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The Weekly Marilyn Round-Up: January 6, 2017

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Welcome to a new year, Marilyn fans!  We are back after a holiday hiatus to bring you a weekly run-down of Marilyn in the news.

 

An autographed photo gifted to singer Thalia by her husband as part of an amazing Marilyn Christmas gift.

Did you get any Marilyn items for the holidays?  A couple of celebrities made headlines recently for their Marilyn-related holiday surprises.  Singer Thalia received a gift purchased at the November Julien’s auction from her husband Tommy Mottola – Marilyn’s handbag, lipstick, and face powder.  He also threw in a candid photo of Marilyn signing an autograph for a fan, autographed by Marilyn herself, from the Freida Hull collection.  Now that’s a gift any Marilyn fan would be over the moon to receive – major brownie points for Mr. Mottola!

Meanwhile, Khloe Kardashian bragged about her MM-related gift from her mother, Kris Jenner online.  She received two original Marilyn prints signed by photographers Richard C. Miller and Bert Stern.  Khloe is a big Marilyn fan, one of many in the famous family.

 

Another Marilyn-related production will be hitting the stage, this time at The Cutting Room in New York City.  With Love, Marilyn is apparently a musical performance based on Marilyn’s love affairs and will be performed on February 13th and 14th, 2017.  While the mention of Marilyn’s lovers raises our eyebrows – Marilyn fans know how much speculation and outright nonsense tends to appear in those tales – we’ll give the performance credit either way for donating proceeds to a women’s cancer charity.  Marilyn will be played by Erin Sullivan, who previously played her on the stage in the New Mexico production Marilee and Baby Lamb: The Assassination of an American Goddess.  That play was based on Lena Pepitone’s highly questionable accounts of Marilyn’s life.

 

An original Warhol for sale in Belfast.

The Julien’s auction in November was the biggest news of 2016, but 2017 will see Marilyn on the block again.  Julien’s will be auctioning off remaining items in a June Marilyn auction.  If you missed out in November, there may yet be a  treasure to be had in a few months.  Details on what will be up for bids aren’t yet available, but will include some items that went unsold in November.

 

An Andy Warhol original screen print of Marilyn, signed by the author, is among a collection of original Warhols coming up for sale in Belfast, Ireland.  If you can’t afford the nearly $105,000 US dollar price tag on the Marilyn, you can at least see it on display at Gormley Find Arts if you’re in the Belfast area.

 

That’s it for this week…and here’s to a great Marilyn year!

 

BOOK REVIEW: Marilyn Monroe: The Life, The Myth

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[vc_row type=”in_container” scene_position=”center” text_color=”dark” text_align=”left” overlay_strength=”0.3″][vc_column column_padding=”no-extra-padding” column_padding_position=”all” background_color_opacity=”1″ background_hover_color_opacity=”1″ width=”1/1″][vc_column_text]Marilyn Monroe: The Life, The Myth
Edited By Giovan Battista Brambilla, Gianni Mercurio, Stefano Petricca
1996 Rizzoli
ISBN 0847819604
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The Weekly Marilyn Round-Up: December 9, 2016

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Hi there Marilyn fans!  Another Friday is upon us, and once again our girl continues to pop up in the headlines.

 

Marilyn’s name shows up in a recent article focusing on Hermione Brown, a female lawyer in a male-dominated field during Marilyn’s era, who represented a number of celebrity clients.  The article lists Marilyn among those who “lined up for her advice”.  She seems a fascinating woman!

 

An exhibit of rare Marilyn photos is underway in Berlin.  Although the exhibit started up on November 4th, the news has only just crossed our desk here at IM.  Gallerie Hiltawsky hosts the exhibit through January 14th.

 

Well, it’s the same shade of pink anyway.

The New York Post shouted “You can own Marilyn’s sexy luggage” in a story on luggage maker T. Anthony of NYC.  The story states that they created a signature red and black luggage look for Marilyn while she was divorcing her husband – according to the story, she didn’t want her initials on it as he didn’t know yet.  Sounds a bit stretched to us, but I’m sure the luggage is lovely.

 

But, you are surely asking, which celebs have been accused of “channeling” Marilyn this week, probably in some obscure way???  Not to let you down, we have Mariah Carey in a pink dress, and Jennifer Hudson in a white one, neither of which really looks like Marilyn’s dresses.  All more proof that Marilyn’s name draws more clicks, even when another celeb is in the headline!

 

 

That’s it for this week!  The Roundup will be on hiatus for the holidays…see you in January!

 

 

 

 

Reliving Marilyn: An Interview With Morgan Blackbyrne About The New Marilyn Movie

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The upcoming film, Reliving Marilyn, focuses on Marilyn’s close friendship with her makeup artist, Whitey Snyder.  Actor and co-director of the film, Morgan Blackbyrne, answered a few questions about it for Immortal Marilyn.  He co-stars as Whitey with his wife, Nadine Banville, both IM members.

How did the idea for Reliving Marilyn come about?

rm-photo1 One day, while Nadine and I were discussing our discoveries about Marilyn (through much reading and research),  I had a thought as an actor/film maker – When I saw the photo of Marilyn’s body being wheeled out of her last home by a ambulance attendant, I wondered: “What were the thoughts of that guy?!”   “What it must have been for him to do his job, that night…”

I then had the notion of possibly making a film about someone we don’t hear about – an average person in direct contact with Marilyn, if even for a few moments, because that sort of thing interests me a great deal.  Sure, there are the big players in the life of someone like Our Girl, but what about the myriad of others we never, or rarely, hear about?  It’s this kind of microscope I like to use in my medium of story telling.

It was then that Nadine told me of Whitey and the promise between Marilyn and him.  I was totally taken aback! This was a lovely and a true story!

We immediately began work on the script for what was first titled, While I’m Still Warm, later dubbed Reliving Marilyn.

 

The movie focuses on Marilyn’s relationship with makeup artist Whitey Snyder.  What is it about that friendship that made you want to explore it on film?

At first and simply put – because it’s never been done. There has been far too much done about Marilyn’s romantic experiences, real and imagined/exaggerated, that we felt it was refreshing to consider a true story focussed on this non-romantic relationship – this deep friendship that quite permeated Marilyn’s life and yet, so few people know about.   Also, from the standpoint of modern film, wherein romance is far too often the go-to formula, I find it generally refreshing to tell stories differently. Stories with soul. True stories.  These are things I feel are what discerning viewers are hungry for.

The more we delved into the relationship between Whitey and Marilyn, the more I felt myself on the edge of tears – my heart pulled in this direction.  We’ve heard so much about her struggles and, quite truthfully, how she was used by the studio system.  To discover this man who was always there for her, right to the end, warmed my soul.

We’ve all felt, in our own ways, the tragedy that imbued Marilyn’s life. So, to discover Whitey was like discovering a light in her life. Certainly not the only light, by any means but, dare I say, possibly the “purest” one?  While he was an employee of Marilyn’s, paid for his services, he was a true friend…the kind of friend that seemed in short supply in Marilyn’s life.

And for me, as a person – as an actor – he became my new hero in her life.

Whitey Snyder was known for being fairly quiet on the subject of Marilyn after her death, a loyal friend.  Did you find it difficult to get a sense of who he was given mainly second-hand information, and how accurate do you think your portrayal of their friendship is as a result?

rm-photo2I watched the few interviews with Whitey and soaked up all the written references I could find about him and his relationship with Marilyn.  This was greatly augmented by new information discovered by Gary Vitacco-Robles.

I don’t wish to spoil the film, but after reading (and loving) our script, Gary suggested two episodes for our film that we hadn’t found in any other reference material!  Of course, we then read his books and found his style to be honest, truthful and faithful to Marilyn. Indeed, faithful to the facts.  And the true stories are far more interesting than anything some screenwriter could concoct to “make it more juicy”.

Portraying Whitey was my biggest acting challenge to date. His presence was the kind that was strong yet understated at the same time. His sensitivity to Marilyn and her needs was great, and at the same time he had a spine of steel.  To me, the ultimate “strong quiet type”.  He was direct and honest. Told it like he saw it, and yet was a true craftsman and artist. After all, he helped create Marilyn’s unique look. To this day, make up artists study the make up secrets of Allen Whitey Snyder!

As an actor, I’m a very sensitive person and I spent hours studying and ruminating upon many photos of Whitey with Marilyn.  He was a very expressive man, without being overtly so.  And in the process of becoming quiet within myself, I feel I discovered more about the man.

While this may seem odd to any non-actors reading this, every performer’s way into a character is an individual journey. You explore all avenues at your disposal and you make choices at the same time accepting immutable facts.

I always go back to two photos in particular – the one where he’s holding the mirror for Marilyn, on the set of Niagara, and the one where’s he’s hugging her in the Nevada desert, on the set of The Misfits.

In the first, I saw such warmth, admiration and hopeful concern, all at once, in his eyes as he held that mirror. I knew I was seeing Marilyn’s protector as well. Someone who would do all he could to help her, serve her, and protect her.

In the Misfits photo (obviously by this point, they both had had many experiences together)  I saw the same caring protector and friend, who was by now also quite seasoned at knowing what Marilyn needed.

As most know, The Misfits was a hard shoot for Marilyn, one that Whitey is quoted as saying “…should not have happened” (from the standpoint that he could see she wasn’t ready or well enough to tackle this film yet). And yet, she’s stellar in it!

But Whitey’s caring for Marilyn comes through in that hug photo.

This is where careful and judicious use of artistic license comes into play.  Remaining true to the facts as we know them, I wondered what was being said, while all these photos were taken. What were the feelings? What was shared? This guided my screen writing.

I do hope the truest Marilyn fans will accept that in film, there is the need for story telling clarity. What can be effectively dramatized doesn’t have to be vastly (or incorrectly) portrayed, but there are often slight variances from the verbatim truth.

For example, director Ron Howard spoke of this, with regards to making Apollo 13. Apparently, the astronauts never said, “Huston, we have a problem”, but the actual words were reconfigured to fit into this concise and dramatic quote.

Reliving Marilyn has similar, or dialogue extrapolated from accurate accounts of the facts on various sets, Marilyn’s status via chronology, and what we know of her concerns about her work as an actress and person.

This is also where my craft as an actor comes into play. No one can ever totally become another person! And an actor can only be themselves AS the character they’re playing.  Both Nadine Banville and I feel this way about our portrayals.

 

What can Marilyn’s fans expect from Reliving Marilyn that really makes it different from previous biopics?

Reliving Marilyn is a grass roots, professional independent film made by Marilyn FANS! This is a first, as far as I’m aware of. And while we are low budget, our production value is quite the opposite.

Reliving Marilyn is also unique in that we are not basing our film upon the work of one writer but several. You name it, we’ve read it and either employed it or not.  We also did our very best to remain true to the facts, having asked the following people to vet our script: Marijane Gray, Mary Sims, and Gary Vitacco-Robles.

I would add that although everyone has a different way of appreciating anything – some are mainly into the factual while others are more concerned about the respect and spirit with which something is handled – we are confident that at very least, we have achieved far better than most other biopics about Marilyn have in the past.  Our strength is in the respect for Marilyn and in the spirit with which we made this film; the latter includes being as factually correct as possible. And it seems our consultants agree.

 

You made an effort to be accurate with this film.  How challenging did you find that given the incredible amount of misinformation out there?  Do you feel you were successful?

As I began to state in the previous question, yes, we feel we’ve been successful, by and large. We didn’t just read and go. We consulted others as well as vetted our script.  I should also point out that there were a few deliberate changes made mainly to avoid infringing upon copyrights!  The precise positioning of Whitey and Marilyn in scenes inspired by photo moments are different yet recognizable – If you take a look, you’ll see there’s something different in each of the examples with this article.

I should also point out that, in my mind at least, working with scenes often inspired by photos, lends a greater deal of truth to the story. After all, the photos are factual evidence of, at very least, that these characters did these things and in these places.  What was said can only be wondered…but our scenes were created on the basis of facts, not pure conjecture.

 

Which scene did you have the most fun filming?  Which one was the hardest?

rm-photo3For Nadine, she had the most fun shooting the SGTG pool scene. She’s a natural water baby and loved the freedom of this scene, as much as I feel Marilyn did, as well, despite being unwell during that shoot.

For myself, “fun” isn’t the best word but rather “warm” – our scene inspired by The Misfits hug photo, between Whitey and Marilyn.  It embodies virtually most of what their relationship was all about in spirit. For me, at least, this scene was a pleasure to shoot. We kept it simple yet effective.

There’s another scene I loved filming, too, but I won’t mention it lest I spoil the film.

For Nadine, the hardest part was mastering the “Marilyn sound”.  We knew we didn’t want to channel Lorelei Lee for every single word that came out of her mouth – this, we feel, has been done too much and is part of the problem with other biopics – they base their take on Marilyn too much on her screen personas, not the real person.

Nadine went with just a touch of Lorelei Lee combined with the much more realistic sound of Marilyn, in the Richard Meryman interview.  Nadine also captures Marilyn’s unique laugh, something so tricky that no one we’re aware of has ever quite done it, even a bit.

For me, the hardest thing to do was actually more about balancing the act of being the male lead and co-directing.

I was in charge of the overall visual direction of the film while my co-director, Shannon Lawson, handled most of the actors, including myself. She made sure I changed hats from director/producer to actor.

 

Actresses who have played Marilyn on film in the past have been subject to a great deal of scrutiny.  What are you hoping fans will see in Nadine’s performance that will make it stand out and pass the “fan test”?

Realizing that no one – NO ONE – can ever totally embody another person, we feel that for anyone to expect that there’ll ever be another actress who can TOTALLY capture and portray Marilyn will only lead to disappointment. There is only one Marilyn!

Having said that, we hope people will feel Marilyn’s more tender aspects, in Nadine’s performance. Marilyn’s softness and her so-called “woman-child” quality, Marilyn’s ability to turn on her persona at will and, most importantly in our eyes, Marilyn’s vulnerability and insecurities.   These are aspects of Marilyn we feel have been either left out or only given peripheral treatment in most all previous biopics made about her.

 

What do you most hope viewers of the film will take away from it?

As I see it, this question refers to ALL viewers, Marilyn experts and the general public alike.

For the Marilyn fans and experts, we hope they will both see and feel the respect for Marilyn and the true spirit with which we have made Reliving Marilyn. We hope they love it! At very least, that Reliving Marilyn is the first to stick to the facts rather than sensationalism-to-sell-tickets.

For the average viewer, we hope to open their eyes to more about the real Marilyn, the human being behind the lovely blue eyes and the skirt flying up over a subway grate. And, perhaps, urge them onto their own path of discovering Marilyn, as we all have.

In both cases, we feel all viewers will see that Reliving Marilyn is a unique biopic that respects and honors Marilyn, and the unsung hero of her life – Whitey.

In conclusion, we wish people to know that the fate of Reliving Marilyn being properly distributed is in doubt. Hence our funding drive.  We are independent producers, who have made this film for far less than just the legal fees alone on a major Hollywood production.  We have had to bootstrap this production from the get-go, especially after our chief financier tragically passed away at age 48, in early 2014.  We have struggled ever since, choosing to make this film now or never.

While we respect that we cannot openly post about our funding drive on Immortal Marilyn, we hope that anyone who is keen to help us will contact us via our Facebook page, or directly to me, Morgan Blackbyrne.

Marilyn’s Contemporaries: Audrey Hepburn

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Life and Career

Audrey Kathleen Ruston was born in Belgium on May 4, 1929 to Joseph Hepburn-Ruston and his wife, Baroness Ella van Heemstra.  Ella was twice divorced and had two boys from a previous marriage. The couple constantly fought and Joseph’s drinking became a major contributing factor to the end of their marriage. As a result, Joseph walked out on the family when Audrey was just six years old, an event which left her traumatized.

A young Audrey

A young Audrey

When World War II broke out in 1939, Audrey and her mom were living in Arnhem in the Netherlands, which Ella believed to be safer from Nazi occupation; however, Hitler’s army soon invaded, taking over the town in 1940 and leaving Audrey to spend her childhood and part of her teen years in poverty and suffering from malnutrition and depression.

“People have fears now which are mostly distant and unknown: fears of death or cancer or getting killed in a car smash. I knew the cold clutch of human terror all through my early teens: I saw it, felt it, heard it and it never goes away. You see it wasn’t just a nightmare: I was there and it all happened.”

There was one hobby that became Audrey’s escape.  Not long before the Nazis came, Audrey had taken up ballet. She was a natural and ballet soon became her passion. Her mother even ran a dancing academy at one point in which Audrey taught young students to help raise more money for food.

Although the Nazis had gone by 1945 with the German surrender, Audrey was still without much food and money, and at the time, the Red Cross was providing emergency rations, an action which started a fire in Audrey’s heart for wanting to help others as the Red Cross had helped her family.

From there, Audrey continued her dance classes and was soon approached by Dutch film director Charles van der Linden, who was scouting her class one morning in search of a young girl for a small part in his film Dutch in Seven Lessons. Audrey was chosen immediately and was a natural in front of the camera, even with no prior acting training. She soon began auditioning for chorus-girl roles in West End musicals to make more money so that she could continue attending her ballet classes.

By the 1950’s she was signed to Ealing Studios, receiving minor roles and cameos in films. Her first serious relationship was to wealthy Jimmy Hanson. Although they announced their engagement in 1952, it was soon broken off because of conflicting schedules.

Audrey’s big break came one fateful day in Monte Carlo, where she was on location for a comedy. Famed French writer Colette was quickly running out of time searching for the perfect girl to star in the upcoming stage adaptation of her story Gigi. Colette was fascinated by Audrey and her vision of Gigi had come to life; Audrey was soon cast as the lead and was on her way to Broadway.

During filming of Roman Holiday

During filming of Roman Holiday

Gigi was a sold-out hit and Audrey became an overnight success. Her Broadway publicity got her noticed by Hollywood director William Wyler, who had just acquired the option to the comedy Roman Holiday. Gregory Peck was already cast as the male lead, and Wyler was searching for a European actress for his princess for the picture. This film became her next major success. When it opened in 1953, it received rave reviews. This led to Audrey’s first Oscar win, and the first of five academy award nominations.

Following the success of her first Hollywood film, Audrey’s future in movies was secured, next appearing as the female lead in the 1954 hit Sabrina. Soon after, at a cocktail party hosted by Gregory Peck, Audrey met her future husband, actor/writer/director Mel Ferrer. The two quickly fell in love and married in September of 1954 at Lake Lucerne.

Audrey continued her work in motion pictures, landing memorable roles such as Natasha Rostova in War and Peace (1956), Jo Stockton in Funny Face (1957), and Sister Luke in The Nun’s Story (1959). In January of 1960, she welcomed her first and only child with Mel, son Sean Ferrer. Her next major project came in 1961, when she starred in Breakfast At Tiffany’s with her timeless performance as New York party girl Holly Golightly, further cementing her iconic status as an actress. Sadly, Audrey’s marriage with Mel was beginning to crumble. The couple finally divorced in 1968.

Audrey with her son, Luca

Audrey with her son, Luca

Once her marriage with Mel ended, so did her film career, for the most part. After the completion of Wait Until Dark (1967), she retired to Switzerland to devote more time to being a mother to Sean, and made frequent trips to Rome to visit with friends. She soon met her second husband, Italian psychiatrist Andrea Dotti, and the two were married in January of 1969. Her second and last child, son Luca Dotti, was born the following year.

With Dotti’s increasing reputation as a womanizer, this marriage also did not last. The couple would divorce in 1982. Audrey would appear in only four more minor films, returning to Hollywood for Robin and Marian in 1976. Four years later, at a dinner party held in New York, Audrey met her final and greatest love: Dutch television actor Robert Wolders. Although they never married, they would be devoted to each other until her death in 1993.

Although by this time Audrey had become one of the most appreciated stars in the world, the most rewarding experience in her life came when she was given the title of Goodwill Ambassador of UNICEF in 1987. This allowed her to travel to many third-world countries and help hundreds of starving children in horrible living conditions. By working with UNICEF, she felt she had finally reached her life’s mission that had come full circle: to help children in need just as the Red Cross had helped her over 40 years ago.

In September of 1992, upon her return to Switzerland from a UNICEF mission in Somalia, she began suffering from severe pain in her lower stomach. She had unknowingly been carrying a rare form of abdominal cancer which had been slowly growing over the course of several years. By December that same year, after undergoing surgery and chemotherapy, the cancer had metastasized and had become terminal. She passed away peacefully at her home in Switzerland in January of 1993. In her final farewell letter to her sons, she wrote,

Audrey Hepburn, UNICEF ambassador in Ethiopia

Audrey in her work for UNICEF

“If you ever need a helping hand, it’s at the end of your arm. As you get older, remember you have another hand: the first is to help yourself, the second is to help others.”

In 1993, her son Sean accepted her posthumously awarded Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award.

Marilyn Connections

Anthony Beauchamp – Photographed both Marilyn and Audrey

Anita Loos – Author of Gentlemen Prefer Blondes. Script writer for Gigi on Broadway.

Richard Avedon – Photographer and friend of both Marilyn and Audrey at around the same time.

Billy Wilder– Director of Sabrina. Director of Seven Year Itch (1955) and Some Like It Hot (1959)

Cecil Beaton – friend of Audrey. Photographed her beginning in the late 1940’s. Worked with her on My Fair Lady. Photographed Marilyn in 1956.

Breakfast At Tiffany’s – Truman Capote initially wanted Marilyn for the role of Holly Golightly in Breakfast At Tiffany’s. She considered the role, but she was advised by various people in her professional circle not to accept it.

Personal Connections

In 1960, Marilyn, married to Arthur Miller at the time, engaged in an affair with Let’s Make Love co-star Yves Montand, who was also married to another woman. During the filming of Sabrina, Audrey, although herself not married at the time, had an affair with married co-star William Holden.

Like Marilyn, who suffered the loss of a child due to a miscarriage in 1956, Audrey had two miscarriages before giving birth to her two healthy sons Sean and Luca.

Also like Marilyn, Audrey is one of the most popular women who have fallen victim to endless misquotes. Nearly everything you encounter on a shirt, Instagram post, purse, or poster is not said by her.

Both Marilyn and Audrey are two incredibly talented women of the silver screen who will stand the test of time. Marilyn will forever live on as America’s beloved bombshell with a heart of gold and a creative mind, and Audrey as both a fashion and movie icon, a symbol of classic elegance, and someone whose tireless efforts as a humanitarian sparked a legacy that will forever be appreciated.

-Ky Monroe for Immortal Marilyn