Blonde Venus with Marlene Dietrich & Cary Grant - 1932

This has to be one of my favourite movies of all time, for many different reasons. First off, I ADORE Marlene Dietrich. She was beautiful, smart, controversial and an all-round entertainer. On top of that she was super talented, and starred in some pretty good movies. She was stylish and provocative at the same time, wearing men's suits and skimpy cabaret outfits in movies and in her performances... And on top of all of that she refused to play any part in the rising Nazi government in her birth country, left for the US (even after she was offered a substantial amount to stay in Germany), and became a staunch anti-Nazi, never afraid to raise her voice when needed.
But back to the movie. Marlene Dietrich plays Helen Faraday and it also stars Cary Grant (probably one of the first movies that he was actually a main character in if I am not mistaken), as the debonair Nick Townsend who tries to steal Helen away from her husband and son.
Helen Faraday plays a wife and mother in need of money who returns to the stage in the character of Blonde Venus. She falls in love with Nick Townsend but is constantly struggling with the love she still has for her husband and son and cannot choose between the two lifestyles. You know, one of those love triangles that have existed since the beginnings of time, therefore timeless and always end in heartbreak.
An added plus is that there are three numbers performed by Marlene as Blonde Venus in this movie, You Little So-And-So, I Couldn't Be Annoyed and Hot Voodoo. Did I already mention that I love Marlene Dietrich as a singer too?!
There are some gorgeous costumes in this movie, some of which I wish I could replicate and pull off myself, especially the one where she is wearing a plain, long black dress and a small black cap. Beautiful.


Lastly, Blonde Venus was directed by Josef von Sternberg, who made about 7 movies with Marlene as his leading lady. In my opinion they made for a great partnership: intrigue, style, great story lines and pretty amazing pictures. I love the shadows and the starkness of the lighting, especially in this one (it's also very apparent in Morocco). It's exactly this type of lighting that I try to recreate in photography, that stark, overexposed look of old 1920's and 1930's movies.

Anyway, this is my go-to movie when I am feeling a little down, a little plain and in need of a good old crying session. Nothing beats it.
Other Marlene/von Sternberg collaborations to see are: Blue Angel (with the performance of "Falling in Love Again"), Morocco, Dishonored, Shanghai Express, The Scarlet Empress and The Devil is a Woman.

Beautiful French musical nostalgia


I spent all afternoon working on some articles at Cake Shop, while drinking copious amounts of coffee and listening to my ipod to drown out the squeals of a group of tourists who had come to eat cake. There are about 10 different sarcastic comments that I could add to that, but I am going to restrain myself from sarcasm because I am way too excited to post what I have wanted to post all day! I was scrolling through the many playlists I have made over the past few years that I have owned this current ipod and came across one called "Time". Quelle little gem!! All old French music that I love so much. As it made me so happy, I want to share it with the world, so I recreated it on Spotify and made it a public playlist.

And yes, technically Jacques Brel, Marlene Dietrich, Jane Birkin and Josephine Baker weren't French (although Josephine Baker did become a French citizen), but they are singing in French, so it works. And Jacques Brel is on par with Tim Buckley in my head, and those of you who know me also know what that means.

LOVE.

Click on the link below and the playlist should open in Spotify. If it doesn't tell me immediately as no time should be wasted on you not listening to this!!

Quelle Nostalgie