Marilyn Monroe dresses, personal photos going up for auction

This combination photo shows actress Marilyn Monroe posing over the updraft of a New York subway grate while filming "The Seven Year Itch" New York, left, and the dress she is wearing on a mannequin. The dress, created by Bill Travilla, is one of several items that will be up for auction in October 2018. (AP)

Dresses that belonged to Marilyn Monroe along with an autographed photo thanking the executive who launched her Hollywood career will go on display before heading to auction.

Auction house Profiles in History announced Wednesday that the items will be exhibited in Beverly Hills starting Aug. 18. An auction will follow in late October.

They include a photograph that Monroe signed to 20th Century Fox executive Ben Lyon that reads: "Dear Ben, You found me, named me and believed in me when no one else did. My thanks and love forever. Marilyn"

This combination photo of images released by Profiles in History shows costumes worn by actress Marilyn Monroe in "Gentlemen Prefer Blondes," left, and "The Seven Year Itch," that are up for auction in October 2018. (AP)

Born Norma Jeane Mortenson, Monroe changed her name after coming to Hollywood. She used her mother's maiden name Monroe, while Lyon provided the "Marilyn."

The photo was taken during the filming of "The Seven Year Itch," the 1955 movie that provided history's lasting image of Monroe, standing over a subway grate and holding down her white dress.

A version of the dress, made by the original designer Bill Travilla for Monroe for tours and exhibits, is also among the items up for sale, along with her hand-annotated script for the film.

In this Sept. 9, 1954 file photo, Marilyn Monroe poses over the updraft of a New York subway grate while filming "The Seven Year Itch" New York. The dress, created by Bill Travilla, is one of several items that will be up for auction in October 2018. (AP)

Also in the auction are Monroe's personal childhood photographs 15 costumes she wore in films, including dresses from "Gentlemen Prefer Blondes" and "How to Marry a Millionaire."

The exhibit at The Paley Center for Media will also feature large format photographs of Monroe by fashion photographer Milton H. Greene, who was a friend of the actress.