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Marilyn Monroe Sex Tape Story:
Businessman who bought film for $1.5 million wants to
protect her privacy
A
15-minute film of hollywood bombshell actress Marilyn
Monroe engaging in oral sex with an unidentified man
will be kept from public view by a New York businessman
who has bought it for $1.5 million, the broker of the
deal said on Monday.
Memorabilia collector Keya Morgan said he recently
arranged the sale of the silent, black-and-white film
from the son of a dead FBI informant who possessed it
to a wealthy Manhattan businessman who wants to protect
Monroe’s privacy.
“The gentleman who bought it said out of respect for
Marilyn he’s not going to make a joke of it and put
it on the Internet and try to exploit her,” said memorabilia
collector Keya Morgan. “That’s not his intention and
I would never get my name involved if that were to happen.”
Marilyn is clothed and the man’s face remains out of
the frame for the entire 15 minutes of the film, said
Morgan, who watched it.
Monroe
was rumored to have had an affair with former U.S. President
John F. Kennedy, and Morgan said former FBI director
J. Edgar Hoover, a Kennedy rival, went to great lengths
to try to prove it was Kennedy in the film.
One of Monroe’s ex-husbands, the late baseball great
Joe DiMaggio, once tried to buy it from the collector
for $25,000 but “he would not part with it,” according
to FBI files on Monroe that are available on the FBI
Web site
Morgan is a well-known collector who owns memorabilia
from the estates of Monroe and DiMaggio and said he
was a friend with Monroe’s other two husbands, Jim Dougherty
and Arthur Miller.
He said he learned of the existence of the film while
working on a documentary about Monroe, who died in August
1962 at age 36. A former FBI agent told him about it,
and Morgan said he confirmed it by tracking down the
son of the FBI informant, who had provided a copy to
the FBI.
The
late informant’s son had the original while the copy
remains classified in the FBI files, said Morgan, whose
deal was first reported by the New York Post on Monday.
The FBI agent that I interviewed said J. Edgar Hoover
was completely obsessed. A team of nine individuals
were analyzing the tape inside a lab. J. Edgar Hoover
brought in a few prostitutes who allegedly had been
with President Kennedy and they tried to ... see if
that was really President Kennedy.
Talk with Monroe
An FBI spokesman declined to comment except to point
out the Monroe files available online, which refer to
the film but make no mention of Hoover’s purported interest.
Marilyn
Monroe's career as an actress spanned 16 years. She made
29 films, 24 in the first 8 years of her career.
Born as Norma Jeane Mortenson on June 1, 1926 in
Los Angeles General
Hospital
, her mother, Gladys, listed the fathers address as
unknown. Marilyn would never know the true identity of
her father.
Due to her mother's mental instability and the fact that
she was unmarried at the time, Norma Jeane was placed in
the foster home of Albert and Ida Bolender. It was here
she lived the first 7 years of her life.
"They
were terribly strict...they didn't mean any harm...it
was their religion. They brought me up harshly."
In 1933, Norma Jeane lived briefly with her mother.
Gladys begin to show signs of mental depression and in
1934 was admitted to a rest home in
Santa Monica
. Grace McKee, a close friend of her mother took over
the care of Norma Jeane. "Grace loved and adored
her", recalled one of her co-workers. Grace,
telling her..."Don't worry, Norma Jeane. You're
going to be a beautiful girl when you get big...an
important woman, a movie star." Grace was
captivated by Jean Harlow, a superstar of the twenties,
and Marilyn would later say..."and so Jean Harlow
was my idol."
Grace
was to marry in 1935 and due to financial difficulties,
Norma Jeane was placed in an orphanage from September
1935 to June 1937. Grace frequently visited her, taking
her to the movies, buying clothes and teaching her how
to apply makeup at her young age. Norma Jeane was to
later live with several of Grace's relatives.
"The
world around me then was kind of grim. I had to learn to
pretend in order to...I don't know...block the grimness.
The whole world seemed sort of closed to me... (I felt)
on the outside of everything, and all I could do was to
dream up any kind of pretend-game."
In September 1941 Norma Jeane was again living with
Grace when she met Jim Dougherty, 5 years her senior.
Grace encouraged the relationship and on learning that
she and her husband would be moving to the East Coast,
set in motion plans for Norma Jeane to marry Dougherty
on June 19, 1942.
"Grace
McKee arranged the marriage for me, I never had a
choice. There's not much to say about it. They couldn't
support me, and they had to work out something. And so I
got married."
Dougherty
joined the Merchant Marines in 1943 and in 1944 was sent
overseas. Norma Jeane, while working in a factory
inspecting parachutes in 1944, was photographed by the
Army as a promotion to show women on the assembly line
contributing to the war effort. One of the
photographers, David Conover, asked to take further
pictures of her. By spring of 1945, she was quickly
becoming known as a "photographers dream" and
had appeared on 33 covers of national magazines.
In the fall of 1946 she was granted a divorce...later
saying, "My marriage didn't make me sad, but it
didn't make me happy either. My husband and I hardly
spoke to each other. This wasn't because we were angry.
We had nothing to say. I was dying of boredom."
On July 23, 1946 she signed a contract with Twentieth
Century-Fox Studios. She selected her mother's family
name of
Monroe
. From this point on she would be known as Marilyn
Monroe to all her fans. She had a minor part in the
movie "Scudda-Hoo! Scudda-Hay! and was dismissed as
a contract player in August. Rehired in 1948, Marilyn
sang here first song in the movie "Ladies of the
Chorus".
Johnny Hyde, of the
William
Morris
Agency
, became her mentor and lover in 1949. Also, in 1949,
Marilyn agreed to pose nude for a calendar. A fact that
was to stir controversy later in her career as a
superstar.
"
Hollywood
is a place where they'll pay you a thousand dollars for
a kiss and fifty cents for your soul"
Her first serious acting job came in 1950 when she had a
small but crucial role in "The Asphalt Jungle"
and received favorable reviews. "Clash By
Night" in 1952 earned her several favorable
notices...Alton Cook of the
New York
World-Telegram and Sun wrote..."a forceful actress,
a gifted new star, worthy of all that fantastic press
agentry. Her role here is not very big, but she makes it
dominant."
Monroe
's first leading part in a serious feature was to be in
"Don't Bother to Knock", also filmed in 1952.
Marilyn met Joe DiMaggio in early 1952, she was 25 and
he was 37. DiMaggio, recently retired from baseball, had
expressed a desire to meet this famous star. By February
the romance was in full bloom.
"I
was surprised to be so crazy about Joe. I expected a
flashy
New York
sports type, and instead I met this reserved guy who
didn't make a pass at me right away! He treated me like
something special. Joe is a very decent man, and he
makes other people feel decent, too!"
In
1952 Marilyn began filming "
Niagara
" with Joseph Cotten...a film that was to establish
her stardom. After her next big film, "Gentlemen
Prefer Blondes", she and Jane Russell signed their
names and placed their hands and feet in the wet cement
in front of the Chinese Theatre on
Hollywood Boulevard
...the same place she had visited with Gladys and Grace
years earlier as a child.
"I
want to be a big star more than anything. It's something
precious"
Fox suspended Marilyn in 1954 for failure to appear on
the set of "Pink Tights". The studio had
refused to let her look at the script prior to accepting
the part. She felt that due to her star status, she
should have the right to script approval.
On January 14 Joe and Marilyn were married. The wedding
captured the headlines worldwide. Joe was an extremely
jealous type of guy and resented her popularity among
other men. He desired a housewife, not a star of such
magnitude...the marriage was in trouble from the
beginning.
"I
didn't want to give up my career, and that's what Joe
wanted me to do most of all."
She was asked to go on a USO tour of
Korea
in February to entertain the troops, beginning on the
16th for four days. She entertained over 60,000
soldiers, many who had never seen a Monroe film...having
been in the service during her rise to stardom... most
had seen still photos of her in many magazines and
newspapers. She was a huge success. Joe did not
accompany her on this trip...explaining, "Joe hates
crowds and glamour."
"...standing
in the snowfall facing these yelling soldiers, I felt
for the first time in my life no fear of anything, I
felt only happy."
On May 29, Marilyn began filming "There's No
Business Like Show Business". Throughout the summer
she was ill with bronchitis and anemia. For the first
time, Marilyn began showing serious side-effects of the
many sleeping pills she had been taking for the last few
years...often groggy, lethargic and crying on the set.
The famous "skirt blowing" scene from the
"Seven Year Itch" , filmed in 1954 was to be a
hit with both amateur and professional photographers.
Several hundred, along with 2000 spectators gathered
outside the Trans-Lux Theater in
New York City
in the early morning hours of September 15th to see and
record her as she posed for over two hours for her
adoring fans.
In the fall of 1954 Marilyn and Joe separated...later to
divorce. On October 6, Jerry Giesler made a press
announcement and stated "...as her attorney, I am
speaking for her and can only say that the conflict of
careers has brought about this regrettable
necessity." With the press hounding her, Marilyn
answered in a choked voice, "I can't say anything
today. I'm sorry. I'm sorry."
"When
I married him (Joe), I wasn't sure of why I married him,
I have too many fantasies to be a housewife."
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