tragic. that simply wasn t true. can we start again? she had an agency, she was hungry for more creative chall challenges. she had a lot of strength with her vulnerability. she stood up to the old hollywood guard and said i m mad as hell and won t take it anymore. up until the day she died, she was a fighter. of course her early death is a tragedy but that doesn t over right everything she achieved up until that point. she became the biggest movie store in the world. and she is one of the famous and most recognizable women in history. excited fans gather on a san diego beach to watch marilyn monroe shoot her first film in two years. arguably her greatest role. it s incredible what she does in that. on paper, the role of sugarcane is very much a type of a dumb blonde. i can t believe this musical family. my mother is a piano teacher and my father a conductor. this woman is so dumb she doesn t even realize her two best friends are men in drag. what
delayed a little bit but 20th century fox is going through big problems. they want it over and done with. during the 1960s, the film studios were really competing with the rise in popularity of television and one way to get people into the movie theaters was to produce these huge big budget epics with incredible costumes and so much luxury to see on the biggest screen poss possible. by the time something s got to give was made they were working on one of the biggest productions ever colleopatra elizabeth taylor was getting paid ten times what marilyn monroe was being paid. it s a disastrous shoot.
she needs you. she doesn t have anybody. he said, okay, i ll call. he called. he said to her, amy had a dream, she laughed, ha-ha. and they spoke on the phone for three hours. he was going to fly to beverly hills. fine. and she died. about 5:30 in the morning, i get a phone call, and marilyn monroe died last night. i said don t give me that. hung up the phone. had seen marilyn just hours earlier. she was found dead early this morning a empty bottle o and bedside table. and i turned on the tv and there it was on the news, and i went to the house. there were a couple police officers there, just a few
everyone knew there was a relationship between marilyn m monroe and the president of the united states. it was secretive and that night, the whole madison square garden sat there in awe waiting for this princess of the motion picture industry and our president. 48 hour hydration. for that healthy skin glow. neutrogena®. for people with skin.
to. someone who is accessible. it s like you re seeing her soul in a way. she s just looking right at the camera. and, you know, it as like she s looking at you. marilyn monroe the person is gone. the image is not gone, and it will never be gone. her legacy is defined more by the images we see of her, by her career than anything else, despite the tragedies of her life. she s up there as fresh and new and wonderful as she ever was. marilyn monroe is a mirror for people s ideas about women s sexuality and women s power, about whether beautiful women can be intelligent, about