Wednesday, January 21, 2009

"I think it's just elegant to have an imagination. I just have no imagination at all. I have lots of other things, but I have no imagination."


Controversy was never far from Marilyn Monroe. Her career was filled with scandals and her personal life was far from perfect. She was able to do on-screen what no other actress was capable of doing, despite her problems.

The role she is most associate with today, or at least the image that is most associated with her, is of The Girl in The Seven Year Itch (1955).

The Seven Year Itch began as a successful sex comedy on Broadway. It was one of the hot properties of its Broadway season. But there were going to be some problems for any studio that picked the project up. Some of the dialogue from the play was too racy for censors at this time period.

Fox won the bidding war and went to work on rewriting the play. Director and writer Billy Wilder worked with playwright George Axelrod to tone down the dialogue. It was Wilder’s idea to keep the dialogue mild, but use the actors to create the sexual tension present in the play. There was no actress who exhibited sexuality like Marilyn Monroe. She got the part of The Girl and Tom Ewell reprised his lead role from the Broadway play.

Fox made an agreement with Axelrod that the movie would not be released until the play had finished its Broadway run. This didn’t work out quite how Fox had hoped. When the public found out that Marilyn Monroe was going to be in the movie – they rushed to see the play again. When they saw what she was going to be doing the movie – they rushed to see the play again. Fox ended up having to pay Axelrod a lot of money so they could release the movie because Marilyn Monroe’s unintended publicity prevented the play from closing.

One of the most iconic images in movies is Marilyn Monroe in a white dress, having her skirt blown up by a subway train while she and Tom Ewell are leaving a movie. Wilder and company intended to shoot the scene at 2 a.m. when they thought no one would be around the theater. They were wrong as location of the site was released and people learned what the scene was going to be about. After much trouble, Wilder was able to calm down the hundreds of spectators so he could get the scene shot.

One of the spectators was Marilyn’s husband, Joe DiMaggio. The group of people snapping pictures and whistling at his wife did not sit well with him. He would leave the city for the West Coast the day after. The marriage between Monroe and DiMaggio would end soon after as well because of the incident. DiMaggio did not want Marilyn to have a movie career, especially one that subjected her to being whistled at by all kinds of men.

The footage from the New York street was unusable for Wilder because of all the noise. It had to be re-shot in the studio. It was a much tamer version of what people on the New York street saw.

As for the story of the movie, Tom Ewell plays a husband and father who has been married for seven years. His wife and son leave New York for New England to escape the summer heat. Ewell has to stay home and get work done. He works for a dime paperback company and is reading over the manuscript a psychologist has written that describes “the seven year itch” married men have. The psychologist believes that after seven years of marriage, the male gets the itch to have an affair with another woman, but he still loves his wife.

Ewell has the unfortunate luck of meeting Marilyn Monroe, who is an aspiring actress and happens to be renting out the apartment above Ewell’s for the summer. The summer heat is particularly hot and Marilyn does not have any air conditioning in her apartment. Ewell happens to have some, so Marilyn spends a lot of time there trying to cool down. Ewell of course believes she is there because she likes him.

Ewell makes advances that Marilyn rejects. Eventually he realizes that what he is trying to do is wrong and begins to think of his family. His son forgot his paddle for his kayak and Ewell finally remembers he has to mail it. The movie ends with Ewell vowing to take the paddle to his son while Marilyn waves goodbye to him from his apartment window.

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