- The Persistence of an Iconic Star's Dazzling Image Is Key to a New Documentary That Features Interviews With Norman Mailer, Hugh Hefner, Gloria Steinem and Photographers Arnold Newman, Eve Arnold and Elliott Erwitt - There is an oft told tale of Marilyn Monroe walking down a New York City street, incognito, turning to her companion and saying, "Do you want to see her?" With that, she threw off all vestiges of Norma Jeane and miraculously transformed. There were no grand gestures, no change of clothes, no make-up. It was a simple shift, a slithering out of one skin into the other. The "outing" of Marilyn is something she looked at with both skepticism and awe. Arguably the most photographed person ever, she once said, "I carry Marilyn Monroe around with me like an albatross." In a new film, AMERICAN MASTERS offers a unique take on one of the world's first superstars by turning to the still photographs that captured Monroe's beauty, complexity and, ultimately, her own complicated relationship with the star side of herself. "Marilyn Monroe: Still Life" airs on PBS Wednesday, July 19, 2006. Check local listings. The film is a highlight of the 20th anniversary season of AMERICAN MASTERS, a five-time winner of the Emmy for Outstanding Primetime Non-Fiction Series and a recent recipient of a seventh Peabody Award. The documentary is directed by Gail Levin, an Emmy Award-winning television and film producer/director whose most recent project was AMERICAN MASTERS "James Dean: Sense Memories," which won a 2005 CINE Golden Eagle. "The vast archive of Marilyn Monroe photographs cemented her in the public conscience like no one before or since," said Susan Lacy, creator and executive producer of AMERICAN MASTERS. "We are telling her story through the iconography of the 20th century. Her relationship with the lens was, perhaps, her greatest and most successful love affair." Says director Levin, "She was brilliantly conceived for the camera and perhaps equally its victim. Almost like Eve she entered the world naked and broke - a potent combination that created her indelible image." If she had lived, Monroe would celebrate her 80th birthday in June. This film is aimed at the persistence of her image. Through interviews with photographers such as Eve Arnold, Arnold Newman, Elliott Erwitt, George Zimbel and Phil Stern, and especially through the photos themselves, "Still Life" captures moments of great triumph and great tragedy. From the 1949 nudes - she posed because she needed money - to the classic air grate photo from The Seven Year Itch through the final shots taken by George Barris in 1962, the photographs remain as an ageless memento of her guts, grace and sexiness. Fearless, Monroe graced the first cover of Playboy in 1953. In "Still Life," publisher Hugh Hefner recalls the now-classic centerfold. "One has to remember that the 1950s, the post-war era, was a very conservative time, socially, sexually, politically, and to pose for that picture and then to say that all she had on was the radio, to have that attitude in the 1950s, defined her persona and was a liberating force." Hefner plans to be laid to rest in a crypt in Westwood Cemetery in Los Angeles, right next to Monroe, who died in 1962 at age 36. Several celebrated writers have offered their opinions on the Marilyn Monroe legend over the years. Gloria Steinem (Marilyn, 1988) discusses her earliest impressions in "Still Life." "I was embarrassed by her because she was a joke, she was vulnerable. She was so eager for approval. She was all the things that I feared most being as a teenage girl." Norman Mailer wrote about Monroe in Marilyn: A Biography (1973) and in Of Women and Their Elegance (1981). In "Still Life" he recalls her marriage to playwright Arthur Miller. "When they moved to the country, five miles away, I just assumed that there'd be an invitation from Arthur to come over for dinner. And for a whole year, some of my friends were invited. We never were. And I never forgave Arthur for that. And what was my motivation? I wanted to meet her so I could steal her. Steal her from her husband. And you know a criminal will never forgive you for preventing them from committing the crime that is really in their heart and so I always had an edge against Arthur ever after." "Still Life" looks at Marilyn from the inside out. Ultimately, it was the camera that was her friend, and the rules of friendship applied - they respected each other. The unremarkable girl with the amazing smile. The sex goddess. The great dame. The movie star in the snapshots taken by the enlisted men in Korea. The worldwide seductress. She was, as Some Like It Hot director Billy Wilder described her, an original. "The first day a photographer took a picture of her," he said, "she was a genius." AMERICAN MASTERS has won 16 Emmys, including Outstanding Primetime Non-Fiction Series for 1999, 2000, 2001, 2003 and 2004, in addition to seven Peabodys, an Oscar and two Grammys. The AMERICAN MASTERS film library is one of the most highly honored in television history, with profiles of more than 140 artistic giants.
|