1926-1962

Type: 
Person
Subfield: 
d
Alias: 
1926-1962

Marilyn

1987

Young Marilyn

becoming the legend
1994

Marilyn

the passion and the paradox
2012
"Last year J. Randy Taraborrelli wrote a bestselling book entitled The Secret Life of Marilyn. His is the most recent of dozens written since Marilyn's death in August of 1962 and yet the appetite for information about Marilyn is insatiable. No matter whether sensational or flawed, as most of these biographies have been, the fans always come out, in best-selling numbers. This time, with Lois Banner's An Uncommon Woman, Marilyn's fans won't be disappointed. This is no re-tread of recycled material. As one of the founders of the field of women's history, Lois Banner will reveal Marilyn Monroe in the way that only a top-notch historian and biographer could. Banner appreciates the complexities of Monroe's personal life in the context of her acheivements as an actor, singer, dancer, comedian, model, and courtesan. And the new information she unearths is revelatory. Banner's credentials opened doors and she has access to material no one else has seen, from the so called "Rosetta stones" of Monroe research (two large file cabinets filled with a trove of personal papers), to an interview with a member of the Kennedy secret service detail who shared what he witnessed for the first time, to facts and anecdotes about her childhood and her death and every stage of her life in between that were either missed or ignored or misinterpreted. Like her art, Marilyn's self was rooted in paradox: she was a powerful star and a child-like waif, a joyful, irreverent party girl with a deeply spiritual side; a superb friend and a narcisist; a dumb blonde and an intellectual. No biographer before has attempted to analyze--much less realized--most of these aspects of her personality. Lois Banner has"--.

Marilyn Monroe

cover to cover
2003
A collection of photographs, quotes, and personal anecdotes that profile the life and career of legendary actress Marilyn Monroe.

Marilyn's last words

her secret tapes and mysterious death
2005
Examines tapes, documents, and forensic evidence that led the author to conclude that actress Marilyn Monroe did not commit suicide in 1962 but was killed as part of a CIA conspiracy to ruin then attorney general Robert Kennedy, and orchestrate the downfall of his brothers, Jack and Ted.

Marilyn and me

sisters, rivals, friends
1992
Actress Susan Strasberg writes of her life and her friendship with her surrogate sister Marilyn Monroe.

Marilyn Monroe

Norma Jeane's dream
1997
A biography of the screen icon, from her early days as an orphan to her rise to stardom; includes discussion of her film career, marriages, and tragic death.

Blonde

a novel
2000
Presents a fictionalized account of the life of actress Marilyn Monroe.

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