![MONROE, Marilyn (1926-1962) Autograph letter signed ("Marilyn Monroe") to Errol Flynn (1909-1959), [Los Angeles, c. 1950]. 3 pages, on a folded 12mo calling card engraved on front: "Mrs. Edward Francis Hutton," Light dampstains and soiling, else very good.](https://www.christies.com/img/LotImages/2016/NYR/2016_NYR_12262_0387_000(monroe_marilyn_autograph_letter_signed_to_errol_flynn_los_angeles_c_19110152).jpg?w=1)
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MONROE, Marilyn (1926-1962) Autograph letter signed ("Marilyn Monroe") to Errol Flynn (1909-1959), [Los Angeles, c. 1950]. 3 pages, on a folded 12mo calling card engraved on front: "Mrs. Edward Francis Hutton," Light dampstains and soiling, else very good.
A rare and unusual autograph letter from the young star, written to one of her matinee idols, Errol Flynn, thanking him for a gift of flowers. The note, which appears to have been left at Flynn's Mullholland Farm doorstep, reads, in full: "Dear Errol Flynn. You are a hard man to get! I have called you several times to thank you for the lovely flowers, and nice note, but have not been lucky enough to reach you - They were lovely, and it was so nice of you to have thought of sending them - Thank you - See you soon, have fun! love Marilyn Monroe"
Flynn was one of Monroe's screen idols as a child--she saw Flynn's 1937 film Prince and the Pauper at least three times. When she made it in Hollywood, she attended at least a few of Flynn's infamous parties on Mullholland Farm. Heddy Lamar recalled that Flynn used to conduct "greyhound" races on the hillside lawns surrounding his estate, with six young men donning numbers on their backs, would chase a "rabbit," which was actually a young girl, topless, wearing bunny ears. The winner would get the girl, while the girl received a sable stole. "In fact, Marilyn Monroe was the bunny once; though in all fairness to Marilyn, she got the sable but the winner got only a kiss and a photograph of himself with Marilyn..." (McNulty, Errol Flynn, 312)
Provenance: Franz Bueb (1916?-1982) German-born artist who was an intimate of Jack and Jackie Kennedy, Doris Duke and other social luminaries of the mid-twentieth century. The card may have come into his possession through Heddy Lamar, to whom he taught painting, or another mutual friend of Flynn.
How and why Marilyn came into possession of a calling card from Edward Francis Hutton's third wife, Dorothy Dear Metzger, remains a mystery at present.
Reference: Thomas McNulty, Errol Flynn: The Life and Career. 2011, 312.
A rare and unusual autograph letter from the young star, written to one of her matinee idols, Errol Flynn, thanking him for a gift of flowers. The note, which appears to have been left at Flynn's Mullholland Farm doorstep, reads, in full: "Dear Errol Flynn. You are a hard man to get! I have called you several times to thank you for the lovely flowers, and nice note, but have not been lucky enough to reach you - They were lovely, and it was so nice of you to have thought of sending them - Thank you - See you soon, have fun! love Marilyn Monroe"
Flynn was one of Monroe's screen idols as a child--she saw Flynn's 1937 film Prince and the Pauper at least three times. When she made it in Hollywood, she attended at least a few of Flynn's infamous parties on Mullholland Farm. Heddy Lamar recalled that Flynn used to conduct "greyhound" races on the hillside lawns surrounding his estate, with six young men donning numbers on their backs, would chase a "rabbit," which was actually a young girl, topless, wearing bunny ears. The winner would get the girl, while the girl received a sable stole. "In fact, Marilyn Monroe was the bunny once; though in all fairness to Marilyn, she got the sable but the winner got only a kiss and a photograph of himself with Marilyn..." (McNulty, Errol Flynn, 312)
Provenance: Franz Bueb (1916?-1982) German-born artist who was an intimate of Jack and Jackie Kennedy, Doris Duke and other social luminaries of the mid-twentieth century. The card may have come into his possession through Heddy Lamar, to whom he taught painting, or another mutual friend of Flynn.
How and why Marilyn came into possession of a calling card from Edward Francis Hutton's third wife, Dorothy Dear Metzger, remains a mystery at present.
Reference: Thomas McNulty, Errol Flynn: The Life and Career. 2011, 312.