On what would have been her 100th birthday, Marilyn Monroe’s personal effects are being sold off in a British auction that feels more like a wake than a celebration. The lots include her signature red lipstick, the white halter dress from The Seven Year Itch, and a powder compact still dusted with her DNA. But for every bidder hoping to own a piece of Hollywood history, there are a dozen of us left wondering: what does it mean to auction off a ghost?
The sale, hosted by a London auction house, has drawn crowds of collectors, fans, and the morbidly curious. The prices are astronomical, as expected. But as the gavel falls on each item, one can’t help but feel the cultural shift: we are no longer content to admire icons from afar. We must own them. We must touch the fabric that touched her skin. This is the human cost of celebrity worship. We reduce a complex woman to a collection of objects.
Monroe herself was a master of reinvention, but she was also a victim of the very system that now profits from her memory. The auction is a stark reminder that in our society, even the dead cannot escape commodification. The money raised will go to a charity, they say. But at what emotional price? The woman who once said ‘I don’t know who invented high heels, but all women owe him a lot’ would likely have a wry comment about the price of her stilettos now.
Yet, there is a quiet rebellion in the crowd. Not just the bidders, but the onlookers who have come to witness history. They remember her not as a brand, but as a girl from LA who dreamed of being something more. Perhaps that’s the real story here: not the hammer price, but the collective memory of a woman who defined an era. As the auctioneer calls for the next lot, I think of the thousands of women who saw themselves in her vulnerability. That cannot be sold.
The sale continues, but the real treasure is the shared human experience of a life that flickered too briefly. We are left with whispers of a legend, and a question: what do we truly owe our icons?










