Read Marilyn Monroe: The Biography Online
Authors: Donald Spoto
Tags: #Biography & Autobiography, #Entertainment & Performing Arts, #Women, #Performing Arts, #Film & Video, #History & Criticism
a pretty dull: Earl Wilson, | |
You know: Quoted in Sidney Skolsky’s column in the | |
They showed me: “The Men Who Interest Me . . . By Mrs. Joe DiMaggio,” | |
Why, you’re: This little dialogue has been attributed to their meeting in 1953, which Milton and Marilyn put forth as the official time of their meeting and which most people accepted—including Amy Greene (who married Milton that year). But Rupert Allan heard it in his home in 1949. | |
painting with the: Often in MG: e.g., I, 4, p. 31; see also Al Morch, “The photographer who captured Marilyn Monroe,” | |
Telegram to MG from MM preserved in MG I, 1. | |
sad to see Milton: Rupert Allan to DS, June 17, 1991. | |
voluptuously made: Quoted in Lawrence Grobel, | |
When she finished: John Huston, | |
But she was: Quoted in the | |
For the better: JWP/NL II, p. 9. | |
She impressed me: John Huston in Wolper, | |
It was the first: JWP/NL II, p. 10. | |
I don’t know: | |
Body control: Quoted by George Masters to DS, Aug. 8, 1992. | |
For the reminiscences of Agnes Flanagan, see Crivello, p. 250. | |
eager young hustlers: Nunnally Johnson, quoted in Rollyson, p. 33. | |
Almost everybody thought: MG XII, 3, p. 14. | |
Joe sponsored: David Brown to DS, Nov. 11, 1992. | |
had done a good: Joseph L. Mankiewicz, | |
Every now and then: | |
very inquiring: George Sanders, | |
but somehow she: Mankiewicz, p. 79. | |
soft-spoken: Fredda Dudley Balling to Constance McCormick, quoted in the Constance McCormick Collection in the Film Archives of the University of Southern California. | |
because I wanted: MG2 IV, 3, p. 22. | |
She fed Josefa: JWP/NL I, p. 11. | |
was a channel: JWP/NL II, p. 10. | |
I signalled: | |
He had a tendency: Steffi Sidney Splaver to DS, June 5, 1992. There is also an amusing account of Skolsky’s place in Hollywood history in Goodman, pp. 46–49 and 392–395. | |
Do you think: Quoted by Skolsky in Goodman, p. 394. | |
From then on: Sidney Skolsky, | |
He had confidence: “The Men Who Interest Me . . . By Mrs. Joe DiMaggio,” | |
I don’t know: MG2 VIII, 5. | |
I saw: JWP/NL I, p. 13. | |
Joe Schenck was: Sam Shaw to DS, March 8, 1992. | |
Natasha often accused: MG2 III, 3, p. 9. | |
just by standing: | |
| Chapter Ten: |
It wasn’t until: JWP/NL II, p. 16. | |
She said she: | |
she was frightened: Quoted in “MM Remembered,” | |
She can’t stop: Quoted in Kazan, p. 404. | |
Every time: | |
She hadn’t even: | |
technique of seduction: | |
a simple, decent-hearted: | |
Marilyn simply wasn’t: Kazan, p. 415. | |
I’m not interested: Many times in her life: e.g., the incident here, cited in Pete Martin, “The New Marilyn Monroe,” | |
the shock of: Arthur Miller, | |
When Miller withdrew his script from Hollywood rather than alter its premise, he received a telegram from Harry Cohn complaining that “THE MINUTE WE TRY TO MAKE THE SCRIPT PRO-AMERICAN YOU PULL OUT” (see Miller, p. 308). The wheels were set in motion for the absurd charges of anti-Americanism against Arthur Miller. | |
the air around: Miller, p. 306. | |
not only by: | |
was something like: | |
She fell in love: JWP/NL I, p. 9. | |
if I had stayed: Arthur Miller, quoted in James Kaplan, “Miller’s Crossing,” | |
Most people: MM to AM, March 9, 1951; she kept a working copy (MG2 III, 3). | |
If you want: AM to MM, March 13, 1951, cited in Fred Lawrence Guiles, | |
It scared hell: Kazan, p. 427. | |
you could hear: Sidney Skolsky, “Hollywood Is My Beat,” | |
hardly enough room: Quoted in Robert Cahn, “The 1951 Model Blonde,” | |
the whole crew: June Haver in “MM remembered,” | |
she grabbed: Jack Paar, on the television program | |
one of the brightest: Ezra Goodman in the | |
Marilyn Monroe is superb: | |
Our bodies: He was citing the epigraph to the first chapter of his book; cf. Michael Chekhov, | |
I am going: Chekhov, p. 6. | |
Merely discussing: | |
artists of such magnitude: Chekhov, p. 163–166. | |
She is particularly concerned: Cahn, | |
She’s the biggest: Quoted in Goodman, p. 234. | |
How much of the story: Skolsky, p. 220. | |
The studio: Richard Meryman, “A Last Long Talk With A Lonely Girl,” | |
Like a famous predecessor: Cahn, | |
terribly late: Rupert Allan to DS, Aug. 1, 1991. | |
the brightest star: Rupert Allan, “Marilyn Monroe . . . a serious blonde who can act,” | |
Nothing happened: Robert Wagner, in | |
indifferent, amusing: E.g., Wanda Hale, in the | |
Hold a good thought: E.g., Skolsky, p. 216; also Susan Strasberg to DS, Aug. 29, 1992. | |
Every element had to be: Marjorie Plecher Snyder to DS, May 2, 1992. | |
scared as hell: Quoted in Peter Bogdanovich, |