Marilyn Monroe
(/ˈmærəlɪn mənˈroʊ/; born Norma Jeane Mortenson; June 1, 1926 – August 4, 1962)
was an American actress, model, and singer. Known for playing comic "blonde bombshell" characters,
she became one of the most popular sex symbols of the 1950s and early 1960s, as
well as an emblem of the era's sexual revolution. She was a top-billed actress
for a decade, and her films grossed $200 million (equivalent to $2 billion in
2022) by the time of her death in 1962. Long after her death, Monroe remains a pop
culture icon. In 1999, the American Film Institute ranked her as the
sixth-greatest female screen legend from the Golden Age of Hollywood.
Born and raised in Los Angeles, Monroe spent most of her
childhood in a total of 12 foster homes and an orphanage before marrying James
Dougherty at age sixteen. She was working in a factory during World War II when
she met a photographer from the First Motion Picture Unit and began a
successful pin-up modeling career, which led to short-lived film contracts with
20th Century Fox and Columbia Pictures. After a series of minor film roles, she
signed a new contract with Fox in late 1950. Over the next two years, she
became a popular actress with roles in several comedies, including As Young as
You Feel and Monkey Business, and in the dramas Clash by Night and Don't Bother
to Knock. Monroe faced a scandal when it was revealed that she had posed for
nude photographs prior to becoming a star, but the story did not damage her
career and instead resulted in increased interest in her films.
By 1953, Monroe was one of the most marketable Hollywood
stars. She had leading roles in the film noir Niagara, which overtly relied on
her sex appeal, and the comedies Gentlemen Prefer Blondes and How to Marry a
Millionaire, which established her star image as a "dumb blonde". The same year, her nude images were used
as the centerfold and on the cover of the first issue of Playboy. Monroe played
a significant role in the creation and management of her public image
throughout her career, but felt disappointed when typecast and underpaid by the
studio. She was briefly suspended in early 1954 for refusing a film project but
returned to star in The Seven Year Itch (1955), one of the biggest box office
successes of her career.
When the studio was still reluctant to change Monroe's
contract, she founded her own film production company in 1954. She dedicated
1955 to building the company and began studying method acting under Lee
Strasberg at the Actors Studio. Later that year, Fox awarded her a new contract,
which gave her more control and a larger salary. Her subsequent roles included
a critically acclaimed performance in Bus Stop (1956) and her first independent
production in The Prince and the Showgirl (1957). She won a Golden Globe for
Best Actress for her role in Some Like It Hot (1959), a critical and commercial
success. Her last completed film was the drama The Misfits (1961).
Monroe's troubled private life received much attention. She
struggled with addiction and mood disorders. Her marriages to retired baseball
star Joe DiMaggio and to playwright Arthur Miller were highly publicized, but
ended in divorce. On August 4, 1962, she died at age 36 from an overdose of
barbiturates at her Los Angeles home. Her death was ruled a probable suicide.
Life and career
1926–1943: Childhood
and first marriage
Marilyn Monroe was born Norma Jeane Mortenson on June 1,
1926, at the Los Angeles General Hospital in Los Angeles, California. Her
mother, Gladys Pearl Baker (née Monroe; 1902–1984), was born in Piedras Negras,
Coahuila, Mexico to a poor Midwestern family who migrated to California at the
turn of the century. At age 15, Gladys married John Newton Baker, an abusive
man nine years her senior. They had two children, Robert (1918–1933) and
Berniece (1919–2014). She successfully filed for divorce and sole custody in
1923, but Baker kidnapped the children soon after and moved with them to his
native Kentucky.
Monroe was not told that she had a sister until she was 12,
and they met for the first time in 1944 when Monroe was 17 or 18. Following the
divorce, Gladys worked as a film negative cutter at Consolidated Film
Industries. In 1924, she married Martin Edward Mortensen, but they separated
just months later and divorced in 1928. In 2022, DNA testing indicated that Monroe's
father was Charles Stanley Gifford (1898–1965), a co-worker of Gladys, with
whom she had an affair in 1925. Monroe also had two other half-siblings from
Gifford's marriage with his first wife, a sister, Doris Elizabeth (1920–1933),
and a brother, Charles Stanley (1922–2015).
Although Gladys was mentally and financially unprepared for
a child, Monroe's early childhood was stable and happy. Gladys placed her
daughter with evangelical Christian foster parents Albert and Ida Bolender in
the rural town of Hawthorne. She also lived there for six months, until she was
forced to move back to the city for employment. She then began visiting her
daughter on weekends. In the summer of 1933, Gladys bought a small house in
Hollywood with a loan from the Home Owners' Loan Corporation and moved
seven-year-old Monroe in with her. They shared the house with lodgers, actors
George and Maude Atkinson and their daughter, Nellie. In January 1934, Gladys
had a mental breakdown and was diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia. After
several months in a rest home, she was committed to the Metropolitan State
Hospital. She spent the rest of her life in and out of hospitals and was rarely
in contact with Monroe. Monroe became a ward of the state, and her mother's
friend Grace Goddard took responsibility over her and her mother's affairs.
Over the next four years, Monroe's living situation changed
often. For the first 16 months, she continued living with the Atkinsons, and
may have been sexually abused during this time. Always a shy girl, she now also
developed a stutter and became withdrawn. In the summer of 1935, she briefly
stayed with Grace and her husband Erwin "Doc"
Goddard and two other families. In September 1935, Grace placed her in the Los
Angeles Orphans Home. The orphanage was "a
model institution" and was described in positive terms by her peers,
but Monroe felt abandoned. Encouraged by the orphanage staff, who thought that
Monroe would be happier living in a family, Grace became her legal guardian in
1936, but did not take her out of the orphanage until the summer of 1937.
Monroe's second stay with the Goddards lasted only a few months because Doc
molested her. She then lived for brief periods with her relatives and Grace's
friends and relatives in Los Angeles and Compton.
Monroe's childhood experiences first made her want to become
an actress: "I didn't like the world
around me because it was kind of grim ... When I heard that this was acting, I
said that's what I want to be ... Some of my foster families used to send me to
the movies to get me out of the house and there I'd sit all day and way into
the night. Up in front, there with the screen so big, a little kid all alone,
and I loved it."
Monroe found a more permanent home in September 1938, when
she began living with Grace's aunt Ana Lower in the west-side district of
Sawtelle. She was enrolled at Emerson Junior High School and went to weekly
Christian Science services with Lower. She excelled in writing and contributed
to the school newspaper, but was otherwise a mediocre student. Owing to the
elderly Lower's health problems, Monroe returned to live with the Goddards in
Van Nuys in about early 1941.
The same year, she began attending Van Nuys High School. In
1942, the company that employed Doc Goddard relocated him to West Virginia.
California child protection laws prevented the Goddards from taking Monroe out
of state, and she faced having to return to the orphanage. As a solution, she
married their neighbors' 21-year-old son, factory worker James Dougherty, on
June 19, 1942, just after her 16th birthday. Monroe subsequently dropped out of
high school and became a housewife. She found herself and Dougherty mismatched,
and later said she was "dying of
boredom" during the marriage. In 1943, Dougherty enlisted in the
Merchant Marine and was stationed on Santa Catalina Island, where Monroe moved
with him.
1944–1948: Modeling
and first film roles
In April 1944, Dougherty was shipped out to the Pacific,
where he remained for most of the next two years. Monroe moved in with her in-laws
and began a job at the Radioplane Company, a munitions factory in Van Nuys. In
late 1944, she met photographer David Conover, who had been sent by the U.S.
Army Air Forces' First Motion Picture Unit to the factory to shoot
morale-boosting pictures of female workers. Although none of her pictures were
used, she quit working at the factory in January 1945 and began modeling for
Conover and his friends. Defying her deployed husband, she moved on her own and
signed a contract with the Blue Book Model Agency in August 1945.
The agency deemed Monroe's figure more suitable for pin-up
than high fashion modeling, and she was featured mostly in advertisements and
men's magazines. To make herself more employable, she straightened her hair and
dyed it blonde. According to Emmeline Snively, the agency's owner, Monroe
quickly became one of its most ambitious and hard-working models; by early
1946, she had appeared on 33 magazine covers for publications such as Pageant,
U.S. Camera, Laff, and Peek. As a model, Monroe occasionally used the pseudonym
Jean Norman.
Through Snively, Monroe signed a contract with an acting
agency in June 1946. After an unsuccessful interview at Paramount Pictures, she
was given a screen-test by Ben Lyon, a 20th Century-Fox executive. Head executive
Darryl F. Zanuck was unenthusiastic about it, but he gave her a standard
six-month contract to avoid her being signed by rival studio RKO Pictures.
Monroe's contract began in August 1946, and she and Lyon selected the stage
name "Marilyn Monroe". The
first name was picked by Lyon, who was reminded of Broadway star Marilyn
Miller; the surname was Monroe's mother's maiden name. In September 1946, she
divorced Dougherty, who opposed her career.
Monroe spent her first six months at Fox learning acting,
singing, and dancing, and observing the film-making process. Her contract was
renewed in February 1947, and she was given her first film roles, bit parts in
Dangerous Years (1947) and Scudda Hoo! Scudda Hay! (1948). The studio also
enrolled her in the Actors' Laboratory Theatre, an acting school teaching the
techniques of the Group Theatre; she later stated that it was "my first taste of what real acting in
a real drama could be, and I was hooked". Despite her enthusiasm, her
teachers thought her too shy and insecure to have a future in acting, and Fox
did not renew her contract in August 1947. She returned to modeling while also
doing occasional odd jobs at film studios, such as working as a dancing "pacer" behind the scenes to
keep the leads on point at musical sets.
Monroe was determined to make it as an actress, and
continued studying at the Actors' Lab. She had a small role in the play Glamour
Preferred at the Bliss-Hayden Theater, but it ended after a couple of
performances. To network, she frequented producers' offices, befriended gossip
columnist Sidney Skolsky, and entertained influential male guests at studio
functions, a practice she had begun at Fox. She also became a friend and
occasional sex partner of Fox executive Joseph M. Schenck, who persuaded his
friend Harry Cohn, the head executive of Columbia Pictures, to sign her in
March 1948.
At Columbia, Monroe's look was modeled after Rita Hayworth
and her hair was bleached platinum blonde.[75] She began working with the
studio's head drama coach, Natasha Lytess, who would remain her mentor until
1955. Her only film at the studio was the low-budget musical Ladies of the
Chorus (1948), in which she had her first starring role as a chorus girl
courted by a wealthy man. She also screen-tested for the lead role in Born
Yesterday (1950), but her contract was not renewed in September 1948. Ladies of
the Chorus was released the following month and was not a success.
1949–1952:
Breakthrough years
When her contract at Columbia ended, Monroe returned again
to modeling. She shot a commercial for Pabst beer and posed for artistic nude
photographs by Tom Kelley for John Baumgarth calendars, using the name 'Mona Monroe'. Monroe had previously
posed topless or clad in a bikini for other artists including Earl Moran, and
felt comfortable with nudity. Shortly after leaving Columbia, she also met and
became the protégée and mistress of Johnny Hyde, the vice president of the
William Morris Agency.
Through Hyde, Monroe landed small roles in several films,
including two critically acclaimed works: Joseph Mankiewicz's drama All About
Eve (1950) and John Huston's film noir The Asphalt Jungle (1950). Despite her
screen time being only a few minutes in the latter, she gained a mention in
Photoplay and according to biographer Donald Spoto "moved effectively from movie model to serious actress".
In December 1950, Hyde negotiated a seven-year contract for Monroe with 20th
Century-Fox. According to its terms, Fox could opt to not renew the contract
after each year. Hyde died of heart attack only days later, which left Monroe
devastated. In 1951, Monroe had supporting roles in three moderately successful
Fox comedies: As Young as You Feel, Love Nest, and Let's Make It Legal.
According to Spoto all three films featured her "essentially [as] a sexy ornament", but she received some
praise from critics: Bosley Crowther of The New York Times described her as "superb" in As Young As You
Feel and Ezra Goodman of the Los Angeles Daily News called her "one of the brightest up-and-coming
[actresses]" for Love Nest.
Her popularity with audiences was also growing: she received
several thousand fan letters a week, and was declared "Miss Cheesecake of 1951" by the army newspaper Stars and
Stripes, reflecting the preferences of soldiers in the Korean War. In February
1952, the Hollywood Foreign Press Association named Monroe the "best young box office
personality". In her private life, Monroe had a short relationship
with director Elia Kazan and also briefly dated several other men, including
director Nicholas Ray and actors Yul Brynner and Peter Lawford. In early 1952,
she began a highly publicized romance with retired New York Yankees baseball
star Joe DiMaggio, one of the most famous sports personalities of the era.
Monroe found herself at the center of a scandal in March
1952, when she revealed publicly that she had posed for a nude calendar in
1949. The studio had learned about the photos and that she was publicly rumored
to be the model some weeks prior, and together with Monroe decided that to prevent
damaging her career it was best to admit to them while stressing that she had
been broke at the time. The strategy gained her public sympathy and increased
interest in her films, for which she was now receiving top billing. In the wake
of the scandal, Monroe was featured on the cover of Life magazine as the "Talk of Hollywood", and
gossip columnist Hedda Hopper declared her the "cheesecake queen" turned "box office smash". Three of Monroe's films —Clash by
Night, Don't Bother to Knock and We're Not Married!— were released soon after
to capitalize on the public interest.
Despite her newfound popularity as a sex symbol, Monroe also
wished to showcase more of her acting range. She had begun taking acting
classes with Michael Chekhov and mime Lotte Goslar soon after beginning the Fox
contract, and Clash by Night and Don't Bother to Knock showed her in different
roles. In the former, a drama starring Barbara Stanwyck and directed by Fritz
Lang, she played a fish cannery worker; to prepare, she spent time in a fish
cannery in Monterey. She received positive reviews for her performance: The
Hollywood Reporter stated that "she
deserves starring status with her excellent interpretation", and
Variety wrote that she "has an ease
of delivery which makes her a cinch for popularity". The latter was a
thriller in which Monroe starred as a mentally disturbed babysitter and which
Zanuck used to test her abilities in a heavier dramatic role. It received mixed
reviews from critics, with Crowther deeming her too inexperienced for the
difficult role, and Variety blaming the script for the film's problems.
Monroe in Don't
Bother to Knock (1952)
Monroe's three other films in 1952 continued with her
typecasting in comedic roles that highlighted her sex appeal. In We're Not
Married!, her role as a beauty pageant contestant was created solely to "present Marilyn in two bathing
suits", according to its writer Nunnally Johnson. In Howard Hawks's
Monkey Business, in which she acted opposite Cary Grant, she played a secretary
who is a "dumb, childish blonde,
innocently unaware of the havoc her sexiness causes around her". In O.
Henry's Full House, with Charles Laughton she appeared in a passing vignette as
a nineteenth-century street walker. Monroe added to her reputation as a new sex
symbol with publicity stunts that year: she wore a revealing dress when acting
as Grand Marshal at the Miss America Pageant parade, and told gossip columnist
Earl Wilson that she usually wore no underwear. By the end of the year, gossip
columnist Florabel Muir named Monroe the "it
girl" of 1952.
During this period, Monroe gained a reputation for being
difficult to work with, which would worsen as her career progressed. She was
often late or did not show up at all, did not remember her lines, and would
demand several re-takes before she was satisfied with her performance. Her
dependence on her acting coaches—Natasha Lytess and then Paula Strasberg—also
irritated directors. Monroe's problems have been attributed to a combination of
perfectionism, low self-esteem, and stage fright. She disliked her lack of
control on film sets and never experienced similar problems during photo
shoots, in which she had more say over her performance and could be more
spontaneous instead of following a script. To alleviate her anxiety and chronic
insomnia, she began to use barbiturates, amphetamines, and alcohol, which also
exacerbated her problems, although she did not become severely addicted until
1956. According to Sarah Churchwell, some of Monroe's behavior, especially
later in her career, was also in response to the condescension and sexism of
her male co-stars and directors. Biographer Lois Banner said that she was
bullied by many of her directors.
1953: Rising star
Monroe starred in three movies that were released in 1953
and emerged as a major sex symbol and one of Hollywood's most bankable
performers. The first was the Technicolor film noir Niagara, in which she
played a femme fatale scheming to murder her husband, played by Joseph Cotten.
By then, Monroe and her make-up artist Allan "Whitey" Snyder had developed her "trademark" make-up look: dark arched brows, pale skin, "glistening" red lips and a
beauty mark. According to Sarah Churchwell, Niagara was one of the most overtly
sexual films of Monroe's career. In some scenes, Monroe's body was covered only
by a sheet or a towel, considered shocking by contemporary audiences. Niagara's
most famous scene is a 30-second long shot behind Monroe where she is seen
walking with her hips swaying, which was used heavily in the film's marketing.
When Niagara was released in January 1953, women's clubs
protested it as immoral, but it proved popular with audiences. While Variety
deemed it "clichéd" and "morbid", The New York Times
commented that "the falls and Miss
Monroe are something to see", as although Monroe may not be "the perfect actress at this point ...
she can be seductive—even when she walks". Monroe continued to attract
attention by wearing revealing outfits, most famously at the Photoplay Awards
in January 1953, where she won the "Fastest
Rising Star" award. A pleated "sunburst"
waist-tight, deep décolleté gold lamé dress designed by William Travilla for
Gentlemen Prefer Blondes, but barely seen at all in the film, was to become a
sensation. Prompted by such imagery, veteran star Joan Crawford publicly called
the behavior "unbecoming an actress
and a lady".
While Niagara made Monroe a sex symbol and established her "look", her second film of
1953, the satirical musical comedy Gentlemen Prefer Blondes, cemented her
screen persona as a "dumb
blonde". Based on Anita Loos' novel and its Broadway version, the film
focuses on two "gold-digging"
showgirls played by Monroe and Jane Russell. Monroe's role was originally
intended for Betty Grable, who had been 20th Century-Fox's most popular "blonde bombshell" in the
1940s; Monroe was fast eclipsing her as a star who could appeal to both male
and female audiences. As part of the film's publicity campaign, she and Russell
pressed their hand and footprints in wet concrete outside Grauman's Chinese
Theatre in June. Gentlemen Prefer Blondes was released shortly after and became
one of the biggest box office successes of the year. Crowther of The New York
Times and William Brogdon of Variety both commented favorably on Monroe,
especially noting her performance of "Diamonds
Are a Girl's Best Friend"; according to the latter, she demonstrated
the "ability to sex a song as well
as point up the eye values of a scene by her presence".
In September, Monroe made her television debut in the Jack
Benny Show, playing Jack's fantasy woman in the episode "Honolulu Trip". She co-starred with Betty Grable and
Lauren Bacall in her third movie of the year, How to Marry a Millionaire,
released in November. It featured Monroe as a naïve model who teams up with her
friends to find rich husbands, repeating the successful formula of Gentlemen
Prefer Blondes. It was the second film ever released in CinemaScope, a
widescreen format that Fox hoped would draw audiences back to theaters as
television was beginning to cause losses to film studios. Despite mixed
reviews, the film was Monroe's biggest box office success at that point in her
career.
Monroe was listed in the annual Top Ten Money Making Stars Poll
in both 1953 and 1954, and according to Fox historian Aubrey Solomon became the
studio's "greatest asset"
alongside CinemaScope. Monroe's position as a leading sex symbol was confirmed
in December 1953, when Hugh Hefner featured her on the cover and as centerfold
in the first issue of Playboy; Monroe did not consent to the publication. The
cover image was a photograph taken of her at the Miss America Pageant parade in
1952, and the centerfold featured one of her 1949 nude photographs.
1954–1955: Conflicts
with 20th Century-Fox and marriage to Joe DiMaggio
Monroe had become one of 20th Century-Fox's biggest stars,
but her contract had not changed since 1950, so that she was paid far less than
other stars of her stature and could not choose her projects. Her attempts to
appear in films that would not focus on her as a pin-up had been thwarted by
the studio head executive, Darryl F. Zanuck, who had a strong personal dislike
of her and did not think she would earn the studio as much revenue in other
types of roles. Under pressure from the studio's owner, Spyros Skouras, Zanuck
had also decided that Fox should focus exclusively on entertainment to maximize
profits and canceled the production of any "serious
films". In January 1954, he suspended Monroe when she refused to begin
shooting yet another musical comedy, The Girl in Pink Tights.
Monroe and Joe DiMaggio after getting married at San
Francisco City Hall in January 1954
This was front-page news, and Monroe immediately took action
to counter negative publicity. On January 14, she and Joe DiMaggio were married
at the San Francisco City Hall. They then traveled by car to San Luis Obispo,
and then honeymooned outside Idyllwild, California, in the mountain lodge of
Monroe's lawyer Lloyd Wright. On January 29, 1954, fifteen days later, they
flew to Japan, combining a "honeymoon"
with his commitment to his former San Francisco Seals coach Lefty O'Doul, to
help train Japanese baseball teams. From Tokyo, she traveled with Jean O'Doul,
Lefty's wife, to Korea, where she participated in a USO show, singing songs
from her films for over 60,000 U.S. Marines over a four-day period. After
returning to the U.S., she was awarded Photoplay's "Most Popular Female Star" prize. Monroe settled with Fox
in March, with the promise of a new contract, a bonus of $100,000, and a
starring role in the film adaptation of the Broadway success The Seven Year
Itch.
In April 1954, Otto Preminger's western River of No Return,
the last film that Monroe had filmed prior to the suspension, was released. She
called it a "Z-grade cowboy movie in
which the acting finished second to the scenery and the CinemaScope
process", but it was popular with audiences. The first film she made
after the suspension was the musical There's No Business Like Show Business,
which she strongly disliked but the studio required her to do for dropping The
Girl in Pink Tights. It was unsuccessful upon its release in late 1954, with
Monroe's performance considered vulgar by many critics.
In September 1954, Monroe began filming Billy Wilder's
comedy The Seven Year Itch, starring opposite Tom Ewell as a woman who becomes
the object of her married neighbor's sexual fantasies. Although the film was
shot in Hollywood, the studio decided to generate advance publicity by staging
the filming of a scene in which Monroe is standing on a subway grate with the air
blowing up the skirt of her white dress on Lexington Avenue in Manhattan. The
shoot lasted for several hours and attracted nearly 2,000 spectators. The "subway grate scene" became
one of Monroe's most famous, and The Seven Year Itch became one of the biggest
commercial successes of the year after its release in June 1955.
The publicity stunt placed Monroe on international front
pages, and it also marked the end of her marriage to DiMaggio, who was
infuriated by it. The union had been troubled from the start by his jealousy
and controlling attitude; he was also physically abusive. After returning from
NYC to Hollywood in October 1954, Monroe filed for divorce, after only nine
months of marriage.
After filming for The Seven Year Itch wrapped up in November
1954, Monroe left Hollywood for the East Coast, where she and photographer
Milton Greene founded their own production company, Marilyn Monroe Productions
(MMP)—an action that has later been called "instrumental"
in the collapse of the studio system. Monroe stated that she was "tired of the same old sex roles"
and asserted that she was no longer under contract to Fox, as it had not
fulfilled its duties, such as paying her the promised bonus. This began a
year-long legal battle between her and Fox in January 1955. The press largely
ridiculed Monroe, and she was parodied in the Broadway play Will Success Spoil
Rock Hunter? (1955), in which her lookalike Jayne Mansfield played a dumb
actress who starts her own production company.
After founding MMP, Monroe moved to Manhattan and spent 1955
studying acting. She took classes with Constance Collier and attended workshops
on method acting at the Actors Studio, run by Lee Strasberg. She grew close to
Strasberg and his wife Paula, receiving private lessons at their home due to
her shyness, and soon became a family member. She replaced her old acting
coach, Natasha Lytess, with Paula; the Strasbergs remained an important
influence for the rest of her career. Monroe also started undergoing
psychoanalysis, as Strasberg believed that an actor must confront their
emotional traumas and use them in their performances.
Monroe continued her relationship with DiMaggio despite the
ongoing divorce process; she also dated actor Marlon Brando and playwright
Arthur Miller. She had first been introduced to Miller by Elia Kazan in the
early 1950s. The affair between Monroe and Miller became increasingly serious
after October 1955, when her divorce was finalized and he separated from his
wife. The studio urged her to end it, as Miller was being investigated by the
FBI for allegations of communism and had been subpoenaed by the House
Un-American Activities Committee, but Monroe refused. The relationship led to
the FBI opening a file on her.
By the end of the year, Monroe and Fox signed a new seven-year
contract, as MMP would not be able to finance films alone, and the studio was
eager to have Monroe working for them again. Fox would pay her $400,000 to make
four films, and granted her the right to choose her own projects, directors and
cinematographers. She would also be free to make one film with MMP per each
completed film for Fox.
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