home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=90TT3395>
- <title>
- Dec. 17, 1990: The Twinkle Hasn't Faded
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Dec. 17, 1990 The Sleep Gap
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- SHOW BUSINESS, Page 96
- The Twinkle Hasn't Faded
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>TV provides a rare glimpse of Marilyn Monroe's last film
- </p>
- <p>By Richard Zoglin
- </p>
- <p> Not long after getting fired from her last, unfinished
- movie, Marilyn Monroe sent a telegram to Robert Kennedy. In it
- she declined an invitation to visit the Kennedy clan, making an
- odd, wistful joke by way of explanation. She was too busy
- "protesting the loss of minority rights belonging to the few
- remaining earthbound stars," Monroe said. "All we demanded was
- our right to twinkle."
- </p>
- <p> And twinkle she has. More than 28 years after Monroe's death
- from a drug overdose at 36, the star's legend has not just
- endured, it has prevailed. The tide of Monroe reminiscences and
- memorabilia flows on. Two weeks ago, a watercolor self-portrait
- by Monroe, painted in 1955, was displayed in a collection of
- artworks by 40 celebrities, assembled as a benefit for the
- American Cancer Society. A series of photos of Monroe at 19,
- taken by an Army photographer when the actress was working at an
- airplane factory in 1945, has been unearthed for an exhibition
- opening Jan. 3 at the Helander Gallery in Palm Beach, Fla. A
- close friend, actress Susan Strasberg, is writing a book about
- Monroe, due out in 1992.
- </p>
- <p> Now a TV documentary re-creates the sad final chapter of
- Monroe's career; her work on Something's Got to Give, the 20th
- Century Fox film left uncompleted when she died in August 1962.
- The hourlong special (Thursday, Dec. 13, 9 p.m. EST, the Fox
- network) unveils raw footage that had been thought lost until it
- was discovered in a warehouse on the Fox lot in 1982. Written and
- narrated with nicely understated affection by producer Henry
- Schipper, the documentary gives a fascinating behind-the-scenes
- glimpse of a Hollywood star--and a Hollywood studio--in
- extremis.
- </p>
- <p> In Something's Got to Give, a remake of the Cary Grant-Irene
- Dunne comedy My Favorite Wife, Monroe was cast as a woman,
- presumed dead, who returns after five years on a deserted island
- to find her husband (Dean Martin) remarried. The TV documentary
- shows that contrary to Hollywood lore, Monroe was not listless
- and drugged-out in her last film appearance. In fact, she looks
- terrific (she had lost 15 lbs. for the part) and seems alert and
- spirited in the clips--especially in the famous nude swimming
- scene that landed her on magazine covers around the world.
- </p>
- <p> But Monroe's frequent absence from the set threw the
- production into turmoil. She called in sick for the first two
- weeks of shooting, arrived late or not at all many other days and
- enraged studio bosses when she left the set to fly to Washington
- for President Kennedy's birthday party. As shooting fell further
- and further behind schedule, Fox executives, already reeling from
- budget overruns on the Elizabeth Taylor-Richard Burton
- extravaganza Cleopatra, fired her and sued for breach of
- contract. But they quietly hired her back weeks later when
- co-star Dean Martin, out of loyalty to Monroe, refused to work
- with the actress chosen to replace her, Lee Remick. Monroe died
- before filming could resume.
- </p>
- <p> Marilyn: Something's Got to Give includes interviews with an
- array of people who took part in the filming, from producer
- Henry Weinstein to the former child actors who played Monroe's
- children. Wonderful nuggets of Marilyniana emerge. Her
- insecurities led Monroe to demand that a blond extra be tossed
- off the set and later to complain that co-star Cyd Charisse was
- padding her bra. When the Shah of Iran visited the Fox lot
- Monroe refused to meet him until she found out Iran's position on
- Israel.
- </p>
- <p> And the movie? From the unedited clips and outtakes, a few
- things become clear. Beleaguered director George Cukor was
- something close to a saint. Monroe was almost laughably miscast.
- And the film looks like a dog that would have done little to
- revive her sagging Hollywood career. For her thriving legend,
- however, it should be boffo.</p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-