John Gilmore: Inside Marilyn Monroe

Please scroll down to read the review in English

Joskus kirja jää roikkumaan. Hankin John Gilmoren Inside Marilyn Monroen jo vuonna 2007, kun se ilmestyi, mutta luin sen kokonaan vasta nyt. Gilmore itsekin on näyttelijä, joka kohtasi Marilynin niin Los Angelesissa kuin New Yorkissakin.



Gilmoren ja Marilynin lapsuudet olivat joissain määrin samankaltaisia. Kumpikin syntyi Los Angelesissa, kummankin äiti antoi lapsensa toisten kasvatettavaksi (vaikka Gladys vierailikin Norma Jeanen luona ja otti lopulta tytön luokseen asumaan), ja kummankin lapsuus oli vähemmän perinteinen. Molemmat halusivat näytellä ja olivat nuoria Hollywoodissa samaan aikaan.

Gilmore aloittaa ensitapaamisestaan Marilynin kanssa. Siitä hän siirtyy sulavasti Marilynin lapsuuteen, nuoruuteen ja eteenpäin. Kirjan tunnelma on jotenkin surullinen, paikoittain jopa synkkä. Gilmore ei piirrä Hollywoodista kuvaa unelmien maana. Loppua kohden Marilynin tarina muuttuu yhä traagisemmaksi, ja viimeisen päivän kuvaus on dramaattisempi kuin se muiden lähteiden valossa todennäköisesti oli. Tämä on ehkä Gilmoren ainoa erehdys.



Kirjasta välittyy tunne, että Gilmore tuntee jonkinlaista sielunsukulaisuutta Marilynin kanssa. Hän ei yritä väittää harrastaneensa seksiä Marilynin kanssa tai muutenkaan suurentele heidän suhdettaan. Hän ei vähättele Marilynia. Kyseessä on Marilyn-kirja, ei Gilmore-kirja. Jälkisanoissa (Send in the Clowns) Gilmore suomii Slatzeria ja muita, jotka ovat tehneet itsensä kuuluisiksi ja ansainneet rahaa vääristelemällä Marilynia, hänen elämäänsä ja hänen kuolemaansa.

Suosittelisinko Inside Marilynia ensimmäiseksi Marilyn-kirjaksi. En ehkä. Kirja on kuitenkin hyvä lisä niille, jotka haluavat tietää enemmän Marilynista.



Sometimes a book is left hanging. I got Inside Marilyn Monroe by John Gilmore in 2007 when it was published, but didn't read it in full until now. I had read some of it. Gilmore himself is an actor who met Marilyn in Los Angeles as well as in New York.




Their childhoods parallel in interesting ways. Both were born in Los Angeles, given away by their mothers to be raised by other people (although we know Gladys visited Norma Jeane and after a while, took her to live with her), and had a less than traditional childhood. Both wanted to act and were young in Hollywood at the same time. 

Gilmore begins with the first time he met Marilyn. From there he moves on to cover her childhood, her youth and so on. The writing feels sad, even grim at times. Gilmore doesn't paint a picture of Hollywood as a land of dreams. Towards the end Marilyn's story changes to an even more dramatic one, and the description of her last day is more tragic than it actually was in the light of information from other credible sources. This is perhaps Gilmore's only error.




From the book I get the impression that Gilmore feels a special connection to her, almost protective. He doesn't try to claim to have slept with her, or make their relationship anything bigger than it actually was. He also doesn't look down on her. He lets the reader know something about himself, but not by stealing the spotlight away from Marilyn. This is still a Marilyn book. In the afterword, Send in the Clowns, Gilmore lashes out at Slatzer and others, who have made themselves famous and made money with fabricated stories about Marilyn, her life and her death.

Would I recommend Inside Marilyn as a first Marilyn book? Probably not. It is however a good one for those seeking to know more about her.

Comments

  1. Gilmore was a pathological liar and writer of fiction. As an expert on MM, I'd bet if you dedicated a few hours to researching things in the book that you were unaware of before reading it. You'll find its because they aren't true. A review from another blog said "For example he says his mother was “a boozing pal” of Jean Harlow and was on the set of Flying Down to Rio when it collapsed in the Long Beach earthquake. With today’s online newspaper archives, we can confirm in a few keystrokes that the quake occurred March 10, 1933, while pre-production for Flying Down to Rio didn’t begin until at least a month later. Once you get wise to Gilmore, the lies jump off the page like fleas.”

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