Did Kim Kardashian Really Damage Marilyn’s Dress?

Last month, Kim Kardashian donned Marilyn Monroe’s iconic “Happy Birthday Mr. President” dress and ascended the front steps of the Metropolitan Museum of Art to the Met Gala. The red carpet fashion choice sparked outrage among museum conservators who warned that the historic dress would not go unscathed. And this week, pictures posted on Instagram suggested that they were right. Images depicting what appear to be tears and missing sequins on the dress went viral, enraging the Internet.

In response to the photos, however, a new TikTok video appears to show that the dress may have been damaged before Kardashian even put it on.

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Post by @marilynmonroecollection (screenshot Valentina Di Liscia/Hyperallergic)

The photos showing apparent damage were shared on June 13 by @marilynmonroecollection, an Instagram account run by Scott Fortner, a superfan who claims to own the largest private collection of Marilyn Monroe’s personal and archival objects. They were taken by Fortner’s friend ChadMichael Morrisette, a Los Angeles-based mannequin maker and another Marilyn enthusiast who told Hyperallergic he captured the close-up of the dress on display at Ripley’s Believe It or Not’s Hollywood location on June 12. Morrisette told Hyperallergic that he was familiar with the dress because he set up the display mannequin when it was auctioned at Julien’s in 2016.

For comparison, Fortner also posted a video of the undamaged dress, stating that it was taken at the 2016 auction where it sold for a record-breaking $4.8 million to Ripley’s Believe It or Not. Ripley’s loaned the dress to Kardashian for the Met Gala this year, noting that Kardashian would change into a replica after her red carpet appearance.

But a TikTok video posted on June 14 attempts to clear the celebrity’s name. Using a screenshot from a video of Kardashian changing into the dress posted by Ripley’s on May 2, the 32-second TikTok appears to show that the dress was ripped and missing sequins before she wore it.

“The rhinestones are missing, the clamps are all messed up, so how do we know the dress didn’t look like this when clamped or closed?” asked TikTok user @gaymanwithaspraytan, referencing the photos posted by the Marilyn Monroe Collection on Instagram, which portray the dress clamped shut.

If both the Marilyn Monroe Collection photographs and the Ripley’s video are accurate representations, it would suggest that the dress sustained damage in the time between when Ripley’s purchased it and when it was loaned to Kardashian.

Ripley’s has remained conspicuously silent amid the controversy, failing to respond to Hyperallergic’s multiple requests for comment. The company has not issued a public statement nor addressed the accusations on its social media accounts, despite a mounting number of comments and posts from angry users.

Whether or not the wear and tear signs on the dress are casualties of Kardashian’s outing, Morrisette told Hyperallergic that her wearing it at all was not only an act of disrespect to Marilyn Monroe but a destruction of American history.

“It’s like she ripped the constitution in half and walked out,” Morrisette said.

The dress is indeed an iconic fragment of Americana. Monroe wore it in 1962 when she sang a breathy rendition of “Happy Birthday” to President John F. Kennedy at Madison Square Garden. She died shortly after. The performance, and its seeming affirmation that the movie star and the president did in fact have an affair, went down in pop culture history. So did the dress, a rhinestone- and sequin-adorned silk gown created by esteemed Hollywood costume designer Jean Louis and based on a sketch by Bob Mackie — himself a legendary designer for old Hollywood stars who went on to become the mastermind behind the most iconic outfits worn by Cher, Madonna, and Elton John.

No one wore the dress after Monroe, and last month, Mackie called loaning the dress to Kardashian a “big mistake.” He wasn’t the only one: Museum conservators voiced concerns and criticized Ripley’s for breaking standard museum practice (although Ripley’s Believe It or Not is not an accredited institution).

Some pointed to the Costume Society of America’s 1986 resolution banning clothes accessioned into collections from being worn. The Fashion Institute of Design & Merchandising’s museum curator Kevin Jones curator told the Los Angeles Times that “whenever you move, something is giving way, even if you can’t see it.”

The dress is back on display at Ripley’s in Hollywood, but for now, two viral social media posts offer opposing stories about what happened to the dress during its red carpet appearance.

Source: Hyperallergic.com

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