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- @
- Monroe's real name was Norma Jean Baker. She was illegitimate, and
- her mother had psychiatric problems, so she was brought up in an
- orphanage and in foster homes. She married a sailor at 15, but was
- divorced four years later, by which time she had become a model
- #
- In the early
- Fifties, Hollywood
- liked its stars to
- be clean and
- wholesome.
- Monroe's rather
- sleazy history
- almost brought
- her short career to
- a sudden halt.
- But Marilyn's
- artless honesty
- meant her early
- indiscretions
- were forgiven
- #
- When she became
- a star, Monroe's
- huge appeal lay
- partly in her
- contradictions:
- sex symbol and
- serious actress,
- wife to America's
- most famous
- sportsman and
- then to its
- best playwright,
- Marilyn was
- "bright enough to
- play the dumb
- blonde role to
- perfection."
- #
- Depression and
- drug dependence,
- as well as
- divorce, all
- afflicted Monroe
- towards the end
- of her life. At that
- time, she was
- regarded as a
- difficult person;
- after her death
- from an overdose
- of barbiturates, at
- the age of 36, she
- became a tragic
- figure, whose
- unhappy life was
- shrouded by the
- glitz and glamor
- of Hollywood
-
- #
- Thirty years after
- she died, Monroe
- is still a star, and
- still makes news.
- She was immort-
- alised by Andy
- Warhol, aped by
- Madonna and
- honoured by the
- US postal service
- (in 1995 she
- became the first
- film star to
- appear on a
- postage stamp).
- More than 70
- books have been
- written about her
- since her death
- @
- Monroe's first
- glimpse of
- showbiz was
- as a model,
- chosen by an
- Army photo-
- grapher in1944
- to pose for
- pin-up pictures.
- This led to a
- contract with
- Twentieth-
- Century Fox, in
- 1946. After
- several minor
- film roles, she
- began to make an
- impact in The
- Asphalt Jungle
- and All About
- Eve, both in 1950
- #
- Monroe said: "Success came to me in a rush." By 1952 she was the
- most popular actress of the year, chosen by American moviegoers.
- The same year, alongside Jane Russell, she put her handprint on the
- sidewalk of fame, outside Graumman's Theatre in Los Angeles
- #
- The leading role
- in The Seven Year
- Itch (and her
- marriage to
- baseball star Joe
- DiMaggio) gave
- Monroe worldwide
- celebrity; but
- Monroe sought
- respect as an
- actress, too.
- She studied at
- the Actor's Studio
- in New York, and
- won critical
- acclaim for her
- role in the film
- Bus Stop
- #
- Some Like It Hot and Let's Make Love, were among Marilyn's most
- successful films. The latter was made with Yves Montand - shown
- here with his wife, Simone Signoret and Monroe's husband, Arthur
- Miller (far left)
- #
- Monroe was fired
- from the set of
- Something's Got
- to Give for her
- wayward
- behaviour: she
- had turned up for
- only 12 of her 32
- days' shooting.
- The studio said
- it was going
- to sue her for
- $750,000 in
- damages. But
- two months
- later Marilyn
- Monroe was dead
- @
- Monroe married
- Joe DiMaggio
- in 1954. "I
- wonder if I can
- take all your
- crazy publicity",
- he said. He
- couldn't - he
- particularly
- objected to the
- billowing-skirt
- scene from The
- Seven Year Itch.
- Nine months
- later they were
- divorced, but
- they remained
- lifelong friends
- #
- Monroe's third
- husband was the
- famous American
- playwright,
- Arthur Miller.
- One US paper
- headlined the
- announcement of
- their marriage:
- "Egghead weds
- hourglass". Asked
- what the secret
- was of Miller's
- appeal, Monroe
- said: "Everything.
- Haven't you seen
- him?"
- #
- After her death, rumours spread that Monroe had had affairs with
- both John Kennedy (centre) and his brother Robert (far left). A friend,
- the actor Peter Lawford, claimed that she told him to "Say goodbye
- to Jack" (President Kennedy) on the night of her death
- #
- The Kennedy
- connection led to
- speculation about
- Monroe's suicide
- - and to the
- allegation that
- she had in fact
- been murdered,
- to cover up her
- relationship with
- the president
-