I'd read quite a few books that mention Ms. Dietrich's enormous sexual appetite...I find this story from her daughter hard to believe. Maybe she doesn't want to see her mother in that kind of way...
BERLIN (Reuters) - Sultry actress Marlene Dietrich, one of the 20th century's most iconic figures, hated sex and had a schizophrenic personality, according to her daughter Maria Riva.
In an interview with German magazine Bunte to be published Thursday, Riva said Dietrich's aversion to sex did not deter countless men from pursuing her.
"All of her lovers wanted to marry her anyway," the magazine quoted the 81-year-old Riva as saying. Riva, who has written a memoir entitled "My Mother Marlene," said that Dietrich's hatred of sex and sometimes distant personality often made her feel sorry for the men who fell in love with her glamorous mother.
"Marlene Dietrich the film star was always just the person in the mirror, but never her real self," said Riva. "She was a totally normal schizophrenic."
Dietrich's performances in Berlin cabarets and more than a dozen German films during the 1920s prompted her discovery by American film producers.
She moved to Hollywood in 1930, where her roles in American productions propelled her rise to fame. During the 1930s, Dietrich became a vocal opponent of the Nazi leadership in her native Germany, and became an American citizen in 1937. She died in Paris in 1992.
In an interview with German magazine Bunte to be published Thursday, Riva said Dietrich's aversion to sex did not deter countless men from pursuing her.
"All of her lovers wanted to marry her anyway," the magazine quoted the 81-year-old Riva as saying. Riva, who has written a memoir entitled "My Mother Marlene," said that Dietrich's hatred of sex and sometimes distant personality often made her feel sorry for the men who fell in love with her glamorous mother.
"Marlene Dietrich the film star was always just the person in the mirror, but never her real self," said Riva. "She was a totally normal schizophrenic."
Dietrich's performances in Berlin cabarets and more than a dozen German films during the 1920s prompted her discovery by American film producers.
She moved to Hollywood in 1930, where her roles in American productions propelled her rise to fame. During the 1930s, Dietrich became a vocal opponent of the Nazi leadership in her native Germany, and became an American citizen in 1937. She died in Paris in 1992.
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