The Murder of Marilyn Monroe Page 2
Bobby, on hearing of Marilyn’s plans—and somehow knowing of her concomitant relationship with Greenson—called the good doctor and convinced him that his star patient also intended to disclose her romantic dealings with the psychiatrist.
This would not only have terminated Greenson’s career but very likely would have landed him in prison. “Marilyn has got to be silenced,” Bobby told Greenson—or something to that effect. Greenson had thus been set up by Bobby to “take care” of Marilyn …
I certainly think Marilyn would have held a press conference. She was determined to gain back her self-esteem. She was unbalanced at the time—and Bobby was determined to shut her up, regardless of the consequences. It was the craziest thing he ever did—and I was crazy enough to let it happen.
Best friend and occasional lover Frank Sinatra was more than a little suspicious after learning a crucial detail from the autopsy. Sinatra’s valet, George Jacobs, stated, “When the cops said it was an overdose, he had no doubt about it, nor did I … It was only later when the autopsy revealed no residue of pills in her system that we got curious. Mr. S began to suspect Lawford and his brothers-in-law of possible foul play.”
Pat Newcomb countered to biographer Donald Spoto, “There’s no way they could’ve done this. I resent it so much … I’d like to see Bobby exonerated from this. He would never do it … He wouldn’t hurt her … He was in San Francisco.” Former Police Chief Daryl F. Gates conceded in his autobiography, “The truth is, we knew Robert Kennedy was in town on August 4. We always knew when he was here. He was the Attorney General, so we were interested in him, the same way we were interested when other important figures came to Los Angeles.” On Marilyn and Bobby, Gates continued, “Frankly, I never bought into the theory that she killed herself because he dumped her—if he did. My feelings were that she was emotional over many things; a relationship gone sour would be just one of many problems she had.”
Michael Selsman, a twenty-four-year-old press agent in 1962, held a job alongside Pat Newcomb within the Arthur P. Jacobs Company. Selsman relayed to biographer Jay Margolis, “After Marilyn died, I worked at Fox and Paramount as an executive. I’m from New York. Back in the sixties, I knew of [Marilyn’s acting coaches] the Strasbergs, and knew [their actress daughter] Susan. The Strasbergs were horrible people, and Susan was, in my mind, destroyed by her mother. The parents were attention seekers, users, preyed on weak-minded actors, and never came up with anything original. They copied Stanislavski and feasted on the notoriety of the few successful actors that happened to come up in New York at that time. There were thousands more who never amounted to anything. Those who can act, act. Those who can’t, they become coaches.”
Describing what it was like working with Marilyn day-to-day, Selsman relayed, “I never saw her happy. I never saw her laugh. Never heard any jokes from her. It was strictly business. All actors are shy and lonely people. That’s why they are actors … Marilyn’s concerns in the office were mainly about interviews and photo sessions. Pat was her main contact, so whatever she thought was threatening was discussed in private with Pat and sometimes Arthur … It was part of my job to be at the funeral. I attempted to coordinate with the reporters, photographers from around the world, and the press agents from Fox. It was a circus.” Selsman was queried as to what he knew about August 4, 1962:
MARGOLIS:
Did Arthur Jacobs tell you Bobby Kennedy was at Marilyn’s home the day she died either in the afternoon or in the evening?
SELSMAN:
Yes.
MARGOLIS:
Was it afternoon or evening?
SELSMAN:
It was the afternoon.
Regarding Peter Lawford’s last full-length interview, Dean Martin’s ex-wife Jeanne remarked to Margolis, “Somebody would’ve said something years ago. The mystery of her death, people have let up on that one ages ago.” Informed that the autopsy revealed how Marilyn’s stomach was empty, Mrs. Martin replied, “I never read that. I never heard that. Don’t bother telling me because I wouldn’t want to know that.”
When told that many now agree Bobby Kennedy was in Los Angeles on August 4 before Marilyn died and after she died, Mrs. Martin said, “I don’t care where he was. He didn’t kill Marilyn. Bobby Kennedy would not kill anybody. He would kill somebody? It’s impossible. It’s such yellow journalism.” After bringing to her attention that biographer Heymann had actual interview tapes of Lawford’s own voice mentioning the conspiracy to murder Marilyn, Mrs. Martin responded, “I knew the Kennedys very well. I knew Peter very well. If anybody took pills, it was Peter.”1
As for the bugging tapes he heard, Lawford told Heymann:
You could apparently hear [on Mafia-Teamster tapes] the voices of Marilyn and JFK as well as Marilyn and RFK, in addition to MM and Dr. Ralph Greenson. In each case, you could hear the muted sounds of bedsprings and the cries of ecstasy. Marilyn, after all, was a master of her craft.
It is certainly possible that Peter Lawford obtained Mafia-Teamster recordings. In fact, as noted by Anthony Summers, Lawford tried to obtain Mafia tapes in at least one other instance, regarding gangster Mickey Cohen’s female associate Juanita Dale Slusher (a.k.a. Candy Barr). This information is supported by a D.A.’s investigation into Lawford’s activities in 1961.
Fred Otash recalled to biographer James Spada, “Something strange happened with Lawford one day. He came to me and said, ‘Fred, have you got some means for me to make secret recordings?’ I said, ‘Yes, what do you need?’ He would never tell me what they were. So my vibration is that he was possibly wiring up Jack Kennedy and Bobby.”
Jayne Mansfield’s press secretary, Raymond Strait, who knew Otash for twenty years, agreed: “I’ve listened to tapes in which Jayne and the President were the principal players. Lawford had copies of the tapes and once, during a bong-sharing session with Jayne in the Pink Palace, played them back for her. Later on, she prevailed upon Peter to play them for one of her lovers but he declined. Peter apparently owned quite a library of audio tapes of his famous brothers-in-law and their trysts with famous Hollywood sex symbols.”
Strait told Margolis: “Otash knew conversations between me and Jayne before I even met him! He taped Jayne because, after all, she slept with both of them [Jack and Bobby Kennedy]. Wherever they were at, Otash was there a little bit ahead of them … The only thing that worried Fred at all was the Johnny Stompanato case [in which actress Lana Turner’s brutal lover was purportedly murdered by her daughter Cheryl]. Fred was very complicit as an accessory after the fact because he removed the knife, put Cheryl’s fingerprints on it and put it back in! Lana Turner killed Johnny Stompanato. Lana caught him and Cheryl in bed together. He went after her daughter, and Lana jumped in the middle and he got it. Mother and daughter love each other. ‘Save my career,’ so Cheryl saves Lana’s career, and that’s what Cheryl did.”
When Jay Margolis interviewed Joe Naar, Joe said he was not only Lawford’s best friend, but also a friend of the Kennedy family. According to Naar, he and Lawford repeatedly went over Marilyn’s last night and Lawford blamed himself for the movie star’s death.
Peter Lawford was a close friend of Marilyn Monroe for more than a decade. Never a man to make decisions on his own, as confirmed by his lawyer Milt Ebbins, the English actor was an unwilling participant in her murder. By all accounts, feeling extremely guilty for years following his friend’s death, and aware of what the Kennedy brothers had done both to him and to Marilyn, Lawford confided as much to biographer C. David Heymann. A year later, Peter Lawford was dead.2
MARILYN’S CLOSE FRIENDS GET SUSPICIOUS
At around 7:30 in the evening of Friday, July 13, 1962, George Barris captured the final professional photograph of Marilyn Monroe during her lifetime. A freelancer for Cosmopolitan magazine, Barris recalled, “I said, ‘Marilyn, this is the last picture I’m going to take of you.’ She was sitting on the sand and we had this Scandinavian heavy sweater she was wearing. She bundled up and she had covered he
r knees with the blanket. She leaned forward and said, ‘Alright, George, this is just for you.’ She puckered her lips and threw a kiss to me. She said, ‘This is for you and the world and this is the picture I want to be remembered by.’ ”
Now fast-forward to August 3 of that same year. “When I was in New York after I left Los Angeles and Marilyn Monroe, I was putting together the story for Cosmopolitan, which was to be about twelve pages and a cover,” Barris remembered. “She called and asked, ‘How is everything going?’ ‘Fine.’ ‘George, you must come back to see me in California. I have some very important things we have to talk about. It’s very important…. There are many things we have to talk about and there are some things that are very, very shocking that you must know about. You must come out….’ I said, ‘Well, can’t you talk on the phone and tell me what it’s about?’ She said, ‘It’s something I’d rather not discuss on the phone….’‘Marilyn, it’s Friday here. I’ll try to come out by Monday morning if it’s alright.’ ‘Please, promise me.’ I said, ‘I promise.’ ”
Barris told Jay Margolis he regretted not going back to California on August 4, the very next day. Margolis asked him, “Marilyn never let on that she was going to hold a press conference, right? She just said she had to talk to you about something important?” Barris confirmed, “That’s all she said.”
Barris reflected in his 1995 book: “She never seemed happier … I was very happy for her … She said she’d probably just relax, go out to dinner, and then maybe go over to the Lawfords’ for their regular Saturday night party. Then she said, ‘Love you—see you Monday.’ I said I loved her, too.”
During her final interview before her untimely death, Marilyn told George Barris, “The happiest time of my life is now … There’s a future and I can’t wait to get to it—it should be interesting! I feel I’m just getting started; I want to do comedy, tragedy, interspersed … I have no regrets, because if I made any mistakes, I was responsible … I like to stay here (in California) but every once in awhile I get that feeling for New York. Here all I have to do is lock the [front and back] doors and go. I like ground to stand on.”
“Why would she take her life?” George Barris asked Jay Margolis. “We did photographs at Santa Monica beach near Peter Lawford’s. Marilyn bought a new house in Brentwood but it wasn’t furnished. She had gone to Mexico to furnish it Mexican style. She was waiting for the furniture to arrive. Marilyn said to me, ‘How can we photograph there if it doesn’t look right? What can we do?’ ‘If you want to go back where you lived with your first husband in Catalina, I’ll try.’ ‘No, I don’t want to go back.’ ‘My friend’s home in the Hollywood Hills would be perfect. When I brought it up, he said all he wants is a picture of you and him as a souvenir. You don’t have to do it if you don’t want to.’ ‘No, it’s okay.’ I took a picture of him with Marilyn. All the other photos are at his home.”
In 1995, using those pictures taken at Santa Monica Beach and in North Hollywood at his friend Tim Leimert’s house, George Barris created a touching and tender book about Marilyn Monroe, with her own words guiding the narrative. It was a project they planned to do sometime in the future just days after they became friends in September 1954. Back then, Marilyn was making The Seven Year Itch in New York and Barris was photographing her. That film became his favorite Marilyn Monroe movie. “What I particularly liked about Marilyn was that she didn’t act like a movie star,” he wrote. “She was down to earth … Sure, she was beautiful and sexy, but there was an almost childlike innocence about her … Marilyn was always polite and friendly to everyone on the set.”
Evelyn Moriarty was Marilyn’s stand-in for her final three movies: Let’s Make Love (1960), The Misfits (1961), and the unfinished Something’s Got to Give (1962). Moriarty relayed to biographer Richard Buskin, “Buck Hall was the assistant director on Something’s Got to Give and, like the rest of the production office, he hated her. He was a bastard. According to what I was told by the camera operator and Bunny Gardel, who did her body makeup, when they were working on Bus Stop [in 1956], Buck Hall would ogle Marilyn. She called him a Peeping Tom and he never forgave her for that. Well, by the time of Something’s Got to Give, the Fox executives were fed up with Marilyn. You could feel the tension when she walked on the set. Although the crew adored her, she was a piece of meat as far as those execs were concerned and they treated her like one.
“June 1 [1962] was Marilyn’s thirty-sixth birthday. So, that morning I bought her a cake with candles, but [director] George Cukor and the Fox executives wouldn’t let me give it to her until they got a full day’s work out of her. Late in the afternoon, George finally said I could wheel out the cake and he joined in our little celebration, but the smiles were fake. Afterwards, as Marilyn was leaving, I was with her, Bunny Gardel, and [hairstylist] Agnes Flanagan, and I said, ‘She’s not going to be here Monday because of the way that Buck Hall and the others just treated her on the set.’ Still, I didn’t know she was never going to be in again.”
That same Friday of Marilyn’s final birthday, having worked briefly with Elizabeth Taylor in Rome, Italy, for a Cosmo report on the filming of Cleopatra, George Barris approached Marilyn on the set of Something’s Got to Give. As Barris later told Jay Margolis, “When I arrived, she said, ‘What are you doing here?! I heard you were in Rome with Elizabeth Taylor! So, you found a new girl, huh?’ ‘No, we were just doing the story. She’s impossible to work with.’ ‘Can you imagine they’re paying her a million dollars for that picture?’ They later brought out the cake and we all sang ‘Happy Birthday’ with me at her side.
“I was supposed to meet her at the studio Monday to start on our story. She wasn’t there when I got there. She called in. She was a very frail person. They sent their own studio doctor [Dr. Lee Siegel] to investigate if she was really sick. He confirmed she was really sick. The studio was desperate. They had all these technicians, cameramen, and actors and actresses on salary. They’re paying them and they were going broke. They had paid Elizabeth Taylor on Cleopatra a million dollars. The studio was in bad shape financially.”
Marilyn was fired from Something’s Got to Give on June 8. She and Barris began their joint projects the following day through July 18. “I don’t think anyone was ever more determined,” he’d remember, “and I never encountered a model who worked as hard as she did.”
“I will never believe that she took her own life,” Barris wrote. “It will always be my conviction that she was murdered.” Four years later in 1999, George Barris has not changed his stance and stood firm. “She was murdered. What else could it have been? I don’t think she ever killed herself.”
Barris said to Jay Margolis, “I’ll never forget her because she was kind and she was honest and she was lovable, and she was a girl who became what she was because she was determined and she had been through her whole life making everyone happy. She was always a caring person. She was a timid person but also a very lonely person. Unfortunately, her marriages were not very successful. Only if Marilyn had a child, I think that would have saved her life.”
Learning of the tragic news of her passing, Barris relayed to Margolis, “When I was in the country, I was with my brother-in-law. We went to a local grocery to get some milk and bagels. I sat in the car and he went in to buy it and he came running out. And he looked at me, ‘It just came over the radio.’ I said, ‘What are you talking about?’ ‘Marilyn is dead.’ ‘You shouldn’t make jokes like that. It’s not nice.’ ‘No, it’s true. Honestly.’ I couldn’t believe it. I was just in a shock. I dropped him off then I drove all the way back to New York where I lived at Sutton Place. It was about a hundred miles. Luckily, I didn’t get a ticket or in an accident, I was driving so fast. When I got back, the doorman told me that there was a bunch of press and photographers and reporters looking for me. ‘If they come back, tell them I’m not here.’ I went upstairs. I put on the television and radio. All that came over was ‘Marilyn is dead. Marilyn is dead.’ It was too much. I shut everythin
g off. I couldn’t take it.”
Actress Jane Russell was also suspicious of the circumstances surrounding Marilyn’s death. When interviewed on November 29, 2010, by Jay Margolis, Jane Russell confirmed a story about an unpleasant run-in with Robert Kennedy: “I met him one time after his brother had been killed. I was working with this organization. We called it WAIF to get kids adopted. You couldn’t get them from the United States but you could from other countries. The kids would come in with the parents that had all been picked, and he happened to be there one of these times. He met other people, and he was very friendly and nice. Then he was introduced to me, and the face just went huh! It was not friendly at all. I thought, well boy, something’s funny there. So I guess he thought I knew all about whatever went on … I just think there was something very strange. When the Lord gets here, we’ll know exactly what happened … There were things that she looked forward to. The studio had said okay. There were so many things that were happening that she wanted to happen.”
An intriguing article by author Wendy Leigh appeared in the United Kingdom on March 3, 2007. After interviewing Jane Russell, Leigh discovered the actress believed her friend had been murdered: “I don’t think she killed herself,” Russell stated. “Someone did it for her. There were dirty tricks somewhere.”
“I suggest that Jack and Bobby Kennedy—both Marilyn’s lovers—may have been involved, and Jane nods darkly,” Leigh wrote while adding that Russell told her, “Soon after Marilyn died, I met Bobby Kennedy and he looked at me as if to say: ‘I am your enemy.’ ”
On August 1, 1962, three days before her death, Marilyn Monroe was rehired by Twentieth Century-Fox to complete shooting on Something’s Got to Give and signed a one-million-dollar, two-picture deal. Just over three decades later, in July 1993, her stand-in, Evelyn Moriarty, told Richard Buskin, “There’s no way she killed herself. I spoke with her the Wednesday before she died and she was so excited about going back to work. She told me they’d be shooting Dean Martin’s close-ups first and then placing Dean for her close-ups—she was really up. She had to finish this picture at Fox because she was going to film I Love Louisa at United Artists with Frank Sinatra, produced by her publicist Arthur Jacobs. She also talked about having three pictures to do in Europe, two of them with Brigitte Bardot. It was all ‘We’re going to do this’ and ‘We’re going to do that’—she had battled the studio, she had won, and she was really looking forward to all of those projects.”