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Liz Smith | 07/25/2008 1:44 pm

Marilyn Monroe -- The Way She (Really) Was

Parade Magazine

Editor’s Note: The following story is reprinted by permission of Parade Magazine, and appears in their Sunday, July 27th issue.

 

“I’m trying to find myself as a person. Sometimes that’s not easy to do. Millions of people live their entire lives without finding themselves. But it is something I must do. The best way for me to find myself as a person is to prove to myself that I am an actress.”


That was Marilyn Monroe, in 1955, the year of her great rebellion against Hollywood.


Monroe died on a warm California night on August 4th, 1962. She had finally succumbed to the barbiturates she had used all of her adult life to control chronic insomnia and excruciating menstrual pain—she would crumple to the floor in agony at the onset of her period. And yes, she had finally succumbed to her emotional pain. I don’t believe Marilyn “planned” to die; it simply happened to her that night—one unusually unhappy night. (And, if we are to believe her hand was on the telephone when her body was found, it is likely she changed her mind.)


Almost fifty years after her death, Marilyn’s hold on the collective imagination is stronger than it was even during her short life—as I write this we are coming off a hoax about a Marilyn “sex tape” and the reality of wonderful, newly found footage of her from the set of “The Misfits.” (She looks surprisingly robust and radiant for a woman having a breakdown and on the brink of a heartbreaking divorce.) As the anniversary of her death approaches, there are bound to be TV specials, news reports and feature articles on this “ultimate sex-symbol.” And the word that will be used most is… “tragic.” Her tragic childhood, her tragic life, her tragic death. Her beauty and poignancy will be noted. Her love affairs, real and rumored, will be rolled out. Few will remember the Marilyn of 1955. Well, I prefer that empowered woman.

Read more about: Liz Smith, Marilyn Monroe

47 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment

Victoria Parisi
Great article on Marilyn, thank you Liz! I’m 56 now, but when I was a young pup I read many books about Marilyn, one by Robert F. Slatzer. I wrote him a letter through his publisher and we became long distance friends (of sorts). The best for me was his first phone call in response to my letter. I thought as if I had really connected with Marilyn through him. So, years later, after many letters and calls…Bob is gone…and now websites depict Mr. Slatzer as a fraud and a writer of tales. Liz…what do you know of him? Is it all true that he was just a loser as they say? I want to think not. His middle of the night calls (from LA to the East Coast) mezmarized me with his stories of Marilyn. Once, he offered to set me up as a still photographer on movie sets and I did not….me, oh so close to my Italian family….move to LA? No way. Many times I regretted that decision and wished I had gone! Is Bob Slatzer a fraud, or was he Marilyn’s friend?
By Victoria Parisi on 07/31/2008 6:26 pm
Jeanie Black
I saw “THE MISFITS” the other night again; also, “THERE’S NO BUSINESS LIKE SHOW BUSINESS”. I felt I was seeing a very vibrant woman in “THE MISFITS”, in spite of what the public was very well aware of at that time happening to Marilyn in her personal life. The earlier film reminded me of a young, healthy starlet who knew she was on her way to somewhere spectacularly fantastic in the show business world! I am told Hugh Hefner has purchased the Memorial Park in Los Angeles where she is laid to rest & I was showing friends to the place she rests last weekend, only to find the bench with a written tribute to her has been removed. I would like to see it returned & rededicated to this beautiful vibrant soul who gave so much of herself in seeking our love & approval of her limitless talents in her short time here on the planet Earth. Such a shame to diminish such a star who shines so brightly even now in our darkness, don’t you think so? Somebody do something that will make a hugh difference in honoring her burial place as well even now, please? Thanks for your attention; it won’t be wasted! ^_^ Jeanie Black PEACE
By Jeanie Black on 08/01/2008 4:25 am