Now that is scary! Marilyn Manson goes make-up free on night out with girlfriend



He's known for his controversial performances and dramatic Goth make-up.

But hellraiser Marilyn Manson looked almost unrecognisable as he went on a night out with his girlfriend, minus his face paint.

The American rocker, 40, dressed completely in black as he and partner Evan Rachel Wood, 22, paid a visit to Le Zenith concert halls in Paris yesterday.



Marilyn Manson looked almost unrecognisable when he stepped out in Paris yesterday with no make-up while (left) the rocker is painted up to the max

They looked relaxed as they left the venue and the only make-up Manson had on was a smudge of black eye liner.

But there was not a hint of his dramatic white-painted face and dark red lips.



Manson has just settled a lawsuit filed against him by one of his former Spooky Kids band members.

But in a new twist in the case, the agreement has been delayed by an argument over legal fees.



He was joined by girlfriend Evan Rachel Wood and the pair paid a visit to Le Zenith concert halls in the French capital



Legal row: Manson's former bandmate Stephen Bier

Manson's ex-keyboardist Stephen Bier, formerly known by his stage name Madonna Wayne Gacy and sometimes referred to as Pogo, filed a breach of contract lawsuit in Los Angeles against the rocker in 2007.



He claimed Manson used money from their former band partnership to buy personal luxuries, such as ex-wife Dita Von Teese's $150,000 engagement ring and Nazi paraphernalia.



A settlement was reached on December 11, but the agreement hit an obstacle when law firm Grodsky & Olecki, also a defendant in the suit, filed a lien for unpaid legal fees from 2007 when they successfully persuaded a judge to drop all of Bier's claims.



According to Southern California Public Radio, the firm wants to be paid from the settlement money. Their lien now puts a complete resolution of the case on hold.



Meanwhile, Manson took to his MySpace account to rant about the matter, saying: 'I want to make clear that, aside from the wasted legal fees, in no way did I pay off the person that stood behind a keyboard pretending to play music other artists in this band wrote.'