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? PDF Ebook Marilyn Monroe: The Final Years, by Keith Badman

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Marilyn Monroe: The Final Years, by Keith Badman

Marilyn Monroe: The Final Years, by Keith Badman



Marilyn Monroe: The Final Years, by Keith Badman

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Marilyn Monroe: The Final Years, by Keith Badman

Published for the fiftieth anniversary of her tragic death, this definitive account dispels the rumors and sets the record straight on her last two years


Marilyn Monroe passed away at the age of thirty-six under circumstances that have remained mysterious to this day. Marilyn Monroe: The Final Years separates the myths and rumors from the facts as Keith Badman takes readers through the concluding months of 1960 to that fateful day in August 1962.

In this extraordinary book―the product of five years of exhaustive research―the author is both biographer and detective: Badman uncovers long-lost or previously unseen personal records, exclusive interviews, and eyewitness accounts that illuminate the final chapter of Marilyn's life as she navigates weight gain, drug use, an dpersonal turmoil, along with drama on the set of the ill-fated movie Something's Got to Give.

Badman dispels popular beliefs, such as her supposed affairs with John and Bobby Kennedy. (Monroe only had a one-night stand with the president at Bing Crosby's house, and never with Bobby.) Readers learn the long-concealed identity of her biological father, who refused Marilyn's attempt to contact him in 1951―and was then repaid with her apathy ten years later when he attempted to contact her. The author also reveals the details of her famous "last Sitting" with photographer Bert Stern (which was not her last photo shoot) and describes the horror she endured after being tricked into being institutionalized at the Payne-Whitney Psychiatric Clinic, from which ex-husband Joe DiMaggio had to pull strings to secure her release. Perhaps most shockingly, we learn of the regrettable incident in which a drunken Monroe was sexually exploited by mobsters at a Lake Tahoe hotel co-owned by Frank Sinatra. Finally contrary to the salacious rumors that Marilyn was suicidal or the victim of a murder and cover-up, Badman discloses new information about her final days alive and reveals, in unequivocal detail, evidence that indicates Monroe's death was accidental.

Above it all, Badman pays homage to Monroe by rescuing her final months from the realm of wild and sensationalized allegations popularized by those who sought to gain from them. Marilyn Monroe: The Final Years sheds new light on an immortal movie legend.

  • Sales Rank: #777731 in Books
  • Published on: 2012-07-17
  • Released on: 2012-07-17
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 9.60" h x 1.23" w x 6.45" l, 1.25 pounds
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 352 pages

Review

“He painstakingly examines day-to-day events, sorting through fact and myth to uncover the real story.” ―Library Journal

“A meticulously detailed look at the year and a half leading up to Marilyn's death.” ―The Huffington Post

“Meticulously researched…unlocks the mystery surrounding the final hours of Hollywood's favourite blonde.” ―Sunday Express (UK)

“Shocking and frank, Badman's work is a piece of investigative journalism worthy of the highest accolades.” ―Record Collector (UK)

About the Author

KEITH BADMAN is the author of several pop culture books, including The Beach Boys, Beatles Off the Record and Good Times and Bad Times: The Definitive Diary of the Rolling Stones 1960–1969.

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
MARILYN MONROE (Chapter One)

Prelude--Childhood/Adulthood

Birth to June 1961

At 9.30 on the morning of Tuesday 1 June 1926, in the fortress-like confines of the charity ward of the Los Angeles General Hospital, Dr Herman M. Beerman unwittingly delivered his most famous baby. Originally called Norma Jeane Mortenson, the illegitimate child would later become known as Marilyn Monroe, the world's most celebrated movie star.

Her mother was a 24-year-old motion-picture negative film cutter, Gladys Pearl Monroe Mortenson. Described by her work colleagues as a 'talkative, short, cute blonde' and 'a lot of fun when she wanted to be', at the time of the birth, Gladys was so broke that, to help pay her hospital costs, colleagues at the Consolidated Film Industries, where she worked, were obliged to share her medical expenses. The problems did not end there. According to those who would treat her, Gladys soon developed schizophrenia.

Her family had a history of mental instability. Both of her parents, Otis Elmer Monroe and Della Monroe Grainger, lived out their twilight years in mental institutions, and her brother, Marion, had suffered from a problem best described at the time as paranoid schizophrenia. Though Gladys herself was most likely a manic-depressive, it was not uncommon during the 1930s and 1940s for those suffering from manic depression to be diagnosed as paranoid schizophrenics. Whatever the exact nature of her mother's disorder, Marilyn Monroe naturally came to possess a morbid fear of genetic insanity.

Marilyn's paternity remains a subject of debate to this day. Although the name of Norwegian immigrant Edward Mortenson, Gladys's second husband (her first being a man named Jasper Baker) was listed as the father on the certificates pertaining to Norma Jeane's birth and Marilyn's marriages to Joe DiMaggio and Arthur Miller, it was never the case. Other men have been suggested as candidates. As Donald Spoto pointed out in his 1993 book, Marilyn Monroe: The Biography, these included 'Harry Rooney, a co-worker who was besotted with her; the adoring Clayton MacNamara or, perhaps most likely of all, Raymond Guthrie, a film developer who ardently courted her [Gladys] for months...' Marilyn, however, perhaps wistfully, believed Mortenson to be her father, having been shown a picture of the man as a child and primed 'this is your father'. In fact, however, he was Charles Stanley Gifford, born on Sunday 18 September 1898 in Newport County, Rhode Island.

In her posthumously published 1974 memoir, My Story, Marilyn recalled of the man in the picture that 'There was a lively smile in his eyes and he had a thin moustache like Clark Gable', while her mother told her he had been 'killed in an auto accident in New York'. As surviving images prove, however, the man in the picture was evidently not Edward Mortenson, but Gifford, who did bear a strong resemblance to Gable. And her mother was wrong that the man had been killed in a motor accident. Gifford was not killed in a motor accident, Mortenson, however, was. The fateful collision occurred on Tuesday 18 June 1929, at approximately 5pm, and in Ohio rather than New York; Mortenson was riding his motorcycle along the road from Youngstown to Akron and when he tried to overtake a car in front of him, he smashed into a sedan, breaking both of his legs. He fell to the ground unconscious and paralysed. Mortenson passed away just as the ambulance he was travelling in reached the nearby hospital. (To add to the confusion, a second man bearing the name, Martin Edward Mortenson, also entered the scene claiming to be Marilyn's true biological father. When he died of a heart attack on Tuesday 10 February 1981, aged 83, in Riverside, California, a copy of Norma Jeane's birth certificate was found among his possessions.)

The actress's mother had become besotted with the stout, dark-haired Gifford during his stint in charge of the day shift at Consolidated Film Industries in early 1925. Gifford's employment with the motion picture plant Thomas H. Ince Studios in Culver City had recently been terminated and his wife, Lillian Priester, was suing him for divorce. Her claims against him (he associated himself with low-life women, was addicted to narcotic drugs and had beaten her on numerous occasions) made it abundantly clear what kind of man he was. In an attempt to rebuild his life and earn some useful dollars, Gifford took a post at Consolidated as a hypo-shooter and developer and, within months, had worked his way up to the position of superintendent of the night crew. By the spring, the pair were having an affair and on Wednesday 6 May, his divorce became final. Twenty days later, on Tuesday 26 May, Gladys walked out on her husband, Mortensen. Her intention was clear to everyone; she had set her sights on becoming the next Mrs Gifford. However, he saw Gladys as just another fling and, by Christmas Eve 1925, had tired of it and promptly fled. But there was a catch: Gladys was now three months pregnant. Norma Jeane would become that child.

The idea of placing Norma Jeane with neighbours Albert and Ida Bolender on Sunday 13 June 1926, just 12 days after the baby's birth, came from Gladys's mother, Della. She had asked the couple, who lived across the road at 215 Rhode Island Avenue in Inglewood, Los Angeles County, to watch over her granddaughter while she travelled to South America to reconcile with her husband.

Contrary to the long-held belief that Gladys totally abandoned her daughter, she actually resided with Norma Jeane at the property and dutifully paid Albert and Ida $25 a month rent. Della knew Gladys and Norma Jeane would be in good hands and that a visit to them would always be just a short distance away. 'Mrs Baker [i.e. Gladys] was with me,' Ida confirmed in 1956. 'She stayed in Hollywood when working nights as a negative cutter, and stayed with me while working days...She [Norma Jeane] was never neglected and always dressed nicely. Her mother supported her all the time and bought all her clothes.'

Incontestable proof that both Gladys and her daughter lived under the Bolenders' roof can be found in an official census of Inglewood Township, Los Angeles County (enumeration district no. 19). Details of that Rhode Island Avenue house, as registered on Tuesday 1 April 1930, revealed that, besides Gladys and Norma Jeane, the other occupiers of the building were Albert, aged 46, Ida, 42 and their son Lester, 3. (Albert made a mistake when he filled out the form, noting Gladys as being 27 years of age and Norma Jeane as 63.)

In spite of his carefree, unconcerned exterior, Gifford did not (despite what we have been told before) wash his hands of the child. When Norma Jeane was just one or two years old, after learning of the child's placement with the Bolenders, the concerned father actually came forward and tried to adopt her. However, Gladys now despised the man; still smarting at how he had absconded during her pregnancy, she was having none of it and his request was denied.

 

With the Bolenders ably watching over her child, Gladys returned to work at the Consolidated Film Industries. Each Saturday she would take her child on an outing, usually a walking tour to the streets outside the movie stars' homes in the Hollywood hills. Another of Gladys's favourite journeys was to the recently opened Grauman's Chinese Theater on Hollywood Boulevard, famous for its red-carpet movie premieres. Norma Jeane and her mother would stare down adoringly at the world-famous foot and hand prints captured in cement outside the building. Norma Jeane would intently place her small hands and feet over the imprints.

Despite her mother's warmest intentions to display love and affection to her daughter, however, Norma Jeane would forlornly recall Gladys only as 'the woman with red hair' or 'the pretty woman who never smiled'. She did not regard her as her real mother. In her primary years, she looked upon Ida and Albert as her true parents and would call them 'Mama' and 'Daddy'.

It is intriguing to see how often Monroe's childhood has been portrayed in despondent, dull, quite depressing tones, insisting that she was, for the better part of her young life, unloved, unpopular and poor. The truth is that, from birth until she was eight years old, Norma Jeane lived in only one place, the cosy yet austere, old-fashioned six-room home in the middle-class city of Inglewood belonging to the devoutly Catholic Albert and Ida Bolender. Even as far back as 1952, Hollywood spokespeople were dramatising Marilyn's upbringing at the Bolenders' by saying that she was pounded with religious precepts that dictated damnation for her slightest transgression, brainwashed into thinking that 'drinking, smoking and dancing was the works of the devil', made to promise she'd never drink or swear, ordered to scrub and polish the house's floors and forced to attend church several times a week. True, the young girl did attend church with the Bolenders, but quite happily.

However, some truly disturbing incidents did happen to her in that time. First, in July 1927, her grandmother Della attempted to smother her with a pillow. For no perceptible reason, she walked over to the Bolenders' home in a state of complete undress, smashed her way in through the glass in the front door and made an unprovoked attack on the young child. The ramifications from the incident were immense. A few weeks later, on Thursday 4 August, she was committed to Norwalk's Metropolitan State Hospital where, just 19 days afterwards, she died of a heart attack. She was found to be suffering from manic-depressive psychosis.

The second incident came when Gladys attempted to murder her. 'Her mother tried to kill her three times,' Marilyn's third husband, playwright Arthur Miller, shockingly revealed in an April 1968 interview for the BBC. 'Her mother was quite mad.' Throughout most of her life, Marilyn often remarked how she could still vividly recall these horrific encounters.

Due to the highly dependable statements of both Miller and the Bolenders, I believe these events did happen; most of...

Most helpful customer reviews

30 of 32 people found the following review helpful.
DEFINITELY A PAGE TURNER ~ A MUST FOR THE SERIOUS M.M. FAN!
By Thomas W. Jacobs
An intense scrutiny detailing in the affairs of Marilyn Monroe's last year of life is not the type of book every Marilyn fan is interested in reading. On the other hand many of us that have been reading one account after another; some far reaching in believability to many that seem downright bizarre; MARILYN MONROE THE FINAL YEARS seems to have the key to straightening out all the loose ends, complications, & accusations of the subject into a story that tends to be quite acceptable as the truth of what really happened to Marilyn.

Badman disproves theories that have been long upheld as truth in his exhaustive search into information, files, & proven facts from the past. Once incorrect notions have been dismissed, he continues on with his narrative towards resolution. In the past I have always been bothered by books that relied on quotes or interviews with marginal characters such as Robert Slatzer or Jeanne Carmen. If these people were just using Marilyn to spin a tale of their own importance (as is suspected in BOTH cases;) how can one then depend that the rest of a book is accurately researched? This author rids himself of such speculation from the start.

Most disturbing is the description of the activities & degradation Marilyn suffered during what has been known as "the lost weekend" at the Cal-Neva Lodge in July 1962. The timeline of that weekend and other falsehoods have been cleared up but it's really not pleasant to read about the details of what supposedly went on. However, on the whole this book was indeed riveting & enjoyable as Badman also introduced many new tidbits of information never revealed in other books on Marilyn.

10 of 11 people found the following review helpful.
Informative and sad but there are some glaring mistakes
By Jackson
I thought Keith Badman's book really takes everything that's been written and concisely sorts it out into a final version. There were many things that I wasn't aware of such as the handling of her corpse and the exploitation by Life photographer Leigh Weiner in the crypt, posing Marylin's body for pictures. Just such horrible treatment from nearly everyone in her life who USED her with such ferociousness. Even Lee Strasberg, who got the chunk of her estate still submitted exorbitant bills to her estate, which in the end bankrupted it so there wasn't even enough money to care for Marilyn's mother! Of all the dirty rats from Sinatra, Peter Lawford, the Kennedys, the Mafioso, Dr. Greenson, Eunice Murray, that prick George Cukor, all the dry cleaners, limo drivers, pool company, anyone and everyone took advantage of this woman her whole life without end... It's too bad that she and Joe couldn't have remarried but they were best as good friends. I never realized that her menstrual problems were the cause, in a majority of times, of all her filming delays! For anyone and myself included, who have had endometriosis, there is no relief from the pain. The endometrium tissue can end up growing around your intestines, causing extreme chronic pain. And hormonally you can be a basket case. At that time there were few options. She also suffered from colitis, extreme constipation as her diet was absolutely terrible. I think that explains the discoloration of the colon at the time of her autopsy. But why all the cover up? Her phone records, the cleaning up of her house by so many at the studio and everyone! All the lies by Murray and Greenson!
There are some glaring mistakes in the book however. St. Martin's Press in New York can't afford a proofreader? Page 117 talks about the "injections of Nembutal, Seconal, phenobarbital and the knockout drops chloral hydrate". Then on p. 221 the chloral hydrate has turned into tablets. I don't believe chloral hydrate has EVER come in tablets. Page 245 lists phenergan as an anti-allergy medication. Actually this can be prescribed with codeine to help with coughs or nausea and vomiting from prescription medication side effects adding another potential medication side effect to the mix. Marilyn had a succession of viruses and sinus infections from April to June which also caused absences from "Something's Got To Give" so this could very well have contained codeine, which would have contribted yet another respiratory depressant to her mix of meds. Finally on page 253 - this is just plain wrong. "Kennedy left Gilroy in Saline County, Kansas and shortly thereafter arrived at the Santa Monica Airport"? Boy that's quite a feat! Actually Gilroy is in Santa Clara County near Salinas, CALIFORNIA which is in Monterey County. Kennedy went from Gilroy to LA and by helicopter & that takes around 2 hours.
But I do find the book, otherwise, a good read with what I do know are actual facts - so well written and a must for any Marilyn fan although I am heartbroken to learn of the leeches that continue to get millions of dollars from her image and contributed nothing to her peace of mind. Used in life. That is Marilyn's epitaph yet amazingly, herself, she never did anyone any harm. That is even more amazing! Who can say that? Especially not a movie star! She was a loving, wonderful, crazy, beautiful, yet totally exploited woman. This is her story and death. Rest in peace Norma Jeane.

30 of 39 people found the following review helpful.
yet another biography
By Mark D. Mccardell
Well, here we are,another British twit author. The first chapter he should have skipped. It tried to sum up Marilyn s childhood and family situation in 9 pages and skips her rise as superstar and starts in 1961. It would have been better to simply start with 1961 and skip the inaccuracies previously. He catalogs Marilyns extended family history as all suffering from mental illness. Marilyn s grandfather actually died of syphilis which can mimic symptoms of mental illness in later stages of disease. Her grandmother had untreated congential heart failure and died very rapidly having been misdiagnosed as mentally ill. Science and medicine were more primitve in the earlier part of the 20th century and I dont think you can characterized Marilyn s entire family as crazy. The mother, Gladys, yes. I would suggest reading the secret life of Marilyn Monroe which has a much better researched book for Marilyn s early years. This author has made many mistakes. He says marilyn was paying her first psychiatrist $200 a visit. That was probably about her entire take home pay. Maybe 20 dollars a visit????.........this was 1951....61 years ago, $200 could have bought you a decent used car back then. Where do they get this stuff? If they get that wrong, what else is wrong? Is it that the pound versus dollar conversion is too difficult for these Brits? Doesnt he use fact checkers? Irritating. He should know with Marilyn fans you dont get your facts wrong. The author describes eunice murray, Marilyn s housekeeper as a pyschiatric nurse. He lists Mrs Murray s biography as a source. In that book I read, written by Murray in 1975 and long since out of print, Murray poo poos the idea she was a nurse. I dont believe she ever went to college. She was barely making ends meet when Marilyn came along and lived in poverty most of her life. Not exactly what one would expect of a prof. psychiatric nurse? She was present the nite Marilyn died, if she was a nurse why didnt she try and revive Marilyn? The authors info that Marilyn s house was bugged in feb of 62 is pure bunk. He claims veronica Hammel the actress purchased the house in 1972 and later when remodeling, found the bugging.First of all, Marilyn did not take possession of the house until March 1962, secondly the buyer of the house after Marilyn s death lived there from 1963 to 1977 and then sold the house. Veronica never owned the house then, if ever.This is rubbish he picked up in some other fbi/mafia/kennedy lunatic suspect book. I will give the author credit for not going on too much about the Kennedy brothers, and correctly getting that it was a one nite stand with President Kennedy and no wild affair with either brother.He also goes on to state John Kennedy was really horrible in the sack, something Ive read elsewhere a couple of times. Bobby being somewhat shortchanged,if you get my drift, gleened from other biographies, I imagine would have been worse. Marilyn rightly steered clear of him and wouldnt have had a long term thing with either one simply due to there being duds in the sack, to put it bluntly . However the author still claims Bobby Kennedy was at marilyns house the afternoon of her death. His source was Eunice Murray and all the other quacks that keep repeating it. Eunice has given so many different stories about what happened you cant believe any of it. She has good reason to give conflicting answers, to take away suspicion from herself and Greenson (see Donald Spotos book). I dont believe any of the garbage the author writes about Marilyn s infamous Cal Neva trip shortly before her death. The author does touch on Dr Greenson, and discussed the fact he struck Marilyn June 2 1962 in a heated moment. He really fails to carry forward on that with much explanation at all. Obviously if your shrink hits you and caused bruises to your face, he has issues with you and is somewhat unstable. You would think the author would have pursued this. Why didnt Marilyn fire him immediately? Report him to the police? Etc? Nope states the face slapping instant and moves on. His murder theory isnt too bad, but he really gives little if any evidence from the autopsy and just gives his opinion. He believes it was a mixture of nembutal and chloral hydrate but insists marilyn DRANK the choloral hydrate.You take choloral hydrate by pill form (which isnt all that effective) or you take it rectally either by suppository or enema. He has marilyn drinking the choloral hydrate in a mad fit of rage at being unable to fall asleep. Gulping it down. You can mix it with a juice but you cannot take it simply by drinking it in unadulterated form. He mentions the purple discoloration of Marilyn colon in the autopsy, but dismisses it as a result of her gallbladder problem and a side effect of chronic drug useage.She had a gallbladder operation 15 months prior and was no longer suffering from this problem. Also, the pathologist commented on the autopsy that he had NEVER seen a drug overdose victim with a disolored inflamed colon like this. He doesnt go on to explain why Murray gave so many conflicting versions of events over the years and why both she and the dr just didnt come out and say, Marilyn took a drug overdose by accident. In fact, Greenson gave up seeing patients soon after 1962, and taught and lectured, and developed congestive heart problems early on, suffered a nervous breakdown in subsequent years and in pictures of him Ive seen when he was older, he had a haunted very very morose look. I think Marilyn s death and his part in it (see author Donald Spoto) eventually got the best of him. He was unstable and so was the companion Eunice Murray. Marilyn was not careful enuf with the people around her closest, and she was very careless with her drug usage. A combination drug taking during her last day (not in lethal amts), combined with what the dr prescribed that nite, given by Murray, was what ended Marilyn s life, and was a careless accident mostly the drs fault. Basically this book has a few interesting tid bits in it, it seems apparent the author has read most of the biographies, and did very little research and no interviews with anyone that was involved with Marilyn that I see.He obviously spent some time tracking down Marilyn s limo rental companies in new york and los angeles and this smartly gave him some time line for marilyn s day to day activiity. He seems very smug, the author that he can state how much she paid for such and such a trip in the limo. Not really much research on his part. Its also apparent he did some research in the 20th century archives............I would say enuf to string a 3rd rate book together. Marilyn had $ problems and she was always close to the edge. But the author paints an inaccurate picture of Marilyns finances. As part of her 1955 fox contract not only was she getting 100k a picture from fox but she was getting a yearly salary of $100,000 paid in monthly installments. The outside movies for other studios for the last 6 years were more lucrative. She owned part of some like it hot and got $300k up front and it was highly lucrative in the long run. SHe owned part of the misfits and had recieved in 1960 $300k in salary as well. She chose to take payments from prior movies in Jan of each year and spread out the payments over several years for tax reasons. The author indicates in 1962 when she went to buy a house she had to borrow $5000 from Dimaggio to make the downpayment. She had received $300,000 that month in installment payments.Why did she need to borrow $ then? She didnt, the authors timeline is wrong, it was the summer before she borrowed the $ Subsequent massive remodeling of the house, furniture buying, clothes buying, ALOT of people on her staff(at least 8), well paid, constant first class air travel,it would be impossible for Marilyn to live with the kind of limited funds the author paints, all minor points but just paints the author as not very accomplished. My conclusion, a waste of time and not a very good effort on the authors part.

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