Read Marilyn Monroe: The Biography Online
Authors: Donald Spoto
Tags: #Biography & Autobiography, #Entertainment & Performing Arts, #Women, #Performing Arts, #Film & Video, #History & Criticism
She wanted me: Ella Fitzgerald, quoted in Gloria Steinern, | |
He, too, wanted: Michael Korda to DS, June 30, 1992. | |
299 | Background material on the formation of MMP is found in MG (all files and folders) and was also provided by Jay Kanter (MM’s MCA agent in New York from 1955) to DS, April 15, 1992. |
For a brief outline history of Lew Wasserman’s extraordinarily powerful career, see “Lew!”, | |
never had a chance: MG I, 2, p. 3. | |
With us she had: Amy Greene to DS, May 5, 1992. | |
Marilyn seemed to me: Jay Kanter to DS, April 15, 1992. | |
because of their: Irving L. Stein, corporate memorandum dated Feb. 2, 1955, in MG II. Hereinafter, Stein’s corporate memoranda, letters, etc., are designated ILS. | |
We will go: | |
The account of the night at the Copacabana was recalled by Amy Greene to DS, May 5, 1992. | |
It is the damndest: ILS to Aubrey Schenck, Jan. 13, 1955: MG II. | |
You’re looking good: Quoted in Sidney Skolsky’s syndicated column (e.g., | |
It might be fatal: ILS, Jan. 27, 1955: MG II. | |
Get Joe DiMaggio: ILS, Jan. 31, 1955. | |
only while DiMaggio: ILS, Feb. 2, 1955: MG IV. | |
Is this a: Earl Wilson, “Marilyn, Joe Tryst Hints Reconciliation,” syndicated column (e.g., | |
Regarding Marilyn’s ease in wandering the streets of New York if she did not make herself up: this she discussed on Edward R. Murrow’s CBS television show | |
307 | Regarding RCA’s promotion for her recordings in |
For accounts and histories of Lee Strasberg and the Actors Studio, see Evangeline Morphos, ed., | |
We were like: Eli Wallach, quoted in Joanne Kaufman, “Studio System,” | |
We were dedicated: Shelley Winters, | |
He sometimes got: Anne Jackson, | |
Lee was enshrined: Kazan, p. 539. | |
It made me: Marlon Brando, quoted in the | |
Lee-you-should-excuse: Quoted in Adams, p. 3. | |
Crying, after all: Quoted in Viner, p. 109. | |
All this talk: Laurence Olivier, quoted by Basil Langton to DS, May 11, 1990; see also Maurice Zolotow, “The Olivier Method,” | |
On Strasberg’s insisting that MM submit to psychoanalysis: Susan Strasberg to DS, June 3 and 10, 1992; see also Susan Strasberg, | |
Milton did more: Amy Greene to DS, May 5, 1992. | |
| Chapter Fifteen: |
I had teachers: MG VI: 4. | |
It seemed to me: ILS, Feb. 28, 1955. | |
My problem is: Her remarks have three sources: Belmont, p. 19; MG III, 3, 17, in notes taken at a meeting with Stein on March 10, 1955; and MM to Susan Strasberg, quoted to DS, June 3, 1992. | |
The incidents and dialogue with the Rostens are recounted in Norman Rosten, | |
When she came: Norman Rosten, quoted in Kahn, p. 67. | |
and the resulting: Miller, p. 354. | |
It was wonderful: James Kaplan, | |
It meant a lot: MM on Edward R. Murrow’s CBS-TV show | |
The circumstances of the Murrow television broadcast are derived from Amy Greene’s account to DS, May 5, 1992; and from a study of the program, preserved in the archives of the Museum of Television and Radio, New York City. | |
Imagine what you: Eve Arnold, on the BBC-TV documentary | |
For Susan Strasberg’s contributions, see | |
She wore: Stanley Kauffmann, “Album of Marilyn Monroe,” | |
323 | You have only: Susan Strasberg to DS, June 3, 1992. |
Sam Shaw’s memories of MM to DS, March 7, 1992. | |
Looking at her: Truman Capote, “An Abbess in High-heeled Shoes,” | |
I just felt: The incident with Eli Wallach is recorded in Adams, p. 256. | |
The notes by MM are recorded in MG III, VI, VII, IX, as are the poems on pp. 325–327. | |
My father was: Susan Strasberg to DS, June 3, 1992. | |
Don’t you ever: Quoted in Adams, p. 263. | |
Our household revolved: Strasberg, | |
it was hard: John Strasberg, quoted in | |
When I have problems: Quoted in Adams, p. 258. | |
Oh, no: MM quoted by Gloria Steinem in | |
Hi, it’s me: Quoted by Susan Strasberg to DS; also in | |
anybody who had: Kim Stanley to John Kobal, p. 699. | |
endeavor to develop: Frank Corsaro, on the 1991 American Masters documentary on the Actors Studio, prod. Chloe Aaron, dir. Dennis Powers for PBS. | |
I know they say: For MM on Kafka, see Tom Hutchinson, | |
That’s all they’re: Shaw and Rosten, p. 95. | |
We’re just good friends: | |
Marilyn was afraid: Lois Weber Smith, quoted in Allen, pp. 199–200. | |
Marilyn told me: Rupert Allan to DS, Aug. 3, 1991. | |
The supplanting of Milton by Lee was suggested in Dorothy Kilgallen’s column in the | |
How do we: ILS, June 30, 1955: MG IX. | |
332 | For details of MM’s time with the Strasbergs on Manhattan and on Fire Island, and for the nighttime dialogue between MM and their daughter, I am grateful for several interviews with Susan Strasberg during May, June and July 1992. |
One day she: Amy Greene to DS, May 5, 1992. | |
had a great sense: | |
She was pleased: John Springer to DS, March 5, 1992. | |
This is the girl: Quoted in Edward Wagenknecht, | |
The dialogue with Gilels is reported by Rosten (pp. 24–25), who was present. | |
336 | Regarding the FBI file on Marilyn Monroe, there are eighty pages declassified, beginning at document number 105-40018-1. Documents dated August 19, 1955, and April 27, 1956, concern MM and her request for a visa and the history of her last two years. They are documents numbered 105-40018. The document containing the FBI’s recording of the item from the London |
I expect our divorce: Joe DiMaggio, on the INS newswire service dated Aug. 21, 1955; see e.g., | |
I never should: MM to Amy Greene, quoted to DS, May 5, 1992. | |
You all start: George Axelrod, | |
I saw: Quoted by George Axelrod to DS, April 22, 1992. | |
I’m beginning to: MM, quoted in Pete Martin, “The New Marilyn Monroe,” | |
| Chapter Sixteen: |
There is persuasive: | |
But then she had: Laurence Olivier, | |
The questions and answers at the press conference were widely reported: see, e.g., | |
Shall I take: Josephine DiLorenzo and Theo Wilson, “Marilyn Can Act Too, Sez Olivier,” | |
The strap breaking: John Moore to DS, Aug. 23, 1992. | |
Before we went: Eve Arnold in the BBC-TV documentary | |
artless: Quoted in Hugo Vickers, | |
Brooklyn became Nirvana: Sam Shaw to DS, March 7, 1992. | |
heavenly: often, as in Hedda Hopper’s syndicated column for Jan. 24, 1956. | |
There are all: ILS, Jan. 6, 1956: MG IV. | |
Teenage boys: Vincent X. Flaherty, “Will Marilyn Become an Intellectual?” | |
America’s best known: Walter Winchell’s radio broadcast of Feb. 12, 1956, recorded as FBI document number 62-31615-966. | |
344 | For an account of Miller’s troubles with the FBI, see Natalie Robins, |
the next stop: Walter Winchell’s broadcast of June 10, 1956, recorded as FBI document number 62-31615-983. | |
Miss Monroe, after: Memo from SAC, Los Angeles, to Director, FBI, dated June 1, 1956, FBI document number 23-100-422103. | |
Regarding the final disposition of MMP shares and control, information is detailed in ILS memoranda throughout October and December 1955, culminating in the memorandum of February 11, 1956. | |
Be conservative: The Wasserman memorandum to Stein was dated Feb. 14, 1956; subsequent calls and correspondence on this matter occur through the twenty-first. | |
Marilyn Monroe, Blonde: Quoted in “The New Marilyn,” | |
This was really: Maureen Stapleton to DS, April 22, 1992. | |
I couldn’t see: Quoted in | |
very deep: Anna Sten to John Kobal, p. 140. | |
often brilliant: Robert Schneiderman, “Drama teacher remembers Marilyn Monroe,” | |
The press reception at the airport was documented on film and has been included in virtually every documentary on MM: see, e.g., Feldman and Winters, “Beyond the Legend,” and Wolper, | |
For the court appearance of MM, see these newspapers, all dated March 1: | |
She seemed content: Allan Snyder to DS, May 2, 1992. | |
Irving Stein’s statement is from ILS, memorandum dated March 3, 1956: MG VII. | |
In Marilyn’s powerful: JWP/NL II, p. 25. | |
But Marilyn can’t act: Joshua Logan, | |
I have worked: | |
she wants to: Milton Greene to ILS, March 17, 1956: MG IV. | |
Like a child: Guy Trebay, “Don Murray,” | |
Milton seemed to want: William Woodfield to DS, Sept. 20, 1991. | |
surrounded with intrigue: Ezra Goodman, | |
He just kept clicking: George Axelrod to DS, Nov. 6, 1991. | |
I can’t do it: Miller, pp. 379–380. |