Marilyn Monroe

2022 - 4 - 27

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'The Mystery of Marilyn Monroe: The Unheard Tapes' Review ... (The New York Times)

This documentary teases a vague conspiracy surrounding Monroe's death — but mostly rehashes well-circulated facts and rumors.

Finally, Summers, who appears continually, presents his ideas surrounding Monroe’s final hours and potential inconsistencies in the timeline. Summers apparently got more tantalizing intel from the family of Ralph Greenson, who was Monroe’s psychiatrist, and from Fred Otash, a private eye who in the tapes says that Jimmy Hoffa wanted him to dig up dirt on John F. Kennedy and Robert F. Kennedy. Throughout the film, Monroe is said to have been involved with both Kennedy brothers. But mostly the film presents a banal rehash of established facts and well-circulated rumors about Monroe’s life.

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'The Mystery of Marilyn Monroe: The Unheard Tapes' review: Netflix ... (CNN)

Hello again, Norma Jean, as the 60th anniversary of Marilyn Monroe's death brings renewed opportunities to revisit her life and legacy, without really ...

Given that there's plenty of video and film footage of Monroe to weave in, it's an indulgence that's far too cute for its own good, adding a sense of showbiz pizzazz that does nothing to buttress the project's credibility. For her part, Monroe in taped interviews talks about her twin desires to be happy and be a good actress, saying somewhat sadly with the benefit of hindsight, "You have to work at both of them." The documentary undermines that, alas, with the unnecessary wrinkle of having actors "play" those people by lip-synching the audio, a pointless attempt to create the impression that the viewer is seeing the other side of those conversations.

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The Truth About Marilyn Monroe's Final Hours and More ... (E! Online)

All the times Netflix's The Mystery of Marilyn Monroe: The Unheard Tapes, which traces the movie star's lows leading up to her shocking death in 1962, ...

"Based on the evidence available to us, it appears that her death could have been suicide or come as a result of an accidental drug overdose," then-District Attorney John Van de Kamp said at a press conference. at the TV: It's usually the false things.

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Netflix Marilyn Monroe Documentary Is A Fascinating Deep Dive Into ... (Decider)

Marilyn Monroe died of a drug overdose on August 4, 1962, in her Los Angeles home. Her death was ruled a probable suicide by officials. Nothing in Summer's book ...

So many saw her as a prize to win, rather than a talent to behold. Marilyn Monroe died of a drug overdose on August 4, 1962, in her Los Angeles home. It does not come to any new conclusions beyond what was already covered in his book, but it’s undeniably fascinated to hear the archived taped interviews about the movie star—even if the accompanying “reenactments,” featuring actors lip-syncing to the audio, are silly.

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What Separates Netflix's New Marilyn Monroe Documentary From ... (Vanity Fair)

The Mystery of Marilyn Monroe: The Unheard Tapes, which relies on tapes from Anthony Summers's investigation into the late icon, premieres on Netflix ...

“Tony discovered that she was vulnerable to falling prey to men who did not have her best interests at heart—men who saw something in Marilyn and her strength that they wanted to diminish,” says Cooper. “I see that all around me in many relationships with women of all ages. To make the audio more visually compelling for her documentary, Cooper filmed recreations of the conversations—with actors in period costume reenacting the calls with Summers. The documentary offers an unparalleled glimpse at an investigation of this scale, as well as fragmented recollections about Monroe directly from the people who knew her. The Mystery of Marilyn Monroe: The Unheard Tapes, premiering Wednesday on Netflix, uses them to construct another portrait of Monroe. While The Mystery of Marilyn Monroe: The Unheard Tapes won’t turn up any new reporting, it is a fascinating listen for true-crime fans or anyone interested in celebrity investigations. And I really found that to be true here.”

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Marilyn Monroe's Death Explored in New Netflix Doc: Why Were the ... (PEOPLE.com)

The Mystery of Marilyn Monroe: The Unheard Tapes features never-before-heard interviews with those close to the star who call into question much of what ...

"At the beginning of the process, when I went to L.A., I visited her grave," she says. She was said to have talked one of the brothers about the amorality of nuclear weapons. "And suggests that the circumstances of her dying were covered up." I adore her." I hope I represent you in a way that you would've wanted to be represented in 2022, and in fact, during your life.'" She was a multidimensional, wonderful, amazing human being," says the director. "I was like, 'I won't, of course. She worked incredibly hard. It's an investigation where everything we thought we knew is not really correct." Was there a cover-up? "If you then say to me, 'Why were those circumstances covered up?' I would say that what the evidence suggests is that it was covered up because of her connection with the Kennedy brothers." Given Monroe's ties to the White House, the Kennedys, the mob and others, questions swirled — and continue to swirl — about her final days.

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How Did Marilyn Monroe Die? The True Story Behind the Netflix ... (Newsweek)

"The Mystery of Marilyn Monroe: The Unheard Tapes" debunks conspiracy theories about how the icon died and introduces a new generation to her sad end.

An accidental overdose was ruled out due to the amount of pills in her system—pills for which she had had her prescription filled the previous day. She took the call shortly after going to her bedroom at 8 p.m., and her autopsy estimated her death at between 8:30 p.m. and 10:30 p.m. Among symptoms of disorganization, sleep disturbance was prominent, for which she had been taking sedative drugs for many years." The truth of the matter is that Monroe was an unhappy woman who took her own life at the age of 36. On Sunday, August 5, 1962, at around 3 a.m., Monroe's housekeeper Eunice Murray went to check on the actor in the bedroom of her home in Brentwood, Los Angeles. Murray, who had been asked by Monroe's psychiatrist to stay over at the star's home, found the door locked, and Monroe unresponsive despite the light being on. The Marilyn Monroe documentary also aims to debunk some of the conspiracy theories that have cropped up around her death.

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Marilyn Monroe (Mankato Free Press)

One of the dances in the MSU spring dance concert is inspired by the iconic Marilyn Monroe. Student McKenna Prill will channel the spirit of the late ...

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Netflix Documentary Alleges Bobby Kennedy and Marilyn Monroe ... (Decider)

How did Marilyn Monroe die and where was Bobby Kennedy when Marilyn Monroe died? The Mystery of Marilyn Monroe on Netflix investigates.

Fred Otash, a private detective who claimed he had bugged Peter Lawford’s house and phones in order to dig up dirt on the Kennedys, said that Robert Kennedy called Monroe that night and that the two had a vicious argument. Bobby Kennedy called her the night of her death from Lawford’s house. … But she had come to a point where she felt like she was being used. Nothing in The Mystery of Marilyn Monroe questions how Monroe died, but Summer does spend copious time questioning when she died. Marilyn Monroe died of a drug overdose of barbiturates at her Los Angeles home on August 4, 1962. Despite the somewhat misleading trailer and opening sequence, the film does not give any credence to conspiracy theories that Monroe was murdered, rather than overdosed on barbiturates in what was ruled a probable suicide.

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How Did Marilyn Monroe Die? All the Rumors and Conspiracy ... (Parade Magazine)

How did Marilyn Monroe die? Let's take a look at all the theories about whether the Mafia, the FBI or the CIA were involved—plus, the truth about her ...

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Why Netflix Chose a Marilyn Monroe Documentary Director Who ... (IndieWire)

Emma Cooper had never seen a Marilyn Monroe film when she was approached to make a documentary about her.

“As a modern, middle-aged woman, I was surprised at how I could relate to her story,” she said. So I think she would have fared better today than she did then, and she probably would have fared better than a lot of other people today.” One of the film’s major themes is the inherent tension between who Marilyn Monroe was and who the world wanted her to be. “My obsession was to try and show her in a more multifaceted, more multidimensional way than I had ever known her,” Cooper said. “And so I felt like I could really connect with the arc of her life. Cooper’s film exists somewhere on the spectrum between reverent documentary and pulpy true-crime flick, luring viewers in with a promise to reopen the case of Monroe’s death, but ultimately spending more time examining who she was as a person than debating who (if anyone) killed her.

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How Did Marilyn Monroe Die? A Netflix Documentary Uncovers New ... (Women's Health)

For the past 60 years, there's been one story about Marilyn Monroe's death. Here's what to know about the new Netflix documentary that explores her death.

Cyril Wecht, a prominent forensic pathologist, told People that this suggests that “she might have been injected” with the drugs. The official word is that Marilyn died of an overdose. Writer John Sherlock also says in the doc that Greenson told him Marilyn was alive at home and died on the way to the hospital. The changing story, he says, “suggests that the circumstances of her dying were covered up.” "Bobby Kennedy called her the night of her death from [his sister's] house. [Greenson] told me he was in the ambulance.” Summers says in the documentary that it’s possible that “the Kennedys said, ‘Sh*t, she can make public that we’ve been discussing nuclear matters’….[and] thought, ‘We’ve got to stop all this. “No, she wasn’t [dead at home],” ambulance company owner Walter Schaefer says in the documentary. Murray had seen a light go on in Marilyn's room around 3:25 a.m., but found the door locked. Marilyn was pronounced dead, but police weren’t called until 4:20 a.m., about an hour after Murray had initially called Greenson. (Doctors said they needed permission from Marilyn’s movie studio before alerting the authorities.) Warning: The following contains references to suicide. The woman seemed to have it all: fame, beauty, money, power.

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The Sneering Documentary <i>The Mystery of Marilyn Monroe</i ... (TIME)

All of the Marilyns we know are represented here, in film clips, news footage, and whispery voice-over recordings, in which the actress candidly shares her own ...

The Mystery of Marilyn includes so many interviews—many with people who were deeply pained by what had happened to her—that it may seem unfair to single out a few of the movie’s more crass figures. What’s more, hearing this now 40-year-old testimony from a relic of old Hollywood serves as a reminder of how the business used to work—and in that context, that it took until 2017 for Harvey Weinstein to fall seems all the more remarkable. And yet hearing an old coot salivating about how Marilyn used to “put out” comes off as yet another instance of how, even in 2022, we just can’t let Marilyn alone. This three-way friendship points directly to the shady circumstances surrounding Marilyn’s death—there’s no real news there, but even today, the degree of the brothers’ involvement with the star, and how it may have influenced or even caused her death, is still a subject of speculation. Those taped interviews, never available to the public, have been dramatized and shaped into the documentary The Mystery of Marilyn Monroe: The Unheard Tapes, directed by Emma Cooper and featuring Summers as a guide. As the case was being reopened, a British newspaper suggested that Irish-born journalist Anthony Summers might want to launch his own investigation, which resulted in 650 tape-recorded interviews and eventually led to a 1985 book, Goddess: The Secret Lives of Marilyn Monroe, which presented new and credible evidence about the events surrounding Marilyn’s death.

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Why Did Marilyn Monroe Change Her Name? Here's the Truth (Distractify)

While Marilyn Monroe is one of the most famous names in Hollywood, many are unaware that it wasn't the actress and model's birth name. Why did she change ...

She was sexually abused for the first time at the age of eight, and later abused at the age of 11 by a man named Mr. Kimmel. As of now, all we know is that she changed her name before entering the Hollywood scene. She was going by the name Marilyn instead of Norma Jean for about 10 years before it was actually official. According to Netflix Life, it took her about a decade to legally change her name. The life and career of Marilyn Monroe are constantly being scrutinized decades after her stardom, since so many details about the icon are shrouded in mystery. Why did she change it?

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Netflix's "The Mystery of Marilyn Monroe: The Unheard Tapes": 6 ... (Salon)

A series of conversations recorded by journalist Anthony Summers reveal more about the actor's tragic life.

As Summers described in the documentary, Miller and Monroe's relationship was essentially a "Svengali situation." "It was something about how disappointed he was in me. Monroe's psychiatrist, Dr. Ralph Greenson, also saw Monroe as "a woman who was deprived of childhood." I don't know what else to say," she told reporters at a news conference with her lawyer. DiMaggio, who was retired from Major League Baseball when he met Monroe, soon grew possessive of his wife and struggled with a marriage in which he felt overshadowed by Monroe's fame. "Yeah, I was never used to being happy," Monroe is heard saying in an old clip. When asked about her childhood, Monroe would frequently refer to herself as a "waif" rather than an orphan. "In this business, in the golden years every casting director, every studio used to have a black book, you know what I mean?" "You see, the business has changed since then . . . it used to be sex," he continued. Her cause of death was immediately ruled as an overdose, but many were quick to suggest there was more to it than that and speculated that she perhaps died of suicide or was killed by a known acquaintance. "So, every girl, you know, I'm talking about kids that were breaking in, like Marilyn Monroe, you know, when they get started, all the casting directors, they would write in their black book who could be laid." According to Rosen, Monroe was a known name in multiple black books.

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The Mystery of Marilyn Monroe: The Unheard Tapes on Netflix ... (The Independent)

For decades, it has been reported that Monroe was found dead in her bed by her psychiatrist, Ralph Greenson, who broke in through her bedroom window after ...

Her most successful films include The Seven Year Itch (1955) Bus Stop (1956) and Some Like It Hot (1959). [Greenson] told me he was in the ambulance.” “She died in the ambulance,” he said.

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The Truth About Marilyn Monroe's Final Hours and More ... (NBC Connecticut)

All the times Netflix's "The Mystery of Marilyn Monroe: The Unheard Tapes," which traces the movie star's lows leading up to her shocking death in 1962, ...

"Based on the evidence available to us, it appears that her death could have been suicide or come as a result of an accidental drug overdose," then-District Attorney John Van de Kamp said at a press conference. "She was excited about establishing her own sort of family." You have to work at both of them." And though "she was slightly discombobulated at all times," as director Billy Wilder put it to Summers, it's one of her best, most enduring films. And I said anyone who allows her to take a drug ought to be shot." (Miller had been a member of the League of American Writers, which included a number of Communists, from 1935 until 1943, and he ended his friendship with Elia Kazan after the director named names for the House Un-American Activities Committee.) Monroe once said, as quoted by Summers in the Netflix film, "'I knew it was wrong, but to tell you the truth I think I was more curious than anything else. "Peter would obviously be sort of pimping for both Kennedys," Jeanne said of Lawford planning gatherings that served as a convenient place for illicit meetings. Among the dozens of old interview clips included in the Netflix documentary, her "Gentlemen Prefer Blondes" co-star Jane Russell told journalist Anthony Summers that they'd work all day and Monroe would meet with her acting coach at night. She never knew her father (an upcoming French documentary purports to have new information about that mystery), and that absence haunted her throughout her life. "With a little makeup and everything, she went ahead and worked," Whitten said. At another time, she said, "What I'd like to accomplish, I would like to be a good actress, a true actress.

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Stream It Or Skip It: 'The Mystery of Marilyn Monroe: The Unheard ... (Decider)

The Gist: Sex, drugs, politics, Hollywood, conspiracy theories – Marilyn Monroe's life and the aftermath of her death is surely one of the juiciest and most ...

Any Monroe bio, by necessity of truth, will have all the titillating fodder that perks our interest, and she was the type of personality that draws you in with a soupcon of pheromones, but hooks you with her deep, melancholy soulfulness. Our Call: As a big-boom expose, The Mystery of Marilyn Monroe: The Unheard Tapes whiffs. One of Greenson’s daughters said Monroe coyly referred to one of her lovers as “the General,” namely, Robert Kennedy, then the Attorney General of the United States. We hear archival audio in which Monroe talks about how she loved Jean Harlow and Clark Gable, and would spend hours and hours at the movie theater when she was a kid. The Gist: Sex, drugs, politics, Hollywood, conspiracy theories – Marilyn Monroe’s life and the aftermath of her death is surely one of the juiciest and most tragic celeb stories ever. If you’ll pardon the phrase, the title of Netflix documentary The Mystery of Marilyn Monroe: The Unheard Tapes makes it sound like it’s dropping bombshells about the life of Hollywood’s greatest sex symbol.

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How did Marilyn Monroe get famous? (Netflix Life)

Netflix's highly anticipated documentary The Mystery of Marilyn Monroe: The Unheard Tapes is now streaming. Even 60 years after her death, ...

Once Monroe was in the spotlight, she was never out of it again. She was briefly suspended in 1954 for refusing to work a film project, but came back to star in The Seven Year Itch, which became one of the biggest box office successes of her career. Later on, the studio did give her a new contract which gave her more control and money. That was thanks to her role leading the film noir Niagara, which heavily relied on her sex appeal. He thought she had the right look for a model, leading her to the Blue Book Model Agency where she became a successful pin up model. The model and top-billed actress was a star that shone bright.

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How Did Marilyn Monroe <em>Really</em> Die? (TownandCountrymag.com)

A new documentary, The Mystery of Marilyn Monroe: The Unheard Tapes, sheds light on conspiracy theories, Kennedy connections, and the final moments of an ...

I want other people to come away from the film feeling they’ve gotten to know her and know the things that happened at the end of her life and why. That’s the only thing that’s important to me, is that we’ve got the truth, and I believe we have. The making of the film really mirrored the way Tony wrote the book; it took years, and I think that people respond to that methodology. I tried to tell her that I’m standing here as a woman who’s older than she was when she died, and it’s the 2020s and I’m hoping to give her the right voice. I always knew that what Tony had evidenced in his book—the timeline we’re able to put together—was a revelation to me, and I thought it would be to other people. Time and time again, when I was trying to untangle her final days, the truth always ended up being somewhere in the middle.

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What Does 'Waif' Mean? Inside Marilyn Monroe's Childhood (Newsweek)

Throughout her life, the star referred to her younger self not as "homeless" but "waif" as per Netflix's "The Mystery of Marilyn Monroe: The Unheard Tapes."

Russell would go on to adopt three children in the 1950s: Tracy, Thomas, and Robert John. She spoke about her experience of being abused by her lodger to her biographers Ben Hecht in 1953 to 1954 and Maurice Zolotow in 1960. She also spoke her of childhood abuse in interviews for Paris Match and Cosmopolitan. Yeah, I was never used to being happy. I was bought up a waif. Newsweek has everything you need to know.

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The Mystery of Marilyn Monroe: The Unheard Truth — another ... (Financial Times)

Often seen in whirring close-up, they belong to veteran journalist Anthony Summers, whose investigative biographies include Goddess, his 1985 account of the ...

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