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3:55 pm - 11/30/2012

The New Yorker Reviews "Love, Marilyn" in new Lindsay Lohan & Marilyn Monroe article, EW Grade A Rev



HAPPY GIRLS: LINDSAY LOHAN AND MARILYN MONROE
Posted by Richard Brody

Here’s Marilyn Monroe, interviewed on February 25, 1956, upon her return to Hollywood for the filming of “Bus Stop.” Part of this clip, along with the story behind it, is featured in Liz Garbus’s fascinating new documentary, “Love, Marilyn,” which opens at Film Forum tomorrow. Monroe had the notion that she was being underpaid compared to other actresses—notably, Elizabeth Taylor—and walked away from her contract with 20th Century Fox just when her popularity was at its apex. She came to New York and studied with Lee Strasberg at the Actors Studio—a turn that gave rise to the film, which Garbus made largely on the basis of letters, diaries, and notebooks of Monroe’s that ended up in the Strasberg archives.

Look at Marilyn Monroe, about twenty seconds into the clip, when a journalist “asks,” without a question mark at the end of the sentence, “You’re a happy girl now.” The infinitesimal silence that goes with her dubious glance—a tightly controlled eye-roll—away from the interviewer, followed by her ironic verbal shrug (a melodic “uh-h” with a subtly derisive smile), suggests the equivalent of, “You have no idea.” It’s in that sudden abyss of true and horrific emotion in the midst of the most conventionally candied context that encapsulates Monroe’s art—and art it is.

Marilyn Monroe got no respect. She may have been beloved by the public, or a certain segment of it, but she was never nominated for an Oscar—not for “Gentlemen Prefer Blondes,” not for “The Seven Year Itch,” not for “Some Like It Hot,” not for any of her supporting roles. There were as many ambient prejudices on the part of critics and sophisticated viewers back then on the subject of what constitutes good acting as there are now. Lindsay Lohan’s performance in the rather mediocre TV film “Liz & Dick” (which, however—I should have mentioned—features the admirable script conceit of a virtual posthumous interview with the protagonists) received unfortunately (and unwarrantedly nasty) negative reviews. My post earlier this week highlighting her performance and praising her (sadly derailed) career attracted some outraged comments. Unfortunately, the news of Lohan’s latest clash with the law only diverts attention even further from her work and makes her an easy target of ridicule for cruel and ghoulish observers who would find her problems anything other than painful to contemplate.

It’s too soon to know whether Lohan is in Monroe’s league (is anyone?)—she hasn’t had enough adult roles or enough good directors yet—but she did some extraordinary work before turning twenty, the age at which Norma Jeane Baker signed her first movie contract and took her nom d’écran. Despite the gaps that Lohan’s travails have torn in her career and the holes they have likely torn in her psyche, her very presence, in a movie such as “Liz & Dick,” comes packed with an intensity and an anguish that perhaps no other actor of her generation can offer, regardless of technical skill. Lohan isn’t the first great actress to confront addiction and other personal crises, but she has the misfortune to be living in an age of total exposure, when no studio publicist or code of silence can restrain reports of her sufferings as well as of her escapades, and her performance in “Liz & Dick” has a built-in echo chamber and mirror that cast the tabloid horrors of her recent life back onto her.

This is true of Monroe, too. Her best performances pose the vertiginous question of mask and identity—a question that’s all the more disturbing given her overtly seductive, faux-dumb persona. Garbus’s documentary shows the poignant extent to which Monroe cultivated an image that she knew would sell—and then came to be identified with it. The film has the great merit of recovering the private voice from behind the screen and tabloid celebrity. One of Monroe’s most moving performances is the one that seems to come from beyond the grave—it’s from the 1962 film “Something’s Got to Give,” from which she was fired soon before her death and which was never completed. The remaining footage, however, has been put together. It’s a remake of the 1940 comedy “My Favorite Wife,” with Monroe playing a woman who, having spent years shipwrecked aboard a desert island and being declared dead, returns home to find her husband remarried. Monroe comes through the gate six minutes in; she has the magical, floating, unreal aspect of a ghost. She hadn’t worked for more than a year, and she seemed to be returning from far away to a place where she belonged but may not have been welcome.

As Garbus shows, Monroe built her persona on a defiance of the era’s taboos as well as a compliance with (even an exaggeration of) its stereotypes. Our own era’s codes are amorphous and permeable. The breakdown of the barrier between the public and the private makes acting an even riskier business, and plenty of young performers respond with a prudent and responsible professionalism, the supreme value of the age. The definition of their risk is physical, not moral. I don’t think that Lohan’s troubles with substance abuse, with family, with discipline, and with the law do anything to serve her art (they’re surely terrible for her career), but they’re inseparable from it. And—strangely, disturbingly, unjustly—they render her more of a pariah than Monroe ever was.

Three years from now; a press junket for a film; a brazen interviewer who tells the twenty-nine-year-old Lohan: “You’re a happy girl now.” Let’s hope no interviewer is so brazen as to call her a girl. Nonetheless, I’d bet that her response would be as worthy of the ages.

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"Love, Marilyn" features Elizabeth Banks, Ellen Burstyn, Glenn Close, Viola Davis, Jennifer Ehle, Lindsay Lohan, Lili Taylor, Uma Thurman, Marisa Tomei, Evan Rachel Wood. Rounding out this portrait, Adrien Brody, Hope Davis, Ben Foster, Paul Giamatti, Janet McTeer, Oliver Platt and David Strathairn bring to life the writings of Billy Wilder, Natasha Lytess, Truman Capote, Gloria Steinem and Norman Mailer, completing the image of this very flesh-and-blood young woman in thrall to ambition, imagination, demons, and fear who, over time, came to embrace life, friendship, and the possibility of her future.



Watching Liz Garbus' magical documentary Love, Marilyn, I realized not just how much we don't know about Marilyn Monroe but how a lot of what we think we know is more of a construct than a reality. Garbus is working from a treasure trove of new material: boxes of the star's highly confessional and introspective letters and diaries, which were found only recently. Actresses like Glenn Close, Viola Davis, and a fantastic Uma Thurman read the excerpts, and listening to Monroe's own words, we hear her voice and glimpse her soul as never before. We also watch her in never-before-seen interviews, photographs, and home movies, some of which were shot when she wasn't wearing makeup. That's a good metaphor for what the film achieves: It presents Marilyn without the cosmetic cover of her mythologies.

Most of us consider Marilyn Monroe a born star with modest acting skills, but Love, Marilyn deepens the argument that the ditzy, dim-bulb ''Marilyn'' was every inch a performance, and a brilliant one. (Lee Strasberg thought she was as great a talent as Brando.) Much of her more unstable behavior can be linked to prescription drugs, and had she come up in the rehab era, she might have triumphed over the demons that came to define her. If so, maybe she'd now be seen as the figure captured by Love, Marilyn: not just the quintessential sex symbol of the 20th century but, in the sheer scale of her self-invention, a trendsetter for the 21st. A

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prophecypro 30th-Nov-2012 04:59 pm (UTC)
This is some slick stannery right here
retromaury 30th-Nov-2012 04:59 pm (UTC)
I feel like she's going to die any day now
die2nitelive4ev 30th-Nov-2012 05:09 pm (UTC)
as much as I agree it's still a sick thing to say in such a casual way
winonaforever 30th-Nov-2012 05:03 pm (UTC)
Wtf?
liliana_ 30th-Nov-2012 05:03 pm (UTC)
she did some extraordinary work before turning twenty

lol, no
lathwen1 30th-Nov-2012 08:00 pm (UTC)
I needed some examples there tbh
_cheshire 30th-Nov-2012 05:04 pm (UTC)
I'm really tired of hearing Lindsay compared to Marilyn as some weird way to validate Lindsay's complete inability to realize how much she has ruined her career.

I'm glad somebody is delving into Marilyn's issues though. NHF all these girls glamorizing Marilyn while ignoring all the sad parts of her life.
die2nitelive4ev 30th-Nov-2012 05:11 pm (UTC)
the sad parts of Marilyn's life makes her even more glamorize to me. IDK how you can love her without taking in the sadness and vulnerability.
nathanandbarry 30th-Nov-2012 05:40 pm (UTC)
because, trust me, a lot of these girls who "idolize" her don't know anything about her and haven't seen any of her films. When I was in college, I'd be hanging out with someone and see Marilyn poster then strike up a conversation and they wouldn't know anything about her. I just stopped even trying.
die2nitelive4ev 30th-Nov-2012 05:43 pm (UTC)
I am a true supporter of the tragic muse, got a winehouse tattoo to remind me not to be one because life imitates art too much. It was her vulnerability in her films that made her iconic and not another blonde bimbo. But then Che Guevara posters are all the rage but they couldnt tell you why.
maidenhell 30th-Nov-2012 05:45 pm (UTC)
Marilyn has almost ceased being a real person and is just a cultural avatar.
cherrybombx 30th-Nov-2012 08:08 pm (UTC)
http://fakemarilynmonroequotes.tumblr.com/

i can't find the one about "texting boys" though but that's my favorite hehe
itscomicrelief 30th-Nov-2012 05:19 pm (UTC)
her very presence, in a movie such as “Liz & Dick,” comes packed with an intensity and an anguish that perhaps no other actor of her generation can offer, regardless of technical skill.

LOL NO
lesrouges Re: 30th-Nov-2012 05:27 pm (UTC)
lol mte. i can see how this would be possible but lindsay's talent is not equal or greater than the amount of baggage she has.
maidenhell Re: 30th-Nov-2012 05:46 pm (UTC)
She was the worst part of that movie. The Richard Burton dude was a better actor, able to express emotions with more authenticity.
lathwen1 Re: 30th-Nov-2012 08:08 pm (UTC)
lol
lesrouges 30th-Nov-2012 05:25 pm (UTC)
i feel like this is glamorizing the wrong things? and i really don't think lindsay and marilyn have similar personalities at all -- like, it's obvious the author of this article wants to see lindsay succeed and so they've liken her to someone better but with similar qualities... but shit this is reaching so hard.
tlcspice 30th-Nov-2012 05:31 pm (UTC)
Lindsay and Marilyn are hardly alike. Marilyn was never privileged when she was young and had to make her way into the film industry by hard work. She didn't become a star until her mid-twenties and she really wasn't into drinking until she was a bit older. She also didn't do recreational drugs like Lindsay. She took sleeping pills and had enemas and stuff, but she was MUCH healthier than Lindsay and she would have lived longer had her life not been taken.
retromaury 30th-Nov-2012 05:33 pm (UTC)
Didn't she die of an overdose? I always thought Marilyn was a drug addict let me read her wiki page
dior 30th-Nov-2012 05:44 pm (UTC)
many speculate JFK and his team killed her and made it to look like an overdose/suicide
tlcspice 30th-Nov-2012 05:49 pm (UTC)
Someone besides Marilyn definitely tried to make it LOOK like a suicide. The LAPD even listed her death as "possible suicide" before even performing the autopsy. It's all very sketchy.
tlcspice 30th-Nov-2012 05:47 pm (UTC)
Nope. No drugs were found in her stomach during her autopsy. She was either killed by accident or on purpose, possibly via an enema.
riookierin 30th-Nov-2012 06:00 pm (UTC)
From what things I've read and seen on TV, I always thought so, too; she had a fondness of barbiturates.
tlcspice 30th-Nov-2012 06:09 pm (UTC)
Barbiturates aren't what killed her.
riookierin 30th-Nov-2012 05:57 pm (UTC)
Did not even know this movie was a thing. And ofc, Lindsay is in it. She's the msfirecrotch of the Marilyn Monroe fandom.
leitao 30th-Nov-2012 06:03 pm (UTC)
I'm really looking forward to "Love, Marilyn." Sounds like a really interesting and intimate (yet respectful) documentary. =O

Not here for the Marilyn Monroe / Lindsay Lohan comparison, though . . .
mai_shiranui 30th-Nov-2012 06:14 pm (UTC)
What the fuck...

beokitty 30th-Nov-2012 06:32 pm (UTC)
Marilyn is so painfully beautiful, ESP in motion.
buffy_usa 30th-Nov-2012 06:43 pm (UTC)
i don't know what is more pathetic - lindsay or the stans still trying hard in denial

yesterday\s round up led me to this thread, and frankly i lol irl at the number of threads just about lindsay and her completely fucked up busted life

smh

i wish lindsay posts had a speidi ban
mrmidwest classy lady30th-Nov-2012 07:04 pm (UTC)
kenzainfluenza Re: classy lady30th-Nov-2012 08:03 pm (UTC)
this is so sweeeeeeeeeet
coldharbourlove 30th-Nov-2012 07:40 pm (UTC)
lol lilo stans make me laugh. where was the support in the other posts?
missjersey 30th-Nov-2012 10:14 pm (UTC)
Stop, stop, STOP comparing these two in terms of their careers. They both are hard to work with, they both have drug and alcohol problems, and they both are surrounded by enablers. But do NOT compare their acting skills. Monroe was leagues ahead of where Lindsay was when she was in "Mean Girls", that that's probably her best acting gig (and that movie is such a cult classic because of supporting actors and outstanding writing, NOT because of Lohan).

And this will sound stupid, but Monroe had that special factor that you can't learn. When you see her on camera, you just focus on her. Lindsay has never, and will never, have that.
rogue 30th-Nov-2012 11:54 pm (UTC)
so sick of marilyn monroe
vagabonden 1st-Dec-2012 01:26 am (UTC)
This Lindsay/Marilyn thing needs to stop. They render Lindsay as more of a pariah than Monroe because Lindsay has a criminal rap sheet that's growing longer than her IMDB database, but started off as a child and teen widely respected in the industry. Marilyn had to fight and claw her way into any respectable status as an actress.

Most of all, Lindsay has resources available to her as an addict that Marilyn never had. I think that's the most frustrating part of all.
deltabean 1st-Dec-2012 02:51 am (UTC)
Love, Marilyn sounds good. I want to see it.
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