This is an absorbing biography of Dietrich by her daughter,
Maria Riva. We are given the star’s life in detail, from her birth until her
death. Riva’s life was closely twined with her mother’s from the day she was
born- her mother used her as constant companion (who needs school when you can
be your mother’s dresser?) and servant- so she was there to see and hear what
Dietrich did and said for decades. From an early age, Riva was aware of her
mother’s constant sexual escapades- sex and performances are the main themes of
the book, along with Riva’s attempts to escape her mother’s life and have a
life of her own. Dietrich had no concept of boundaries, and said and did the
most atrocious things in front of her daughter, and then her son-in-law (when
Dietrich returned from having sex with John Kennedy, she pulled her used
panties out of her purse and thrust them to her son-in-law’s nose, encouraging
him to smell the scent of the president!) and then even her grandchildren. She
lied about her age, which meant she had to lie about her daughter’s age, too.
When Riva was in her teens, she was still being dressed as a little girl, to
enforce the illusion that Dietrich had only given birth to her a few years
before. Dietrich drank heavily (especially late in life) and was her own
pharmacist, in the years when amphetamines and downers were easily gotten. As
far as I could tell, she never gave a thought to anyone else unless they could
do something for her.
But she was beautiful, and could enthrall audiences. She was
smart- she learned from wardrobe, lighting people, directors and anyone else
and applied what she learned to her art. Josef von Sternberg, the man who made
her a star in ‘Blue Angel’ and with whom she had an on again, off again affair
for years, taught her the most- mainly, how to light herself for the effects
she wanted. Thankfully, most of the people she worked with were willing to take
her orders. She was a hard worker; she spent money like it was water-
supporting herself, her daughter, her husband with whom she did not live (most
of the time), her husband’s mistress, and giving extravagant gifts to her
lovers- so she had to work almost all the time. She was strict with herself
when working, and had bulimia, which allowed her to eat the rich foods she
loved and still lose weight. Sadly, in her old age, she developed some dementia
and that, along with her alcoholism and drug use, made her last years sad
indeed.
Of course this is the biography of Riva, too. As long as her
mother was alive, their lives were entwined. Riva did carve out her own life,
though, becoming a television star for many years and raising a family. I was
entranced by this biography- I couldn’t stop reading because every time I figured
Dietrich couldn’t do anything worse, of course she would!
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She doesn't sound very likable.
ReplyDeleteShe doesn't sound very likable.
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