Biography
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Passed among several homes as a girl, s--ually abused as a teenager, Norma Jean thought little of herself. Yet she also had a gritty, opportunistic side, and dreamed of being a big movie star. She knew she had a soft voice and she climbed the ladder. She was both more intelligent and more unhappy than her screen goddess image ever suggested.
Marilyn Monroe was Playboy's first centerfold. She did not pose for Playboy,
however. The photos were taken for a calendar several years earlier and Hugh
Hefner purchased them for his men's magazine. A successful cinema career
followed (after posing of the calendar—they were not featured in Playboy until
after she was a movie star) where she co-starred with such big-screen stars as
Cary Grant, Clark Gable, Laurence Olivier, Joseph Cotten, Richard Widmark, Jane
Russell, Laurene Bacall, Ethel Merman, Charles Laugthon, Tony Curtis, french
actor Ives Montand and Dean Martin.
Marilyn died in her Los Angeles home at age 36, supposedly a suicide from a
overdose of sleeping pills, but circumstances surrounding her death have led
many to believe that her death was not a suicide. Rather, some believe that she
was killed because of her involvement with members of the Kennedy family.
Nothing has ever emerged to prove this.
Gladys Baker, Marilyn's mother, was released from a sanitarium years after
Marilyn's death. After her release she moved into her daughter Berniece's house
in Florida. Afterward she moved to a nursing home where she died on congestive
heart failure on March 11th, 1984 at eighty-two years old. She was never certain
who Marilyn Monroe or Norma Jeane were when asked. A woman so fascinated by
movie stars did not even know she gave birth to one of the most famous women in
history.
Marilyn was married three times throughout her life. The first was to Jim
Dougherty when she was 16 years old. Marilyn's guardian, Grace Goodard, who was
moving away with her own new husband, wanted Marilyn to get married so she would
not go back to an orphanage. She later divorced him in 1946, as she wanted to
create a career for herself in movies and Jim did not want her to.
In 1952 Marilyn Monroe married baseball great Joe DiMaggio. That union lasted 9 months. Joe wanted Marilyn to be a housewife and have children. Marilyn always wanted children, but did not want to give up her career.
It's indicated by some that Joe had beaten Marilyn a number of times during
their short marriage. One incident happened after her skirt blowing scene in The
Seven Year Itch. After storming off the set during the scene, Joe returned home
and after Marilyn's arrival later that evening, he allegedly assaulted Marilyn
for the humiliation he felt during her "display."
Marilyn Monroe's last husband was playwright Arthur Miller. To save their
marriage, Arthur created the movie The Misfits as a Valentine for Marilyn.
Shooting the movie was rough, and soon after the film wrapped they divorced.
Arthur went on to marry Inge Morath, a photographer who was on the set of the
movie to document its creation.
After
Marilyn's
death,
Arthur
opened a
play
called
After
the Fall
with a
character
named
Maggie
who was
very
similar
to
Marilyn.
The play
upset
all of
Arthur
and
Marilyn's
friends.
Arthur's
career
in
America
was soon
shattered.
He now
has a
play in
the
works
called
Finishing
the
Picture
which is
centered
around
the
making
of The
Misfits.
Marilyn's
character
spends
the play
in a
tranquillised
haze in
a hotel
room,
drinking
and
suffering
a
nervous
breakdown.
DiMaggio never stopped loving Marilyn, and after she died, he sent fresh roses to her crypt 3 times a week for 20 years. He took over her funeral arrangements, and refused to allow her 'killers' to attend. No Hollywood figures attended, and no Kennedys were invited. Her first husband, Jim Dougherty, was working for the Los Angeles Police Department that day, and Arthur Miller did not attend.
Joe DiMaggio's last words were, "I'll finally get to see Marilyn."
Marilyn Monroe's make-up stylist, Whitey, promised Marilyn that he would make her up when she died. Marilyn even gave him a money clip with the words, "Whitey Dear, While I'm still warm, Marilyn." Joe reminded him of his promise when she died. He fulfilled that promise with the help of a bottle of whiskey.
Numerous books with photographs of Marilyn Monroe have been published over the years and once every two or three years "new, never before published" photos surface. For those interested not only in photos but in her life, Goddess, the Secret Lives of Marilyn Monroe, written by Anthony Summers is suggested reading.
A myth that Marilyn Monroe was born with six toes resulted from the publication of photographs taken by the photographer Joseph Jasgur in March 1946. The pictures were published in the book The Birth of Marilyn: The Lost Photographs of Norma Jean (1991) by Jasgur and Jeannie Sakol. Two of the pictures can be interpreted as showing six toes, although they can also be explained as tricks of the light. Since there is no corroborating evidence from other photographs or written records, the story is commonly dismissed as an urban legend.
Marilyn Monroe is interred in the Westwood Village Memorial Park Cemetery in Westwood, California.
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This Marilyn Monroe Biography Page is Copyright The Planets © 2004 - 2006 Chuck Ayoub