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Film

Review: My Week With Marylin

November 28, 2011 11:00
Michelle Williams as Marilyn

ByJonathan Foreman, Jonathan Foreman

1 min read

Marilyn Monroe's appeal can seem hard to understand today. Her strange mixture of innocence, voluptuousness, dumb-blondeness and little-girlishness are as alien to contemporary sexual tastes as the heavyweight beauties in baroque paintings. Nevertheless, the doomed, damaged, superhumanly glamorous star remains an object of fascination almost five decades after her death.

Monroe's latest screen reincarnation is based on the memoirs of Colin Clark, who was an assistant on The Prince and the Showgirl. This was the movie that brought Monroe to Britain and into an impossible professional relationship with Sir Lawrence Olivier, who both directed the comedy and starred in it.

Clark's books recount the tensions and misunderstandings between classically trained Olivier and Monroe, with her "method" training, her unprofessional lateness, and the drugs she used to keep her unhappiness and insecurities at bay.

Clark was starstruck by Monroe, who in turn was thrilled to find a sympathetic Englishman on set, and the 24-year-old youth and the 30-year-old recently married megastar spent a mostly innocent but erotically tinged week together in the English countryside in the middle of the troubled production.