Elizabeth Lee Miller (1907-1977) was a model, photographer, war correspondent, mother, inspiration and empathetic campaigner for women's rights. As the mood of war grows more and more in Europe, she gets a job in the editorial office of London's "Vogue" magazine. Already with her first photographs, the girl proves that she is really talented, but her true abilities will be revealed when Li applies for accreditation for a trip to the front. Soon, Li starts sending pictures of people crippled by war to the editorial office, telling cruel stories.
It is to this woman that the first recorded use of napalm on the front line in history belongs. Her lens captured the 1941 Battle of Britain, the horrors perpetrated by the Nazis at Buchenwald and Dachau concentration camps. And it was she in 1945. on April 30, together with Life magazine correspondent David Sherman, visited Hitler's apartment in Munich. On the same day that the Führer killed himself in the Berlin bunker, an iconic photo was taken in his Munich apartment: a fully equipped Lee Miller lying in Hitler's bathtub.