This is one of the most amazing books on Marilyn Monroe and tells the story of her life as
she told it to George Barris just a few weeks before her death. Marilyn was by now at a
crossroads in her life and this was her reflection on her life so far. She had been through a
lot of turmoil during the last two years of her life but had kept going and was coming out
the other side...  you can't help wondering why Fox had treated her so shabbily during
those final months when making, Something's Got To Give. They must have known how
vulnerable and emotionally fragile she was and yet instead of trying to help her they fired
her...
How awful for Marilyn, to be abandoned once more, she must have felt like the young
Norma Jeane being hauled unwillingly into the orphanage. But she had her supporters this
time and one of them was George Barris.
Marilyn opens her heart in this book and we see her as a very human character, raw and
very tender from her recent ordeals. She is very honest and perhaps reveals to us a
Marilyn we have never seen before, the private side which only a very few would have
been privileged to see up 'til then.
These photographs are magnificent, a study in photographing people in general and
women particularly, and technically astounding. The colour images, almost certainly shot
on the Kodachrome of the vintage, and thirty-some years old when the book was
prepared for litho, have a lovely vintage tonality. A great model, a great photographer,
great cameras and films, and some beautiful scenery in Southern California all add up to
photos that would be worthwhile even if Marilyn had never been famous and were still
alive baking cookies in Ohio.
The photos are unlike any that were taken before, in total contrast to the recent shoot
with Bert Stern, these photos reveal a more natural side, often with very little make-up
and hair undone. I think they're very poignant to Marilyn's state of mind, she looks so
open, ready for the world, older but wiser than before: "As far as I'm concerned, the
happiest time of my life is now. There's a future, and I can't wait to get to it. It should be
interesting. "
It almost seems unbelievable that time was running out for Marilyn, there was so much
promise left, a great actress was emerging and one can only surmise what she would have
become had she survived that fateful night in August.
A truly outstanding book and one I would highly recommend.
Author: George Barris
Paperback: 176 pages
Publisher: Citadel Press; Reprint
edition (1 Nov 2003)
Language English
ISBN-10:0806524537
ISBN-13:978-0806524535