Tuesday, February 28, 2017

Marilyn Monroe


Born Norma Jeane Mortenson on June 1, 1926, actress and sex symbol Marilyn Monroe had a very difficult childhood. She never knew her father and when she was very young her mother Gladys was committed to an insane asylum after developing psychiatric problems and attempting to smother Monroe in her crib with a pillow. Monroe spent most of her childhood in foster homes and orphanages where she was sexually assaulted and claimed that she was raped at age 11.

Monroe's only way out of the foster care program was marriage, so at 16 she dropped out of high school and married her boyfriend Jimmy Dougherty. Since her new spouse was in the merchant marine, he was eventually sent to the South Pacific. During his absence, Monroe got a job at a munitions factory in Van Nuys, California, where she was discovered by a photographer. When her husband came home in 1946, Monroe had a successful career as a model and had adopted the name Marilyn Monroe and dyed her hair blonde in preparation for an acting career as her dream was to become a star like Jean Harlow and Lana Turner.

As Monroe focused more on her career, her husband became resentful and unsupportive and they divorced in lat 1946, the same year Monroe signed her first movie contract. Monroe's acting career did not take off until the 50s when her parts in All About Eve and The Asphalt Jungle impressed audiences and critics and gained her a lot of attention. Her first hit as the star of a film was the musical comedy Gentlemen Prefer Blondes in 1953 which led to many more roles in light comedic films. That same year she was the centerfold in the first edition of Playboy which expanded her image as a sex symbol. She soon was wed to Joe DiMaggio in 1954, but they divorced after 9 months due to his abuse.

While Monroe was loved by audiences and was an international star, she had immeasurable insecurities about her acting abilities and suffered from chronic pre-performance anxiety that made her physically ill and was the cause of her habitual tardiness on film sets. Her absences were so extreme that it frequently upset her co-stars and crew. These insecurities caused her to move to New York in 1956 to pursue deeper roles than a bubbly dumb blonde. She starred in Bus Stop and The Prince and the Showgirl, and both were successful but in the latter Monroe's erratic behavior due to her anxiety and problems in her personal life resulted in very tense relations with her co-stars and crew. She returned to her old genre of movies in 1959 and won a Golden Globe award for her role in Some Like It Hot for "Best Actress in Comedy".

In 1962 Monroe was fired from Something's Got to Give because of her excessive absence from the set which she claimed were due to an illness. At this point, both Monroe's career and personal life were in turmoil as she had recently divorced her third husband Arthur Miller. On May 19, 1962 Monroe gave her final performance with her now famous tribute to JFK at his birthday celebration singing "Happy Birthday, Mr. President". Four months later on August 5, Monroe died in her home in Los Angeles at age 36. Her d
eath was officially ruled a drug overdose, but there are many conspiracies that she was murdered.

She was buried in a "Cadillac casket" in her favorite Emilio Pucci dress. Hugh Hefner bought the crypt next to her and her ex husband Joe DiMaggio had red roses delivered to her crypt for the next 20 years. Her films grossed more than 200 million dollars during her career and she is still known as one of the most popular icons and sex symbols.


Sources:
http://www.biography.com/people/marilyn-monroe-9412123#famed-career
http://www.vanityfair.com/news/2008/10/marilyn200810


4 comments:

  1. This is a great detailed biography about Marilyn Monroe. It gave me an idea about her whole life. Monroe can also be considered a symbol for the change of women and perception toward sexuality during this period. She showed people that women can be unashamed about their body, and that sex can be discussed in the public. https://www.immortalmarilyn.com/how-did-marilyn-monroe-change-the-world/

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  2. Interesting post about Marilyn Monroe. I appreciate that you included her upbringing; I had no idea that she faced such hardships when she was a child. An interesting point to research is about how she was portrayed in society. Do you think that her appearance and behavior helped shape the stereotype of women of this time, or do you think she was a product of the gender norms and expectations of the time? Being such a sex symbol, how would she have reacted to the current women's rights movements? For more information, go to: https://www.theguardian.com/film/features/featurepages/0,,498050,00.html

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  3. This was a really interesting short bio. Because TV and Hollywood entertainment were big during the height of her career, it is really important to look into individual actors and actresses and how they were viewed in society. This era was the wild rock 'n roll age for American youth so the portrayal of her as a sex symbol seems to fit the context. As media did and still does, they only reveal the best parts of an actor or actress's life, so her tragic childhood is not very well-known. It is very unfortunate that she passed away at such a young age. I like how you didn't just explain her life, but made a connection to the social aspect of that period in American history.

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  4. This was really interesting. Marilyn Monroe is always seen as a light-hearted, beautiful woman, so it was a surprise to hear how troubled her childhood was. Her status as a sex symbol showed the changing roles of women as well as their sexualization. She showed that it wasn't necessarily a bad thing to show off one's body and was extremely influential for women, both then and today.

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