Read Marilyn Monroe: The Biography Online
Authors: Donald Spoto
Tags: #Biography & Autobiography, #Entertainment & Performing Arts, #Women, #Performing Arts, #Film & Video, #History & Criticism
She was terrified: Jane Russell to DS, March 18, 1985; likewise on | |
Neither of us: Jamison, | |
far more intelligent: Jane Russell, | |
no makeup: | |
that she was just: Jack Cole, quoted in Kobal, p. 605. | |
the most frightened: Hawks, in McBride, | |
I’m really eager: MM to Dick Williams, | |
On the auction of the Reinhardt materials, see the | |
Surely you will: Gottfried Reinhardt, | |
| Chapter Twelve: |
Marilyn, this man: JWP/NL I, p. 19. | |
still very much: Sidney Skolsky’s column for Feb. 9, 1953. | |
She had to be: “Billy, Please Dress Me Forever,” | |
that looked as if: “Florabel Muir Reporting,” | |
burlesque show: Joan Crawford, in Bob Thomas’s Associated Press syndicated column (e.g., | |
One thing that makes: Joan Crawford, quoted in the | |
Marilyn’s the biggest: Quoted in Aline Mosby, “ ‘They’re just jealous of Miss Monroe,’ says Betty Grable,” | |
a love affair: Jean Negulesco, | |
under the spell: Dorris Johnson and Ellen Leventhal, eds., | |
By this time: Alex D’Arcy to DS, June 18, 1992. | |
On the Lytess-Monroe attachment delaying production, see | |
Monroe cannot do: Charles K. Feldman, interoffice memo to staff at Famous Artists Agency dated Feb. 20, 1953. In the Charles Feldman Papers at the American Film Institute, Los Angeles. | |
no meanness in her: Lauren Bacall, | |
Honey, I’ve had mine: Doug Warren, | |
I don’t want: The incident is recalled in Anne Edwards, | |
trying to direct: Charles K. Feldman to MM, Aug. 10, 1953; from the Feldman Collection at the American Film Institute. | |
I pleaded with: Otto Preminger, | |
Marilyn, you don’t: JWP/NL I, p. 2. | |
Marilyn thought there: Robert Mitchum in the Gene Feldman/Suzette Winters television film documentary | |
We put her through: Paul Wurtzel to DS, Feb. 19, 1992. | |
245 | I wouldn’t accept: Luitjers, pp. 57–58. |
Here are the: Allan Snyder to DS, May 2, 1992. | |
She thought they: Quoted in Bart Mills, | |
246 | Regarding news accounts of the Kinsey reports, see |
She was superb: Jack and Joan Benny, | |
Success has helped: Sidney Skolsky’s syndicated column, “Hollywood Is My Beat,” | |
For the circumstances of Grace Goddard’s suicide, see California State File number 53-087308. | |
As for Grace’s husband, he never saw Marilyn Monroe after 1945. Ervin “Doc” Goddard married twice more—first to Anna Alice Long and then to Annie Rundle, who died with him in an auto crash in Ventura on Dec. 4, 1972. | |
she had proved: Negulesco, p. 223; on the pre-theater party, see Johnson, | |
since Gloria Swanson: Mike Connolly, in the | |
This is just: Quoted in Luitjers, p. 56. | |
For Marilyn’s observations and agent Hugh French’s reaction, see a letter from him to Charles K. Feldman dated Oct. 9, 1953, and preserved in the Feldman Collection at the American Film Institute, Los Angeles. | |
convinced Marilyn: Ray Stark to Charles K. Feldman, memorandum dated Dec. 1, 1953, preserved in the Feldman Collection, American Film Institute, Los Angeles. | |
she cooperated: Hugh French to Charles K. Feldman, cable dated Dec. 19, 1953, preserved in the Feldman Papers, American Film Institute, Los Angeles. | |
| Chapter Thirteen: |
pill-pals: Sidney Skolsky’s column for June 6, 1954 (in the | |
not fighting over: Loyd Wright, Jr., quoted in the | |
I was put: Quoted in Marie Torre, “Marilyn Monroe,” | |
I read the script: Quoted in Sidney Skolsky’s column in the | |
I couldn’t believe: Zanuck, quoted in Dick Williams’s column in the | |
Marilyn herself: | |
the inheritor: | |
I’d like to have: Widely quoted in the international press: see, e.g., Allen, p. 180; Kahn, p. 254; | |
On the motel room, see Allen, p. 180. | |
It usually rents for: Quoted in Hedda Hopper, “DiMaggio and Monroe Hide for Honeymoon,” | |
radiant: | |
solemn and tired: | |
I just bumped: “Marilyn and DiMaggio on Their Way to Japan,” | |
my Slugger: Often throughout 1954, and reported, e.g., in Roger Manvell, | |
Airport officials: United Press International wire item dated January 30, 1955; see, e.g., the | |
went virtually unnoticed: | |
like I was: Kahn, p. 255. | |
For O’Doul’s recollections, see Kahn, | |
The press conference was widely reported by wire services; see, e.g., | |
the marriage seemed: Quoted in Allen, p. 183; also see Gay Talese, “The Silent Season of a Hero,” in | |
264 | For accounts of MM’s tour of Korea, see C. Robert Jennings, “The Strange Case of Marilyn Monroe vs. the U.S. Army,” |
There were seventeen: From the original draft of Hecht’s version of MM’s autobiography, Box HE, pages 133–136, in the Ben Hecht Collection at The Newberry Library, Chicago. | |
She was Marilyn Monroe: Quoted in the |