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Marilyn Monroe by Lawrence Schiller on the set of Something’s Got To Give on May 23, 1962

Posted By: nrg
Marilyn Monroe by Lawrence Schiller on the set of Something’s Got To Give on May 23, 1962

Marilyn Monroe - Lawrence Schiller Photoshoot 1962
18 jpg | up to 3000*1997 | 6.17 MB

American director, author and photojournalist Lawrence Schiller in his memoir Marilyn & Me, featuring Marilyn Monroe’s last on-set shoot:

“I had a meeting with Marilyn about what became these famous pictures of her beside the swimming pool, and she said: ‘I’m thinking about jumping in a swimming pool with my bathing suit on but coming out with nothing on.’ And her press agent Pat turned to her and said: ‘You’re not really going to do that Marilyn, are you?’ She looked at me: ‘If I do that and you publish these pictures all over the world, and I approve them, I don’t want to see Elizabeth Taylor in the magazine the same week I am. I’m only getting $100,000 from this picture, Elizabeth Taylor’s getting a million dollars and I’m just as good an actress as she is.’

Marilyn felt she wasn’t accepted for her talent. She felt that she wasn’t valued. She would have given you all the wrinkles on her face to be Anna Magnani or Simone Signoret or to be Vanessa Redgrave but she wasn’t that. They didn’t give her Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf, they gave that to Liz Taylor. They didn’t give Suddenly Last Summer to Marilyn Monroe, they gave that to Liz Taylor. So she tried to use the pictures, I think, as a way of gaining publicity to prove to the studio that she was as important as Elizabeth Taylor.

At the time of taking this photograph she was very frustrated, however she wanted to present an image to the world that didn’t show that anger. This is an image for publicity. This is an image that says: ‘I can be on the cover of magazines, I’m wanted by every single man in the world and I don’t offend women. Women will come to watch me also.’ That’s why she’s remembered 50 years later; because she never offended a woman. Everybody wanted to save her – if it was a divorce, if it was a miscarriage, whatever, you wanted to save her yourself: ‘If I was there, I would have given her advice and this never would have happened.’ You don’t remember Jean Harlow, you don’t today remember Marlene Dietrich – a great actress. There are other women that had the same sensuality that Marilyn did but you remember Marilyn because we wanted to save her from this tragedy.’

Marilyn Monroe by Lawrence Schiller on the set of Something’s Got To Give on May 23, 1962

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