Marilyn Monroe Gets Down to Business (Spring 2023 | Volume: 68, Issue: 2)

Marilyn Monroe Gets Down to Business

AH article image

Authors: Holley Snaith

Historic Era: Era 10: Contemporary United States (1968 to the present)

Historic Theme:

Subject:

Spring 2023 | Volume 68, Issue 2

Marilyn Monroe in 1953 as she appeared on December 1953 issue of Photoplay magazine.
Marilyn Monroe appeared on the cover of the December 1953 issue of  Photoplay.

There is an immortal image of Marilyn Monroe that lives in the public mind. We recall the sensuous platinum blonde with lips painted bright red, the iconic beauty mark perfectly situated on her left cheek, and she's wearing a chic low-cut dress that shows off her gorgeous figure and legs. More than six decades after her death at the age of thirty-six, this photo remains omnipresent. 

But, behind the persona so carefully constructed by Monroe, there was a strong and savvy career woman. She knew that the public was entranced by her sexy “dumb-blonde” image, but to her, that was merely acting. When she made the bold decision in the early 1950s to stand up to her studio, 20th Century-Fox, the public realized that the beguiling actress was no pushover. 

Early in 1953, the 26-year-old was growing disenchanted with her six-year acting career. Having been in her contract with 20th Century-Fox, one of Hollywood’s “Big Six” studios, for two years, she had acted alongside big-name stars like Bette Davis, Claudette Colbert, and Cary Grant, but the roles she played were hardly fulfilling. She was longing for a strong script, a role that she could sink her teeth into, and navigate away from the characters that the studio forced upon her. 

Behind the persona so carefully constructed by Monroe, there was a strong and savvy career woman.

Monroe hoped that the new year would mark a turning point, and it did, but not in the way she envisioned. Gentlemen Prefer Blondes, released in July 1953 and co-starring Jane Russell, was a box- office hit, grossing around $5 million. That fall, How to Marry a Millionaire, featuring an all-star cast that included Lauren Bacall and Betty Grable, proved to be an even bigger smash, generating more than $7 million. Fox was basking in Monroe’s allure. 

That summer, she was invited to leave her mark in cinematic history by placing her hand and footprints in the wet cement at  Grauman’s Chinese Theatre on Hollywood Boulevard. Capitalizing on her popularity, Fox decided it was time for the starlet to venture into the flourishing medium of television, and Monroe made her first TV appearance on the new season of The Jack Benny Show in September. She portrayed the “dream girl” that Benny had met on a ship returning home from Hawaii, serenading him with “Bye, Bye Baby” in her trademark, sweet, childlike voice. The show’s ratings went through the roof.

Monroe playboy
Monroe's appearance on the cover of Playboy in 1953 boosted the aspiring actress' popularity and cemented her reputation as a sex symbol. Pawn Stars

Although her career had catapulted, Monroe was concerned about its trajectory. Her characters Lorelei Lee in Gentlemen Prefer Blondes and Pola Debevoise in How to Marry a Millionaire were the quintessential ditzy blondes, all beauty,