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Marilyn Monroe
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Although film actress and Hollywood legend
Marilyn Monroe
has been the subject of a large number of albums, she rarely stepped into a recording studio to make a commercial recording and only appeared in five real movie musicals (with a few other musical performances in her straight films), making for a total record and soundtrack output of less than three dozen titles that are recycled endlessly along with bits of movie dialogue and radio and TV appearances on the frequent
reissues. Nevertheless, she had a good voice that matched her seductive visual appeal, and her limited catalog includes effective interpretations of the work of such songwriters as
Harold Adamson
and
Hoagy Carmichael
;
Harold Arlen
and
Johnny Mercer
;
Irving Berlin
;
Sammy Cahn
and
James Van Heusen
;
Cole Porter
; and
Leo Robin
and
Jule Styne
.
Monroe
was the illegitimate daughter of Edward Mortenson (who abandoned her mother before her birth and died in a motorcycle accident when she was three years old) and Gladys Pearl (Monroe) Baker, a film cutter. Her mother was mentally unstable and was institutionalized when the child was five, leaving her to a succession of orphanages and foster homes. At 16 in 1942, she married Jim Dougherty, an aircraft plant worker who soon enlisted in the merchant marine as his participation in World War II. Left alone, she joined the war effort by taking a job as a paint sprayer at the Radio Plane Company. There she was spotted by a photographer on assignment for Yank magazine to take pictures of women in the defense industry, and the resulting photographs led her to a career in modeling; she divorced her husband in 1946. The same year, she was signed to a one-year contract at 20th Century Fox, where she changed her name and took acting, singing, and dancing lessons.
Monroe
was given tiny parts in a couple of Fox films, then dropped. Columbia Pictures signed her in March 1948 and gave her her first important role in a B-picture, the musical Ladies of the Chorus (1949), in which she had two featured songs,
"Anyone Can See"
and
"Ev'ry Baby Needs a Da-Da-Daddy,"
both written by
Allan Roberts
and
Lester Lee
. She was then dropped by Columbia and, in financial straits, accepted an offer to pose nude for a calendar; she was paid 50 dollars. She got small parts in films on a freelance basis in 1949 and 1950, including Love Happy, the last
Marx Brothers
movie, and the acclaimed dramas The Asphalt Jungle and All About Eve. In 1951, she returned to Fox with a seven-year contract and appeared in supporting roles in nine films over the next two years.
She was finally given a substantial part in the thriller Niagra, released in January 1953, and she also got to sing a song in the film,
Lionel Newman
and
Haven Gillespie
's
"Kiss."
In the summer of 1953,
Monroe
co-starred with
Jane Russell
in Gentlemen Prefer Blondes, a movie adaptation of the Broadway musical with songs by
Jule Styne
and
Leo Robin
. She made a strong impression, singing
"A Little Girl From Little Rock,"
"Diamonds Are a Girl's Best Friend,"
and
"Bye Bye Baby"
from the original show score as well as
"When Love Goes Wrong (Nothin' Goes Right),"
written by
Hoagy Carmichael
and
Harold Adamson
for the film. She proved herself up to the vocal demands for the most part, though
Marni Nixon
, Hollywood's most prominent ghost singer, dubbed in some notes for her. MGM Records released a 10" LP soundtrack album.
With the release of the comedy How to Marry a Millionaire in November and the December publication of the inaugural issue of Playboy magazine, which contained her 1949 nude photographs, only adding to her celebrity,
Monroe
became a major star in 1953. She capped her fame by wedding retired baseball player
Joe DiMaggio
on January 14, 1954, though the marriage lasted less than a year, ending in divorce on October 27.
Monroe
's ascent to stardom led to a recording contract with RCA Victor Records. Her next film was the Western drama River of No Return, released in April 1954, but she managed to sing four songs in it,
"One Silver Dollar,"
"I'm Gonna File My Claim,"
"Down in the Meadow,"
and the title song, all written by
Lionel Newman
and
Ken Darby
. Her studio recording of
"River of No Return"
for RCA briefly appeared in the singles charts in July. In December, she had a co-starring role in There's No Business Like Show Business, a major movie musical starring
Ethel Merman
and
Dan Dailey
and also featuring
Donald O'Connor
,
Mitzi Gaynor
, and
Johnnie Ray
. The movie was an anthology film of the music of
Irving Berlin
, and
Monroe
sang the newly written
"A Man Chases a Girl"
with
O'Connor
as well as the vintage
Berlin
songs
"You'd Be Surprised,"
"After You Get What You Want, You Don't Want It,"
"Lazy,"
and
"Heat Wave."
Decca Records released a 10" soundtrack LP from the film, but
Monroe
's contract with RCA precluded her participation in it; her parts were replaced by
Dolores Gray
, and RCA released its own EP of
Monroe
singing her songs from the film.
Monroe
worked less frequently after 1954, attempting to take greater control of her career. After the spring 1955 release of the comedy The Seven Year Itch (in which she played
"Chopsticks"
on the piano with co-star
Tom Ewell
), she didn't work for a year. In the interim, she married playwright
Arthur Miller
on June 29, 1956. She gave one of her strongest performances in Bus Stop, released in the summer of 1956, in which she played a saloon singer who performed a sultry version of
Harold Arlen
and
Johnny Mercer
's 1942 song
"That Old Black Magic."
The Prince and the Showgirl, released in the spring of 1957, gave her the opportunity to sing
Richard Addinsell
and
Christopher Hassall
's
"I Found a Dream."
Another lengthy layoff ensued before
Monroe
returned to outright musical comedy with Paramount's Some Like It Hot in 1959. The film's 1929 setting and
Monroe
's casting as band singer Sugar Kane gave her three musical numbers, all period songs:
A. Harrington Gibbs
,
Joe Grey
, and
Leo Wood
's 1922 tune
"Runnin' Wild!"
;
Harry Ruby
,
Herbert Stothart
, and
Bert Kalmar
's 1928 standard
"I Wanna Be Loved by You"
; and
Matt Malneck
,
Fud Livingston
, and
Gus Kahn
's slightly anachronistic 1931 hit
"I'm Through With Love."
United Artists Records released a soundtrack album and even issued a
Monroe
single of
"I Wanna Be Loved by You"
/
"I'm Through with Love."
Monroe
returned to Fox for Let's Make Love, released in the summer of 1960. She played an off-Broadway actress wooed by a billionaire played by
Yves Montand
in her final movie musical, and got to sing a trio of
Sammy Cahn
-
James Van Heusen
songs,
"Let's Make Love,"
"Specialization,"
and
"Incurably Romantic,"
in addition to a revival of
Cole Porter
's
"My Heart Belongs to Daddy."
Columbia Records released the soundtrack album.
Monroe
next filmed The Misfits, a drama written by her husband, but she and
Miller
divorced in January 1961 shortly before the movie was released.
Her next and last musical appearance occurred in May 1962, when she led the audience at Madison Square Garden in a rendition of
"Happy Birthday"
to
President John F. Kennedy
. She had flown in from Los Angeles where she was shooting Something's Got to Give with
Dean Martin
, and it was absences like that which led Fox to fire her from the picture. On August 5, 1962, she was found dead of an overdose of barbiturates that may have been either an accident or suicide.
In the fall of 1962, 20th Fox Records released
Marilyn
, an album of soundtrack recordings from her films There's No Business Like Show Business, River of No Return, and Gentlemen Prefer Blondes. It spent more than two months in the charts. The album was reissued in 1972 in a TV offer under the title
Remember Marilyn
. Around the same time, the Legends label released an album called
Marilyn Monroe
that included everything from film excerpts to a television commercial and
Monroe
's performance of
"Happy Birthday."
The album was reissued by Sandy Hook Records under the title
Rare Recordings 1948-1962
in the 1980s. Starting in the 1990s, many small labels, especially overseas, released CDs that repackaged the same material.
Monroe
's fame has only increased since her death, making such albums popular despite their repetitiousness and often inferior quality. In 1998, Varese Sarabande released a version of the soundtrack of
There's No Business Like Show Business
including
Monroe
's performances for the first time; the same year, Rykodisc reissued an expanded version of the soundtrack to
Some Like It Hot
.
Marilyn Monroe
's singing constitutes a limited but significant part of her overall appeal as a performer. Especially because there is a tendency to focus on her fame and her troubled life over her actual work, it is worth listening to as an example of the real talent she brought to her performances. ~ William Ruhlmann, All Music Guide
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Polly Tobey
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would have to bleach it to get color to take get the capet to match curtians i wouldn't be red down the the red snapper like the fish get it?
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Albums (44)
The Essentials: Platinum Edition
(11 songs)
Life & Music of Marilyn Monroe
(16 songs)
Heatwave
(15 songs)
Download
Diamonds Are a Girl's Best Friend/Home Town Story
(12 songs)
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