What Marilyn Monroe Reveals About Resonance

    Marilyn Monroe didn’t just appear in Hollywood with the voice we recognize today. She built it.

    In this episode of Read the Room, we listen closely to the evolution of Marilyn Monroe’s voice. From her early films to the persona that became one of the most recognizable and resonant signals in cinema.

    Along the way, Marilyn herself offers clues about what she was doing, why she worked the way she did, and what resonance really means.

    Chapters:
    00:00 Marilyn Monroe: The Phenomenon
    00:39 The Voice Transformation: Before | After
    02:12 What Did Marilyn Do: In Her Words
    03:30 On Being Late, Rushing, and Nerves
    04:558 Her Philosophy on Performance & Discipline
    06:05 The Reality of Resonance
    07:39 Final Scene: Some Like It Hot

    Interview footage:
    Marilyn on Marilyn — BBC Documentary (2001) featuring archival audio interviews conducted by Life Magazine and Marie Claire (France) in 1962, less than a month before Marilyn Monroe’s death.

    Share.

    26 Comments

    1. Marilyn uses different voices according to the role that she was playing. If you watch Bus Stop, for instance, she sounds like the sweet hillbilly that she's supposed to be in the film. If you watch Clash By Night she sounds like the regular girl that she's supposed to be. The same thing goes for The Prince & the Showgirl, Don't Bother to Knock, Gentlemen Prefer Blondes etc.

    2. Such a great analysis of Marilyn! She would of loved a film about her life from you, as this is true. I watched blonde and it was so disrespectful. Marilyn had so many sides to her personality and really was a great actress

    3. People really undermined her intelligence simply because they were so distracted by their own fantasies about her
      I'm going to even go out on a limb by saying that she actually mayve been the most intelligent person in the room….its such a shame that pretty much across the board people really seem to think that SOME LIKE IT HOT was her best film….yes sure at hypersexualizing her …and from reading one finds that this was truly something that pained her deeply she really had a desire a longing to get serious roles and to be received as a respected thespian rather than the cutest silliest most sexually desired gal in the room.. .They shortchanged her …

    4. 5:30 She used the word "disciplined" as a synonym for "punished." She felt she shouldn't be punished (for being late, slow, whatever) while she's at work because her work is art and cannot be hurried or forced and certainly shouldn't be punished. That's how I interpreted it.

    5. Her main problems are her films and her parts–the same problems lots of actors have. Most if her films are junk and her parts are not challenging. For example, no one asked her to be in Three Faces of Eve, did they? Or The Miracle Worker, did they? Or The Children's Hour, did they?

      She simply couldn't break out of Marilyn–not in her mind, but in the minds of those who cast films. They simply never thought of her in these types of roles. And of course, she didn't have the drive to be like Lucy–start her own company (although she did have a company), commission or buy her own scripts, make her own films and get the parts she wanted that way. For example, she wanted to be Grushenka in Brothers K. But it never occurred to her to go out there, raise the money, pay for a movie treatment, and make the damned film.

      Shelley Winters always wondered what the hell Marilyn would have done if she had lived. She couldn't go on playing the breathy, bubbly ingenue forever. Would they have cast her in Virginia Woolf? Never! How about Network? Never!

      See what I mean. She died at just the right time to perpetuate the Marilyn image she created. I mean, can you see her at 70? What on earth would she be doing?

      She's one of those people to be seen in isolation, almost as if you blacked out the entire rest of the film and just looked at her. Jerry Lewis is another such person, although for him you should also turn the sound down. Just watch him move.

    6. voice changes with age, in her case hardly since she died young, the roles that you show here, the speech and tone was actually accordingly to the part: efficient secretary or naive seduccion

    7. Speaking like a baby is the thing I could never get past with Marilyn. Marilyn plays at being dumb like the snow plays at being white.

    8. You lost me completely when you said, ‘she has so much class.’ Ludicrous – she was the antithesis of ‘class.’

    Leave A Reply