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Bio:
Date of birth (location)
1 June 1926
Los Angeles, California, USA
Date of death (details)
5 August 1962
Los Angeles, California, USA. (drug overdose) The most celebrated of all actresses, Marilyn Monroe, was born Norma Jean Mortenson, on June 1, 1926, in the Los Angeles General Hospital, in California. Prior to her birth, Marilyn`s father bought a motorcycle and headed north to San Francisco, thus abandoning the family in LA. Marilyn grew up not knowing for sure who her father really was. Her mother, Gladys, had entered into several relationships thus confusing her daughter as to who fathered her. Afterward, Gladys gave Norma Jean (Marilyn) the name of Baker, a previous suitor before Mortenson. Poverty was a constant companion. Gladys, who was extremely attractive and worked for RKO Studios as a film cutter, suffered from mental illness and therefore was in and out of mental institutions for the rest of her life. Subsequently, Marilyn spent time in foster homes. When she was nine, Marilyn was placed in an orphanage where she was to stay for the next two years. When she was released from the orphanage, she went to, yet, another foster home. In 1942, at the age of sixteen Marilyn married an aircraft plant worker by the name of James Dougherty who was 21. The marriage only lasted four years when they divorced in 1946. By this time, Marilyn began to model swim suits and bleached her hair blonde. Various shots made their way into the public eye, where some were eventually seen by RKO head, Howard Hughes. Hughes offered Marilyn a screen test, but an agent suggested that Fox Studios would be the better choice since it was bigger and more prestigious. She was signed to a contract at $125 per week for a six month period and that was increased by $25 at the end of that time when her contract was lengthened. Her first film was in 1947 with a bit part in Shocking Miss Pilgrim, The (1947). Her next production was not much better. 1948 saw Marilyn in the largely forgettable, Scudda Hoo! Scudda Hay! (1948). The two of the three brief scenes she appeared wound up on the cutting room floor. Later that same year, Marilyn was given a better role as Evie in Dangerous Years (1947). Twentieth Century-Fox declined to renew her contract, so she went back to modeling and acting school. Columbia Studios then picked her up to portray Peggy Martin in the film short Ladies of the Chorus (1948) where she sang two numbers. Even the notices from the critics were favorable, but Columbia dropped her after that film.
Once again, Marilyn returned to modeling. In 1949, Marilyn appeared in United Artists` film Love Happy (1950). It was also the same year she posed nude for the now famous calendar shot which was later to appear in Playboy magazine in 1953 and further boost her career. She would be Playboy`s first centerfold in that magazine`s long and illustrious history. 1950 proved to be a good year for Marilyn. Not because she appeared in five films, but for the notices for her small ones in two of the five. they were Asphalt Jungle, The (1950) with MGM and All About Eve (1950) with Fox. Even though both roles were amounted to bit parts and the latter received Oscar nominations, movie fans remembered her dumb blonde performance. In 1951, Marilyn got a fairly sizable role in Love Nest (1951). The public was now getting to know Marilyn and was enthralled with her. She exuded an almost innocence about the aura of sexuality about her. In 1952, Marilyn appeared in Don`t Bother to Knock (1952) in which she played a babysitter who was somewhat mentally unbalanced. She didn`t fare well with the critics in this one. Later in the year she appeared in Monkey Business (1952) where she was seen for the first time as a platinum blonde. The look became her trademark. The next year she appeared in Gentlemen Prefer Blondes (1953) as Lorelei Lee. It was also the same year she began dating the baseball great, Joe DiMaggio.
Marilyn was now a box-office drawing card. Later, she appeared with Betty Grable, Lauren Bacall and Rory Calhoun in How to Marry a Millionaire (1953). Although her co-stars got the rave reviews, it was the sight of Marilyn who excited the audience, particularly if they were men. On January 14, 1954, Marilyn wed DiMaggio, then proceeded to film There`s No Business Like Show Business (1954). That was quickly followed by The Seven Year Itch which was released in 1955 and showcased her comedic talent.
By October of 1954, Marilyn announced her divorce from DiMaggio. The union lasted only eight months. In 1955, Marilyn was suspended by Fox for not reporting for work on `How To Be Very Popular`. It was her second suspension, the first being for not reporting for the production of `The Girl In Pink Tights`. Both roles went to others. In 1955, she appeared in Seven Year Itch, The (1955) which showed one of film`s most memorable scenes when she stands above a subway grate and the wind from a passing subway blowing her white dress up. It was to be the only film she appeared that year. Her work was slowing down to to her problems with being tardy to the set, being ill, whether real or imagined, and generally being unwilling to cooperate with the producers, directors, and fellow actors. In Bus Stop (1956), she finally showed the critics that she could play a dramatic role. It was also the same year she married playwright, Arthur Miller. (They divorced in 1960). In 1957, Marilyn flew to Britain to film Prince and the Showgirl, The (1957) which proved less than reliable at the box-office. Though it made money, it was thought to be slow-moving. After a year off in 1958, Marilyn returned to the silver screen the next for the delightful comedy, Some Like It Hot (1959) with Tony Curtis and Jack Lemmon. The film was an absolute smash hit with Curtis and Lemmon pretending to be females in an all girl band, so they can get work. That, again, was be the only film for the year. In 1960, Marilyn appeared in the production of George Cukor`s Let`s Make Love (1960), with Tony Randall and Yves Montand. Most critics considered it slow moving. The following year, Marilyn made, what was to be her final film. Misfits, The (1961) also proved to be the final film for the legendary Clark Gable who died later that year of a heart attack. The film proved to be popular with critics and the public alike.
In 1962, Marilyn was chosen for the film, Something`s Got to Give (1962). Again her absenteeism caused delay after delay in production and she was fired in June. It looked as though her career was finished. Studios just didn`t want to take a chance on her because it would cost them thousands of dollars in delays. She went in seclusion in her home in LA. On August 5, 1962, her housekeeper found her nude and lying face down on her bed, the victim of an overdose of sedatives. She was only 36. Marilyn made only 30 films in her lifetime, but her legendary status and mysticism will remain with film history forever.
JUST ADDED Nude Gallery of Marilyn Monroe at platinum celebs
Quotes:
"I love a natural look in pictures. I like people with a feeling one way or another - it shows an inner life. I like to see that there`s something going on inside them."
"My problem is that I drive myself... I`m trying to become an artist, and to be true, and sometimes I feel I`m on the verge of craziness, I`m just trying to get the truest part of myself out, and it`s very hard. There are times when I think, `All I have to be is true`. But sometimes it doesn`t come out so easily. I always have this secret feeling that I`m really a fake or something, a phony."
"They were terribly strict. They didn`t mean any harm...it was their religion. They brought me up harshly." - on living with the Bolenders when she was a little girl
"I was surprised to be so crazy about Joe. I expected a flashy New York sports type, and instead I met this reserved guy who didn`t make a pass at me right away! He treated me like something special. Joe is a very decent man, and he makes other people feel decent too." - on meeting Joe DiMaggio for the first time
"Joe hates crowds and glamour." - explaining why Joe DiMaggio didn`t come on one of her USO tours
"My marriage didn`t make me sad, but it didn`t make me happy either. My husband and I hardly spoke to each other. This wasn`t because we were angry. We had nothing to say. I was dying of boredom." - on why she divorced James Dougherty
"I didn`t want to give up my career, and that`s what Joe wanted me to do most of all." - on why her marriage to Joe DiMaggio couldn`t work
"I want to be a big star more than anything. It`s something precious."
"Jean Harlow was my idol." - on her favorite actress, the first platinum blonde
"The world around me then was kind of grim. I had to learn to pretend in order to - I don`t know - block the grimness. The whole world seemed sort of closed to me... [I felt] on the outside of everything, and all I could do was to dream up any kind of pretend game." - on drifting in and out of orphanages when she was little
"Grace McKee arranged the marriage for me, I never had a choice. There`s not much to say about it. They couldn`t support me, and they had to work out something. And so I got married." - on her early marriage to James Dougherty
"I had the radio on." [Q. Did you have anything on ?]
"Chanel No. 5." [Q. What do you wear to bed ?]
"I`m not interested in money, I just want to be wonderful."
"A career is wonderful, but you can`t curl up with it on a cold night."
"Sometimes I think it would be easier to avoid old age, to die, young, but then you`d never complete your life, would you? You`d never wholly know yourself..."
"A dollar for your thoughts..."
"I`ve been on a calendar, but never on time."
"No one ever told me I was pretty when I was a little girl. All little girls should be told they`re pretty, even if they aren`t."
"In Hollywood a girl`s virtue is much less important than her hairdo. You`re judged by how you look, not by what you are. Hollywood`s a place where they`ll pay you a thousand dollars for kiss, and fifty cents for your soul. I know, because I turned down the first offer often enough and held out for the fifty."
"Dogs never bite me. Just humans."
"Sex is a part of nature. I go along with nature."
"Fame will go by and, so long, I`ve had you, Fame. If it goes by, I`ve always known it was fickle."
"I knew I belonged to the public and to the world, not because I was talented or even beautiful, but because I never had belonged to anything or anyone else."
"People had a habit of looking at me as if I were some kind of mirror instead of a person. They didn`t see me, they saw their own lewd thoughts, then they white-masked themselves by calling me the lewd one."
"A sex-symbol becomes a thing, I just hate being a thing. But if I`m going to be a symbol of something I`d rather have it sex than some other things we`ve got symbols of."
"The truth is I`ve never fooled anyone. I`ve let people fool themselves. They didn`t bother to find out who and what I was. Instead they would invent a character for me. I wouldn`t argue with them. They were obviously loving somebody I wasn`t. When they found this out, they would blame me for disillusioning them---and fooling them."
"To put it bluntly, I seem to have a whole superstructure with no foundation. But I`m working on the foundation."
"If I had observed all the rules, I`d never have gotten anywhere."
"I want to grow old without face-lifts... I want to have the courage to be loyal to the face that I have made."
"It`s often just enough to be with someone. I don`t need to touch them. Not even talk. A feeling passes between you both. You`re not alone."
"I`m a failure as a woman. My men expect so much of me, because of the image they`ve made of me and that I`ve made of myself, as a sex symbol. Men expect so much, and I can`t live up to it."
"It stirs up envy, fame does. People you run into feel that, well, who does she think she is, Marilyn Monroe? They feel fame gives them some kind of privilege to walk up to you and say anything to you, you know, of any kind of nature - and it won`t hurt your feelings."
"Fame is fickle, and I know it. It has it`s compensations but it also has it`s drawbacks, and I`ve experienced them both."
"My illusions didn`t have anything to do with being a fine actress. I knew how third rate I was. I could actually feel my lack of talent, as if it were cheap clothes I was wearing inside. But my God, how I wanted to learn, to change, to improve!"
"If I play a stupid girl, and ask a stupid question, I`ve got to follow it through. What am I supposed to do, look intelligent?"
On posing nude for the calendar in 1949: "My sin has been no more than I have written, posing for the nude because I desperately needed fifty dollars to get my car out of hock."
"An actor is supposed to be a sensitive intrument. Isaac Stern takes good care of his violin. What if everyone jumped on his violin?"
"There was my name up in lights. I said `God, somebody`s made a mistake!` But there it was in lights. And I sat there and said, `Remember, you`re not a star.` Yet there it was up in lights."
"Some people have been unkind. If I say I want to grow as an actress, they look at my figure. If I say I want to develop, to learn my craft, they laugh. Somehow they don`t expect me to be serious about my work."
"I was never used to being happy, so that wasn`t something I ever took for granted. I did sort of think, you know, marriage did that. You see, I was brought up differently from the average American child because the average child is brought up expecting to be happy - that`s it, successful, happy, and on time."
"You know, when you grow up you can get kind of sour, I mean, that`s the way it can go."
"Wouldn`t it be nice to be like men and get notches in your belt and sleep with most attractive men and not get emotionally involved?"
"I used to think as I looked at the Hollywood night, `There must be thousands of girls sitting alone like me, dreaming of becoming a movie star. But I`m not going to worry about them. I`m dreaming the hardest.`"
"The trouble with censors is they worry if a girl has cleavage. They ought to worry if she hasn`t any."
"I used to say to myself, `What the devil have you got to be proud about, Marilyn Monroe?` And I`d answer, `Everything, everything.`"
On stardom: "It scares me. All those people I don`t know, sometimes they`re so emotional. I mean, if they love you that much without knowing you, they can also hate you the same way."
"Goethe said, `Talent is developed in privacy, ` you know?And it`s really true. There is a need for aloneness which I don`t think most people realize for an actor. It`s almost having certain kinds of secrets for yourself that you`ll let the whole world in on only for a moment, when you`re acting."
"Please don`t make me a joke. End the interview with what I believe... I want to be an artist, an actress with integrity."
"I`ve never dropped anyone I believed in."
On John F. Kennedy: "It would be so nice to have a president who looks so young and good-looking."
"I restore myself when I`m alone. A career is born in public -- talent in private."
"Talent is developed in privacy... but everybody is always tugging at you. They`d all like sort of a chunk at you. They`d kind of like to take pieces out of you."
"I want to be an artist... not an erotic freak. I don`t want to be sold to the public as a celluloid aphrodisiacal."
"Hollywood is a place where they`ll pay a million dollars for a kiss... and fifty cents for your soul."
(About Montgomery Clift): He`s the only person I know that is in worse shape than I am.
"I`ve never liked the name Marilyn. I`ve often wished that I had held out that day for Jean Monroe. But I guess it`s too late to do anything about it now."
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