Read Marilyn Monroe: The Biography Online
Authors: Donald Spoto
Tags: #Biography & Autobiography, #Entertainment & Performing Arts, #Women, #Performing Arts, #Film & Video, #History & Criticism
They all came over: Eunice Murray, quoted in the | |
The man: Wilson, p. 56. | |
There was no doubt: | |
494 | MM’s telephone message logs, kept in longhand and then typed by Cherie Redmond, were turned over to DS in 1992 by a purchaser who had obtained them after MM’s death from Inez Melson. |
According to Redmond’s message logs (for Feb. 5, March 8, May 9, June 12, 22, 29 and July 6), Eunice’s repeated requests for cash advances continued throughout that year constituted a habit MM found annoying—as she did the housekeeper’s demand for a signed check | |
For Isadore Miller’s brief recollections of the Florida visit, see Wagenknecht, pp. 52–54. | |
On MM’s freedom from drug dependence during her Mexican trip, see Murray, p. 59ff.; also Pat Newcomb to DS, Aug. 3, 1992. | |
Whenever she was: George Masters to DS, Aug. 8, 1992. See also George Masters and Norma Lee Browning, | |
Regarding MM’s dress at the Golden Globe ceremony: George Masters to DS, Aug. 8, 1992. | |
drunk, barely: Susan Strasberg to DS, June 3, 1992; see also | |
vitamin shots: Murray, p. 78. | |
It was irresponsible: Arnold Abrams, M.D., to DS, Nov. 2, 1992. | |
During and after: Ralph Roberts to DS, Mar. 2, 1992. | |
It is hard: Pat Newcomb to DS, Aug. 3, 1992; see also Guiles, | |
The details of MM’s visit to Greenson on March 3, 1962 were provided by two sources who requested anonymity—one a medical colleague of Greenson, the other a person close to him. | |
I don’t know: Nunnally Johnson to Jean Negulesco, quoted in Negulesco, p. 223. | |
the studio simply: Arnold Shulman to DS, July 7, 1992; see also Shulman’s comments in Strasberg, | |
an artist who: David Brown to DS, Nov. 11, 1992. | |
loved and admired: Milton Rudin to DS, Oct. 31, 1992. | |
500 | out of line: The doctor present in the Greenson house was under supervision by Greenson for psychotherapeutic training that year, and he was an eyewitness to the DiMaggio event. Still in practice in Los Angeles, he has requested that his name not be used as a source for this event. In fact, there was a second witness, also a physician still in practice in Beverly Hills. |
Henry, don’t you pay any attention: Quoted by Weinstein to DS, Dec. 10, 1992. | |
I think that Ralph: Henry Weinstein to DS, Dec. 10, 1992. | |
She was a poor creature: Quoted in McCann, p. 176. | |
executives were not: Walter Bernstein to DS, March 5, 1992; see also his reminiscences in “Marilyn Monroe’s Last Picture Show,” | |
She was very charming: Bernstein to DS, March 5, 1992. | |
based on the fact: Murray, p. 71. | |
504 | Regarding Eunice’s management of Marilyn’s home and life, and her choice of workmen, see her book, pp. 72ff. |
It’s not particularly: Cherie Redmond to Hedda Rosten, April 27, 1962. | |
505 | Not in her worst: Susan Strasberg to DS, Nov. 5, 1992. |
For the injection by Seigel, see Bernstein, | |
Seigel was: Ernest Lehman to DS, Aug. 29, 1992. | |
every few days: Murray, p. 78. | |
Regarding the gift to Agnes Flanagan: see Crivello, p. 250. | |
The arithmetic: | |
an agent: David Brown to DS, Nov. 11, 1992. | |
507 | Receipts detailing each hour of Marilyn’s appointments from April through June were preserved by Carey Cadillac. They were signed and dated by the driver, Rudy Kautzky, and bear invoice numbers 21703 through 22005. |
509 | For Cukor’s opinions, DS interviewed (on April 20, 1992) Richard Stanley, the director’s assistant during the last seven years of Cukor’s life. |
511 | Seigel’s reports are preserved in the production files for the film, on reports for April 30 through May 4, and in the documentary |
Marilyn did | |
Marilyn was shattered: Johnson and Leventhal, p. 208. | |
The president’s birthday gala in May had, of course, been planned for months: Marilyn told Rupert Allan, among others, that the invitation to her was issued personally by JFK in March, and as filming approached, she also made it clear to Fox that she would have to be released for two days in New York that May. The studio would not, of course, object to a star appearing at so prestigious an event. | |
nothing, absolutely: | |
It might have been: Murray, p. 101. | |
At 4:00: Daily log for May 1 kept by Cherie V. Redmond, from the Redmond/Melson papers delivered to DS in June 1992. | |
Evelyn Moriarty’s meeting with Eunice Murray was told to DS by Evelyn on Feb. 17, 1992. | |
Hildi was afraid: Ralph Greenson to Marianne Kris, Aug. 20, 1992: Greenson Papers, Special Collections, UCLA. | |
When I left: Ralph Greenson, Folder 4, Box 2: Greenson Papers, Special Collections, UCLA. This material was the rough draft form of what became a portion of chapter twelve of his book | |
By this time: Pat Newcomb to DS, Aug. 3, 1992. | |
I had no idea: Milton Gould to DS, Nov. 10, 1992. | |
The Weinstein-Ebbins dialogue was reconstructed for DS by Milton Ebbins, Aug. 6, 1992. | |
The whole thing: Henry Weinstein to DS, Dec. 10, 1992. | |
Peter Levathes firmly denied (to DS, Oct. 8, 1992) the absurd allegation set down by some writers to the effect that he received a telephone call from Robert Kennedy, ordering the release of MM from work so she could come to New York on May 17. | |
became more and more: recounted to DS by Ralph Roberts on March 2, 1992. | |
We kept working: William Asher to DS, Sept. 25, 1992. | |
skin and beads: Quoted in Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr., | |
I’d like you: Quoted in Wagenknecht, p. 54. | |
Marilyn came: Mathilde Krim, on | |
reveled in that: George Masters to DS, Aug. 8, 1992. | |
Regarding the presidential gala: for years there has circulated the rumor that after the reception at the Krim residence, MM joined Kennedy for a tryst in his bedroom at the Carlyle Hotel. “This is absolutely impossible,” recalled Ralph Roberts. After Milton Ebbins and two other guests left the Krim residence on East Sixty-ninth Street with Marilyn, they delivered her to her apartment at about two o’clock, and there Roberts awaited to give her pre-arranged massage. “When I departed, it was almost four and she was asleep” (RR to DS, March 2, 1992). | |
| Chapter Twenty-one: |
524 | MM was attended at home for her ear infection and resulting insomnia by Dr. Milton Uhley, then on call for Engelberg. He billed her for three visits to her home: the evening of May 27, after midnight on May 28–29, and from one to four the morning of June 3. |
What happened: Henry Weinstein, in the Schipper documentary | |
a dangerous arsenal: Murray, p. 107. | |
527 | Henceforth, all details of MM’s telephone calls are derived from the complete records of General Telephone and Electronics for the two numbers installed at her residence, 476-1890 and and 472-4830. These were provided to DS through the mediation of producer-director Ted Landreth, who obtained them from Neil Spaatz, Senior Detective with the Los Angeles Police Department and later head of security for Playboy Enterprises. |
528 | Details of the telephone calls and meetings involving Weinstein, Feldman, Levathes, Rudin, Greenson and Gang were all set down in nine pages of studio memoranda by Phil Feldman titled “Marilyn Monroe Situation” and dated June 6 through 11, 1962. DS obtained them in early 1992 from a private source. Henceforth these documents are designated “Feldman.” |