My partner was a big fan of the Dietrich and in 1982 he wrote her a letter and she responded. I read that she typed her own letters and I remember thinking that it made my partner so happy that one of his childhood idols sent him a letter on July 2, 1982. My partner was also lucky in sending some flowers to Peggy Lee when she was at the Fairmont and she had two tickets at the box office so we could see her. He was lucky to be able to meet Ms. Lee after the show. I looked on from a distance and remember she was in a wheelchair but she did her show sitting down. My partner died in 1991 and when I think of these two ladies, I only think of the joy they gave him, how great is that.
She was 62 in 1963, having been born in 1901. She looks beautiful here - the beauty and the glamor. She may have been born German, but she proved to be a patriotic naturalized American during WW2 by going overseas to entertain and boost the morale of American and Allied forces. Much admired!
The most elegant and glamorous woman ;...professional ....and groomed in every way ....they don't make them like that anymore . Thank God we have these recordinds and her many screen performances to show future historians how REAL 🌟 shone ! Forever a Marlene Dietrich loyal fan ❤😊
Thank you so much for sharing this. I have never seen it before. I saw Marlene Dietrich perform live in Copenhagen several times when i was young over a span of almost ten years - and it was pure magic. An old recording like this of course can never do her (or anybody else) justice. But good to see never the less.
Please, tell us more about your memory! What dress she used on your evening with beads + swan coat or petals plus sequins coat, maybe something during and after concert when she usually was giving autographs
I had a conversation with Miss Dietrich before her Expo 67 concert in Montreal. She was still very beautiful, incredibly so, the stuff of legends and burningly intense in person, yet feminine at the same time. Her grandson was in my year at Carnegie Mellon University and had mixed feelings about his famous grandmother. The above performance was exactly the same as her Expo 67 version. Unforgetable.
Wow, you are lucky! There she presented her Broadway 1967 programme, read somwhere that in 67 she have sung Surabaya Johnny on her concerts (beside her trademark Johnny song) ,also Burt Bacharach was still her conducter at that time, in 1968, he stopped being her conductor, only few occasional perfomaces.
@@savelysavely2483 Yes, a smiling Bacharach was onstage with her and rumors about their relationship abound. I saw him backstage, as well, handsome, still youngish, elegantly dressed and smiling...at me, no less. He was the one who alerted her that I was waiting backstage to chat with her.
@@matthewdarnell3535 She was everything you say...the stuff of legends. Her grandson was bemoaning her self absorption....that she cared more about herself than him.
After reading her daughter's book, it's amazing to watch one of these now and know how much she'd been bound, taped back, and sewed in so that she could look as she did.
Marlene became a supreme concert performer. She honed her skills during WW2 entertaining GIs. She learned a great deal from Danny Thomas and other performers. Then she headlined and further enhanced her skills as a star attraction in Vegas. In the early 1960s, Burt Bacharach became her conductor and orchestrator. He updated all her arrangements and the orchestrations so they would support and highlight her voice. He did a sensational job for her.
I saw her live in the early 1970s in Melbourne. Then she went to Sydney and fell off the stage and hurt her leg. It was a great concert, I was only young but really enjoyed it. My friend I went with took me around to the stage door after the show and when she came out she was hoisted onto a car's bonnet and signed autographs.
Once of her last concerts was in New York with a broken leg to earn money to send her two grandchildren to College. After her death , her ungrateful bitch of a daughter wrote an expose in which she didn’t even acknowledge that fact.
A great voice? Well, perhaps not.......bt THIS, boys and girls, is what can be accomplished with charisma, glamour, and sheer force of personality. Truly, authentically LEGENDARY.
She was a performer of songs, not necessarily the same as a singer. A lot of the magic was in how she put character into the songs. Where Have All The Flowers Gone, a spotlight concentrated in her head and shoulders, everything else in darkness, mesmerising and full of sorrow.
She never said about herself, she was a " great singer ". She was a " Diseuse" , its more like Sprechgesang. Her songs are not all, but often Storys. About Live, Love and so on. I like hear her voice and her Interprentation. But everyone can decide.
Стать,повадки и красота! Не говоря уж о таланте! Богиня😍❤️💐❤️💐❤️💐😍
2 місяці тому+1
Marlene's magnificent interpretation, in a topic that is still current, due to the continuous wars and the dead they cause and that is that they will never learn !!. Where were the flowers gone?
Ah, the great chanteuses (?) of the past. Maybe not the best singers, but the emotion and commitment they out into each song more than made up for that.
She created the illusion of a sexy, beautiful woman who could act & sing. That is no mean achievement. She is up there with the great Divas of all time. RIP
She delivered a very powerful performance of "Where Have All the Flowers Gone". The song meant a lot to her because she had lived thru WWI in Germany and had personally witnessed the slaughter in WWII. As evident in this video, she had a tremendous stage presence.
At the beginning, Marlene la vie en rose sang Piaf's world-famous song. Two days before, on 10.10.1963, Edith Piaf died, who was very friendly with Marlene....
THE MOST AMAZING WOMAN IN MOVIE HISTORY. HER ONE LOOK CAN KILL EVERY MAN. HOW MUCH CHARM, CHARISMA, NO ONE HAVE. THE ONLY ONE TO WHOM SHE GIVES TO MARIKA REKK
Que se puede decir, sin ser redundante, de una artista soberbia en la que se conjugan a la perfección, atractivo arrebatador, personalidad carismática y talento. Ese astro fue Marlene Dietrich.
You have made a great job with sound! - officially released songs from that perfomamce on UA-cam sounds not good, cause it doesnt have echo and perfomamce perceives absolutely different because the absence of echo. Now I understand why sound was important for her as lights on stage
Уеs seeing her in person, it was either the late 60 s or very early 70 s I cannot remember the play or cabaret only it was a theatre in George Street Sydney I? I only remember the voice and Legs that I can't forget.
She fell and broke a leg and went on to perform her last concert to earn the money to put her two grandchildren through college which her ungrateful b***h of a daughter never acknowledged!
She had an awful voice and sang badly , sometimes flat. Nor was she a beauty. BUT she rose to create the illusion that she was and could. That is a greater achievement than a God given talent. She was a stupendous Diva and a terrific, charitable humanist.
Für mich persönlich ist Marlene Dietrich die faszinierenste Künstlerin aller Zeiten, Ihre Berühmtheit im 20. Jahrhundert und bis heute ist unerreicht, ich wüsste nicht, wer wird sie jemals toppen, ihre Bühnenpräsenz war einfach umwerfend, es wirkt heute vielleicht altmodisch, weil man heutzutage über mehr Lichteffekte verfügt. Das alles hatte Marlene Dietrich nicht nötig....
Marlene Dietrich once said: "Darling, the legs aren't beautiful, I just know what to do with them". The same is true of her singing and acting. She wasn't great at either, but she was a star nevertheless. She dressed for the image and she became what those who saw her movies or heard her sing wanted her to be. What she offered was artifice. What she was, was magnificent.
I couldn't have put it better myself. Her entire world and "trade" was her looks and clothes. However she was a TRUE AMERICAN when it came to entertaining the troops and being a HUGE ANTI-WAR "WARRIOR" during WWII and received The Legion D'Honneur award from the DeGalle in thanks. I read the book by her daughter, Maria Riva and it was depressingly fascinating. Dietrichs' alcoholism and bed hopping really were the road to her destruction.
I saw Dietrich show twice when it was. It's hard to realize under that beautiful gown her legs are bleeding and swollen the pain must have been incredible and your daughter attest to that fact but she did it. It was amazing to see her live
Marlene und Ingrid Bergman gehören für mich zu den schönsten Frauen, die es je gab; diese Anmut; das Gesicht hier im Filmdokument von Marlene, die Schönheit ihrer Augen, sie schaut auch lieblich und verletzlich, ihre Bewegungen, ihr Gang, ihre gespannte Aufmerksamkeit, die Liebe zum Publikum, dieser Typ Frauen kommt nie wieder, diese Weiblichkeit, unglaublich, wie sie mich fesselt, ich hoffe, dass irgendwann die heutigen Frauen ein wenig so werden wie Marlene, aber sie war einzigartig, schade, dass es so wenig Ton- bzw. Bildaufnahmen von ihr vorhanden sind, wo sie "berlinert" und man ihren Charme direkt aufnehmen kann, aber Marlene hat sich ja nie einfach so ablichten bzw. aufnehmen lassen, sie regelte alles via Vertrag; so jedenfalls ist es überliefert. Sie ist ein lieber Engel im Himmel geworden, möge sie dort auch als alter Engel geachtet sein und Marlene, Du warst niemals alt, Du warst immer schön, vergiss nicht, jeder Mensch der alt werden darf, wird gebrechlich, aber nicht jeder ist darauf vorbereitet, ich verneige mich vor Dir.
She was already an old lady and this was her second career. The entrance curtain was a disaster, but what a great performer she was. I saw her much later than this and she was still great.
היתה אי פעם זמרת עם קול כמו של מרלן דיטריך? אני, מכל מקום, מימיי לא שמעתי. מרלן דיטריך האחת והיחידה, קול קסום, מופלא, הגשה מכשפת. דיטריך, התגלמות הנשיות.
My partner was a big fan of the Dietrich and in 1982 he wrote her a letter and she responded. I read that she typed her own letters and I remember thinking that it made my partner so happy that one of his childhood idols sent him a letter on July 2, 1982. My partner was also lucky in sending some flowers to Peggy Lee when she was at the Fairmont and she had two tickets at the box office so we could see her. He was lucky to be able to meet Ms. Lee after the show. I looked on from a distance and remember she was in a wheelchair but she did her show sitting down. My partner died in 1991 and when I think of these two ladies, I only think of the joy they gave him, how great is that.
BEAUTIFUL for both of you...memories...
Iam in my 60"s and I love the movies she did. I've her sing voice
Lovely story.
Very touching
@@danielhirschberg876 👍🏻👏🏻❕
I saw her in Chicago at The Palmer House and it was AMAZING. She was the perfect chanteuse and DIVA !!
Seeing her in person was one of the greatest thrills I ever had in a theatre.
Could you please recall where and what year it was? Would be nice to hear your little story ;)
If you were pretty back in your younger days then me going down on you would have been one of the greatest thrills you ever had in a theatre.
@@jasongleaner7475 creep
Thats nice Marilyn! Lucky you!
She was 62 in 1963, having been born in 1901. She looks beautiful here - the beauty and the glamor. She may have been born German, but she proved to be a patriotic naturalized American during WW2 by going overseas to entertain and boost the morale of American and Allied forces. Much admired!
Sipping a fine adult beverage and enjoying a fine cigar while I'm enjoying this fine and beautiful lady. Listening to her talk reminds me of my Mama.
I truly admire the strong German discipline that enabled her to go through the pain that she went through in order to look this fabulous.
The most elegant and glamorous woman ;...professional ....and groomed in every way ....they don't make them like that anymore .
Thank God we have these recordinds and her many screen performances to show future historians how REAL 🌟 shone !
Forever a Marlene Dietrich loyal fan ❤😊
Thank you so much for sharing this. I have never seen it before. I saw Marlene Dietrich perform live in Copenhagen several times when i was young over a span of almost ten years - and it was pure magic. An old recording like this of course can never do her (or anybody else) justice. But good to see never the less.
I remember this from TV at the age of 11 yrs! She was truly unique & I remember buying her record from the WWII era at a garage sale!
I saw her at one of her last concerts in Paris 1973. Unforgettable
Espace Cardin, lucky you ;)
Please, tell us more about your memory! What dress she used on your evening with beads + swan coat or petals plus sequins coat, maybe something during and after concert when she usually was giving autographs
@@savelysavely2483 а в ответ - тишина. Может человек не может ответить. Но воспоминания так важны, особенно прекрасные воспоминания
I had a conversation with Miss Dietrich before her Expo 67 concert in Montreal. She was still very beautiful, incredibly so, the stuff of legends and burningly intense in person, yet feminine at the same time. Her grandson was in my year at Carnegie Mellon University and had mixed feelings about his famous grandmother. The above performance was exactly the same as her Expo 67 version. Unforgetable.
Wow, you are lucky! There she presented her Broadway 1967 programme, read somwhere that in 67 she have sung Surabaya Johnny on her concerts (beside her trademark Johnny song) ,also Burt Bacharach was still her conducter at that time, in 1968, he stopped being her conductor, only few occasional perfomaces.
@@savelysavely2483 Yes, a smiling Bacharach was onstage with her and rumors about their relationship abound. I saw him backstage, as well, handsome, still youngish, elegantly dressed and smiling...at me, no less. He was the one who alerted her that I was waiting backstage to chat with her.
What did her grandson have to say about her? She was absolutely beautiful and I would have loved to see her beautiful face in person!
@@savelysavely2483 I briefly met him, as well. He was all smiles and elegantly dressed. I believe M D And B B were romantically involved.
@@matthewdarnell3535 She was everything you say...the stuff of legends. Her grandson was bemoaning her self absorption....that she cared more about herself than him.
How can anyone be so absolutely glamorous and yet so absolutely real at the same time?
DANK. Heeft er ooit opgestaan maar was verdwenen. Kostbaar. Historisch. Schoonheid.
‘n Andere tijd, mijn jeugd, wat ‘n Ster 💫.
After reading her daughter's book, it's amazing to watch one of these now and know how much she'd been bound, taped back, and sewed in so that she could look as she did.
Her daughter had the personality of a cotton ball
Marlene became a supreme concert performer. She honed her skills during WW2 entertaining GIs. She learned a great deal from Danny Thomas and other performers. Then she headlined and further enhanced her skills as a star attraction in Vegas. In the early 1960s, Burt Bacharach became her conductor and orchestrator. He updated all her arrangements and the orchestrations so they would support and highlight her voice. He did a sensational job for her.
So incredibly glamorous and talented!
wow
You're right, I love romantic music even though I'm a man, I guess that must be the case for you...
Sorry my name is Jean Hyves♥
Loved her since I was a kid and saw her live in 1975 loved her song Illusions
Wow! What city you saw her?
MAGNIFICENT woman and performer. The Most Glamorous of Them All!
There you have it, ladies and gentlemen, this is a legend and a diva, one of those who only comes once in a lifetime. Enjoy.
Wow I haven't seen this in yoears.....my absolute favorite-!!!!!!!!
Thank you for this moment of elegance 🦢
I saw her live in the early 1970s in Melbourne. Then she went to Sydney and fell off the stage and hurt her leg. It was a great concert, I was only young but really enjoyed it. My friend I went with took me around to the stage door after the show and when she came out she was hoisted onto a car's bonnet and signed autographs.
Once of her last concerts was in New York with a broken leg to earn money to send her two grandchildren to College. After her death , her ungrateful bitch of a daughter wrote an expose in which she didn’t even acknowledge that fact.
Schönstes Charisma, unvergänglich !!!!
No matter how small a movie scene Marlene had she stole the show, that's power!
una gran artista alemana con una fuerza de su personalidad en el escenario . Saludos desde Chiclayo-Perú ( Sudamérica)
The era of relentless glamour.
It gives a more spacial quality to our memory of the past.
Where Have All the Flowers Go always give me shivers.
Thank you for posting this. Recently watched "Stage Fright" on TCM. The way she was lit was amazing.
A great voice? Well, perhaps not.......bt THIS, boys and girls, is what can be accomplished with charisma, glamour, and sheer force of personality. Truly, authentically LEGENDARY.
She was a performer of songs, not necessarily the same as a singer. A lot of the magic was in how she put character into the songs. Where Have All The Flowers Gone, a spotlight concentrated in her head and shoulders, everything else in darkness, mesmerising and full of sorrow.
She never said about herself, she was a " great singer ". She was a " Diseuse" , its more like Sprechgesang. Her songs are not all, but often Storys. About Live, Love and so on. I like hear her voice and her Interprentation. But everyone can decide.
The one and definitely only Marlene... Now THAT is a performance.... bar none.💕
Marlene Dietrich… imortal… era de ouro de Hollywood!!! Atriz, cantora e lindíssima!!!
I loved the gowns of that era .
The Diva The Drama The Legend 🌟 a Great 🌟 Star of The golden Hollywood Classics 👍👍👍 Always in
Memorian ❤️
Csodálatos volt! MARLÉNE ÖRÖK ÉS HALHATATLAN! Nagyon jó lenne ezt a felvételt is digitalizálni restaurálni!
Many thanks! Never saw that in full
👏👏👏 merci pour ce document que nous n'avions jamais vu! 💕💕💕
I just love this woman
Fantastic!
Legendary!!! 👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼🎥❤️🎭
love it so much! thank you! she is irresistible...
I saw her concert in Brighton, England in the mid 60s. Same dress and fur. It was wonderful. I had a great balcony seat in a small theatre.
1965 or 1966 perhaps with William Blezard as conductor
You can only day: a Diva is a Diva.
Great artist.
DIVINA!Riposa in pace
The One and Only Marlene Dietrich
Стать,повадки и красота! Не говоря уж о таланте! Богиня😍❤️💐❤️💐❤️💐😍
Marlene's magnificent interpretation, in a topic that is still current, due to the continuous wars and the dead they cause and that is that they will never learn !!. Where were the flowers gone?
Brilliantyle!!! 💐❤️👋
A grande Marlene Dietrich! Uma salva de palmas para ela! Sua Majestade, o charme personalizado na figura festa mulher magnífica!
Fantastisch. Sie war die Größte.
The one the only ladies and gentlemen the chanteuse the diva miss Marlene Dietrich
Ah, the great chanteuses (?) of the past. Maybe not the best singers, but the emotion and commitment they out into each song more than made up for that.
She created the illusion of a sexy, beautiful woman who could act & sing. That is no mean achievement. She is up there with the great Divas of all time. RIP
She delivered a very powerful performance of "Where Have All the Flowers Gone". The song meant a lot to her because she had lived thru WWI in Germany and had personally witnessed the slaughter in WWII. As evident in this video, she had a tremendous stage presence.
Grandissima, indimenticabile Marlene Dietrich ❤️.
At the beginning, Marlene la vie en rose sang Piaf's world-famous song.
Two days before, on 10.10.1963, Edith Piaf died, who was very friendly with Marlene....
I just saw "witness for the prosecution "last night that nightclub scene was something else..
0:35 La vie en rose
4:40 Johnny
8:08 Honeysuckle rose
13:07 Where have all the flowers gone
19:06 Falling in love again
Danke 🤗
einfach nur super Klasse
My endless love ❤ Marlene 🥰😍🤩😘🙏👌🤞✌👍
THE MOST AMAZING WOMAN IN MOVIE HISTORY. HER ONE LOOK CAN KILL EVERY MAN. HOW MUCH CHARM, CHARISMA, NO ONE HAVE. THE ONLY ONE TO WHOM SHE GIVES TO MARIKA REKK
She was one of the best musical saw players of all time
Que se puede decir, sin ser redundante, de una artista soberbia en la que se conjugan a la perfección, atractivo arrebatador, personalidad carismática y talento. Ese astro fue Marlene Dietrich.
Las mejores piernas de Hollywood , que glamorosa , competencia directa de la Garbo , tan famosa como ella ... y además canta muy bien 😀
Jamás tuve competencia, Dietrich y Hepburn lo dijeron.
Figura máxima da canção. O glamour total. Sem rival. o protótipo.Imensa.única.uma lenda,.
Maravillosa Marlene
Gorgeous .the way she sings ❤❤❤❤❤
Her 1930s recording of Jonny is a classic
Wow 👏 2022 ❤🎂 🥳 🎉 🎈 🎊
🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹
El glamour hecho mujer. Impactante.
WOW . . . just wow.......
You have made a great job with sound! - officially released songs from that perfomamce on UA-cam sounds not good, cause it doesnt have echo and perfomamce perceives absolutely different because the absence of echo. Now I understand why sound was important for her as lights on stage
🙏♥️🕊🌹💋🇵🇹🔥🔥🔥🔥👑 love U Lena forever and always💖
By God, that exquisite diva
Marlene immortale !!!❤️❤️❤️
Уеs seeing her in person, it was either the late 60 s or very early 70 s I cannot remember the play or cabaret only it was a theatre in George Street Sydney I? I only remember the voice and Legs that I can't forget.
Звезда❤❤❤
Marlene Dietrich… obrigada pelo mini- concerto com a maior atriz, cantora de todos os tempos!
I have two of her LP's
The voice of great artist
At this time she was in such excruciating pain it was madness to still perform.
She was devoted to her fans.
Pain from what ?
@@lanelmuhammad legs and back (arthritis?)
She fell and broke a leg and went on to perform her last concert to earn the money to put her two grandchildren through college which her ungrateful b***h of a daughter never acknowledged!
Tres touchant madame
And (drum roll please) the Goddess reappears on my long dormant, well loved channel ❤️ 💋
She didn't had a classically beautiful voice....but what she could do with it was amazing.
She was diseuese. And she did terrifically
She had an awful voice and sang badly , sometimes flat. Nor was she a beauty. BUT she rose to create the illusion that she was and could. That is a greater achievement than a God given talent. She was a stupendous Diva and a terrific, charitable humanist.
Потрясающая женщина! Голубой Ангел!
Fantastic 🤌
Bravissima Marlene,,,unica,nel suo genere,👍👍👍👍
Thank you so much for posting this!❤️
Are there concerts with her dressed as a man? I've only seen rare footage about it
Für mich persönlich ist Marlene Dietrich die faszinierenste Künstlerin aller Zeiten, Ihre Berühmtheit im 20. Jahrhundert und bis heute ist unerreicht, ich wüsste nicht, wer wird sie jemals toppen, ihre Bühnenpräsenz war einfach umwerfend, es wirkt heute vielleicht altmodisch, weil man heutzutage über mehr Lichteffekte verfügt. Das alles hatte Marlene Dietrich nicht nötig....
Vielleicht Shirley Bassey
🎉🎉🎉SUPER
Marlene Dietrich once said:
"Darling, the legs aren't beautiful, I just know what to do with them".
The same is true of her singing and acting. She wasn't great at either, but she was a star nevertheless. She dressed for the image and she became what those who saw her movies or heard her sing wanted her to be. What she offered was artifice. What she was, was magnificent.
I couldn't have put it better myself. Her entire world and "trade" was her looks and clothes. However she was a TRUE AMERICAN when it came to entertaining the troops and being a HUGE ANTI-WAR "WARRIOR" during WWII and received The Legion D'Honneur award from the DeGalle in thanks. I read the book by her daughter, Maria Riva and it was depressingly fascinating. Dietrichs' alcoholism and bed hopping really were the road to her destruction.
MARVELOUS!!!!
I saw Dietrich show twice when it was. It's hard to realize under that beautiful gown her legs are bleeding and swollen the pain must have been incredible and your daughter attest to that fact but she did it. It was amazing to see her live
Marlene und Ingrid Bergman gehören für mich zu den schönsten Frauen, die es je gab; diese Anmut; das Gesicht hier im Filmdokument von Marlene, die Schönheit ihrer Augen, sie schaut auch lieblich und verletzlich, ihre Bewegungen, ihr Gang, ihre gespannte Aufmerksamkeit, die Liebe zum Publikum, dieser Typ Frauen kommt nie wieder, diese Weiblichkeit, unglaublich, wie sie mich fesselt, ich hoffe, dass irgendwann die heutigen Frauen ein wenig so werden wie Marlene, aber sie war einzigartig, schade, dass es so wenig Ton- bzw. Bildaufnahmen von ihr vorhanden sind, wo sie "berlinert" und man ihren Charme direkt aufnehmen kann, aber Marlene hat sich ja nie einfach so ablichten bzw. aufnehmen lassen, sie regelte alles via Vertrag; so jedenfalls ist es überliefert. Sie ist ein lieber Engel im Himmel geworden, möge sie dort auch als alter Engel geachtet sein und Marlene, Du warst niemals alt, Du warst immer schön, vergiss nicht, jeder Mensch der alt werden darf, wird gebrechlich, aber nicht jeder ist darauf vorbereitet, ich verneige mich vor Dir.
She was already an old lady and this was her second career. The entrance curtain was a disaster, but what a great performer she was. I saw her much later than this and she was still great.
Here not quite age 62.
@@JudgeJulieLit Well, in that case she looks like crap!!! lol
@@embassyofbellerose8344 It's old for a showgirl.
Deusa!
היתה אי פעם זמרת עם קול כמו של מרלן דיטריך? אני, מכל מקום, מימיי לא שמעתי. מרלן דיטריך האחת והיחידה, קול קסום, מופלא, הגשה מכשפת. דיטריך, התגלמות הנשיות.
היא היתה אנטי נאצי ואוהבת יהודים. הצילה משפחה יהודית והופיע בארץ. נתנה צדקה. לדעתי היתה מצדיקי אומות העולם.
❤️❤️❤️
🌹🌹🌹
A lady for ever
Che potenza di personalità? Cantare in francese,.? ??brava coraggioso
💛 💙 ❤️
Note to Madonna... this is how a sex symbol continues to work and entertain as she ages.
💖❤️
❤❤❤super
❤