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Marilyn Monroe

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Marilyn Monroe (1 June19265 August1962) was a twentieth-century movie star, sex symbol and pop icon. Known for her comedic skills and remarkable screen presence, many now consider her a legendary screen actress.

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Marilyn Monroe

Early life

Marilyn Monroe was born on June 1, 1926 in the charity ward of the Los Angeles County Hospital. Her registered name was Norma Jeane Mortenson, but her grandmother, Della Monroe Grainger, later had her baptized as Norma Jeane Baker. For a while most biographers believed her biological father was most likely Charles Stanley Gifford, a salesman for the studio where Monroe's mother, the late Gladys Pearl Monroe Baker Eley, worked as a film-cutter, but more now accept that he was in fact the man listed on her birth certificate, Norwegian-born Martin Edward Mortenson.

Gladys was unable to persuade her mother Della to look after the baby Marilyn, so Marilyn was placed with foster parents Albert and Ida Bolender of Hawthorne, California, southwest of Los Angeles, where she lived until she was seven years old. In her autobiography My Story, Monroe states she thought Albert and Ida were her biological parents until one day, rather rudely, Ida corrected her. Monroe's book, however, has not been considered a reliable source as it was ghostwritten by Ben Hecht and used as a publicity vehicle. After Monroe's death, Ida claimed that she and Albert had considered adopting her, for which they would have needed her mother Gladys' consent.

Again according to My Story, Gladys visited Norma Jeane every Saturday, but never smiled, hugged or kissed her. At some point, Gladys announced that she had bought a house for herself and her daughter, but a few months after they moved in, she suffered a mental breakdown. Marilyn recalled Gladys "screaming and laughing" as she was forcibly removed to the State Mental Hospital in Norwalk, California, the same hospital where her mother Della had died in August 1927. Gladys' father, Otis, had also died in a mental hospital (near San Bernardino, California) as a result of syphilis.

Consequently Norma Jeane was declared a ward of the state and Gladys' best friend, Grace McKee (later Goddard) became her guardian. After Grace married in 1935, Norma Jeane was sent to the Los Angeles orphanage and then to a long succession of foster homes, where allegedly she was subjected to abuse and neglect. There is little evidence, however, that she lived in as many foster homes as has sometimes been claimed and Monroe herself is known to have given exaggerated information about her childhood during interviews.

In September 1941, Marilyn was reunited with her mother. The Goddard family, however, were moving to the East Coast and felt it would be best if the fifteen-year old Norma Jeane were to marry, as otherwise she would have to return to the orphanage. She had been introduced to a neighbor's son, James Dougherty, who would become her first husband.

Fame

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Cover of the first issue of Playboy

While her husband was away fighting in the Second World War, the young Norma Jeane began work in a factory, where she was found by photographer David Conover. He immediately saw her potential as a model and she was soon signed by The Blue Book modelling agency. She became one of their most successful models, appearing on hundreds of magazine covers. In 1946 she came to the attention of talent scout Ben Lyon who arranged a screen test for her with 20th Century Fox. She passed and was offered a standard six-month contract with a starting salary of $75 per week. She was given the name Marilyn after the actress Marilyn Miller and suggested her mother's maiden name Monroe as her surname. Thus the twenty-year old Norma Jeane Baker became "Marilyn Monroe".

During her first six months at 20th Century Fox, Monroe was given no acting work but instead learned about hair, make-up, costumes, acting and lighting. After six months Fox decided to renew her contract and in the following six months she was given minor roles in two movies, Scudda Hoo! Scudda Hay! and Dangerous Years, both released in 1947. Both films failed at the box office and Fox decided not to renew her contract again. Monroe returned to modelling work and began to network and make contacts in Hollywood. In 1948 a six-month stint at Columbia Pictures saw her star in one movie, Ladies of the Chorus, but it was not a success and she was dropped. She then met one of Hollywood's top agents, Johnny Hyde, who had Fox re-sign her after MGM had turned her down. Although Fox vice-president Darryl F. Zanuck was not convinced of Monroe's star potential, she began to make her mark with performances in films such as All About Eve and The Asphalt Jungle.

Monroe played her first role as a leading lady in Don't Bother To Knock, portraying a deranged babysitter who, in a rage, attacks the little girl in her care. Although it received mixed reviews, Monroe later claimed it to be one of her favorite performances. Her performance in Niagara (1953), however, left little doubt about her on-screen sex appeal. It was around this time that nude photos of Monroe began to surface, taken by Tom Kelley when she had been struggling for work. Prints were bought by Hugh Hefner and in December 1953 appeared in the first edition of his new magazine, Playboy. To a journalist asking what she had on during the photoshoot, she famously replied: "The radio!" To a journalist asking what she wore in bed, she famously replied: "Chanel No. 5!"

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Marilyn with her co-stars of How To Marry A Millionaire

Gentlemen Prefer Blondes and How to Marry a Millionaire, both released in 1953, catapulted Monroe into A-list status and she quickly became the world's biggest movie star. Her next two films, River of No Return and There's No Business Like Show Business were not as successful and she began to tire of the "dumb blonde" roles that Zanuck assigned her. After completing work on The Seven Year Itch in 1954, she broke her contract and fled Hollywood to study acting at The Actors Studio in New York. Fox would not accede on her new contract demands and insisted she return to start work on productions she considered inappropriate, such as Heller In Pink Tights and How To Be Very, Very Popular. However, The Seven Year Itch raced to the top of the summer 1955 box office takings and other Fox starlets Jayne Mansfield and Sheree North were not as well-received, so Zanuck agreed to draw up a new contract with Monroe and she returned to Hollywood.

The first film to be made under her new contract was Bus Stop, directed by Joshua Logan. Critics immediately noted a change in Monroe's acting and generally praised her performance as Cherie, a saloon bar singer who falls in love with a cowboy. Monroe, however, was devastated to find that Fox had cut many of what she thought were her best scenes and believed it cost her the chance of an Academy Award and wider critical acclaim.

Monroe had formed her own production company with photographer Milton H. Greene, Marilyn Monroe Productions, which released its first film The Prince and the Showgirl in 1957. As well as producing the film, she starred opposite the acclaimed British actor Laurence Olivier, who directed it. Unfortunately their relationship did not work well and Monroe's reputation in the film industry for being difficult only grew. Despite this setback, in 1959 she scored another hit starring alongside Tony Curtis and Jack Lemmon in Billy Wilder's comedy Some Like It Hot, a film now consistently rated as one of the best comedy films ever made.

By 1961, Monroe's third husband, the playwright Arthur Miller, had written and worked on what became her and her co-star Clark Gable's last completed film, The Misfits. She made her last significant public appearance in May 1962, singing Happy Birthday, Mr. President at a televised birthday party for President John F. Kennedy. Her erratic attendance for the shooting of Something's Got to Give led Fox to fire her soon afterwards, but a clause in co-star Dean Martin's contract gave him approval over the film's leading lady, so, as he was unwilling to work with anyone else, Monroe was rehired.

Before shooting was completed, however, Monroe was found dead in her Los Angeles home, on the morning of August 5, 1962. Her death, officially found to be suicide by drug overdose, has been the subject of many conspiracy theories, but these have done little to dent her iconic status as an archetypal sex symbol and movie star.

Marriages

James Dougherty

Aged sixteen, Monroe married James Dougherty on June 19, 1942. In the books The Secret Happiness of Marilyn Monroe and To Norma Jeane With Love, Jimmie, Dougherty claimed that he and Monroe were in love and would have lived happily ever after had dreams of stardom not lured her away. Monroe, however, always maintained that the marriage was one of convenience foisted upon them by her foster mother Grace Goddard.

In the 2004 documentary Marilyn's Man, Dougherty made three significant claims: that it was he who had invented the "Marilyn Monroe" persona; that Fox had forced her to divorce him; and that she had always yearned to return to him. To date, however, no evidence to support these claims has been published, nor any evidence that Monroe and Dougherty remained in touch after their divorce. Monroe was reportedly furious when Dougherty gave an interview to the fan magazine Photoplay in 1953 and claimed that she had threatened to jump off the Santa Monica Pier if he ever left her. Later he later appeared as a contestant on the gameshow To Tell the Truth as "Marilyn Monroe's real first husband".

Dougherty's own actions did not support his claims of being Monroe's Svengali, nor her only true love. He remarried only a few months after Monroe divorced him; when informed of her death, the New York Times reported that he had simply said "I'm sorry" and continued his LAPD patrol; and he did not attend her funeral. In an interview for A&E, Dougherty admitted that his mother had been approached by Grace Goddard and afterward had asked him if he'd be willing to marry Norma Jeane to prevent her from being sent to an orphanage.

James Dougherty remained to married to his third wife until her death in 2003. He lived in Maine until his own death from complications due to leukemia on August 15, 2005.

Joe DiMaggio

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Monroe and Joe DiMaggio on their wedding day

In 1951 the baseball star Joe DiMaggio saw a picture of Monroe with two Chicago White Sox players, but waited until his retirement from baseball before asking the man who arranged the picture to set up a date. At first Monroe did not want to see him, fearing a stereotypical jock, but after a two-year courtship they eloped and married at San Francisco's City Hall on January 14, 1954.

Unfortunately their union would quickly prove to be undermined by DiMaggio's jealousy and Monroe's casual infidelity. Although they both claimed to want to settle down, Monroe still craved fame and DiMaggio become very protective. After filming the notorious skirt-blowing scene in The Seven Year Itch, for example, director Billy Wilder recalled the "look of death" on DiMaggio's face as he watched alongside fans and extras. Furthermore, DiMaggio's biographer Richard Ben Cramer claims that DiMaggio was so "disgusted" by Monroe's "sloppiness" and poor hygiene that he began to abuse her. On October 27, 1954, 274 days after their marriage, Monroe obtained a divorce from DiMaggio on the grounds of mental cruelty.

Arthur Miller

On June 29, 1956, Monroe married the playwright Arthur Miller, whom she had first met in 1951, in a civil ceremony. A Jewish ceremony followed two days later, prior to which Monroe had converted to Judaism. After she had finished shooting The Prince and the Showgirl, Monroe and Miller returned to the States from England and discovered she was pregnant. However, Monroe suffered from endometriosis and the pregnancy was found to be ectopic, so it was aborted in order to save her life. A subsequent pregnancy ended in miscarriage.

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Monroe and Arthur Miller on the set of The Misfits

By 1958, Monroe was the couple's main breadwinner. Not only did she pay alimony to Miller's first wife but Miller reportedly charged her production company for buying and shipping a Jaguar car to the United States. His script for the film The Misfits was meant to be a Valentine gift, but by the time filming started in 1960 their marriage was broken beyond repair. A Mexican divorce was granted on January 24, 1961 and on February 17 Miller married the German-born Inge Morath, one of the Magnum photographers recording the making of The Misfits.

As her marriage to Miller was ending, Joe DiMaggio re-entered Monroe's life. A few days after her divorce from Miller, Monroe's psychiatrist arranged for her to be admitted to the Payne Whitney Psychiatric Clinic in Manhattan, where she was reportedly placed in the ward for the most seriously disturbed. Six days later DiMaggio managed to have her discharged and she joined him in Florida. Their "just good friends" claims did not stop rumors of remarriage and during the 1960 Academy Awards telecast entertainer Bob Hope even dedicated Best Song nominee The Second Time Around to them. According to DiMaggio biographer Maury Allen, on August 1, 1962 DiMaggio quit his job with a military post exchange to return to California and ask Monroe to remarry him.

Death and aftermath

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Marilyn Monroe on the set of her last unfinished film, Something's Got to Give

Monroe was found dead in the bedroom of her Brentwood, California home on August 5, 1962, by her live-in housekeeper Mrs. Eunice Murray. She was thirty-six. Her death was apparently caused by an overdose of barbiturates, although as with the assassination of President John F. Kennedy, several theories have sprung up around the circumstances. Most try to make a case for murder due to her connection with the Kennedy family (John F. Kennedy in particular) and there has also been speculation about the relationship between Mrs. Murray, Monroe's psychiatrist Dr. Ralph Greenson – who hired Mrs. Murray – and Monroe's personal publicist, Pat Newcomb, who joined the Kennedy administration a few months after Monroe's death.

A formal reinvestigation in 1982 by the Los Angeles County District Attorney uncovered no evidence of foul play in Monroe's death. Monroe's body was autopsied by County coroner Dr. Thomas Noguchi, who, in his memoir Coroner, states that it was "highly likely" that Monroe's death was suicide. He concedes, however, that no trace of the barbiturates Monroe purportedly took were found in her stomach or intestines. This has led some theorists to suggest that Monroe had been rendered unconscious (for instance via chloral hydrate) and the overdose administered by intravenous injection, or, more likely, by rectal suppository.

On August 5, 2005 the Los Angeles Times published an account of Monroe's death by former Los Angeles County prosecutor John W. Miner, who had been present at Monroe's autopsy. It also published his claim that notes he had taken from tapes supposedly recorded by Monroe for Dr. Greenson shortly before her death indicated that she was not suicidal. The tapes themselves, however, remain lost or destroyed, so there would seem to be no way to verify Miner's story.

Monroe's body was claimed by DiMaggio and he arranged her funeral. According to Monroe's half-sister, Berniece Baker Miracle, DiMaggio took over and she allowed him to do so. For twenty years he had a dozen red roses delivered to Monroe's crypt three times a week. Unlike other men who had known her (or had claimed to have known her) intimately, the highly-private DiMaggio never spoke publicly about Monroe nor wrote a book about his life with her. He died on March 8, 1999.

Gladys, Monroe's biological mother, had been diagnosed as a schizophrenic and between periods in mental hospitals had married her last husband, John Stewart Eley. He died in 1952. In the early 1970s she walked out of a sanitorium and flew to Florida, where Berniece Miracle met her at the airport. She died on March 11, 1984 at a Florida nursing home, refusing to the end to discuss either Norma Jeane or Marilyn Monroe.

Monroe is interred in a crypt at Westwood Village Memorial Park Cemetery in Los Angeles, the cemetary where her foster mother Grace Goddard's aunt was buried and where Monroe in turn had arranged for Grace to be buried.

Did you know...?

  • The town of Haugesund, Norway, birthplace of Monroe's probable biological father Martin Edward Mortenson, has a lifesize statue of Marilyn Monroe.
  • Childhood pictures show that Marilyn was born a blonde, but her hair turned "mousy" brown as she grew up. She dyed her hair several different shades of blonde as an adult.
  • The 1973 song Candle in the Wind, written by Bernie Taupin and performed by Elton John, was originally about Monroe. In 1997 Elton John revised the lyrics before performing the song at Diana, Princess of Wales' funeral.
  • James Cunningham outlined Monroe's life in his 1974 song Norma Jean Wants To Be A Movie Star.
  • Unlikely Monroe fans included Albert Einstein, Ayn Rand, Jean-Paul Sartre, Edith Sitwell and (perhaps less unlikely) Vladimir Nabokov.
  • A piercing made on the upper lip in the same place as Monroe's beauty mark is known as a "Monroe" piercing.
  • Actor Colin Farrell has admitted that as a child he would put sweets under his pillow for Monroe when she came down to visit him from heaven.
  • When Prince Rainier III of Monaco was looking for a famous wife to marry, Monroe was suggested. However, since he was a devout Catholic, the oft-married, non-Catholic and somewhat scandalous Monroe could not have been a possibility. Instead, Rainier married Grace Kelly.
  • Monroe's features are copyrighted to her estate and are not allowed to be reproduced exactly.
  • Monroe is rumored to have had as many as eight abortions during her short lifetime.
  • Monroe had a mild stutter, which was most severe during her teens. She commented in an interview, "I stuttered... Later on, in my teens, when I was at Van Nuys High School, they elected me secretary of the English class and every time I had to read the minutes I'd say, 'Minutes of the last m-m-m-meeting.' It was terrible." [1]
  • Her first screen test was shot by legendary cinematographer Leon Shamroy.
  • Hugh Hefner bought a crypt next to Monroe's for $85,000. The other crypt next to hers was sold for $125,000. There are no empty spots available near Monroe.
  • The myth that Monroe was born with six toes resulted from the publication of photos taken by Joseph Jasgur in March 1946 and published in The Birth of Marilyn: The Lost Photographs of Norma Jean by Jasgur and Jeannie Sakol. Two pictures can be interpreted as showing six toes, although they can be explained as tricks of light. Since there is no corroborating evidence from other photographs or written records, the story is commonly dismissed as an urban legend. [2]
  • Monroe was named Miss Artichoke in 1948 — yes, Miss Artichoke.
  • As bystanders could see a little bit too much, Monroe had to wear two pairs of white underwear under her famous white dress for the "subway grate" scene in The Seven Year Itch. Ultimately the scene was reshot back at the Fox studios, since the crowds proved too distracting.
  • Director Billy Wilder, who made The Seven Year Itch and Some Like It Hot with Monroe, said she had breasts like granite and a brain like Swiss cheese. However, Wilder also said Monroe was a genius, so one could call their relationship somewhat on/off.
  • Monroe was once a roommate of actress Shelley Winters.
  • Monroe was said to be quite intelligent, although it was hidden behind her image as a dumb blonde with beautiful features. She wrote poems, enjoyed literature and always regretted never continuing high school.
  • Celebrity photographer George Barris claims he took the last pictures of Monroe. However, it was Allan Grant who took the last pictures of Monroe, during an interview for Life magazine on July 7, 1962.
  • Among the men Monroe allegedly had affairs with were: President John F. Kennedy, Henry Fonda, Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin, Peter Lawford, Marlon Brando, Howard Keel, Jerry Lewis, Clark Gable, Howard Hughes, Yves Montand, Milton Berle and Elia Kazan. It has also been claimed she had a one-night stand with Joan Crawford.
  • Frank Sinatra gave her a Maltese puppy that she named "Maf Honey". The "Maf" was supposedly short for "Mafia".
  • Contrary to some opinion, the beauty mark above her lip was genuine. [3]
  • Author Truman Capote wanted her to play the part of Holly Golightly in the film adaptation of his book Breakfast At Tiffany's. The role eventually went to Audrey Hepburn.
  • Monroe was voted "Sexiest Woman of the Century" by People magazine in 1999.
  • Her likeness appears on the sleeve of The Beatles LP Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band
  • Monroe purportedly shaved a quarter of an inch off many of her right high-heeled shoes to accentuate the wiggle in her walk.
Film Year Salary
Scudda Hoo! Scudda Hay! 1948 $75/week
The Asphalt Jungle 1950 $1,050
All About Eve 1950 $500/week, with one-week guarantee
We're Not Married! 1952 $750/week
Gentlemen Prefer Blondes 1953 $1,250/week
The Seven Year Itch 1955 $1,500/week
Some Like It Hot 1959 $200,000 plus 10% gross over $4 million
The Misfits 1961 $250,000
Something's Got to Give 1962 $100,000

Filmography

¹ Monroe also credited as Executive producer.

Awards and nominations

  • 1952 Photoplay Award: Special Award
  • 1953 Photoplay Award: Most Popular Female Star
  • 1954 Golden Globe, World Film Favorite: Female
  • 1956 Golden Globe nomination: Best Motion Picture Actress in Comedy or Musical (for Bus Stop)
  • 1958 David di Donatello Award (Italian): Golden Plate (for The Prince and the Showgirl)
  • 1959 Crystal Star Award (French): Best Foreign Actress (for The Prince and the Showgirl)
  • 1960 Golden Globe, Best Motion Picture Actress in Comedy or Musical (for Some Like It Hot)
  • 1962 Golden Globe, World Film Favorite: Female
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Performing Diamonds Are A Girl's Best Friend in Gentlemen Prefer Blondes

Depictions

Films

Television

Further reading

  • . ISBN 0500019789. {{cite book}}: Missing or empty |title= (help); Unknown parameter |Author= ignored (|author= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |Publisher= ignored (|publisher= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |Title= ignored (|title= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |Year= ignored (|year= suggested) (help) An exhaustive and thorough A–Z look at Monroe's life.
  • . ISBN 0688162886. {{cite book}}: Missing or empty |title= (help); Unknown parameter |Author= ignored (|author= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |Publisher= ignored (|publisher= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |Title= ignored (|title= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |Year= ignored (|year= suggested) (help) Argues for Kennedy connection to Monroe's death.
  • . ISBN 0786713801. {{cite book}}: Missing or empty |title= (help); Unknown parameter |Author= ignored (|author= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |Publisher= ignored (|publisher= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |Title= ignored (|title= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |Year= ignored (|year= suggested) (help) Contains alleged transcripts of Marilyn's therapy sessions.
  • . ISBN 0446364126. {{cite book}}: Missing or empty |title= (help); Unknown parameter |Author= ignored (|author= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |Publisher= ignored (|publisher= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |Title= ignored (|title= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |Year= ignored (|year= suggested) (help) Mobster Sam Giancana's nephew and brother claim that Giancana had Monroe killed (pp.434–438).
Preceded by
None
Playboy Playmate
December 1953
Succeeded by