Read Marilyn Monroe: The Biography Online
Authors: Donald Spoto
Tags: #Biography & Autobiography, #Entertainment & Performing Arts, #Women, #Performing Arts, #Film & Video, #History & Criticism
There was too much: Murray, p. 122. | |
Why don’t you come: Regarding MM’s invitation to Pat Newcomb and their dialogue: Newcomb to DS, Aug. 3, 1992; also Newcomb quoted in the | |
seemingly without: Quoted in Murray, p. 125. | |
Marilyn seemed angry: Pat Newcomb to DS, Aug. 3, 1992. | |
Greenson billed MM’s Estate for a visit to Fifth Helena on August 4. | |
He spent most: Milton Rudin to DS, Oct. 31, 1992. | |
567 | Regarding the telephone calls to MM from Joe DiMaggio, Jr., he described these to the police on August 9, who included them in their 1962 report on MM’s death: “Interview With Persons Known to Marilyn Monroe, Police Follow-Up Report,” August 10, 1962; interviews conducted by Detective Sergeant Robert E. Byron. |
Regarding Eunice’s shopping, see Murray, p. 128. | |
I was there: William Asher to DS, Sept. 25, 1992. Milton Ebbins confirmed to DS that Asher was at Lawford’s that afternoon and had related MM’s presence to Ebbins shortly thereafter. | |
Although Greenson admitted in his letter to Kris that he arrived at four-thirty, he wrote that this was at MM’s request and gives no indication of the preceding events of the day, much less of his earlier visit. | |
Regarding Greenson’s visit to MM, see his statement to the police, Aug. 5, 1962; Zolotow, | |
In 1975 and 1982, Peter Lawford told police investigators that he placed his first call to MM at five o’clock that afternoon. | |
Oh, Marilyn: Quoted in Robert Welkos and Ted Rohrlich, “Marilyn Monroe Mystery Persists,” | |
The call from Isadore Miller and Murray’s response are reported in | |
But it was Greenson: Ralph Roberts to DS, March 2, 1992. | |
Regarding Greenson’s calls to Engelberg: Esther Maltz to DS, Oct. 23, 1992. | |
I asked the housekeeper: Greenson to Marianne Kris. Aug. 20, 1962. | |
this was the | |
570 | Regarding the younger Joe DiMaggio’s last call to MM, see note to p. 567, above. See also his statement to the |
happy, gay, alert: Murray, p. 130. | |
quite pleasant: Greenson to Kris, Aug. 20, 1962; Greenson to Zolotow, | |
The time of Lawford’s call can be precisely fixed because Milton Ebbins recalled that Lawford called him at exactly 7:40 P.M.—a time Lawford later confirmed with William Asher and Joe Naar, among others. Ebbins, Asher and Naar interviews with DS dated, respectively, Aug. 6, 1992; Sept. 25, 1992; July 22, 1992. | |
Lawford’s account as herein related was his consistent account as told in a police interview in 1975, and as reported in the | |
| Again, Ebbins denied making the one-thirty call. By his account, following his (roughly) nine o’clock conversation with Rudin, he did not speak with the attorney again until four in the morning, at which time Rudin informed him of the death. “I said, ‘Mickey, what are you doing up at this hour?’ He said, ‘I got problems.’ I asked, ‘How’s Marilyn?’ and he said, ‘Not good.’ He said, ‘Her doctors and I just broke into the bedroom. They’ve been working on her, and they just pronounced her dead.’” This timing (Ebbins to DS, Aug. 6, 1992) seems unlikely, for it contradicts the collective witness of Asher, Naar and Rudin and supports the claims of Greenson and Eunice Murray themselves—namely, that the doctor had to break into MM’s bedroom to gain access to it. |
Say goodbye: Lawford to Los Angeles Police Department, Oct. 16, 1975; also Lawford to Earl Wilson, | |
Regarding Lawford’s second telephone call: see Harrison Carroll, “Lawford Tells of Phoning Marilyn,” | |
Peter was obviously: Milton Ebbins to DS, Aug. 6, 1992. | |
Monroe was laughing: Thomas T. Noguchi with Joseph DiMona, | |
That Ebbins reached Rudin’s office at 8:25 P.M. is confirmed by Rudin’s report to the police, based on his office records for that evening. Attorneys’ offices (especially in Hollywood) routinely have round-the-clock answering services for emergencies. | |
I did not call: Milton Rudin to DS, Oct. 31, 1992. | |
Rudin’s account is from this same interview with DS. Also, see Rudin’s account in the police interview dated Aug. 10, 1962. | |
If only: Murray, p. 132. | |
Joseph Naar’s account: to DS, July 22, 1992. George Durgom, who died in 1992, suffered from Alzheimer’s disease the last several years of his life, while this book was being researched, and could not be interviewed. | |
Ebbins denied (to DS, July 22 and Oct 6, 1992) calling Naar that evening. “He must be mistaken,” he said of Naar, who was and remains a friend of Ebbins. Naar, however, was emphatic (to DS, July 22, 1992): “I could swear it was Ebbins who called.” The information Naar received in that call is consistent with what Ebbins affirmed he later learned. | |
had found Marilyn: The entire episode was recounted by Lawford in InvRep (Lawford), p. 2. | |
At about ten: Natalie Trundy Jacobs to DS, Feb. 28, 1992. | |
574 | Murray’s and Greenson’s reports are here represented as given to the Los Angeles police in 1962: report # 62-509 463. |
for reasons I still: Murray, on Wolper, | |
We’ve lost her: Quoted in Robert Welkos and Ted Rohrlich, “Marilyn Monroe Mystery Persists,” | |
Murray’s altered account from a “light beneath the door” to a “telephone cord” was made on Wolper, | |
Murray’s written answer to Roy Turner’s typewritten letter dated Feb. 9, 1987; also Newcomb to DS, Aug. 3, 1992; Ralph Roberts to DS, March 2, 1992; Rupert Allan to DS, June 19, 1992. | |
| Chapter Twenty-three: |
578 | Clemmons’s account is derived from an extended lecture and presentation he gave in Los Angeles on March 22, 1991, before an audience of those devoted to MM called “Marilyn Remembered.” His report is also contained in DA 1982, pp. 7–8, 26–28. |
It is officer’s opinion: Los Angeles Police Department Report: Re-Interview of Persons Known to MM, dated Aug. 10, 1962. | |
take a look: Don Marshall (Los Angeles Police Department, Retired) to DS, Sept. 2, 1992. | |
a very good: Quoted by Marshall. | |
burning a pile: Peter Brown and Patte Barham, | |
the locks: | |
Nobody was destroying: Don Marshall to DS, Sept. 14, 1992. | |
It was obvious: Robert Litman, M.D. to DS, April 23, 1992. | |
Since our studies: Robert Litman, M.D., quoted in Howard Hertel and Frank Laro, “Marilyn Monroe’s Death Listed by Coroner as Probably Suicide,” | |
an addict among: Norman Farberow, M.D., quoted in the | |
I did not think: John Miner to DS, June 11, 1992. All further citations of Miner are derived from this interview. | |
not a large: DA 1982, p. 4. | |
584 | Citations from Arnold Abrams, M.D., to DS: Nov. 2, 1992. |
On the impossibility of an injection, see also DA 1982, p. 4. | |
This leads: | |
marked congestion: Coroner’s Report, File #81128: autopsy performed on August 5, 1962, signed by T. Noguchi, M.D., Deputy Medical Examiner. See also Noguchi, p. 78. | |
cutting down: To Zolotow, in the | |
Eunice did only: Philip LaClair to DS, July 22, 1992. | |
Weinstein’s recollections concerning Engelberg’s gastric lavage (stomach-pumping) of MM at Doheny Drive were reported in an interview to DS, Dec. 10, 1992. |