The Jewish Princess
With a selection of photographs from Marilyn, a Biography, Pictures by the World’s Foremost Photographers
It is a year in which a movie star can be persecuted in the press for open left-wing associations. Marilyn Monroe is beginning to capture the imagination of America’s intellectuals; grudgingly, they are obliged to contemplate the remote possibility that she is not so much a movie star as a major figure in American life—of a new sort! Of course, they will not move too far in this direction until her death. But since European intellectuals are agog at this new portrait—America persecuting Arthur Miller, its outstanding author, and its most attractive movie star in a neo-McCarthian wholly sophomoric hysteria, et cetera—the State Department quietly intervenes, and Miller and Monroe have held their first fort. He gets the passport. They can be married and go to England to make The Prince and the Showgirl with Laurence Olivier.