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Preserving the Memory of Marilyn Monroe with Dignity and Grace

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Published July 15, 2018

GENTLEMEN STILL PREFER BLONDES 65 YEARS ON


“I remember when I got the part in ‘Gentlemen Prefer Blondes.’ Jane Russell – she was the brunette in it and I was the blonde. She got $200,000 for it, and I got my $500 a week, but that to me was, you know, considerable. She, by the way, was quite wonderful to me. The only thing was I couldn’t get a dressing room. Finally, I really got to this kind of level and I said, “Look, after all, I am the blonde, and it is ‘Gentlemen Prefer Blondes!'” Because still they always kept saying, “Remember, you’re not a star.” I said, “Well, whatever I am, I am the blonde!” Marilyn Monroe

On the 15th July 1953, “Gentlemen Prefer Blondes” made its big screen debut, today we are celebrating 65 years since Marilyn Monroe and Jane Russell sang and danced into our hearts and minds and made us realise that “Diamonds Are A Girls Best Friend!”

“Gentlemen Prefer Blondes” started life as a novel, written by Anita Loos in 1925 and later became a successful Broadway hit in 1949. Marilyn first heard she had secured the role of Lorelei Lee, the lovable gold digging blonde on June 1st 1952, her 26th birthday. She was to co star with Jane Russell, who although at the time had only made 9 pictures to Marilyn’s 19, Jane was undoubtedly the bigger star, having been catapulted into stardom with her debut feature film, “The Outlaw.” The film also had a strong supporting cast, Elliot Reid, Tommy Noonan, George “Foghorn” Winslow and Charles Coburn, who along with Winslow had acted alongside Marilyn in the 1952 screwball comedy “Monkey Business” starring Cary Grant and Ginger Rogers.

Filming commenced November 17th 1952 and according to her co star Jane Russell, Marilyn showed no signs of forgetting lines or being late on set which she became more and more notorious for later on in her career. “I didn’t experience any of the lateness or unprofessionalism you hear about, that came way later. She worked very hard and always knew her lines and was absolutely determined to get ahead.” Russell remembers, “we got along very well and when I found out she was a little nervous about going out on the set, I’d stop by her dressing room and you know, say ‘come on Blondel, it’s time to go! We’re due…’ and she’d say ‘oh! alright Jane’ and we’d trot on the set together.”

The film had 5 songs which showcased Marilyn and Jane’s vocal abilities beautifully: “Two Little Girls From Little Rock,” “Bye Bye Baby,” “When Love Goes Wrong,” “Diamonds Are A Girls Best Friend” and “Ain’t There Anyone Here For Love?” …. the latter was set around Jane Russell’s character Dorothy Shaw attempting to flirt with the Olympic team on the cruise ships gymnasium and swimming pool. Jane bent down at the edge of the swimming pool so that the dancers could dive over and around her into the water. The problem was, one of them clipped Jane on the head with his foot and she rolled into the pool, even though her tumble did look intentional. Jane remembers: “It was an accident and we had to go back and re-shoot the whole number, but they ended up using that footage. We had a long time in those days to rehearse the numbers and we’d worked every day for a couple of months. I wasn’t supposed to end up in the pool at all, but it turned out better the way it happened, although the poor dancer got fired! I mean, it didn’t hurt.” Ron Nyman, who managed to avoid Jane Russell with his own well-excecuted dive, added, “The guy’s name was Ed Fury, he caught her by accident and the reason he was fired is because he then insisted on getting a co-choreography credit!”

Of course, the big musical number that most people remember from the film is the iconic “Diamonds Are A Girls Best Friend” which sees Marilyn in a stunning pink evening gown, singing and dancing on a backdrop of red and black, surrounded by men in suits, vying for her attention. One of the backing dancers was a young George Chakiris, who would later go on to win an Academy Award for his performance in “West Side Story.” “One of my favorite credits is to say that I worked behind Marilyn Monroe and I love saying that.” George remembers fondly, “ She was phenomenal. She only about twenty six when she made that film but Marilyn was an actress who was deeply concerned about her work and was very conscientious. Let me give you an example of her professionalism: If there ever was a cut for any reason, she never went back to her trailer to check her makeup. She’d be there on her starting mark and ready for the next take. “

Filming finished on 22nd January 1953, but it wouldn’t be unleashed to the world for another 6 months. Meanwhile, Marilyn was appearing in cinemas around the world in her 1953 film noir thriller “Niagara” which was her first major starring role, backed by a huge publicity campaign by FOX Studios. If there was anyone who by this point hadn’t heard of Marilyn Monroe, they were sure to by now! It catapulted her into stardom and the public couldn’t get enough of her. With the release of “Gentlemen Prefer Blondes” it would cement her as a major star in Hollywood an an even bigger box office draw.

As a testiment to how popular Marilyn had become over the last 12 months or so and as a tribute to Jane Russell’s everlasting appeal and celebrated career, the two were invited to place their hands and feet in wet cement at Grauman’s Chinese Theatre on 26th June as promotion for the up and coming release of “Gentlemen Prefer Blondes” on July 15th. More can be read about that here:  https://www.marilynrememberedfanclub.com/65-years-of-marilyn-at-graumans-chinese-theatre/

“Gentlemen Prefer Blondes” was a huge success when it was released earning over $12 million at the Box Office after its initial budget of $2.3 million.
“The reviews were great and so was the box office” Jane Russell remembers. “Apparently everyone loved the Monroe-Russell combination, the New York Herald Tribune called it the “Haystack Brunette versus the Blowtorch Blonde.” and said how very well we worked together. They loved the singing, our dancing- even our acting- and especially the ‘Diamonds Are A Girls Best Friend’ number. We were delighted with the reaction the film got from both the press and the public. I was especially happy and I had a ball on that picture.”
Although it was cruely overlooked at every single major awards ceremony, only achieving one nomination at the Writers Guild Of America Awards 1954 for ‘Best Written American Musical’ it went on to be the 6th highest grossing film of 1953 and incidently Marilyn’s second highest grossing film of her career – second to ‘Some Like It Hot.’
It is also safe to say that “Gentlemen Prefer Blondes” is a firm favourite among Marilyn fans and Jane Russell was once quoted as saying “It really was the best thing that either of us was ever involved in.”


Published July 1, 2018

HAPPY CANANDA DAY

Happy Canada Day to all our Canadian members.

These photos were taken during the filming of “River Of No Return” in 1953, whilst on location in Canada, in the national parks of Banff and Jaspe, in Alberta, and in the Canadian Rockies.

65 YEARS OF MARILYN AT GRAUMAN’S CHINESE THEATRE
Published June 26, 2018

65 YEARS OF MARILYN AT GRAUMAN’S CHINESE THEATRE


“I’ll never forget Marilyn saying, “It’s for all time, isn’t it?” “Yes,” I told her, “it’s for all time, or as long as the cement lasts.” She made me cry, she was so sweet. I believed in her. We made a hell of a team and I wish we had done another picture together.”
– Jane Russell

June 26th 1953 marks an incredible 65 years since Marilyn Monroe and Jane Russell both placed their hands and feet in wet cement and were forever immortalised in the forecourt of the famous Grauman’s Chinese Theatre on Hollwood Boulevard. “Filmdom’s first blonde and first brunette” as the newsreels proclaimed, earned their place in the forecourt of the movie theatre as promotion for their up and coming feature film “Gentlemen Prefer Blondes,” which was due to hit theatres on July 1st, 1953.

“When I was younger, I used to go to Grauman’s Chinese Theatre and try to fit my foot in the prints in the cement there. And I’d say “Oh, oh, my foots too big. I guess that’s out.” I did have a funny feeling later when I finally put my foot down into that wet cement, I sure knew what it really meant to me, anything’s possible, almost.”

On some occassions however, Hollywood stars would also leave the imprint of something more suited to their personalities .. Betty Grable, famous for her ‘Million Dollar Legs’ left her leg imprint and Joe E. Brown famous for his… well… large mouth, left his mouth imprint! Marilyn had the rather fun and cheeky suggestion that she should sit down in the wet cement and Jane Russell should lean over in the wet cement, leaving their most famous assets immortalised for the whole world to see! Unfortunately, this request was denied. Instead, Marilyn dotted the “i” in her name with a rhinestone (which was sadly chisled out soon after.) Across both squares the ladies wrote “Gentlemen Prefer Blondes” forever tying them together with such a wonderful movie. I wonder how many tourists have watched the film after seeing its name in wet cement?

Here we are, 65 years on and Marilyn’s hand and footprints are still by far the most popular and most photographed at Grauman’s Chinese Theatre. Of course, it wasn’t just Marilyn’s big day, Jane Russell was right by her side. Taken from “Jane Russell: An Autobiography,” Jane shared her thoughts on the day:

“Marilyn and I were invited to add our footprints to those already cemented in at Grauman’s Chinese Theatre on Hollywood Boulevard. We were both wearing summer dresses and high heels as we posed, arms linked together, for the photographers. We were thrilled beyond words. While I was placing my my feet in that square of soggy cement, I thought of all the times when Pat Alexander and I tried to fit our feet in the footprints of various actresses and how we figured that they must have worn the tiniest shoes for the occassion. Our feet never fit in. Now my prints were in that cement and I couldn’t believe it. I’m sure Marilyn felt the same. Always one for personal comfort, I was wearing my usual big shoes, so no aspiring actress will have any trouble whatsoever getting their feet into my footprints!”



 

The forecourt is nearly full to the brim with the hand and footprints of famous names spanning the last 8 decades. You can definitely spend an entire afternoon feasting your eyes on the imprints of old favourites and new talents.
There are also plenty of Marilyn’s contemporaries immortalised at Grauman’s Chinese Theatre. They include:

Jack Lemmon
Co star in “Some Like It Hot.” He had a joint imprint ceremony with Shirley MacLaine as promotion for “Irma La Douce.” Notice Jack has left a cork imprint after toasting the occassion with a bottle of bubbly!


Anne Baxter
Co star in “All About Eve.”

Bette Davis
Co star in “All About Eve.”

Betty Grable
Co star in “How To Marry A Millionaire” Notice her leg imprint!

Clark Gable
Co star in “The Misfits.”

Donald O’Connor
Co star in “There’s No Business Like Show Business.” He very sweetly brought his Mother along to the ceremony.

Ginger Rogers
Co star in “Monkey Business” and “We’re Not Married!”

Dean Martin
Co star in the uncompleted “Something’s Got To Give.”

Jeanne Crain
Co star in “O’ Henry’s Full House.”

Gene Kelly
Co star in “Let’s Make Love.”

Joe E. Brown
Co star in “Some Like It Hot.” Notice his mouth imprint!


Cary Grant
Co-star in “Monkey Business.”

 

Charles Laughton
Co star in “O’Henry’s Full House.”

The Marx Brothers
Co stars in “Love Happy.”

Mickey Rooney
Co star in “The Fireball.”

Natalie Wood
Co star in “Scudda Hoo! Scudda Hay!”

Barbara Stanwyk
Co star in “Clash By Night.”

Richard Widmark
Co star in “Don’t Bother To Knock.”

William Powell
Co star in “How To Marry A Millionaire.”

Monty Woolley
Co star in “As Young As You Feel.” Notice his beard imprint!

Jean Harlow
Marilyn’s childhood idol.

Frank Sinatra
Close personal friend

Jack Benny
Marilyn appeared on his tv show in 1953.

Doris Day
After Marilyn passed away, her final uncompleted film “Something’s Got To Give” was remade into “Move Over Darling” starring Doris Day and used much of the same sets and props.

Jerry Lewis
Friend of Marilyn’s.

Humphrey Bogart
Husband of Lauren Bacall during the filming of “How To Marry A Millionaire.”

Of course, there are so many other big Hollywood names that never managed to get their hand and footprints immortalised over the years. One of which was Marilyn’s “How To Marry A Millionaire” co-star Lauren Bacall.

Around premiere time for “How To Marry A Millionaire”, Lauren Bacall got an invitation to place her hand and footprints outside Grauman’s Chinese Theater. “I said to Bogie [Humphrey Bogart] that it seemed to me anyone with a picture opening could be represented there, standards had been so lowered. Bogie, loving a chance to puncture Hollywood’s ego, said, ‘Why don’t you refuse?’”

[Hollywood columnist] Joe Hyams printed Bacall’s refusal to accept the tribute in the Tribune. It read, “’Before I came to Hollywood, Grauman’s Chinese was something very special to me – it meant not only achievement – it was the Hall of Fame of the motion picture industry and the people in it were unforgettables and irreplaceables. I don’t think of myself as either – I feel that my career is undergoing a change and I want to feel I’ve earned my place with the best my business has produced.’”

More than 20 years passed, and Bacall did not earn another invitation to place her hand and footprints outside the theater. She wrote about this with some regret in her 1979 memoir By Myself: “A tourist or aspiring actor going to Grauman’s Chinese to see the legendary stars’ footprints will not see mine – or miss them.”

Placing your hands in Marilyn’s hands is an incredible experience and I’m sure she would be so thrilled to know that so many people travel from all over the world just for the experience. Here’s to the next 65 years of Grauman’s!

 

 

Published January 23, 2018

‘NIAGARA’ TURNS 65


This week marks 65 years since the release of the 1953 film noir thriller ‘Niagara’ starring Marilyn Monroe, Joseph Cotton, Jean Peters and Directed by Henry Hathaway.

“Marilyn Monroe and Niagara, a raging torrent of emotion that even nature can’t control!” read the tag line on billboards and advertisements.  Twentieth Century FOX pulled out all the stops on what was to be Marilyn’s first starring role in a major motion picture.

The official synopsis of the movie reads as follows:
“The splendour of both Niagara falls and Marilyn Monroe enhance this taut tale about a faithless wife plotting against her husband.  Joseph Cotten stars as George Loomis, a disturbed Korean war veteran staying at Niagara Falls with his wife, Rose (Monroe).  Thoroughly sensuous and constantly scheming, Rose intends to kill her husband and run off with her lover.  But first she is going to drive George mad by flaunting herself before anyone who will notice.”

Marilyn Monroe enjoyed a good working relationship with her co-stars, in particular with her leading man, Joseph Cotton:
“I enjoyed her company. I enjoyed working with her,” Cotten said about working with Marilyn Monroe in her first starring role. He said she had an appetite for laughter and was aware of her sense of humor describing her as a “pretty clown.  Cotten recalls hearing about her death and receiving a phone call from the Associated Press for a comment.  “At first I was sure it had to be an accident. Such buoyancy of spirit, such sparkling anticipation, such a happy and comic attitude would deny support to any theory,” he wrote. “But she had such moments of fear and insecurity….As to all the other furtive theories-cover-up, murder, etc. – I have no knowledge or interest in such sordidness. I knew and acted with Marilyn Monroe. I am proud of having that privilege.”

Director Henry Hathaway also had kind words to say about working with Marilyn, on two seperate occassions, he was quoted as saying  “She’s the best natural actress I’ve directed.  And I go back.  I worked with Barbara LaMarr, Jean Harlow, Renee Adoree–right up to today.  And she’s the greatest natural talent.  Wait ’til you see her in this picture!”
“Marilyn was marvellous to work with, very easy to direct and terifically ambitious to do better.  And bright, really bright.  She may not have had an education, but she was naturally bright.”

‘Niagara’ was first released in theatres on January 21st 1953 and grossed a healthy $2.35 million return on an outlay of $1,670,000 during its initial run.  Today it is still among Marilyn’s most popular films.

Happy birthday ‘Niagara!’

To purchase a copy of the movie, simply head here: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Niagara-DVD-Marilyn-Monroe/dp/B007JV73EY/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1516716834&sr=8-1&keywords=niagara

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