performance in Network in 1976. I took the iconic picture of her lounging by the pool the morning after her win. We were both married at the time, so it was complicated.’

They married in 1983 and adopted a son, Liam. They divorced four years later. Talking about this marriage was the only time Terry looked uncomfortable.

‘I always swore I wouldn’t marry another actress. I signed a legal document agreeing not to talk about our marriage. She wanted to settle down and I went along with it. Faye wanted me to be a film director, which never appealed. She got the lead part playing Joan Crawford in Mommie Dearest and Faye became the character she was playing, which was frightening as Joan was a monster. Worse, I was pushed into becoming the executive producer.

‘I arrived on the set on the first day to find that Faye had lost the borrowed $100,000 diamond necklace she was supposed to be wearing. I spent most of the day unsuccessfully looking for it.

‘The filming took three months. I was so stressed that I felt ill. My life was a living nightmare. One night I had too much to drink and I rang my close friend celebrity tailor Doug Hayward at 4am and told him I wanted to top myself. He talked to me for an hour.’

Terry walked away from the marriage with nothing and returned to London where he rented a little studio in South Kensington, thinking he would be able to pick up where he left off and work would flood in.


My japes with the Queen
My japes with the Queen

However, Terry recalls: ‘The phone didn’t ring. It taught me a lesson: that you are only as good as your last picture.’

Shortly afterwards he met Laraine Ashton, who had a son named Claude.

‘We married ten years ago and this marriage is my last,’ he says. ‘I am not getting out of it,’ he chuckles. ‘Not least because you need someone for your old age.’

On Christmas Day 2005, Terry was having dinner with Laraine’s family in Somerset when he began to feel ill. He had a trip to the Bahamas coming up, so he tried to ignore it.

He was diagnosed with bowel cancer and within days underwent a major operation. He also had an undiagnosed stomach ulcer, which ruptured, and he spent two weeks in intensive care followed by three months of chemotherapy. ‘I always thought I was invincible,’ admits Terry, who has since had heart trouble and a hernia.

He also has cataracts, which need an operation, but Terry is still taking pictures – but ‘only when I want to’.


Bowie kept Liz waiting

BOWIE KEPT LIZ WAITING

‘This was the summer of 1974,’ says Terry, ‘and Elizabeth Taylor was the biggest star on Earth. She wanted to meet David Bowie to see if he could land a role in her next film The Blue Bird. I arranged a meeting at the Los Angeles home of the film’s director George Cukor.
Elizabeth had a reputation for being late, but it was Bowie who arrived three-and-a-half hours after the agreed time. It was the height of his cocaine addiction. Elizabeth was so angry she almost left, but once he arrived she went into action. The picture shows a nervous Bowie and Elizabeth in command. He didn’t get the part, but they became great friends.’

However, in 2008, he was offered a job he couldn’t refuse. The Nelson Mandela Foundation wanted to give Mandela the present of Terry photographing everyone who came to see him during his 90th birthday celebrations in London.

‘Mandela was staying at The Dorchester for a week. Everyone came to see him including Gordon Brown, Oprah Winfrey, Bill Clinton, Naomi Campbell, Lewis Hamilton and David Cameron. When he left I nearly broke down in tears because he was one of the greatest men I have ever met. I thought, if these are the last photographs I take, I will die a happy man.’

Despite his success he has two significant regrets. ‘I wish I hadn’t divorced twice,’ he admits.

The second regret is, astonishingly, that there have been too many beautiful women in his life.

‘I feel ashamed that I only went out with actresses or models,’ he says. ‘There is more to me than that, but they were the only ones I came in contact with. I just didn’t meet lawyers, doctors or professional women.’

He doesn’t expect any sympathy.

Terry O’Neill’s Screen Sirens And Rock Legends exhibition opens at Proud Chelsea, 161 Kings Road, London, on December 8. His Goddesses app is available from iTunes and T-shirts from www.wearecollective.com.




Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/article-2066526/The-day-I-turned-Marilyn-Monroe-Photographer-Terry-ONeill-relives-amazing-career.html#ixzz1eusMZINA

LIFE's sexiest photos of all time: Water polo players, Hollywood sirens and shameless flirts

Thursday, November 24, 2011

Water polo players, Hollywood sirens and shameless flirts: LIFE's sexiest photos of all time



By Daisy Dumas

Last updated at 7:11 PM on 17th November 2011

Theirs is an imperfect, unairbrushed and largely unformulaic beauty.

From the dark tans and healthy smiles of girls frolicking on a beach to the come-hither flirtation of Liz Taylor, LIFE magazine's sexiest shots all have a natural realness about them.

Celebrating 75 years of LIFE, the photos are part of a collection of defining images from the news magazine's formidable history.

Lean to: Actress Elizabeth Taylor posing in bathing suit on location during filming of motion picture The Night of the Iguana in Mexico
Lean to: Actress Elizabeth Taylor posing in bathing suit on location during filming of motion picture The Night of the Iguana in Mexico

Liz Taylor, lounging against a tree in Mexico flirts playfully - as ever - with the camera. Visiting her husband at the time, Richard Burton, on the set of Night of the Iguana in 1963, the screen megastar relaxes in a summery beach suit and flip flops.

By the time the photo was taken, says LIFE, the star had already won her first Oscar and was Hollywood's highest-paid actress.

Legs eleven: Betty Grable models a shirt of her own design while showing off her famous pins in the process
Legs eleven: Betty Grable models a shirt of her own design while showing off her famous pins in the process


The stunning beauty found herself at the subject of several scandals in the years leading up to the shot, though her beauty was never in dispute.

In another, Steve McQueen drapes a languidly protective arm around his wife, Neile Adams, as she envelops The Great Escape star in an embrace.

Shot by John Dominis, the image, also from 1963, is taken in the actor's home after the photographer developed a close working relationship with McQueen. LIFE writes that the handsome star would often walk around his home and garden in the nude - here, swimmers protect his modesty.

Splashin around: Girls play in the ocean in California, the photo was taken as part of a Co Rentmeester essay on the state's beach life
Splashin around: Girls play in the ocean in California, the photo was taken as part of a Co Rentmeester essay on the state's beach life


California dreamin: Another shot from Co Rentmeester's essay on California beach life shows a splashing girl in the sun
California dreamin: Another shot from Co Rentmeester's essay on California beach life shows a splashing woman in the sun
Doll-like: Actress and sex symbol Jayne Mansfield lounges on an inflatable raft in a swimming pool surrounded by bottles shaped like bikini-clad versions of herself, Los Angeles, 1957
Doll-like: Actress and sex symbol Jayne Mansfield lounges on an inflatable raft in a swimming pool surrounded by bottles shaped like bikini-clad versions of herself, Los Angeles, 1957

A colour photo from the Fifties shows Jayne Mansfield and her perfect physique on a pool lilo, surrounded by plastic dolls. The dolls are hot water bottles modelled on the pin-up's figure.

On to another pin-up, and Betty Grable is caught, arms aloft, showing off the military-style jacket she decorated herself. The coat paid homage to the troops, writes LIFE, who had made the siren a star, her famous and much lusted-after legs on show, as ever.

Revealing: Actor Steve McQueen is photographed at home with wife Neile Adams in 1963
Revealing: Actor Steve McQueen is photographed at home with wife Neile Adams in 1963


Balls aloft: US water polo team, circa 1966, L-R, Rick McNair, Alex Rousseau, Chris Humbert and Chris Duplanty
Balls aloft: US water polo team, circa 1966, L-R, Rick McNair, Alex Rousseau, Chris Humbert and Chris Duplanty




Soap suds: Actress Jeanne Crain balancing a huge soap bubble on her index finger as she luxuriates in a bubble bath in scene from the movie Margie
Soap suds: Actress Jeanne Crain balancing a huge soap bubble on her index finger as she luxuriates in a bubble bath in scene from the movie Margie
In a ruffle: Taken in 1954 by Gordon Parks, this image captures garters in their everyday glory, before they had become a true staple of the x-rated wardrobe
In a ruffle: Taken in 1954 by Gordon Parks, this image captures garters in their everyday glory, before they had become a true staple of the x-rated wardrobe

Fresh as a daisy: Brigitte Bardot during filming of the movie En Effeuillant la Marguerite, or 'Plucking the Petals from the Daisy'
Fresh as a daisy: Brigitte Bardot during filming of the movie En Effeuillant la Marguerite, or 'Plucking the Petals from the Daisy'
Other photos from the collection continue to record stolen moments of the past for posterity - with Life photographers often capturing unplanned, serendipitous and often fleeting moments.
A group of girls splash and laugh together on a California beach, their long hair and tanned bodies shot by Co Rentmeester as part of a 1970 photo essay of beach life in the sun-soaked state.
Smoking hot: Brigitte Bardot on set during filming of Lady and the Puppet
Smoking hot: Brigitte Bardot on set during filming of Lady and the Puppet







New York fashion, 1969: While many of her peers sported Woodstock style, this young lady strides up a city street looking sleek and sophisticated
New York fashion, 1969: While many of her peers sported Woodstock style, this young lady strides up a city street looking sleek and sophisticated

Other images include the US water polo team. Toned, dark and wide-grinned, the naked men - who became immensely popular with ladies - hold water polo to protect their modesty as they laugh together.

Another sees Jane Fonda, anachronistic and faintly comical in full Barbarella get up, staring wilfully at the camera. In one, an unnamed girl of the swinging Sixties strides up a New York street, her sleek fashion at odds with her Woodstock-loving peers.

Beaten and bruised: Actor Clint Eastwood is bare-chested and bandaged after a brutal beating scene from Dirty Harry, 1971
Beaten and bruised: Actor Clint Eastwood is bare-chested and bandaged after a brutal beating scene from Dirty Harry, 1971


Roller girl: Actress Raquel Welch in roller derby uniform during filming of The Kansas City Bomber, 1972
Roller girl: Actress Raquel Welch in roller derby uniform during filming of The Kansas City Bomber, 1972




Unearthly woman: Jane Fonda in full Barbarella get-up, 1967, is a plastic-encased, gun-toting force to be reckoned with
Unearthly woman: Jane Fonda in full Barbarella get-up, 1967, is a plastic-encased, gun-toting force to be reckoned with




Boudoir: Texan model Suzy Parker lounges in her California apartment for photographer Allan Grant in 1957
Boudoir: Texan model Suzy Parker lounges in her California apartment for photographer Allan Grant in 1957


Oscar winner: Faye Dunaway takes in her Oscar win over breakfast and papers at the Beverley Hills Hotel in 1977
Oscar winner: Faye Dunaway takes in her Oscar win over breakfast and papers at the Beverley Hills Hotel in 1977

A beaten, bruised and bandaged Clint Eastwood appears to shake off his injuries with a smile in a 1971 shot from the filming of Dirty Harry. The macho man played policeman Harry Callahan, propelling the actor to the top of the pile of Hollywood action heroes.
'It's easy to be beautiful - just be born that way,' once said model Suzy Parker, according to the magazine. A photo of the red-head in a summer dress lying in her California home, proves that that the Texan was blessed with more than her fair share of natural beauty.
As ever, Marilyn Monroe shows how to do it best, looking directly at the lens, not showing an ounce of flesh and simply giving the camera a look that could melt a million men.
Satin sheets: Actress Rita Hayworth looks stunning - wearing her trademark charming, nonchalant look - in a nightgown in 1941
Satin sheets: Actress Rita Hayworth looks stunning - wearing her trademark charming, nonchalant look - in a nightgown in 1941


Saving the best for last: Inimitably sexy Marilyn Monroe outside her home, shot by Alfred Eisenstaedt
Saving the best for last: Inimitably sexy Marilyn Monroe outside her home, shot by Alfred Eisenstaedt

As ever, time has only accentuated the sexiness of many of LIFE's best shots. Faye Dunaway, shot in 1941 on satin sheets and casually throwing a coy look that became dubbed the 'Mona Lisa of pinups,' hit superstardom shortly after the photo was taken.

The screen siren, natural-looking, voluptuous and every bit the pin-up star, encapsulated a style that is firmly lodged in a bygone era.

Her ensuing fame makes the innocence of the shot yet more endearing.
View more images from LIFE's stunning collection at LIFE.com.

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