Margaretha Gertruida Zelle (Leeuwarden, Netherlands, August 7, 1876 – Vincennes, France, October 15, 1917) known as Mata Hari, a Malay word meaning "Sun", but literally translated means "Eye of the day", lived as a famous exotic dancer, she invented and lived out different personalities to impress those around her and to survive a violent past and frequent the Parisian social scene.
Mata Hari has become a beauty and fashion icon appreciated and desired by all. After years of success and full-house shows, when success began to fade, Mata Hari was preparing to return to the stage with a show about a priest who fell in love with a goddess, when the first world war broke out and boycotted the your plans.
Her frequent travels around Europe put her under the scrutiny of the authorities and suspicions arise about the possibility that she is a spy. The German and French war archives keep Mata Hari's personal documents, now made public, which give us an idea of her personality, her contacts and the seventeen interrogations that led to her execution before the French platoon as a spy with the codename H- 21.
The real facts of her passionate and mysterious life, guided by glamour, alone would be enough to inspire the various film adaptations, documentaries and biographies that have been produced, dispensing with every part of the legend.
George Fitzmaurice's Mata Hari (1931) a fictionalized movie of the life of Mata Hari with Greta Garbo |
Josef von Sternberg's Dishonored (1932) with Marlene Dietrich playing the role of a spy inspired on Mata Hari |
Jean-Louis Richard's Mata Hari, agent H21(1964) with Jeanne Moureau |
From Tom Tierney's Greta Garbo: paper dolls in full color, 1985 | |
Greta Garbo Paper Dolls (2009) by Norma Lu Meehan with costumes from film Mata Hari |
See you soon!
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