by Donald Spoto
Moore, Robin and Gene Schoor. Marilyn & Joe DiMaggio. Manor Books, 1977.
Morphos, Evangeline (editor). Lee Strasberg: A Dream of Passion. Boston: Little, Brown, 1987.
Murray, Eunice. Marilyn: The Last Months. New York: Pyramid, 1975.
Negulesco, Jean. Things I Did . . . and Things I Think I Did. New York: Linden Press/Simon & Schuster, 1984.
Nolan, William F. John Huston: King Rebel. Los Angeles: Sherbourne Press, 1965.
Olivier, Laurence. Confessions of an Actor. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1982.
———. On Acting. New York: Touchstone/Simon & Schuster, 1986.
Overholt, Alma. The Catalina Story. Avalon and Los Angeles: no publisher listed, 1962.
Palmer, Edwin O. History of Hollywood. New York: Garland Publishing, 1978.
Parsons, Louella O. Tell It To Louella. New York: Putnam’s, 1961.
Pepitone, Lena, and William Stadiem. Marilyn Monroe Confidential. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1979.
Pratley, Gerald. The Cinema of John Huston. Cranbury, N.J.: A. S. Barnes, 1977.
Preminger, Otto. Preminger: An Autobiography. New York: Doubleday, 1977.
Rand, Christopher. Los Angeles: The Ultimate City. New York: Oxford University Press, 1967.
Ricci, Mark, and Michael Conway. The Complete Films of Marilyn Monroe. Secaucus: Citadel, 1964.
Riese, Randall, and Neal Hitchens. The Unabridged Marilyn: Her Life from A to Z. New York: Congdon & Weed, 1987.
Robins, Natalie. Alien Ink. New York: Morrow, 1992.
Rollyson, Carl E., Jr. Marilyn Monroe: A Life of the Actress. Ann Arbor: UMI Research Press, 1986.
Rosten, Norman. Marilyn: An Untold Story. New York: NAL/Signet, 1973.
Russell, Jane. Jane Russell: My Paths & My Detours. New York: Franklin Watts, 1985.
Scagnetti, Jack. The Life and Loves of Gable. Middle Village, N.Y.: Jonathan David, 1976.
Schlesinger, Arthur M., Jr. Robert Kennedy and His Times. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1978.
Shaw, Sam, and Norman Rosten. Marilyn among friends. London: Bloomsbury, 1987.
Signoret, Simone. Nostalgia Isn’t What It Used to Be. London: Grafton, 1979.
Shevey, Sandra. The Marilyn Scandal. New York: William Morrow, 1988; Berkley/Jove, 1990.
Skolsky, Sidney. Don’t Get Me Wrong—I Love Hollywood. New York: Putnam’s, 1975.
Skolsky, Sidney. Marilyn. New York: Dell, 1954.
Slatzer, Robert. The Life and Curious Death of Marilyn Monroe. New York: Pinnacle, 1974.
Smith, Ella. Starring Miss Barbara Stanwyck. New York: Crown, 1985.
Spada, James, and George Zeno. Monroe: Her Life in Pictures. New York: Doubleday, 1982.
Speriglio, Milo. The Marilyn Conspiracy. New York: Pocket Books, 1986.
Spoto, Donald. Laurence Olivier: A Biography. New York: HarperCollins, 1992.
Stack, Robert, with Mark Evans. Straight Shooting. New York: Macmillan, 1980.
Steinern, Gloria, with photographs by George Barris. Marilyn. New York: Henry Holt, 1986.
Stempel, Tom. Screenwriter: The Life and Times of Nunnally Johnson. San Diego: A. S. Barnes, 1980.
Strasberg, Susan. Bittersweet. New York: Putnam’s, 1980.
———. Marilyn and Me: Sisters, Rivals, Friends. New York: Warner, 1992.
Summers, Anthony. Goddess: The Secret Lives of Marilyn Monroe. New York: Macmillan, 1985; Signet, 1986.
Taylor, Roger G. Marilyn In Art. Salem: Salem House, 1984.
———. Marilyn Monroe: In Her Own Words. New York: Delilah/Putnam, 1983. (U.K.: Marilyn on Marilyn. London: Zachary Kwintner Books Ltd., 1983.)
Tornabene, Lyn. Long Live The King. New York: Putnam’s, 1976.
Trescott, Pamela. Cary Grant—His Movies and His Life. Washington: Acropolis Books, 1987.
Tynan, Kenneth. Profiles. London: Nick Hern/Walker Books, 1989.
Vineberg, Steve. Method Actors. New York: Schirmer, 1991.
WPA. Los Angeles: A Guide To The City And Its Environs. New York: Hastings House, 1941.
Wagenknecht, Edward. Marilyn Monroe: A Composite View. Philadelphia: Chilton, 1969.
Warren, Doug. Betty Grable: The Reluctant Movie Queen. New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1981.
Weatherby, W. J. Conversations with Marilyn. New York: Mason/Charter, 1976.
Wilson, Earl. Show Business Laid Bare. New York: Putnam’s, 1974.
———. The Show Business Nobody Knows. Chicago: Cowles, 1971.
Wood, Tom. The Bright Side of Billy Wilder, Primarily. New York: Doubleday, 1970.
Young-Bruehl, Elisabeth. Anna Freud. New York: Summit, 1988.
Zolotow, Maurice. Billy Wilder in Hollywood. New York: Putnam’s, 1977.
———. Marilyn Monroe. New York: Harcourt Brace, 1960.
The Films of
Marilyn Monroe
The following abbreviations are used for the credits of Marilyn Monroe’s twenty-nine completed and released motion pictures:
P: Producer
D: Director
Sc: Author of screenplay
b/o: based on
C: Cinematographer
b/w: black and white (all others in Technicolor or DeLuxe)
Rel: Release date
Scudda-Hoo! Scudda-Hay!
P: Walter Morosco for Fox. D/Sc: F. Hugh Herbert, b/o a novel by George Chamberlain. C: Ernest Palmer. Rel: April 1948. MM as Peggy; with June Haver, Lon McCallister, Walter Brennan, Ann Revere, Natalie Wood, Henry Hull, Tom Tully.
Dangerous Years
P: Sol Wurtzel for Fox. D: Arthur Pierson. Sc: Arnold Belgard. C: Benjamin Kline, b/w. Rel: Dec. 1947: filmed after Scudda-Hoo! Scudda-Hay! but released first. MM as Eve; with William Halop, Ann E. Todd, Darryl Hickman, Jerome Cowan.
Ladies of the Chorus
P: Harry A. Romm for Columbia. D: Phil Karlson. Sc: Harry Sauber and Joseph Carol. C: Frank Redman, b/w. Rel: Oct. 1948. MM as Peggy Martin; with Adele Jergens, Rand Brooks, Nana Bryant.
Love Happy
P: Lester Cowan for United Artists (Mary Pickford). D: David Miller. Sc: Frank Tashlin and Mac Benoff, b/o a story by Harpo Marx. C: William C. Mellor, b/w. Rel: April 1950. MM as an unnamed client of Groucho Marx (as a private detective); with Harpo Marx, Chico Marx, Ilona Massey, Eric Blore, Vera-Ellen, Raymond Burr.
A Ticket to Tomahawk
P: Robert Bassler for Fox. D: Richard Sale. Sc: Sale and Mary Loos. C: Harry Jackson. Rel: May 1950. MM as Clara; with Dan Dailey, Anne Baxter, Rory Calhoun, Walter Brennan, Marion Marshall.
The Asphalt Jungle
P: Arthur Hornblow, Jr., for MGM. D: John Huston. Sc: Huston and Ben Maddow, b/o a novel by W. R. Burnett. C: Harold Rosson. b/w. Rel: May 1950. MM as Angela Phinlay; with Sterling Hayden, Louis Calhern, Jean Hagen, Sam Jaffe, James Whitmore.
All About Eve
P: Darryl F. Zanuck for Fox. D/Sc: Joseph L. Mankiewicz. C: Milton Krasner, b/w. Rel: Oct. 1950. MM as Miss Caswell; with Bette Davis, Anne Baxter, George Sanders, Celeste Holm, Gary Merrill, Hugh Marlowe, Thelma Ritter, Gregory Ratoff.
The Fireball
P: Bert Friedlob for Fox. D: Tay Garnett. Sc: Garnett and Horace McCoy. C: Lester White, b/w. Rel: Nov. 1950. MM as Polly; with Mickey Rooney, Pat O’Brien, Beverly Tyler.
Right Cross
P: Armand Deutsch for MGM. D: John Sturges. Sc: Charles Schnee. C: Norbert Brodine, b/w. Rel: Nov. 1950. MM as Dusky LeDoux; with Dick Powell, June Allyson, Ricardo Montalban, Lionel Barrymore.
Home Town Story (not, as usually listed, Hometown Story)
P, D, Sc: Arthur Pierson for MGM. C: Lucien Andriot, b/w. Rel: May 1951. MM as Iris; with Donald Crisp, Jeffrey Lynn, Marjorie Reynolds, Alan Hale, Jr.
As Young As You Feel
P: Lamar Trotti for Fox. D: Harmon Jones. Sc: Trotti, b/o a story by Paddy Chayefsky. C: Joe MacDonald, b/w. Rel: Aug. 1951. MM as Harriet; with Monty Woolley, Jean Peters, Thelma Ritter, Constance Bennett, Albert Dekker.
Love Nest
P: Jules Buck for Fox. D: Joseph Newm
an. Sc: I. A. L. Diamond, b/o a novel by Scott Corbett. C: Lloyd Ahern, b/w. Rel: Oct. 1951. MM as Roberta Stevens; with June Haver, William Lundigan, Leatrice Joy, Jack Paar, Frank Fay.
Let’s Make It Legal
P: Robert Bassler for Fox. D: Richard Sale. Sc: F. Hugh Herbert and I. A. L. Diamond, b/o a story by Mortimer Braus. C: Lucien Ballard, b/w. Rel: Nov. 1951. MM as Joyce; with Claudette Colbert, Macdonald Carey, Robert Wagner, Zachary Scott, Barbara Bates.
Clash by Night
P: Harriet Parsons for Jerry Wald and Norman Krasna, RKO. D: Fritz Lang. Sc: Alfred Hayes, b/o the play by Clifford Odets. C: Nicholas Musuraca, b/w. Rel: June 1952. MM as Peggy; with Barbara Stanwyck, Robert Ryan, Paul Douglas, Keith Andes.
We’re Not Married
P/Sc: Nunnally Johnson for Fox. D: Edmund Goulding. C: Leo Tover, b/w. Rel: July 1952. MM as Annabel Norris; with David Wayne and (in other segments of this anthology film) Ginger Rogers, Fred Allen, Louis Calhern, Zsa Zsa Gabor.
Don’t Bother to Knock
P: Julian Blaustein for Fox. D: Roy Baker. Sc: Daniel Taradash, b/o a novel by Charlotte Armstrong. C: Lucien Ballard, b/w. Rel: July 1952. MM as Nell Forbes; with Richard Widmark, Anne Bancroft, Donna Corcoran, Jim Backus, Lurene Tuttle.
Monkey Business
P: Sol Siegel for Fox. D: Howard Hawks. Sc: Ben Hecht, Charles Lederer and I. A. L. Diamond, b/o a story by Harry Segall. C: Milton Krasner, b/w. Rel: Sept. 1952. MM as Lois Laurel; with Cary Grant, Ginger Rogers, Charles Coburn, Hugh Marlowe.
O. Henry’s Full House
P: Andre Hakin for Fox. D: Henry Koster. Sc: Lamar Trotti, b/o stories by O. Henry. C: Lloyd Ahern, b/w. Rel: Oct. 1952. MM as a streetwalker, in a segment of this five-part anthology film; with Charles Laughton, David Wayne.
Niagara
P: Charles Brackett for Fox. D: Henry Hathaway. Sc: Brackett, Walter Reisch and Richard Breen. C: Joe MacDonald. Rel: Jan. 1953. MM as Rose Loomis; with Joseph Cotten, Jean Peters, Casey Adams, Richard Allan, Denis O’Dea, Don Wilson, Lurene Tuttle.
Gentlemen Prefer Blondes
P: Sol Siegel for Fox. D: Howard Hawks. Sc: Charles Lederer, b/o works by Anita Loos and Joseph Fields. C: Harry J. Wild. Rel: July 1953. MM as Lorelei Lee; with Jane Russell, Tommy Noonan, Charles Coburn, Elliot Reid, George Winslow, Norma Varden.
How To Marry a Millionaire
P: Nunnally Johnson for Fox. D: Jean Negulesco. Sc: Johnson, b/o plays by Zoë Akins and Dale Eunson and a book by Doris Lilly. C: Joe MacDonald. Rel: Nov. 1953. MM as Pola Debevoise; with Betty Grable, Lauren Bacall, William Powell, David Wayne, Rory Calhoun, Alex D’Arcy, Cameron Mitchell, Fred Clark.
River of No Return
P: Stanley Rubin for Fox. D: Otto Preminger. Sc: Frank Fenton, b/o a story by Louis Lantz. C: Joseph LaShelle. Rel: April 1954. MM as Kay Weston; with Robert Mitchum, Tommy Rettig, Rory Calhoun.
There’s No Business Like Show Business
P: Sol Siegel for Fox. D: Walter Lang. Sc: Phoebe and Henry Ephron, b/o a story by Lamar Trotti. C: Leon Shamroy. Rel: Dec. 1954. MM as Vicky; with Ethel Merman, Dan Dailey, Donald O’Connor, Mitzi Gaynor, Johnny Ray.
The Seven Year Itch
P: Charles K. Feldman and Billy Wilder for Fox. D: Billy Wilder. Sc: Wilder and George Axelrod, b/o Axelrod’s play. C: Milton Krasner. Rel: June 1955. MM as The Girl; with Tom Ewell, Evelyn Keyes, Victor Moore and Robert Strauss.
Bus Stop
P: Buddy Adler for Fox. D: Joshua Logan. Sc: George Axelrod, b/o the play by William Inge. C: Milton Krasner. Rel: Aug. 1956. MM as Cherie; with Don Murray, Arthur O’Connell, Eileen Heckart, Betty Field, Hope Lange.
The Prince and the Showgirl
P: Milton H. Greene and Laurence Olivier for Warner Bros. D: Laurence Olivier. Sc: Terence Rattigan, b/o his play. C: Jack Cardiff. Rel: June 1957. MM as Elsie Marina; with Laurence Olivier, Sybil Thorndike, Jeremy Spenser, Richard Wattis, Esmond Knight, Maxine Audley.
Some Like It Hot
P, D: Billy Wilder for Walter Mirisch/United Artists. Sc: Wilder and I. A. L. Diamond, b/o a story by R. Thoeren and M. Logan. C: Charles Lang, Jr., b/w. Rel: March 1959. MM as Sugar Kane; with Jack Lemmon, Tony Curtis, George Raft, Pat O’Brien, Joe E. Brown, Joan Shawlee.
Let’s Make Love
P: Jerry Wald for Fox. D: George Cukor. Sc: Norman Krasner, Hal Kanter. C: Daniel L. Fapp. Rel: Sept. 1960. MM as Amanda Dell; with Yves Montand, Wilfrid Hyde White, Tony Randall, Frankie Vaughan, Madge Kennedy.
The Misfits
P: Frank E. Taylor for UA/Seven Arts. D: John Huston. Sc: Arthur Miller. C: Russell Metty, b/w. Rel: Feb. 1961. MM as Roslyn Tabor; with Clark Gable, Montgomery Clift, Eli Wallach, Thelma Ritter, Kevin McCarthy, Estelle Winwood, Ralph Roberts.
Incomplete: Something’s Got to Give
P: Henry Weinstein. D: George Cukor. Sc: Nunnally Johnson, Walter Bernstein, Hal Kanter et al., b/o the 1940 film My Favorite Wife. C: Franz Planer, Leo Tover, William Daniels. MM’s thirtieth film was canceled during production; extant footage shot from April to June 1962. MM as Ellen Arden; with Dean Martin, Cyd Charisse, Phil Silvers, Wally Cox. The production was formally shut down on June 12, 1962. Marilyn Monroe died on August 4, 1962. The film was rewritten, recast, reproduced and released in 1963 as Move Over Darling, with Doris Day and James Garner.
Index
The index that appeared in the print version of this title was intentionally removed from the eBook. Please use the search function on your eReading device for terms of interest. For your reference, the terms that appear in the print index are listed below
Abernethy, R. J.
Abrams, Arnold
Academy Awards
1951
Acting classes
at Actors Lab
at Actors Studio
with Michael Chekhov
with Lotte Goslar
with Natasha Lytess. See also Lytess, Natasha, as acting coach
with Lee Strasberg
Actors Laboratory (Actors Lab)
Actors Studio (New York City)
Adams, Casey
Adler, Buddy
Adler, Richard
“After You Get What You Want, You Don’t Want It” (song)
Ainsworth, Helen
Albright, Lola
Alexander, Bill
All About Eve
Allan, Richard
Allan, Rupert
Allan, Ted
All My Sons (Miller)
Anderson, Maxwell
Anna Christie (O’Neill)
Anthony, Ray
Antinosa, Bart
Arens, Richard
Arledge, Roone
Arliss, George
Armstrong, Charlotte
Arnold, Eve
Arnow, Max
Asher, William
Asphalt Jungle, The
As Young As You Feel
Atkinson family
Avedon, Richard
Awake and Sing! (Odets)
Axelrod, George
Bacall, Lauren
Backus, Jim
Bacon, James
Baker, Berniece Inez Gladys. See Miracle, Berniece Baker
Baker, Gladys (née Monroe). See Eley, Gladys Pearl
Baker, Jack
Baker, John Newton
Baker, Roy
Ball, Lucille
Bancroft, Anne
Banks, Maggie
Bara, Theda
Barham, Patte
Barnhart, Sylvia
Barris, George
Barsocchini, Reno
Basehart, Richard
Bates, John
Baumgarth, John
Beardsley, Mrs. Gavin
Beaton, Cecil
Bello, Mama Jean
Bement, Illinois
Benny, Jack
Bergen, Edgar
Berle, Milton
Berlin, Irving
Bernstein, Walter
Billionaire, The (original title of Let’s Make Love)
Blackmer, Carolyn Joerndt
Bliss-Ha
yden Miniature Theater
Block, Mervin
Blue Angel, The
Blue Book Agency
short silent film made by
Blum, Albert
Bodrero, Lydia (later Reed)
Bogart, Humphrey
Bohnen, Roman
Bolaños, José
Bolender, Albert and Ida (foster family)
discipline
material conditions
religion and morality
Bouillet, Walter
Brackett, Charles
Brand, Harry
Brand, Phoebe
Brando, Marlon
Breen, Joseph
Breen, Richard
Bretherton, David
Brewer, Roy
Bromberg, J. Edward
Brooklyn, New York
Brooks, Rand
Brothers Karamazov, The (Dostoevsky)
Brothers Karamazov, The (film)
Brown, David
Brown, Harry
Brown, Joe E.
Brown, Kay
Brown, Peter Harry
Budenz, Louis
Burnett, W. R.
Burnside, William
Bus Stop
house rented during shooting of
illness of cast members during shooting of
plot
Paula Strasberg and
weekends with Arthur Miller during shooting of
Byron, Robert E.
Cahn, Robert
Campbell, John
Campbell, Mabel Ella
Camp Pendleton (California), performance at (1952)
Capell, Frank A.
Capote, Truman
Captain Newman, M.D.
Cardiff, Jack
Carmen, Jeanne
Carnovsky, Morris
Carr, Joseph
Carrington, Howard
Carroll, John and Lucille Ryman
Lucille and The Asphalt Jungle
Lucille and Monroe-Hecht autobiography project
money given to Marilyn by
as surrogate parents to Marilyn
Carroll, Madeleine
Carroll, Ronald
Castro, Fidel
Chambrun, Jacques
Chaplin, Charles
Charisse, Cyd
Chasin, George
Chayefsky, Paddy
Chekhov, Michael, acting classes with
Chekhov, Mrs. Michael
Chevalier, Maurice
Child, Nellise
China Seas