On Marilyn Monroe An opinionated guide

Richard Barrios

Book - 2023

"She was born nearly a century ago and has been gone for well over half that time. The body of work she left behind is of limited size and, in some cases, debatable quality. The environment in which she thrived, popular entertainment in the 1950s, is a distant memory, if that. Those are indisputable facts. Why is it, then, that they seem so immaterial? How is it that the phenomenon continues unabated, that the iconography and mythology only seem to increase? Why all the interest and speculation and merchandising, and why all the documentaries and miniseries about her? Plus, to cut a little closer, all those shelves of books? With Marilyn Monroe, there is never one single answer. To start with one of the most obvious: some of it has to ...do with the element of tragedy, the special kind that crashes in when a life of magnetic achievement and renown is cut short with miserable suddenness. Alexander the Great, Joan of Arc, Byron and Keats, Valentino, Hank Williams, James Dean, the Kennedys, Malcolm X, Dr. King, Joplin and Hendrix and Morrison, Elvis, Princess Diana, Michael Jackson. How natural to mourn, how easy to speculate on what could have been. Monroe offers unusually ripe territory for this, with her blatant, rapid-fire explosion into the world's consciousness, the tumult and visibility of her private and professional paths, and the sharply cut-off way she died, overlaid with just enough ambiguity to cause some people to wonder about the circumstances. From there, eventually and alas, to an unseemly franchise based on conjecture about that death, with most of the ruminations drenched in paranoia and personal agendas"--

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Subjects
Genres
Biographies
Criticism, interpretation, etc
Published
New York, NY : Oxford University Press [2023]
Language
English
Main Author
Richard Barrios (author)
Physical Description
xii, 267 pages, 16 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations (some color) ; 25 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 255-257), discography (pages 251-252) , filmography (pages 239-249) , and index.
ISBN
9780197636114
  • Acknowledgments
  • Introduction: Watching Her
  • Chronology: A Life in Days
  • 1. Apprenticeships
  • 2. Breakthroughs
  • 3. A Fox Blonde
  • 4. Seriously
  • 5. Detonating
  • 6. Tiffany's
  • 7. Due Diligence
  • 8. No Name Required
  • 9. Course Correction
  • 10. A Sense of Self
  • 11. Wait for Sugar
  • 12. Off Broadway
  • 13. The Desert
  • 14. Full Stop
  • 15. Legacies
  • Epilogue
  • Citations
  • Filmography
  • Annotated Discography
  • Selected Radio and Television Appearances
  • Selected Bibliography
  • Index
Review by Library Journal Review

According to Barrios (West Side Story: The Jets, the Sharks, and the Making of a Classic), most biographies on Marilyn Monroe focus too much on her marriages, beauty, and sexuality and not enough on her acting talent. In this book, he provides an inside look into how Monroe grew as an actress and created her public persona. Eye-opening and always engaging, this opinionated guide begins with a brief exposé of Monroe's life before modeling and films. From there, Barrios examines her drive to improve herself as an artist. For example, she took diction and acting lessons, had plastic surgery, dyed her hair blond, and made connections with important figures in the film industry. Though the author makes it clear at the beginning of the book that he is a fan of Monroe, Barrios's analysis is fair and balanced. He is not above criticizing Monroe performances he deems "uneven"--her performance in 1952's Don't Bother To Knock, for example--or taking note of her line readings which, he argues, were more appropriate for her comedies than dramas. VERDICT Barrios has fashioned a wonderful biography of Marilyn Monroe.--Leah K. Huey

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