РефератыИностранный языкMaMarilyn Monroe Essay Research Paper Many people

Marilyn Monroe Essay Research Paper Many people

Marilyn Monroe Essay, Research Paper


Many people said that Marilyn Monroe was a great


inspiration in their lives, but through my research, I found


out that she was everything but an inspiration. Throughout


my report, I will give you many facts about marilyn s rough


life and what she did to handle them.


Marilyn Monroe, AKA Norma Jean Mortenson/Baker,


was born at Los Angeles General Hospital at 9:39 am on


June 1st, 1926. The hospital in which she was born is


now the County University of Southern California Medical


Center. Marilyn was born an illegitimate child whose father


(Edward Mortenson) had deserted her mother (Gladys


Baker). However, her real father was Stanley Gifford who


left Gladys when he found out she was pregnant.


Her mother worked at the Consolidated Film Industries


lab as a cutter of negative film. She worked long hours, at


low pay, at a boring and tedious eyestraining job. Since she


was at her job most of the time, she had to pay others to


look after Marilyn. Sometimes she would only get to see her


mother only early in the morning or at night. It was enough


for any mom to have a nervous breakdown. All Marilyn


remembered was her mother being in and out of hospitals.


Marilyn s mother was working long hours at the film lab


just to make ends meet. She became very tired and nervous;


life became difficult for her. She had been sent to the


Norwalk State hospital for Mental Diseases for a rest when


Marilyn was only five years old. That was what caused her


to have a nervous breakdown and that is what caused


Marilyn to spend her childhood in and out of foster homes.


When Gladys first went to the hospital, Marilyn moved in


with her mother s best friend.


When her mom s best friend remarried, she told Marilyn that


her house was too small and someone had to go. Marilyn


was only nine years old then. So one day, she packed


Marilyn s clothes in a suitcase and they got in her car. They


drove and drove for a long time without telling Marilyn


where she was going. They finally arrived at a three-story


red-brick building. Marilyn looked up at the sign and it said


LOS ANGELES ORPHANS HOME. Marilyn told her, Please


don t let me stay here. I m not an orphan, my mother s not


dead. Her mom s friend had to drag her inside the


orphanage. Her mother s girlfriend had promised her that


she would take good care of her. She promised Marilyn that


she would come back often and visit her. She also promised


her that she would get her out of the orphanage as soon as


she was able to. Marilyn didn t believe her though. She


later found out that her mom s best friend was Grace


Goddard. She was her aunt Grace. While in the orphanage,


Marilyn was sexually abused. Two years later, her Aunt


Grace finally took her out of the orphanage. When they


returned from the orphanage, Aunt Grace took Marilyn to


live with her aunt. She lived in Van Nuys, a very poor


neighborhood on the outskirts of Los Angeles. Her name


was Edith Ana Atchison Lower, a sixty-two-year-old spinster.


Her home was a rundown bungalow, and the people in the


neighborhood were mostly poor and on relief. Although she


was poor, Aunt Ana became the greatest influence in


Marilyn s life. She said she was such an influence because


she taught Marilyn to appreciate the simple things in life.


She taught Marilyn what was important in life.


Marilyn commented about her Aunt Ana, She didn t believe


in sickness, disease, or death. She didn t believe in a person


being a failure, either. She did believe the mind could


achieve anything it wished to achieve.


Marilyn had problems with her diction when she went


to High School. She also stuttered a lot. No one really


knew, but her mother bought her a piano that belonged to


the famous actor Fredric March.


Marilyn Monroe always looked older than her age.


When she was only ten, she shot up to her full height 5 5 ,


except she was skinny and looked boyish. At thirteen


everyone said that she looked eighteen, and the boys in their


twenties were trying to date her.


Just three weeks after her sixteenth birthday, she was


married to the boy next door, Jim Dougherty. He was


tweny-one going on twenty-two. They dated for several


months to get to know each other better. And just three


weeks after her birthday, they had their double-ring


ceremony. In those days, she would be considered a child


bride. Wouldn t she be considered a child bride now?


Marilyn s Aunt Ana designed her wedding gown. Marilyn


was listed as her niece on the marriage certificate. At this


wedding she had six mothers claim her and all wheeping


when she marched down the aisle. The mothers all


considered her their daughter because they were her foster


mother s at one time or another.


In 1944, during World War II, Jim listed in the U.S.


Merchant Marine. After his boot training he was stationed


at Catalina Island, not far from where we had been living in


Los Angeles. He was a physical training instructor there, and


Marilyn enjoyed the fact that she was able to join him there.


marilyn remembered it as being a world of men, all sailors


with their wives and families. She said that Jim became


jealous because all of the men would whistle at her as she


passed by. He would lecture her on the type of clothes she


would wear. Marilyn told him that he didn t have to worry


because she would always stay faithful to him. Not many


people believed her though- especially him.


When Jim was shipped to Shanghai, Marilyn went back


to Van Nuys to live with his family. She got a job at the


Radio Plane plant in Burbank {a defense plant}. They


started her there as a parachute inspector, and later she was


promoted to the dope room, where she would spray this


liquid dope, which is made by mixing banana oil and glue, on


the planes fuselages. These were miniature planes used for


target practice. The dope was sprayed on to give it strength.


She worked in overalls and kept her head covered most of


the time so that the dope wouldn t get into her hair, since it


was messy and difficult to wash out.


One day and army photographer came to the plant. He


was from the army s pictorial center in Hollywood. His


assignment was to take pictures for the army newspapers


and magazines of people working in defense plants, showing


them doing their share in the war effort. He called them


morale-booster photos. Marilyn was later told that these


were photos of pretty girls at work.


So when this army photographer, David Conover,


passed by where Marilyn was working, he told her that she


was a real morale booster and told her that he wanted to


take a picture of her for the boys in the army to keep their


morale high.


Those pictures that he took were the first that ever


appeared in a publication. They appeared in hundreds of


army camp newspapers, including the army s famous Yank


magazine and Stars and Stripes.


When David phoned Marilyn a few weeks later, he said


he had shown her pictures to a commercial photographer


friend in Los Angeles and told her that if she was interested


in modeling he would like to see her. She soon called the


photographer, Potter Hueth, and made an appointment to see


him. At his studio he explained to Marilyn that he couldn t


pay for modeling right now, but if she wanted to speculate


with him he would take pictures of her and when he sold


them to the magazines he would pay her. He told her that


the fee was usually five to ten dollars an hour, which was a


lot of money in those days. She agreed to model for him,


but only at night because she did not want to put her other


job in jeopardy.


Marilyn s modeling career started when Potter Hueth


showed the pictures he took of her to Miss Snively, who


then ran the largest model agency in Los Angeles. Marilyn


was quite excited when she agreed to see her. When her


appointment was made, she couldn t sleep that night. If she


didn t like her, that would be the end of her modeling


career-before it started.


Marilyn, calling in sick, took the day off to go see Miss


Snively. She was then nineteen, her marriage was strained,


and she was thinking of divorce. When she wrote to her


husband, she explained that she didn t love him anymore,


that she had a chance for a career as a model, and that she


wanted freedom to pursue her career. She wanted a divorce.


When Jim received the letter, he asked her if she would


wait until he returned from overseas to see if they could


patch things up and make a go for their marriage. But


Marilyn knew the marriage was over. A career was more


important to her. She wanted to become an actress more


than ever. She figured that modeling would give her a


break.


At the appointed hour-11:00 am-Marilyn entered Miss


Snively s office. In there, she told Marilyn that she would


need to go through some modeling classes and that the


tuition was $100.00. Marilyn told her that she didn t


have any money and Miss Snively told her that she could


just pay her with the money she makes working for her.


Marilyn s first modeling job was being a hostess at an


aluminum exhibit at the Los Angeles Home Show in the Pan


Pacific Auditorium. She received $10.00 a day for ten


days, which all went to paying for her modeling lessons.


Marilyn s second modeling job didn t go so well. She


was fired because she wasn t sexy enough. Right after they


told her that, she quit her job at the plant and devoted all


her time to modeling. She wasn t going to let anything or


anyone else stand in her way. They then started putting her


in bathing suits, and all of the sudden she became popular.


In those days, she was a brunette. Miss Snively kept


insisting that she become a blonde. But, Marilyn refused to


bleach her hair. Miss Snively then told her. Norma Jean, if


you expect to go places, you ve got to be a blonde. She


finally agreed to bleach her hair. Photographer Raphael


Wolff agreed to pay for the bleaching. Marilyn had long


hair and they cut it short and styled it in an upsweep. She


didn t really like the look at first-but she knew it got the


attention she needed.


Her first screen test at Fox was a silent test. There


was no dialogue. Mr. Leon Shamroy was the motion picture


cameraman who they said was the best in the business. He


would photograph her screen test.


Secretly one morning around 5:30, Mr. Shamroy and


Marilyn sneaked on the set. She made up in a portable


dressing room that Mr. Lyon sneaked out of wardrobe. The


dress was lovely, a sequined evening gown for her wear for


her big scene. They rehearsed Marilyn s first big scene and


then she began the scene and prayed silently that this was


her big start, the beginning of becoming a motion picture


actress.


Mr. Zanuck saw her screening and loved it! Mr. Lyon


gave her a contract to take home for her legal guardian


Aunt Grace to sign. Mr. Lyon suggested that her first name


be Marilyn and her Aunt Grace told her to use her mother s


maiden name-Monroe. So that is how she got her name.


Later that year, Jim and Marilyn finally divorced in


Reno, Nevada. This occurred just six weeks before she


signed her movie contracts with one of the largest motion


picture studios, Twentieth Century-Fox. And she was only


twenty years old.


After this, Marilyn s life would only just begin to get


better-or so she thought. The money kept pouring in, but


her marriages weren t lasting. Marilyn began to throw


herself to men. She slept with every producer she had ever


had. She starred in thirty movies (one uncompleted). She


married Joe DiMaggio in 1953 and they divorced in 1954.


Then, she married Arthur Miller in 1956 then later


divorced. This is what made her further prey to alcohol and


pills.


Marilyn then moved to 12305 Fifth Elena Drive,


Brentwood. The house is in a cul-de-sac. Frank Sinatra gave


marilyn Monroe a white poodle. His name was Maf. From


this point on, Marilyn downsided. She became very


depressed. She wanted children or a man to live with.


When she would go on her photo shoots, she would become


very down on herself. She had thirteen abortions. Marilyn


had affairs with John F. Kennedy, Robert Kennedy, Marlon


Brando, Jose Bolanos, and Frank Sinatra are just some of


the men.


In 1961, she received a Golden Globe Award for Some Like


It Hot. She sang Happy Birthday to John F. Kennedy in


1962.


Marilyn Monroe loved posing on the Santa Monica


beach. She was late for one of her last photo shoots, but


George Barris rescheduled for the next day. That next day,


around 7:30 PM on July 13, 1962, was the day that the


last picture of her on Santa Monica beach was taken, and


was to be her last. Her good friend and photographer


George Barris, lost his shoe on the beach right before their


departure from there, so Marilyn told him that the ocean


apparently needed it more than he did, so they both threw


their shoes in the ocean and left Santa Monica beach forever.


Marilyn Monroe was found dead in her Brentwood


home, on August 5, 1962 officially a victim of barbiturate


overdose. Marilyn was 36. At 36, she made a statement-


I m thirty-six and I m just getting started. She overdosed


on sleeping pills. Marilyn was in the process of making a


movie Something s Got to Give , but was dropped from the


movie because of chronic lateness and drug dependency. She


died four months after she was fired.


Marilyn s funeral was on Wednesday, August 8,1962.


Marilyn s coffin is in a marble wall-crypt to which a bronze


plaque is attached: Marilyn Monroe


1926-1962


May she rest in peace. She should have turned to God


rather than drugs. Popularity is no excuse to throw your life


away. What was the priority in Marilyn Monroe s life?


How could she even begin to inspire a

living person???


Many people said that Marilyn Monroe was a great


inspiration in their lives, but through my research, I found


out that she was everything but an inspiration. Throughout


my report, I will give you many facts about marilyn s rough


life and what she did to handle them.


Marilyn Monroe, AKA Norma Jean Mortenson/Baker,


was born at Los Angeles General Hospital at 9:39 am on


June 1st, 1926. The hospital in which she was born is


now the County University of Southern California Medical


Center. Marilyn was born an illegitimate child whose father


(Edward Mortenson) had deserted her mother (Gladys


Baker). However, her real father was Stanley Gifford who


left Gladys when he found out she was pregnant.


Her mother worked at the Consolidated Film Industries


lab as a cutter of negative film. She worked long hours, at


low pay, at a boring and tedious eyestraining job. Since she


was at her job most of the time, she had to pay others to


look after Marilyn. Sometimes she would only get to see her


mother only early in the morning or at night. It was enough


for any mom to have a nervous breakdown. All Marilyn


remembered was her mother being in and out of hospitals.


Marilyn s mother was working long hours at the film lab


just to make ends meet. She became very tired and nervous;


life became difficult for her. She had been sent to the


Norwalk State hospital for Mental Diseases for a rest when


Marilyn was only five years old. That was what caused her


to have a nervous breakdown and that is what caused


Marilyn to spend her childhood in and out of foster homes.


When Gladys first went to the hospital, Marilyn moved in


with her mother s best friend.


When her mom s best friend remarried, she told Marilyn that


her house was too small and someone had to go. Marilyn


was only nine years old then. So one day, she packed


Marilyn s clothes in a suitcase and they got in her car. They


drove and drove for a long time without telling Marilyn


where she was going. They finally arrived at a three-story


red-brick building. Marilyn looked up at the sign and it said


LOS ANGELES ORPHANS HOME. Marilyn told her, Please


don t let me stay here. I m not an orphan, my mother s not


dead. Her mom s friend had to drag her inside the


orphanage. Her mother s girlfriend had promised her that


she would take good care of her. She promised Marilyn that


she would come back often and visit her. She also promised


her that she would get her out of the orphanage as soon as


she was able to. Marilyn didn t believe her though. She


later found out that her mom s best friend was Grace


Goddard. She was her aunt Grace. While in the orphanage,


Marilyn was sexually abused. Two years later, her Aunt


Grace finally took her out of the orphanage. When they


returned from the orphanage, Aunt Grace took Marilyn to


live with her aunt. She lived in Van Nuys, a very poor


neighborhood on the outskirts of Los Angeles. Her name


was Edith Ana Atchison Lower, a sixty-two-year-old spinster.


Her home was a rundown bungalow, and the people in the


neighborhood were mostly poor and on relief. Although she


was poor, Aunt Ana became the greatest influence in


Marilyn s life. She said she was such an influence because


she taught Marilyn to appreciate the simple things in life.


She taught Marilyn what was important in life.


Marilyn commented about her Aunt Ana, She didn t believe


in sickness, disease, or death. She didn t believe in a person


being a failure, either. She did believe the mind could


achieve anything it wished to achieve.


Marilyn had problems with her diction when she went


to High School. She also stuttered a lot. No one really


knew, but her mother bought her a piano that belonged to


the famous actor Fredric March.


Marilyn Monroe always looked older than her age.


When she was only ten, she shot up to her full height 5 5 ,


except she was skinny and looked boyish. At thirteen


everyone said that she looked eighteen, and the boys in their


twenties were trying to date her.


Just three weeks after her sixteenth birthday, she was


married to the boy next door, Jim Dougherty. He was


tweny-one going on twenty-two. They dated for several


months to get to know each other better. And just three


weeks after her birthday, they had their double-ring


ceremony. In those days, she would be considered a child


bride. Wouldn t she be considered a child bride now?


Marilyn s Aunt Ana designed her wedding gown. Marilyn


was listed as her niece on the marriage certificate. At this


wedding she had six mothers claim her and all wheeping


when she marched down the aisle. The mothers all


considered her their daughter because they were her foster


mother s at one time or another.


In 1944, during World War II, Jim listed in the U.S.


Merchant Marine. After his boot training he was stationed


at Catalina Island, not far from where we had been living in


Los Angeles. He was a physical training instructor there, and


Marilyn enjoyed the fact that she was able to join him there.


marilyn remembered it as being a world of men, all sailors


with their wives and families. She said that Jim became


jealous because all of the men would whistle at her as she


passed by. He would lecture her on the type of clothes she


would wear. Marilyn told him that he didn t have to worry


because she would always stay faithful to him. Not many


people believed her though- especially him.


When Jim was shipped to Shanghai, Marilyn went back


to Van Nuys to live with his family. She got a job at the


Radio Plane plant in Burbank {a defense plant}. They


started her there as a parachute inspector, and later she was


promoted to the dope room, where she would spray this


liquid dope, which is made by mixing banana oil and glue, on


the planes fuselages. These were miniature planes used for


target practice. The dope was sprayed on to give it strength.


She worked in overalls and kept her head covered most of


the time so that the dope wouldn t get into her hair, since it


was messy and difficult to wash out.


One day and army photographer came to the plant. He


was from the army s pictorial center in Hollywood. His


assignment was to take pictures for the army newspapers


and magazines of people working in defense plants, showing


them doing their share in the war effort. He called them


morale-booster photos. Marilyn was later told that these


were photos of pretty girls at work.


So when this army photographer, David Conover,


passed by where Marilyn was working, he told her that she


was a real morale booster and told her that he wanted to


take a picture of her for the boys in the army to keep their


morale high.


Those pictures that he took were the first that ever


appeared in a publication. They appeared in hundreds of


army camp newspapers, including the army s famous Yank


magazine and Stars and Stripes.


When David phoned Marilyn a few weeks later, he said


he had shown her pictures to a commercial photographer


friend in Los Angeles and told her that if she was interested


in modeling he would like to see her. She soon called the


photographer, Potter Hueth, and made an appointment to see


him. At his studio he explained to Marilyn that he couldn t


pay for modeling right now, but if she wanted to speculate


with him he would take pictures of her and when he sold


them to the magazines he would pay her. He told her that


the fee was usually five to ten dollars an hour, which was a


lot of money in those days. She agreed to model for him,


but only at night because she did not want to put her other


job in jeopardy.


Marilyn s modeling career started when Potter Hueth


showed the pictures he took of her to Miss Snively, who


then ran the largest model agency in Los Angeles. Marilyn


was quite excited when she agreed to see her. When her


appointment was made, she couldn t sleep that night. If she


didn t like her, that would be the end of her modeling


career-before it started.


Marilyn, calling in sick, took the day off to go see Miss


Snively. She was then nineteen, her marriage was strained,


and she was thinking of divorce. When she wrote to her


husband, she explained that she didn t love him anymore,


that she had a chance for a career as a model, and that she


wanted freedom to pursue her career. She wanted a divorce.


When Jim received the letter, he asked her if she would


wait until he returned from overseas to see if they could


patch things up and make a go for their marriage. But


Marilyn knew the marriage was over. A career was more


important to her. She wanted to become an actress more


than ever. She figured that modeling would give her a


break.


At the appointed hour-11:00 am-Marilyn entered Miss


Snively s office. In there, she told Marilyn that she would


need to go through some modeling classes and that the


tuition was $100.00. Marilyn told her that she didn t


have any money and Miss Snively told her that she could


just pay her with the money she makes working for her.


Marilyn s first modeling job was being a hostess at an


aluminum exhibit at the Los Angeles Home Show in the Pan


Pacific Auditorium. She received $10.00 a day for ten


days, which all went to paying for her modeling lessons.


Marilyn s second modeling job didn t go so well. She


was fired because she wasn t sexy enough. Right after they


told her that, she quit her job at the plant and devoted all


her time to modeling. She wasn t going to let anything or


anyone else stand in her way. They then started putting her


in bathing suits, and all of the sudden she became popular.


In those days, she was a brunette. Miss Snively kept


insisting that she become a blonde. But, Marilyn refused to


bleach her hair. Miss Snively then told her. Norma Jean, if


you expect to go places, you ve got to be a blonde. She


finally agreed to bleach her hair. Photographer Raphael


Wolff agreed to pay for the bleaching. Marilyn had long


hair and they cut it short and styled it in an upsweep. She


didn t really like the look at first-but she knew it got the


attention she needed.


Her first screen test at Fox was a silent test. There


was no dialogue. Mr. Leon Shamroy was the motion picture


cameraman who they said was the best in the business. He


would photograph her screen test.


Secretly one morning around 5:30, Mr. Shamroy and


Marilyn sneaked on the set. She made up in a portable


dressing room that Mr. Lyon sneaked out of wardrobe. The


dress was lovely, a sequined evening gown for her wear for


her big scene. They rehearsed Marilyn s first big scene and


then she began the scene and prayed silently that this was


her big start, the beginning of becoming a motion picture


actress.


Mr. Zanuck saw her screening and loved it! Mr. Lyon


gave her a contract to take home for her legal guardian


Aunt Grace to sign. Mr. Lyon suggested that her first name


be Marilyn and her Aunt Grace told her to use her mother s


maiden name-Monroe. So that is how she got her name.


Later that year, Jim and Marilyn finally divorced in


Reno, Nevada. This occurred just six weeks before she


signed her movie contracts with one of the largest motion


picture studios, Twentieth Century-Fox. And she was only


twenty years old.


After this, Marilyn s life would only just begin to get


better-or so she thought. The money kept pouring in, but


her marriages weren t lasting. Marilyn began to throw


herself to men. She slept with every producer she had ever


had. She starred in thirty movies (one uncompleted). She


married Joe DiMaggio in 1953 and they divorced in 1954.


Then, she married Arthur Miller in 1956 then later


divorced. This is what made her further prey to alcohol and


pills.


Marilyn then moved to 12305 Fifth Elena Drive,


Brentwood. The house is in a cul-de-sac. Frank Sinatra gave


marilyn Monroe a white poodle. His name was Maf. From


this point on, Marilyn downsided. She became very


depressed. She wanted children or a man to live with.


When she would go on her photo shoots, she would become


very down on herself. She had thirteen abortions. Marilyn


had affairs with John F. Kennedy, Robert Kennedy, Marlon


Brando, Jose Bolanos, and Frank Sinatra are just some of


the men.


In 1961, she received a Golden Globe Award for Some Like


It Hot. She sang Happy Birthday to John F. Kennedy in


1962.


Marilyn Monroe loved posing on the Santa Monica


beach. She was late for one of her last photo shoots, but


George Barris rescheduled for the next day. That next day,


around 7:30 PM on July 13, 1962, was the day that the


last picture of her on Santa Monica beach was taken, and


was to be her last. Her good friend and photographer


George Barris, lost his shoe on the beach right before their


departure from there, so Marilyn told him that the ocean


apparently needed it more than he did, so they both threw


their shoes in the ocean and left Santa Monica beach forever.


Marilyn Monroe was found dead in her Brentwood


home, on August 5, 1962 officially a victim of barbiturate


overdose. Marilyn was 36. At 36, she made a statement-


I m thirty-six and I m just getting started. She overdosed


on sleeping pills. Marilyn was in the process of making a


movie Something s Got to Give , but was dropped from the


movie because of chronic lateness and drug dependency. She


died four months after she was fired.


Marilyn s funeral was on Wednesday, August 8,1962.


Marilyn s coffin is in a marble wall-crypt to which a bronze


plaque is attached: Marilyn Monroe


1926-1962


May she rest in peace. She should have turned to God


rather than drugs. Popularity is no excuse to throw your life


away. What was the priority in Marilyn Monroe s life?


How could she even begin to inspire a living person???

Сохранить в соц. сетях:
Обсуждение:
comments powered by Disqus

Название реферата: Marilyn Monroe Essay Research Paper Many people

Слов:5457
Символов:34073
Размер:66.55 Кб.