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Check stubs from Twentieth Century-Fox
Film Corporation and MCA Artists, LTD for the "Services of Marilyn
Monroe," week ending January 2, 1960. These payment documents
likely reference compensation for Marilyn's performance in 1960's "Let's
Make Love."


"Let's Make Love"
This
Cinemascope musical comedy
scripted by Norman Krasna as The Billionaire was brought to
Marilyn by producer Jerry Wald as Fox stepped up the pressure for
her to honor her studio commitments. In 1955 she had agreed to
do four films for Fox, but before Let's Make Love went into
production she had only done Bus Stop (1956). Initially
Billy wilder was a front runner for the director's chair.
Apparently he was willing to try again after the harrowing
experience of working together on Some Like It Hot, but he
already was contracted to do The Apartment. George
Cukor was summoned as his replacement. He too had difficulties
with Marilyn, and reputedly did a great deal of his communication
through choreographer Jack Cole.
Marilyn's reputation made it next to
impossible to find a make lead for this movie, a character rumored
to be closely modeled after Howard Hughes. Before Yves Montand
was offered the role, it was turned down by a "who's who" of
Hollywood's headliners: Yul Brenner, Cary Grant, Rock Hudson,
Charlton Heston, William Holden, Gregory Peck, and James Stewart.
It was Marilyn who suggested Montand; the studio was not happy, but
she insisted, and Marilyn got her man, in more ways than one.
Their very public love affair spelled the beginning of the end of
Marilyn's marriage to Arthur Miller, and came close to unraveling
Montand's union with Simone Signoret.
There were script troubles too.
Miller returned from Ireland, where he had been working with John
Huston on the script for The Misfits, to do some emergency
work on Let's Make Love. "Before production, I did some
rewriting of a couple of scenes: "I tried to give some point
between these two featureless figures. When they talked, there
was no character, no motivation, and so I stepped in and did what I
could for the script. But we were beating a dead horse."
The biggest delays during filming were
not due to Marilyn's lateness or illness, they were because of a
strike by actors to preserve residual payments. The Writers
Guild came out in support too, though this was precisely at the time
when Arthur was doing the rewrites.
Marilyn sang four songs for the film:
"My Heart Belongs to Daddy" by Cole Porter, and "Let's Make Love,"
"Incurably Romantic," and "Specialization" by Sammy Cahn and James
Van Heusen. Marilyn's rendition of "My Heart Belongs to Daddy"
is remarkable for the effortlessness of her performance, the result
of at least two weeks of rehearsal.
Rather ominously, the planned premiere
in Reno had to be cancelled because of a power outage. The
movie bombed. Critical write-ups were almost all scathing, and
the public stayed away. Inside Hollywood, gossip circulated
that Marilyn's star was on the wane. Outside America, the film
was renamed The Millionaire.
Important activities in Marilyn's life
around this time include:
- Marilyn officially begins work on
Let's Make Love - November 9
- The first part of one of Marilyn's
musical numbers in the film is finally completed - January 25
- Marilyn receives a Golden Globe
award for Best Actress in a Comedy, for Some Like It Hot -
March 8
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