Marilyn Monroe
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Marilyn Monroe Marilyn Monroe
Studio Photo from 1952 Birth name: Norma Jean Mortenson
Date of birth: June 1 1926(1926-06-01)[1][2][3][4]
Place of birth: Los Angeles, California, USA[3]
Date of death: August 5 1962(1962-08-05)[3][4] (36 years)
Place of death: Los Angeles, California, USA
Citizenship: USA
Profession: actress, singer, model
Career: 1947-1962
IMDb: ID 0000054
marilynmonroe.com Marilyn Monroe on Wikimedia Commons
Marilyn Monroe[5] (English Marilyn Monroe, born Norma Jeane Mortenson, English Norma Jeane Mortenson, baptised Norma Jeane Baker, English Norma Jeane Baker; June 1, 1926 (19260601), Los Angeles — August 5, 1962, there) [6] was an American film actress, singer and sex symbol.
Content
1 Early years 2 Career in Hollywood 3 Personal life 3.1 Political views
4 Death 5 Miscellaneous 6 Memory 7 Filmography 8 Awards and nominations 9 Bibliography 10 Notes 11 References
Young years[edit / edit wiki text]
Norma Jean Mortenson's birth certificate
Norma Jeane Mortenson was born around 9:30 a.m.
June 1, 1926 in the city hospital Los Angeles and was the third child of cinemechanica RKO Pictures, Gladys pearl Baker (nee Monroe, may 27, 1902 — March 11, 1984).
Her maternal grandmother Della Monroe — were from Ireland, grandfather, Otis Monroe[7], arrived from Scotland, mother born in Mexico.
The biological father of the girl is unknown, Martin Edward Mortenson is listed on the birth certificate, and the girl herself was also recorded as Norma Jean Mortenson, but later, when the girl was baptized at six months old at the Gospel Church in Hawsron, the mother changed her daughter's last name to Baker, which was the last name of her first husband (and which she herself still wore).
The father's last name, for unknown reasons, is written in documents with a spelling error, since in reality the last name of the Norwegian emigrant Martin Edward (1897-1981), whom Gladys married on October 11, 1924, was written as MortensEn, not MortensOn.
This mistake led at one time to a great confusion about who exactly was the biological father of the actress.
Gladys separated from Mortensen on May 26, 1925 (they finally divorced on August 15, 1928)[8].
At the end of 1925, Gladys discovered that she was pregnant; by that time, she had many lovers after Mortensen — Charles Stanley Gifford, Harold Rooney, Clayton McNamara.
Some biographers of Monroe suggest that Gladys used the name Mortensen to avoid publicity in society, as a single mother.
Monroe herself has always denied that Mortensen was her father and once stated that when she was little, Gladys showed her a photo of RKO Pictures salesman Charles Stanley Gifford and said that he was her father.
According to Monroe, Gifford had a mustache, which made him very similar to Clark Gable, and sometimes she entertained herself with thoughts that Gable could be her father.
It is believed that Norma Jean Mortenson was named after two great actresses of that time: the brunette Norma Talmadge and the blonde Jean Harlow, however, at the time of Marilyn Monroe's birth, Jean Harlow was named Harlin Carpenter, and she became Jean Harlow only in 1928, when Norma Jean was already two years old.
In children's photos, Norma Jean's hair is curly, reddish brown.
Gladys had mental and financial problems, which is why a large amount of time in Norma's childhood was spent in foster homes and orphanages.
At the age of just two weeks, Gladys gave her daughter to the foster family of Dela Monroe's neighbors, Ida and Albert Bolender [9] in Hawthorne in California.
One day Gladys came to the Bolenders and tried to take Norma away by force (to Ida's horror, Gladys stuffed her daughter into a military duffel bag, after which a fight broke out between the women, and Norma was crying with horror).
Norma Jean lived with the Bolenders until she was 7 years old, but in the fall of 1933, Gladys took her daughter and moved with her to her own house[10].
But a few months later, Gladys began to have mood swings (as Monroe recalled in her book "My Story", Gladys was both "crying and laughing"), which was the reason that in December 1934, Gladys was admitted to a psychiatric clinic in Norwalk[11] and Norma Jean began to live with Gladys ' friend Grace McKee, who became her legal guardian.
It was Grace who told Monroe that one day she would become a movie star.
Together with Grace, Norma began to go to the cinema for the first time and use cosmetics.
When Norma was 9 years old, on August 17, 1935, Grace married Erwin Silliman Goddard and on September 13 of the same year, Norma Jean was placed in an Orphanage in Los Angeles, where her number became 3463[12].
The orphanage wanted to adopt Norma several times, but Gladys refused to sign the relevant documents.
In June 1937, Grace took Norma Jean back and she grew up for a while with Erwin's daughter from a previous marriage, but then, because of Erwin's sexual harassment, Grace sent Norma to her great aunt Olivia Brunings in Compton.
But Norma did not live there for long (one of Olivia's sons also tried to rape her) and in early 1938 Grace sent Norma Jean to her other aunt Anya Lowe, who lived in Van Nuys.
Later, Monroe called the period of life with Lowe as one of several periods of her life when she really felt calm.
But Anya had health problems and in 1942 Norma returned to Grace[13].
Norma Jean Dougherty and Radioplane TDD 2/OQ 3, June 26, 1945
While studying at Van Nuys High School, Norma Jean met James Edward Dougherty and an affair began between them.
14][15].
In January 1942, the Goddard family decided to leave for the East Coast in West Virginia, but there was no place for Norma Jean in this move, so there was an alternative for a 16 year old girl and on June 19, 1942, Norma married Jim Dougherty, after which she dropped out of school and settled with him.
A year after the wedding, he joined the Merchant Navy, and Norma Jean went to work at the Radioplane Co. aircraft factory, which produced TDD / OQ UAVs.
In June 1945, when Norma Jean was still working at Radioplane, an army photographer, David Conover, appeared there, on the instructions of his boss, Ronald Reagan, who took propaganda pictures of women in military factories[16].
After this shoot, Conover offered Norma Jean to pose for $ 5 an hour, and she agreed Soon, Norma Jean leaves her job at the factory to start a modeling career.
On August 2, 1945, a nineteen year old model named Norma Jean Dougherty consulted at the Blue Book modeling agency located at the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles, California, after which, in a team with the head of the Blue Book Modeling agency Emmeline Snively and photographer Andre de Dienes, she began to gain popularity and fame[17].
Career in Hollywood[edit / edit wiki text]
In August 1946, she received an offer to sign a contract at the 20th Century Fox film studios, where she was taken as a statistician.
At the studio, she was offered the names Carol Lind, Claire Norman, Marilyn Miller, but in the end they settled on the name under which she later became famous — Marilyn Monroe.
Monroe's last name is her mother's maiden name.
Soon after her wedding to her first husband Jim Dougherty, Marilyn began to think about a career as an actress, which later destroyed this marriage.
The couple divorced in September 1946.
In October 1948, the film "Chorus Girls" was released, created at the Columbia Pictures film studio.
This was the first film in which Marilyn spoke and sang.
Marilyn Monroe receives a seven year contract with the studio 20th Century Fox and a role in the film"Asphalt Jungle".
In January 1954, she married baseball player Joe DiMaggio.
As it turned out later, DiMaggio was insanely jealous of Marilyn for all the men in the world and often raised his hand against her.
On the grounds of jealousy, they divorced in October 1954.
However, until the end of his life, Joe loved Marilyn and only he of all her lovers came to her funeral.
It was DiMaggio who continued to take care of Marilyn all the following years and tried to provide moral support in her career.
After the wedding with DiMaggio, the 20th Century Fox film studio invited her to star in the musical "There is no Better Business than Show Business".
In March 1954, Marilyn received the "Most Popular Actress" award.
In January 1955, Marilyn announced the creation of her own corporation, Marilyn Monroe Productions, in which she was the president and owner of a controlling stake.
On March 8, 1960, Marilyn Monroe was awarded a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.
18].
With Jane Russell on June 26, 1953.
On January 20, 1961, Marilyn divorced Arthur Miller.
According to the facts, "she stayed at home in her darkened bedroom, existing on sleeping pills and rapidly losing weight."
Then in February, she was placed in a psychiatric clinic in New York, from where she left on March 5, 1961.
Personal life[edit / edit wiki text]
Back in 1950, Marilyn met the playwright Arthur Miller, but then they broke up and met again in 1955.
By that time, he was divorced, and he had two children from a previous marriage.
They were officially married on June 29, 1956, and two days after that they held a Jewish wedding ceremony (Arthur was Jewish).
This marriage turned out to be the longest of all, because it is known for certain that Monroe always dreamed of an intelligent man who could fill in her gaps in education and become her mentor.
This marriage was not the happiest: they lived together for four and a half years and divorced on January 20, 1961.
Later it became known that Arthur made an entry in his diary a few weeks after the wedding, where he said: "It seems to me that she is a little child, I hate her!".
Marilyn saw this recording and was shocked, after which she and Arthur had a fight.
Marilyn always wanted to have children, with every marriage she tried to get pregnant, but she did not succeed.
Arthur got her pregnant, but the pregnancy turned out to be ectopic.
In 1961, Marilyn met US President John F. Kennedy.
There were rumors about their affair, as well as about Marilyn's affair with his brother Robert Kennedy, whom Marilyn treated very well.
All these rumors have no evidence.
Political views[edit / edit wiki text]
According to Marilyn Monroe's friend and secretary, Patricia Newcomb, Marilyn unsuccessfully asked the reporter who took her last interview to finish the article about her with her statement: "What the world really needs is a real sense of kinship.
Everyone: stars, workers, Negroes, Jews, Arabs — we are all brothers.
Please donot make me look frivolous.
Finish the interview with what I believe in"[21].
Monroe was friends with the black jazz singer Ella Fitzgerald and helped her in her career.
Ella Fitzgerald later told: "I really owe Marilyn Monroe… it was because of her that I started playing in "Mocambo", a very popular nightclub of the 50s.
She personally called the owner of the club and told him that she wanted me to be accepted immediately, and if he did, she would take the front table (in this club) every night.
She told him — and it was true, because of her superstar status — that the press would go crazy.
The host said yes, and Marilyn was there, at the table, every night.
The press went overboard.
After that, I never had to play in a small jazz club again.
She was an unusual woman, a little ahead of her time.
And she didnot know about it"[22].
In Mexico in 1962, she was openly associated with Americans who were identified by the FBI as communists, such as Frederick Vanderbilt Field.
The daughter of Monroe's last psychiatrist, Joana Greenson, said that Monroe was " passionate about equal rights, rights for blacks, rights for the poor.
She identified herself with the workers"[23].
Death[edit / edit wiki text]
See also: The Death of Marilyn Monroe
Marilyn Monroe was found dead, with a telephone receiver in her hand, on the night of August 4 to 5, 1962, in her own home in the Los Angeles district of Brentwood, at 12305 Fifth Helena Drive, Brentwood, California.
There was an empty package of sleeping pills by the bed.
Fourteen other bottles of medicines and pills were on the night table.
Monroe didnot leave any suicide notes.
The body was taken to the morgue for an autopsy, which was performed by pathologist Dr. Tsunetomi Noguchi, after which it was announced that Marilyn Monroe died of an overdose of sleeping pills.
Immediately after the death of the actress, the version of an overdose was widely discussed in the American press, causing the so called "Werther effect", as a result of which hundreds of Americans followed her example[24].
She was buried in a wall crypt on August 8, 1962 at Westwood Cemetery.
Miscellaneous[edit / edit wiki text]
Marilyn Monroe uttered the "winged" phrases "Not to worry, but to worry", " I love beautiful men!
But there are very few of them among us…
Can you tell me the name of a handsome man?
Raj Kapoor, Clark Gable, Laurence Olivier and everything, perhaps!"
, " Give a girl a pair of stilettos, and she will conquer the whole world!".
The photo of Marilyn Monroe was on the cover of the first issue of Playboy magazine in 1953.
Memory[edit / edit wiki text]
Marilyn Monroe star on the" Walk of Fame " in Hollywood
Marilyn Monroe is dedicated to the songs of Lady Gaga "Government Hooker" and "Dance in the Dark", Blue System "The Wind Cries (Who Killed Norma Jean)", Mark Ashley "Marilyn's Dream", Florent Mota "Marylin", Glen Danzig "Who Killed Marylin" and Elton John "Candle in the Wind", Jane Birkin "Norma Jean Baker", Nicki Minaj "Marilyn Monroe", Lana Del Rey "Marilyn Monroe", Pharrell Williams "Marilyn Monroe".
In 2010, the video "Coco Mademoiselle" was released, the plot of which was based on the story of a romantic relationship between Marilyn and photographer Douglas Kirkland.
On June 19, 2011, the famous "flying dress" of Marilyn Monroe (the famous frame from the film "Itch of the Seventh Year") was sold at auction at the Profile in History auction house in Los Angeles for $ 4.6 million[25].
On July 15, 2011, an 8 meter sculpture "Marilyn Forever" was opened in Chicago depicting Monroe at the moment when she was standing on a ventilation grate at the intersection of 52nd Street and Lexington Avenue in New York in the comedy "Itch of the Seventh Year", created in 1955, and the air flow lifted up her dress.
The sculptor is Seward Johnson[26].
In 2011, the film "7 Days and Nights with Marilyn" was released worldwide, in which Michelle Williams played the role of Monroe.
The film tells about the time spent by the artist with Laurence Olivier in the work on "The Prince and the Dancer".
Filmography[edit / edit wiki text]
Marilyn Monroe in the film "Gentlemen prefer blondes"
Main article: Filmography of Marilyn Monroe
Year Film Original title Role 1947 Dangerous Years Dangerous Years Evie 1948 Skudda u!
Skudda hey!
Scudda Hoo!
Scudda Hay!
Girl in a canoe (scenes on the lake)
The Girl Coming Out of the Church 1948 Chorus Girls Ladies of the Chorus Peggy Martin 1949 Happy Love Love Happy Grunion's Client 1950 Tomahawk Ticket A Ticket to Tomahawk Clara 1950 Right Cross Right Cross Dusky Ledoux 1950 Fireball The Fireball Polly 1950 Asphalt Jungle The Asphalt Jungle Angela Finlay 1950 All About Eve All About Eve Miss Caswell 1951 Love Nest Love Nest Robert 'Bobby' Stevens 1951 Is Younger Than Yourself and you Will Not Feel As Young as You Feel Harriet 1951 From the Life of Your Hometown Home Town Story Iris Martin 1951 Let's Make It Legal Let's Make It Legal Joyce Mannering 1952 A Skirmish in the Night Clash by Night Peggy 1952 We Are Not Married!
We're Not Married Annabel Jones Norris 1952 The Chief of the Redskins and others...
O. Henry's Full House Prostitute ("Pharaoh and the Chorale") 1952 Monkey Work Monkey Business Miss Lois Laurel 1952 You Can enter without knocking Donot Both to Knock Nell Forbes 1953 Niagara Niagara Rose Loomis 1953 How to Marry a Millionaire How to Marry a Millionaire Paula Debevoise 1953 Gentlemen Prefer blondes Gentlemen Prefer Blondes Lorelei Lee 1954 There's No Better Business Than Show Business There's No Business Like Show Business Vicki Hoffman / Vicki Parker 1954 The River That Doesnot Flow Backwards River of No Return Kay Weston 1955 The Itch of the Seventh Year (Seven Years of Desire) The Seven Year Itch Girl 1956 Bus Stop Bus Stop Cherie 1957 The Prince and the Dancer The Prince and the Showgirl Elsie Marina 1959 Some Like It Hot (Only Girls In Jazz) Some Like It Hot Darling (Dana Kowalczyk)
1960 Let's Make Love Let's Make Love Amanda Dell 1961 The Misfits Roselyn Taber 1962 Something's Got to Happen Something's Got to Give Ellen Wagstaff Arden
Awards and nominations[edit / edit wiki text]
Awards and Nominations Award of the Year Category Film Total BAFTA 1956 Best Foreign Actress The Itch of the Seventh Year Nomination 1958 The Prince and the Dancer Nomination David di Donatello Film Award 1958 The Prince and the Dancer Golden Globe Award 1954 Best Film Female Role Award 1957 Best Actress Comedy/Musical Bus Stop Nomination 1960 Best Actress Musical Film/Comedy In Jazz Only Girls Award 1962 Best Film Female Role Award Laurel Awards 1958 Best Actress Nomination 1958 Best Comedy Actress The Prince and the Dancer Nomination 1959 Best Actress Nomination 1960 Best Comedy Actress In Jazz Only Girls Nomination 1960 Best Actress Nomination 1961 Best Actress Nomination 1962 Best Actress Nomination Photoplay Awards 1952 Award 1953 Hollywood Walk of Fame Award 1960 Award
Bibliography[edit / edit wiki text]
According to The Guardian, about 300 books, dissertations, etc.have been written about Monroe[27] The first and only lifetime publication was in 1961 — "Marilyn Monroe" by biographer Maurice Zolotov.
"Marilyn Monroe" by Donald Spoto "The Secret Life of Marilyn Monroe" by Randy Taraborrelli "The Symbol" by Alva Bessi
In Russian:
Grachev A.V. Marilyn Monroe, M., 1990.
- 64 p., ill.
- 150,000 copies.
Gombau A. Marilyn Monroe: Blonde in Manhattan / Trans.
with fr.
E. Golovina.
M.: Hummingbird, ABC Atticus, 2012 — - 176 p., ill.
- (Person).
- 4000 copies, ISBN 978-5-389-02857-9 V. Golovskoy.
Marilyn Monroe.
Life and Death, M.: "Zakharov", 2007, 2008 Marilyn Monroe: A Passion Told by Herself / Trans.
from English.
N. Pavlishcheva.
- M.: Yauza press, 2012.
- 320 p.
— (A unique autobiography of a woman of the era).
- 10000 copies, ISBN 978-5-9955-0429-0 Rener S.
The tragedy of Marilyn Monroe / Per.
with fr.
L. Zavyalova.
M.: Progress, 1970.
- 230 p., ill.
Taraborelli R. Marilyn Monroe: The Secret life of the most famous woman in the world / Translated from English by A. Stepanova.
Moscow: Eksmo, 2012.
- 608 p., 3000 copies, ISBN 978-5-699-56861-1 Chebotar S. A., Wulf V. Ya.
Marilyn Monroe.
The unfading "star".
Moscow: Yauza, Eksmo, 2013.
- 160 p.
- (Vitaly Wolf on the great women of the XX century).
5000 copies, ISBN 978-5-699-61059-4 "Femme Fatales from Cleopatra to Marilyn Monroe" (Eternal Radiance of Femininity) Vitaly Wolf, Serafima Chebotar.
2013
Notes[edit / edit wiki text]
↑ Marilyn Monroe Biography
↑ Birth certificate — 1926.
<a href="https://wikidata.org/wiki/Track:Q83900"></a>
↑ 1 2 3 Record #118583549 // Gemeinsame Normdatei — 2012—2015.
<a href="https://wikidata.org/wiki/Track:Q27302"></a><a href="https://wikidata.org/wiki/Track:Q304037"></a><a href="https://wikidata.org/wiki/Track:Q256507"></a><a href="https://wikidata.org/wiki/Track:Q170109"></a><a href="https://wikidata.org/wiki/Track:Q36578"></a>
↑ 1 2 Bibliothèque nationale de France: open data platform — 2011.
<a href="https://wikidata.org/wiki/Track:Q20666306"></a>
↑ Marilyn Monroe: Fast Facts.
cmgww.com.
Verified on September 6, 2012.
Archived from the original source on October 17, 2012.
↑ Marilyn Monroe Biography.
Biography.com.
Verified on September 6, 2012.
Archived from the original source on October 17, 2012.
↑ Marilyn Monroe.
Life in the world of men\Sofia Benois.
- M.: Algorithm, 2012 — - 12 ↑ AP.
Mortensen's Death and documents, New York Times (February 13, 1981).
Accessed March 2, 2010.
↑ The article "Marilyn Monroe: Ups and downs" on the website "Women's stuff".
↑ Marilyn Monroe.
The unfaded "star" \ Vitaly Wolf, Serafima Chebotar.
- Moscow: Yauza : Eksmo, 2013.
- p. 34 ↑ Marilyn Monroe \Anna Plantagenet; trans.
from Fr. and the introduction.art.
E. V. Kolodochkina.
- M.: Young Guard; Palimpsest, 2011 — - 265 (7) p.: ill.
— (The life of wonderful people: A small series: ser. biogr.; issue 14).
- 53 ↑ 1 2 Marilyn Monroe \Anna Plantagenet; trans.
from fr. and the introduction.art.
E. V. Kolodochkina.
- M.: Young Guard; Palimpsest, 2011 — - 265 (7) p.: ill.
— (The life of wonderful people: A small series: ser. biogr.; issue 14).
- 54-56 ↑ Marilyn Monroe \Anna Plantagenet; trans.
from Fr. and the introduction.art.
E. V. Kolodochkina.
- M.: Young Guard; Palimpsest, 2011 — - 265 (7) p.: ill.
— (The life of wonderful people: A small series: ser. biogr.; issue 14).
- 57, 65 ↑ McLellan, Dennis.
James Dougherty, 84; Was Married to Marilyn Monroe Before She Became a Star, Los Angeles Times (August 18, 2005).
Accessed May 13, 2011.
↑ "Personal Letter from a 16 Year Old Marilyn Monroe Sells for $52,460 at Bonhams & Butterfields".
artdaily.org (April 20, 2011).
Checked on May 7, 2011.
Archived from the original source on October 17, 2012.
↑ The Radioplane Target Drone.
↑ Marilyn Monroe.
The unfaded "star" \ Vitaly Wolf, Serafima Chebotar.
- Moscow: Yauza : Eksmo, 2013.
- p. 48 ↑ Marilyn Monroe.
Walk of Fame.
Verified on August 14, 2012.
Archived from the original source on August 17, 2012.
↑ "Marilyn Monroe: Still Life".
PBS (July 19, 2006).
Checked on May 8, 2011.
Archived from the original source on October 17, 2012.
↑ "Tony Curtis: 'Marilyn Monroe miscarried my baby'".
The Telegraph (August 7, 2009).
Checked on May 8, 2011.
Archived from the original source on October 17, 2012.
↑ Marilyn Monroe - Still Life | American Masters.
PBS (July 19, 2006).
Verified on September 6, 2012.
Archived from the original source on August 17, 2012.
↑ The Official Web Site of Ella Fitzgerald.
Verified on September 6, 2012.
Archived from the original source on August 17, 2012.
↑ Marilyn Monroe | Reader's Digest Version.
Rd.com.
Verified on September 6, 2012.
Archived from the original source on August 17, 2012.
↑ Reasons for suicides ↑ Marilyn Monroe's" Flying away " dress sold for $4.6 million ↑ A huge sculpture of Marilyn Monroe has appeared in Chicago: everyone can drown I look under her dress ↑ Happy birthday, Marilyn.
guardian.co.uk (May 29, 2001).
Checked on September 6, 2012.
Archived from the original source on October 17, 2012.
Links[edit / edit wiki text]
Marilyn Monroe in Wikicitatnik?
Marilyn Monroe on Wikimedia Commons?
Marilyn Monroe (English) on the Internet Movie Database website
To improve this article, is it desirable?:
Find and issue links to authoritative sources confirming what has been written in the form of footnotes.
Golden Globe Award for Best Actress - Comedy or Musical (1950-1960)
Judy Halliday (1950 • * June Ellison (1951) • Susan Hayward (1952) * Ethel Merman (1953) • Judy Garland (1954) * Gene Simmons (1955 • * Deborah Kerr (1956) • Kay Kendall / The Secret of Elg (1957) • Rosalind Russell (1958) • Marilyn Monroe (1959) * Shirley MacLaine (1960)
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Categories: Personalities alphabetically Born on June 1 Born in 1926 Born in Los Angeles Died on August 5 Died in 1962 Died in Los Angeles Actresses alphabetically Actresses of the USA Actresses of the XX century Singers and singers alphabetically Singers and Singers of the USA Singers and singers of the XX century Marilyn Monroe Artistic pseudonyms Playboy Hollywood Walk of Fame Golden Globe Award winners Died of drug overdose Buried at Westwood Cemetery Graduates of the Acting Studio Actresses who committed suicide
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