With her cartoon eyebrows arching impossibly over her half-shut eyes and those sculpted cheekbones, German-born actress Marlene Dietrich was made for the screen. Working with director Josef von Sternberg, who knew just how to cast her pronounced features into graphic highlights and shadows for maximum drama, she filmed her biggest box-office hits in America between 1930 and 1935. In her later career, she worked with all-star directors Orson Wells, Alfred Hitchcock, Billy Wilder, and Fritz Lang, among others.
She was nominated for her first and only Oscar for her role as the cabaret singer Amy Jolly von Sternberg's in 1930's somewhat scandalous film Morocco, in which she dresses in drag and kisses a woman. She famously rejected the Nazis offer to become the Third Reich's poster girl, then became an American citizen in 1939. And all the while her style toyed with expectations: At times she would appear in public wearing tuxedos, men's suits, or driving outfits, other moments she'd choose full Lanvin gowns, mink stoles, or Dior. The known bisexual was married to little-known director Rudolf Sieber in 1923 and stayed married till his death in 1976, but had numerous open affairs and claimed John F. Kennedy, Yul Brenner, and John Wayne as lovers. In her late life, she had Azzedine Alaïa make her custom clothing before he was famous. She died in 1992, 90 years after the boundary-pushing lady was born on today's date in 1901. To celebrate her, enjoy our slideshow of some of her finest looks.
Via: Great Vintage Photos of Marlene Dietrich, the Queen of Androgyny
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