Read Marilyn Monroe: The Biography Online
Authors: Donald Spoto
Tags: #Biography & Autobiography, #Entertainment & Performing Arts, #Women, #Performing Arts, #Film & Video, #History & Criticism
I was her therapist: Ralph Greenson to Marianne Kris, Aug. 20, 1962. | |
the sad fact: Quoted in | |
I kept him waiting: Skolsky, p. 230. He locates this conversation in Los Angeles after Gable’s death, but that is impossible: it must have occurred between the first heart attack and the second, fatal one, for when Gable died MM was in New York. | |
I take a lot: Vernon Scott, “What’s the Next Move for Marilyn Monroe?” | |
| Chapter Nineteen: |
Scott, | |
My work is: Alan Levy, “Marilyn Monroe: ‘A Good Long Look at Myself,’ ” | |
splendid: W. Somerset Maugham, in a letter to MM dated Jan. 31, 1961. | |
because the press: Pat Newcomb to DS, Aug. 3, 1992. Henceforth, all quotations attributed to Pat Newcomb are taken from this interview unless otherwise noted. | |
incompatibility of character: Divorce proceeding reported in the | |
I am upset: UPI wire service story dated Jan. 21, 1961; see, e.g., the | |
It would be: | |
Mr. Miller is: MM to Hedda Hopper in July 1961, released in her syndicated column on Sunday, July 16. | |
456 | The details of MM’s sojourn at the Payne Whitney Clinic of New York Hospital were provided in interviews with Norman Rosten, Ralph Roberts, Susan Strasberg and Pat Newcomb. For the medical evaluation of her as “extremely disturbed and potentially self-destructive,” see a report obtained by the |
MM’s letter to the Strasbergs was first printed in | |
On DiMaggio’s life from 1955 to 1961, see Bob Dean, “Marilyn to Wed Again?” | |
He carried a torch: Quoted in Allen, p. 186. | |
take the hospital: Quoted by many of MM’s friends—e.g., in Rosten, p. 93. | |
Kris’s remarks to Roberts were relayed to DS and are also found in Susan Strasberg, | |
I feel wonderful: UPI wire service story for March 6, 1961; see, e.g., the | |
as radiantly: | |
She had just been discharged: Wagenknecht, p. 49. | |
Joe DiMaggio deeply loved: Allen, p. 189. | |
The attraction to Joe: | |
I’m very happy: Jonah Rudd, “Now That I Am 35,” | |
There’s no doubt that: Milton Ebbins’s recollections about Sinatra and MM, and about MM up to the night of her death, were provided in his interviews with DS in Beverly Hills on August 6 and September 22, 1992. | |
It was scary: A composite statement of the same sentiments, expressed by MM to Rupert Allan and Susan Strasberg. | |
I told [Arthur]: Rosten, p. 91. | |
Henceforth in the text, all the remarks attributed to Ralph Roberts derive from the interview with DS on March 2, 1992, and from subsequent, supplementary telephone conversations in May, June, August and September of that year. See also Susan Strasberg, | |
469 | Details of the Greenson-Monroe relationship derive from previously dated interviews with Ralph Roberts, Susan Strasberg, Allan Snyder, Pat Newcomb, Rupert Allan; from a conversation with Greenson’s then brother-in-law and attorney, Milton Rudin; and from interviews with three layfolk who knew Greenson personally and two of his Los Angeles psychiatric colleagues, whose five separate requests for anonymity DS has honored so that their professional confidence may be maintained. |
He overstepped: Robert Litman, M.D., to DS, April 23, 1992. | |
Help Help: Norman Rosten, “About Marilyn,” | |
She began to get rid: Ralph Greenson to Marianne Kris, Aug. 20, 1962: Greenson Papers, UCLA Special Collections. | |
I never heard: Betsy Duncan Hammes to DS, July 22, 1992. | |
You must have: David Brown to DS, Nov. 11, 1992. | |
in a shambles: Milton Gould to DS, November 10, 1992. | |
a tall, dark: Negulesco, p. 224. | |
474 | The production history of |
There was nothing: Arnold Shulman to DS, July 28, 1992. | |
Have | |
quick, she was gay: | |
The change: Peter G. Levathes to Spyros P. Skouras, cable dated Jan. 10, 1962, in Box 45 of the Skouras Collection, Stanford University. | |
how much: Peter G. Levathes to DS, Oct. 8, 1992. | |
Her therapist: David Brown to DS, Nov. 11, 1992. | |
essentially a different: Douglas Kirkland to DS, July 24, 1992. | |
If I am a star: Many times, e.g., to Richard Meryman, July 1962, as in | |
I encouraged her: Greenson, in a deposition to the Estate of Marilyn Monroe, preserved in RRG/UCLA. | |
The doctor thought: Eunice Murray, in Wolper, | |
there was nobody else: Ralph Greenson to Marianne Kris, Aug. 20, 1962: Greenson Papers, Special Collections, UCLA. | |
478 | Details on the background and biography of Eunice Joerndt Murray Blackmer were ascertained from the Advancement Office of Urbana University, in Urbana, Ohio; from the Annual Catalogue of the Urbana University School Academy and Junior College for 1917–1918; from the Library and Archives of the Swedenborg School of Religion in Newton, Massachusetts; from Eunice’s son-in-law Philip LaClair (interview July 22, 1992); from County records in Albuquerque, New Mexico, and Bath, Maine; from Frank Higgins, |
mere shadow: Eunice Murray Blackmer to Audrey Stevens, May 13, 1983. | |
constantly to engage: Higgins, pp. 6–7. | |
controversial, alienating: | |
It was strictly: Philip LaClair to DS, July 22, 1992. | |
in any kind: Murray, p. 7. | |
At first: Pat Newcomb to DS, Aug. 3, 1992; henceforth all quotations attributed to Newcomb were derived from this interview unless otherwise noted. | |
very strange lady: Alan Snyder to DS, May 2, 1991. | |
| Chapter Twenty: N.B.: Citations from the daily production reports and call sheets for |
Regarding the cost and mortgage of 12305 Fifth Helena, see the | |
I felt badly: Quoted in Murray, p. 49. | |
she was talked: Evelyn Moriarty to DS, Feb. 17, 1992. | |
but there isn’t: Cherie Redmond to Hedda Rosten, MM daily secretarial and business report from Los Angeles to New York, dated Sunday, Feb. 25, 1962. | |
486 | For accounts of the brief encounters between MM and President Kennedy (hardly constituting a romance), DS relied on interviews with Ralph Roberts, Allan Snyder, Rupert Allan, Susan Strasberg, Pat Newcomb, Milton Ebbins and Joseph Naar; see also Skolsky, pp. 233–234; and Wilson, |
489 | On Robert Kennedy’s friendship (it can be called nothing else) with MM, DS relied on interviews with Edwin Guthman (October 29, 1992) and those listed in the note on p. 493; see also Skolsky, p. 234; Wilson, pp. 60, 84. In his appearance on the television program |