![]() In the event you add or replace a credit card, we may also verify such new or replacement credit card. Your card issuer will credit your card balance within thirty (30) days from the date of the refund. After the card is verified, we will immediately refund the card. To verify your card, we will charge $0.01 to it. We (and/or our third-party payment processor) may verify credit card information in order to register. Failure to do so may inhibit your ability to register. Copies of such documents may be submitted in person, via facsimile 31 or email. ![]() For verification purposes, Bidders who have not participated in an Auction are required to submit a copy of their (A) official government-issued identification (driver’s license / passport / state identification card) and (B) credit card. By submitting your information, you consent to have your personal information processed by Julien’s Auctions in the United States in accordance with our Privacy Policy. ![]() You hereby represent that all information you submit in connection with registration is truthful and accurate. To register, Bidders are required to submit their name, physical address, telephone number, email address, and credit card information. Each Auction requires a separate registration Bidders with a Member Account may register for Auctions via their account. Online Bidders will submit a completed electronic form through the Service at, where they also may establish a Member Account. Any person registering to Bid by phone, absentee, or in person will complete a Bidder Registration Form. In order to participate in an Auction, registration is required for all persons wishing to Bid (“Bidders”). Julien’s Auctions maintains a bond on file with the California Secretary of State as required by California Civil Code §1812.600. All Auctions conducted by Julien’s Auctions, and these Auction Terms and Conditions, are governed by the laws of the State of California. Certain Auctions on the Service may also be contemporaneously conducted live in-person, while other Auctions may be exclusively conducted on the Service. The Service will provide the pertinent information for each Auction, including date, start of auction, each Lot to be sold, and location. Lots are provided by the party that wishes us to sell property on their behalf (each such party a “Consignor”). By completing an online Bidder Registration Form and establishing a Member Account on the Service, you agree that you have read, understood, and agree to be bound by the Terms of Use and these Auction Terms and Conditions.Įach Auction conducted on the Service is of a designated set of items (each a “Lot”) on a designated date or dates. Capitalized terms not defined in these Julien’s Live Auction Terms and Conditions have the meanings set forth in our Terms of Use. Our Terms of Use are incorporated here by reference. Gladys lived primarily in Florida until her death at 82 in 1984.The following terms are supplemental to our Terms of Use and apply to Auctions conducted on the Service and offline by Julien. Over the years, the two of them did slowly develop a relationship.” Monroe was 36 when she committed suicide in 1962 in her will she left her mother $5,000 a year from a $100,000 trust fund. ![]() Randy Taraborrelli, who wrote The Secret Life of Marilyn Monroe, upon which a Lifetime miniseries (premiering May 30) is based: “The poor woman was telling people she was Marilyn Monroe’s mother, and no one believed her. In fact, though Gladys had been in and out of mental hospitals with bipolar disorder, by then she had begun working in an Eagle Rock nursing home. (This led to five women claiming to be her mother.) However, a Hearst gossip columnist revealed that her mother, Gladys Pearl Baker (nee Monroe), an RKO film cutter who’d had “a nervous breakdown,” was living in a state mental hospital in Norwalk, Calif. She had told the press she was an orphan raised in foster homes and that she had never known her parents. THR described her as a “delight for several reasons only one of which is a polished comedy portrayal.” But that same year also brought a revelation that shook Monroe’s image as a happy blonde bombshell. At 26, after a series of B movies, she finally landed a featured role in Howard Hawks‘ Monkey Business. For Marilyn Monroe, 1952 was a career-changing year. ![]()
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