Marlene Dietrich MBTI Personality Type
Personality
What personality type is Marlene Dietrich? Marlene Dietrich is an ENTJ personality type in MBTI, 3w4 - sx/sp - 386 in Enneagram, RCOEI in Big 5, SLE in Socionics.
I don't understand why people think Fe over Fi. At the end of the 30s, her career was not in a good moment since her last movies (The garden of Allah, Desire, Angel) had not done very well, and for that reason, she had been included in the list of box office poison, however, when some Nazi soldiers came to her house and offered to revive her career if she would go with them back to Germany and support the Nazis, she refused because the Nazi ideology and her country was not aligned with her ideology and applied for US citizenship shortly thereafter. A year later, in 1939, the Second World War began and she openly expressed her support for the French and British troops from the beginning, later when the United States joined the war, she offered her services to the troops by singing and doing acts to them, then moving to Germany near the war zone to cheer them up even though she was advised not to as she was a persona non grata in Germany but she did as it seemed the right thing to do even though doing so was risking her life. At the end of the war, she contacted his family and stopped talking to his sister since she had supported the Nazis. I think she was an xxTJ.
Biography
Marie Magdalene "Marlene" Dietrich (27 December 1901 – 6 May 1992) was a German and American actress and singer whose career spanned from the 1910s to the 1980s. In 1920s Berlin, Dietrich performed on the stage and in silent films. Her performance as Lola-Lola in Josef von Sternberg's The Blue Angel (1930) brought her international acclaim and a contract with Paramount Pictures. She starred in many Hollywood films, including six iconic roles directed by Sternberg: Morocco (1930) (her only Academy Award nomination), Dishonored (1931), Shanghai Express and Blonde Venus (both 1932), The Scarlet Empress (1934) and The Devil Is a Woman (1935), Desire (1936) and Destry Rides Again (1939). She successfully traded on her glamorous persona and exotic looks, and became one of the era's highest-paid actresses. Throughout World War II she was a high-profile entertainer in the United States.
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