Read Fragments: Poems, Intimate Notes, Letters Online
Authors: Marilyn Monroe
make map tonight
take my time to think—
Note:
The Sleeping Prince
was the first title for
The Prince and the Showgirl
, which was filmed in London in 1956. This note must have been written the same year.
He said that
I’ve become so deified
as a sex symbol
that public never
accept
me as
a virgin and as a nineteen/twenty year old
he wants to
feel he discovers reality
and he alone is is better
responsible
Eli
g—his lose
tennesse
e
—wants me
tells Eli—
new ending
I don’t want anybody else
Note: Marilyn wanted to play the title role in Elia Kazan’s 1956 film
Baby Doll
, written by Tennessee Williams and starring Eli Wallach. However, Carroll Baker got the part.
I feel the cam
e
ra has got
to look through Gay
’
s
eyes whenever he is in a
scene and even when he is
not there still has to be a sense of
him
He is the center and the
rest move
around
him
but I guess Houston will
see to that
He is both subtle and
overt in his leading them
and in his cruelty and his tenderness
(when he reaches out of himself
for her—R.)
Notes:
John Huston’s (here spelled “Houston”) film
The Misfits
was shot in Nevada, in the summer of 1960. Arthur Miller adapted the script from his own short story, the role of Roslyn having been inspired by his wife. The atmosphere was extremely tense, especially between the couple, whose marriage was foundering. Marilyn, a perfectionist, was frequently late—very late—frightened of not being ready for the challenge, and often groggy from the barbiturates she had begun to depend on. She was awestruck to be acting with Clark Gable, who was a lifelong idol and whom she had sometimes thought of, or dreamed of, as her own father. Marilyn had already been directed by John Huston in
The Asphalt Jungle
, the film that, in spite of a minor role, had put her name in lights. In a sense, in
The Misfits
she acted out her own life with a disquieting and magnificent closeness that must have been enormously tormenting.
It is likely that this note was written during the first half of the shooting, in July. Gay (Langland) is the name of the character played by Clark Gable. The final “R” refers to Roslyn (Taber), Marilyn’s character.
Marilyn at Costello’s restaurant, New York, 1955
KITCHEN NOTES
1955 or 1956
Contrary to the image we may have of Marilyn as often disorderly and chaotic, she attended to some aspects of daily life with care and even meticulousness. When she had to decorate an apartment or house she made notes, took measurements, collected samples or patterns, and decided on color schemes and the arrangement of furniture. Similarly, when she organized a dinner for Helen Schneider’s birthday, very likely at the end of 1955 in New York, she wrote a long, exacting list of everything she had to prepare or check out. Each detail was planned, down to the table decorations and bathroom requisites. This party may have taken place when Marilyn moved into an apartment on the corner of Sutton Place and 57th Street after her long stay in a suite at the Waldorf-Astoria, which had turned out to be too costly for Marilyn Monroe Productions. Incidentally, Marilyn sometimes enjoyed cooking, and when she did she noted recipes down to the last ingredient, step by step, including the quality of produce needed.
ask for Kitty & or Clyde
my white dishes—all of them from Westport
my old silver candle holders
my
paintings
two—dutch woman big one and drunken angels
get firewood—what about silverware
buy—white toilet seat
buy—hamper & or gold thing for bathroom & or thing for back of door for towels, bottles, etc
buy—lamps for bedroom—also shades take Kirt with me
buy foot stool & coffee table (ask M. Moumulion)
buy bar buy mirror at L. & Taylors
buy two chairs—classic—for in front of piano, also serves for extra guest chairs
buy brass ash trays one for M. one for L. one for me
buy chandeliers—one for hall—one for dining area—take back the two glass silver things
buy twelve linen napkins—silverware—for 12
buy birthday present for Helen—
have Kirt paint places for chandeliers also where railing broke
have Milton & Kirt put pictures in hallway—help me arrange room & place
have Kirt saw off legs of brass candle holders
dry clean comforter
have wash—bathroom rugs
send out laundry
call Moumulion
guest towels
paintings 2
coffee table
[indecipherable] glass bar
Notes:
Kitty and Clyde may have provided Marilyn with occasional help.
Kirt seems to have been a man who did odd jobs for Marilyn.
M. Moumulion: unidentified.
The reference to Milton Greene would mean this birthday dinner took place between 1955 and 1956. Marilyn stayed at Milton and Amy Greene’s property in Westport, Connecticut, when she first arrived on the East Coast and often visited them in subsequent months.
champagne? at least some kind of wine with dinner
buy—liquor—scotch—gin—vermouth—
hors d’œuvres
—cavi
a
r—others?
two roasts—1—prime ribs of beef 1—turkey
have Hedda make dressing
large mixed green salad with endive hearts—avocado? (Also aspic?)
vegetables—frozen peas or in pod?—not done too well—Kitty’s squash? or something
Potatoes—of some kind—? ask Kitty
Celery hearts—olives—scallions?—Radishes
ask Hedda about fruit & ice cream for dessert—choc & vanilla
Coffee & cookies & danish pastry for later
Birthday cake for Helen—
Geo. Leslie & me 2
Hedda & Norman 2
Ettore & Jessie 2
Helen & Isadore 2
George Brusilla
[Braziller]
& wife 2
Guy & friend with guitar 2
Bloomingdales?
Wine glasses 12
linen napkins
6 or more guest towels
Murray Hill—25400
french prov. white
marble top 2 sizes
coffee table
buy for less than he says
Lloyds 116 E 60th
Ivory. Flakes or snow
Rinso Blue or detergent
Notes:
Geo. Leslie: unidentified.
Isadore Schneider (1896–1976) was born in the Ukraine and emigrated with his family to the United States in 1904. A novelist and critic, he was a friend of Norman Rosten’s, knew Arthur Miller, and worked as a reader for George Braziller at Grove Press. Helene Berlin Schneider was his wife.
Ettore Rella (1907–1988) was a poet and playwright. His wife was named Jessie.
George Braziller was born in 1916 and founded his own publishing house in 1955. His wife was Marsha.
Guy: unidentified.