Today in History
1962
Marilyn Monroe Found Dead
1962
Marilyn Monroe Found Dead
On
August 5, 1962, movie actress Marilyn Monroe was found dead in her home in Los
Angeles. She was discovered lying nude on her bed, face down, with a telephone
in one hand. Empty bottles of pills, prescribed to treat her depression, were
littered around the room. After a brief investigation, Los Angeles police
concluded that her death was “caused by a self-administered overdose of
sedative drugs and that the mode of death is probable suicide.”
Marilyn
Monroe was born Norma Jean Mortenson in Los Angeles on June 1, 1926. Her mother
was emotionally unstable and frequently confined to an asylum, so Norma Jean
was reared by a succession of foster parents and in an orphanage.
At
the age of 16, she married a fellow worker in an aircraft factory, but they
divorced a few years later. She took up modeling in 1944 and in 1946 signed a
short-term contract with 20th Century Fox, taking as her screen name Marilyn
Monroe. She had a few bit parts and then returned to modeling, famously posing
nude for a calendar in 1949.
She
began to attract attention as an actress in 1950 after appearing in minor roles
in the The Asphalt Jungle and All About Eve. Although she was onscreen only
briefly playing a mistress in both films, audiences took note of the blonde
bombshell, and she won a new contract from Fox. Her acting career took off in
the early 1950s with performances in Love Nest (1951), Monkey Business (1952),
and Niagara (1953).
Celebrated
for her voluptuousness and wide-eyed charm, she won international fame for her
sex-symbol roles in Gentlemen Prefer Blondes (1953), How to Marry a Millionaire
(1953), and There’s No Business Like Show Business (1954).
The
Seven-Year Itch (1955) showcased her comedic talents and features the classic
scene where she stands over a subway grating and has her white skirt billowed
up by the wind from a passing train. In 1954, she married baseball great Joe DiMaggio,
attracting further publicity, but they divorced eight months later.
In
1955, she studied with Lee Strasberg at the Actors Studio in New York City and
subsequently gave a strong performance as a hapless entertainer in Bus Stop
(1956). In 1956, she married playwright Arthur Miller. She made The Prince and
the Showgirl–a critical and commercial failure–with Laurence Olivier in 1957
but in 1959 gave an acclaimed performance in the hit comedy Some Like It Hot.
Her last role, in The Misfits (1961), was directed by John Huston and written
by Miller, whom she divorced just one week before the film’s opening.
By
1961, Monroe, beset by depression, was under the constant care of a
psychiatrist. Increasingly erratic in the last months of her life, she lived as
a virtual recluse in her Brentwood, Los Angeles, home.
After
midnight on August 5, 1962, her maid, Eunice Murray, noticed Monroe’s bedroom
light on. When Murray found the door locked and Marilyn unresponsive to her
calls, she called Monroe’s psychiatrist, Dr. Ralph Greenson, who gained access
to the room by breaking a window. Entering, he found Marilyn dead, and the
police were called. An autopsy found a fatal amount of sedatives in her system,
and her death was ruled probable suicide.
In recent decades, there have been a number of conspiracy
theories about her death, most of which contend that she was murdered by John
and/or Robert Kennedy, with whom she allegedly had love affairs. These theories
claim that the Kennedys had her killed because they feared she would make
public their love affairs and other government secrets she was gathering.
On
August 4, 1962, Robert Kennedy, then attorney general in his older brother’s
cabinet, was in fact in Los Angeles. Two decades after the fact, Monroe’s
housekeeper, Eunice Murray, announced for the first time that the attorney
general had visited Marilyn on the night of her death and quarreled with her,
but the reliability of these and other statements made by Murray are
questionable.
Decades after her death, Marilyn Monroe remains a major cultural
icon.
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