Robert Mitchum Talks About Marilyn Monroe
Mitchum discusses
Monroe
When I first met
Marilyn she was
Norma Jean Baker,
Norma Jean Dougherty as a matter of fact at that time.
And I was working at Lockheed.
Jim Dougherty was my partner and he had a picture of his bride. And she was very shy, very pleasant, very sweet. But uh, she was uh, not too comfortable around people because I suppose her background hadn't prepared her for sort of uh, easy sociality. She was convinced that she was not terribly pretty or sexy.
Really, you know. And as a matter of fact she did not, she didn't have an aura of sexiness about her. The drama coach
Natasha Lytess came into her life because I'm sure that Marilyn thought there was some magic in
Natasha. She felt she needed someone to support her, to tell her what she was doing right when she did do something right. She felt that this whole lark of being a sex goddess or glamor queen was just that. She would uh, play it if that's what they wanted and as a matter of fact she "burlesqued" it really because she thought the whole thing was very, very funny.
In
River of No Return Marilyn was cast opposite an old friend,
Robert Mitchum.
At that time, I didn't think she knew too many people who were very friendly to her.
Growing up in an atmosphere of agents, directors, and journalists, she seemed uh like a lost child. The whole thing to her, I mean her position in this atmosphere was uh like
Alice in Wonderland. The whole thing was through the looking glass and she could not believe that anyone was very serious about her.
She was a very special girl and she had an enormous feeling for, well just for people. When we came back from
Canada, and they were doing close-up work of the stuff we do on the raft in the white water. And there was a fellow in the tank blasting us with a high-pressure fire hose. And she suddenly looked over at him and started almost whimpering and I said, "
What is it?" She said, "
Look at him,", she said, "He'
s freezing". She said, "He's turning blue and I said, "
Good luck to him. He keeps hitting me with that
175 pound hose." And she made them take him out. She just stopped and said, "I can't. That man is suffering". And she stopped and she wouldn't work until they replaced him with somebody who was warmer.
She really felt she didn't have the inner qualifications to fulfill the image of the sex goddess. As a comedienne I think she was very comfortable. But she uh, she thought that the whole thing was a lie because it was not her. And uh, so she tried to wrap it up and was going to
New York and went to the
Actor's Studio and uh, she wanted to find some firm ground.
I should think that if Marilyn would be aware of the, the sort of legendary quality that she herself inspired I should think that no one would be more surprised than she because she never really felt worthy. She would feel that after her years of search that she had been finally and truly adopted.