Monday, December 15, 2008

Will you love me in December?


Like any aspiring star in the studio system, Marilyn Monroe had to make her fair share of B-movies with a small role for her and a stock story. One such movie is As Young as You Feel (1951).

The movie is about a man who has reached the age of mandatory retirement at his big company. The company is so big that it is called the Acme Company, this originally is what made the studio system great. Anyway, the man wants to remain on the job as he has nothing to do in retirement and his family can’t stand having him around. So he decides to dress up as the president of the company and do a routine inspection of his branch’s plant in order to change the company policy.

Here is where the story has a bit of social value. It is an indictment of the big businesses in the capitalist system. No one at the branch knows what the president of the company looks like, so they believe the imposter. The head of the branch has a secretary who is played by Marilyn Monroe. She tries to calm her boss, but he is frantic and flustered when he meets the “president” of the company.

Things go well for our formerly retired hero as he tours the plant and makes sure the policy is rewritten. Things begin to go wrong though when he is asked to speak at a local business meeting and accepts. Newspapermen are there and snap the imposter’s picture. They run an article praising the “president” of the Acme Company for his great speech. Well, the real president of the company sees this and wants to know what is going on.

In the end, the man is exposed as an imposter, but gets to remain on the job even after the age of retirement because he likes it and has done a good job. Everything ends happily.

At least on the screen that is. In Marilyn Monroe’s personal life, some troubles occurred during the making of the movie. Her long time friend and agent Johnny Hyde took ill and died. Hyde was an agent at William and Morris and he got her the part in All About Eve (1950) and a nice seven-year contract with 20th Century-Fox. He even offered to marry her and leave all his money to her, but she didn’t accept as she didn’t truly love him. She did, however, make all the funeral arrangements.

One bright spot in Monroe’s personal life came while she was shooting a scene one day. Elia Kazan and Arthur Miller walked onto the set. Kazan wanted Miller to see Monroe. Why Elia Kazan would care a thing about an unknown bit-player is anybody's guess, but Miller was quite impressed by Marilyn Monroe. She felt the same about him. This first impression each got of the other lasted a long time and when both were available, they married.

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