Read Marilyn Monroe: The Biography Online
Authors: Donald Spoto
Tags: #Biography & Autobiography, #Entertainment & Performing Arts, #Women, #Performing Arts, #Film & Video, #History & Criticism
I liked her: George Cukor, quoted in the | |
She gave me: Quoted in Kobal, pp. 606–607. | |
there was a childishness: Inez Melson, in the television special | |
421 | On Ralph Greenson’s background and childhood, see Greenson’s incomplete and unpublished memoir, “My Father the Doctor,” in Box 12 of the Ralph R. Greenson Collection in the Department of Special Collections at the University of California at Los Angeles; henceforth, extracts from this collection are designated RRG. |
The materials relevant to | |
her dream house: Murray, p. 6. | |
a charismatic speaker: RRG, Box 1. | |
He wanted: Benson Schaeffer to DS, Dec. 28, 1992. | |
Only later was it: A highly respected California psychoanalyst requested DS to preserve his anonymity. | |
a hard-living man: Elisabeth Young-Bruehl, | |
“Drugs in the Psychotherapeutic Situation”: RRG, Box 2, Folder 4. Other lectures cited on p. 426 are located in the same box. | |
“Special Problems In Psychotherapy With The Rich and Famous,” dated Aug. 18, 1978: RRG, Box 2, Folder 19. | |
428 | At a meeting held at Fox on June 8, 1962, during the troubled production of MM’s final film, studio executive Phil Feldman wrote: “Dr. Greenson advised that he would be able to get his patient to go along with any reasonable request and although he did not want us to deem his relationship as a Svengali one, he in fact could persuade her to do anything reasonable that he wanted.” From a memorandum in the Twentieth Century–Fox Studio archives headed “Marilyn Monroe Situation,” dated June 8, 1962. |
I was going to be: The quotations attributed to Ralph Greenson are derived from a letter he wrote to Marianne Kris on Aug. 20, 1962. From the Ralph Greenson Papers, Special Collections, UCLA. | |
I’m thirty-four: Quoted in Eve Arnold, p. 85. | |
You’re both narcissists: Quoted by Esther Maltz (formerly Mrs. Hyman Engelberg) to DS, July 28 and Oct. 23, 1992. | |
prescribe medication for her: Ralph Greenson to Marianne Kris, Aug. 20, 1962: Greenson Papers, Special Collections, UCLA. | |
I have lived: Alfred Hitchcock to DS, July 18, 1975. | |
Westerns and the West: Miller, p. 462. | |
This is an attempt: James Goode, | |
432 | On the making of |
Each of the players: Goode, p. 17. | |
What makes you so sad?: Miller, p. 369. | |
desperately unhappy: Rupert Allan to DS, Aug. 17, 1991. | |
But the character: Sam Shaw to DS, March 7, 1992. | |
Miller’s was the: Shaw and Rosten, p. 186. | |
I have not: Quoted in “Mosaic for Marilyn,” | |
I never really: Jon Whitcomb, “Marilyn Monroe—The Sex Symbol Versus The Good Wife,” | |
But I promised: McIntyre, | |
Harlow was always: Quoted in | |
by throwing a fit: Luitjers, pp. 67–68. | |
I had to: Most of these remarks were edited out of the 1962 | |
She had considerable: Goode, p. 43. | |
I’m Mitzi Gaynor: Goode, p. 117. | |
Cut!: Goode, p. 182. | |
a mean streak: Anjelica Huston to Barbara Walters on ABC-TV, Nov. 6, 1991. | |
437 | For the account of the perils of making |
I want you: Madsen, p. 149. | |
What I didn’t know: | |
I’m doing this one: For the account of Gable’s stunts in | |
438 | For an account of Gable’s stunts in |
You can all: Gable’s remark and the incident are recounted in Goode, pp. 208–209. | |
They don’t care: Gable, quoted in Lawrence Grovel, | |
had begun staying: Miller, p. 474. | |
But I like: Huston, quoted in Gerald Pratley, | |
Well, I ran: Quoted in | |
I spent a lot: John Huston, | |
The telltale sign: Grobel, p. 496. | |
losing steadily: Goode, p. 48; see also pp. 31, 35, 61, 73, 82, 159. Huston’s gambling habits are also detailed in William F. Nolan, | |
What should I ask: The dialogue is recorded in Goode, p. 246 and repeated by Grobel, p. 496. | |
For details of Paula Strasberg’s illness, I am grateful to Susan Strasberg, who discussed the matter in several interviews during June and October 1992. | |
I think we’re doing: Goode, p. 126. | |
I was almost: Miller, p. 477. | |
MM’s doctor-administered injections of Amytal were gruesomely recounted by Miller, p. 481: these were, he wrote, enough to sedate her for a major operation. See also Miller, pp. 528–529. | |
It took so long: Allan Snyder to DS, May 2, 1992. | |
On Huston’s loss of $16,000 on August 16, see Goode, p. 108. | |
the one great lesson: Often quoted—e.g., in Lyn Tornabene, | |
442 | The relevant daily production history of |
I think she: Hedda Hopper’s column for Sept. 1, 1960; prepared the previous day at her office by wire service. | |
On Huston and Miller, see Miller, p. 485. Huston’s account was unvarying: “Drugs ravaged her, and she broke down. I had to send her to a hospital for a week” (in Wolper, | |
444 | August 27: Goode, p. 124. |
And with that: Evelyn Moriarty to DS, Feb. 17 and Aug. 9, 1992. | |
When the press: Ralph Roberts to DS, March 2, 1992. | |
My guess is: Hyman Engelberg, quoted in the | |
looking wonderfully: Miller, p. 485. | |
when she was told: Goode, pp. 257–258. | |
I | |
All my life: Henry Hathaway, quoted in Kobal, p. 613. | |
serious, accurate: Paul V. Beckley, in the | |
I can’t do it: Grobel, p. 498. | |
448 | Detailed information on Greenson’s increasingly bizarre relationship with MM, and his family’s relationship with her, came collectively from Rupert Allan, Ralph Roberts, Susan Strasberg, Pat Newcomb, and from three sources close to the Greenson family who requested that DS preserve their anonymity. |