Why is society still lusting after Marilyn Monroe’s body shape?

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Six decades after her death, there is still a global fascination with Marilyn Monroe. Her presence is ubiquitous – the blonde bombshell actress continues to be referenced in films, TV shows, adverts, music videos, and fashion and beauty collections. Her face is emblazoned on countless art pieces, with one portrait selling of Marilyn selling for £157m in May; the sale marked a record for a piece of artwork by any artist in the 20th century. 

She is also widely referenced and praised in lots of ‘body positive’ rhetoric as a curvy, plus-sized icon who paved the way for bigger women; her clothing size is often cited as a UK size 16. And while I’m all for the celebration of any and all bodies, this is a myth that needs debunking: with her measurements recorded as 36-24-34, Marilyn might have been around a UK size 10-12 at most. 

Even petite reality TV star Kim Kardashian, who famously attended the Met Gala earlier this year sporting the gown in which Marilyn serenaded President Kennedy, was shocked at how small the ’50s icon really was: “I always thought she was extremely curvy,” she told Vogue when she initially tried the dress on. “I imagined I might be smaller in some places where she was bigger and bigger in places where she was smaller. So when it didn’t fit me, I wanted to cry because it can’t be altered at all.”

This was only a few months before the event, so Kim embarked on a strict diet to give herself a chance at wearing the dress: “I would wear a sauna suit twice a day, run on the treadmill, completely cut out all sugar and all carbs, and just eat the cleanest veggies and protein,” she revealed. “I didn’t starve myself, but I was so strict.”

Kim dropped 16 pounds to wear the dress, but it still didn’t fit: she accessorised with a white fur stole because she was unable to do up the zipper at the back. Given that Kim – a very slim woman with curves – was so far from fitting into Marilyn’s dress, it’s further evidence that the ‘plus-sized’ narrative that has been part of the star’s legacy isn’t accurate. And the idea that she is harms the real plus-size community who are being sidelined in favour of, yet again, a slim body, thus contributing further to the lack of body diversity in the media. 

LOS ANGELES – 1951: Rising star Marilyn Monroe poses for a portrait next to a 1950 Pontiac Chieftain on the backlot of 20th Century-Fox in 1951 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Earl Theisen/Getty Images)Earl Theisen Collection/Getty Images

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