| |
|
Nevada History: The Real Story As Told By State
Archivist
Marilyn
Monroe: Mystery and Myth
by Guy Rocha, Nevada State Archivist
Marilyn Monroe, the blonde "sex-goddess" died a tragic
death on August 5, 1962 in Los Angeles. The coroner ruled the actress' death
at age 36 a suicide, albeit under mysterious circumstances.
There were many connections to Nevada during her short
life, beginning with the divorce in Las Vegas in September 1946 from first
husband James Dougherty at the tender age of 20, to her last visit in July
1962 to Frank Sinatra's Cal-Neva Lodge at Crystal Bay, Lake Tahoe, with
actor Peter Lawford, a member of Sinatra's colorful "Rat Pack" and John F.
Kennedy's brother-in-law.
The biggest mystery...more likely myth...associated
with her Nevada connection is that Marilyn Monroe's now well-known affair
with President Kennedy included a tryst at the Cal-Neva Lodge. Local
reporters tried to determine the last sitting president to visit Lake Tahoe
prior to Bill Clinton and focused on John Kennedy. "The juiciest piece of
the Kennedy rumors," wrote the Tahoe Daily Tribune/North Lake Tahoe
Bonanza (July 27, 1997), "stems from an alleged secret rendezvous with
actress Marilyn Monroe on the North Shore." The story has been resurrected
again with the proposed destruction of the vintage cabins at the Cal-Neva
Lodge by its current owner.
The one documented account of John Kennedy visiting
Lake Tahoe was as a Massachusetts U.S. Senator seeking the Democratic
nomination for the presidency of the United States. Governor Grant Sawyer
had arranged for Kennedy to address a joint session of the state legislature
in Carson City on Monday, February 1, 1960. A reception was scheduled for
Sunday evening at the Governor's Mansion followed by a talk at the civic
auditorium. "When Kennedy and Pierre Salinger and their party got to Reno,"
according to Governor Sawyer in his oral history Hang Tough (1993),
"they eluded the press and sneaked off in a car and went up to Lake Tahoe
and looked it over before coming to Carson City."
According to Richard Ham, a Sawyer aide and senior
adviser, Kennedy was staying at the Riverside Hotel. The Senator asked Ham
to provide him with a car that he could drive alone to Lake Tahoe before
going to Carson City. Kennedy apparently visited the Cal-Neva Lodge after a
stop at Squaw Valley, the site of the 1960 Winter Olympics.
However, it was virtually impossible that Marilyn
Monroe was there at Lake Tahoe to greet the aspiring presidential candidate.
Monroe, by all accounts, was in Hollywood at the time rehearsing scenes for
the movie "Let's Make Love". Her marriage to third husband, playwright
Arthur Miller, was clearly troubled and would soon end in divorce. At the
time, she pursued a short-lived affair with co-star Yves Montand.
Some writers conjecture that Monroe was also having an
affair with Senator Kennedy while he was campaigning in the Los Angeles
area. Donald Spoto, the most rigorous and careful of Marilyn's biographers,
wrote in 1993 that the so-called "love affair" between Kennedy and Monroe
was fleeting and did not begin until after the first documented meeting in
October 1961 at Peter and Patricia Kennedy Lawford's Santa Monica beach
house. In fact, Spoto claimed Monroe was intimate only once with Kennedy on
March 24, 1962, when both the president and Marilyn were Bing Crosby's house
guests in Palm Springs.
If Spoto is right that any other claims to the contrary
cannot be substantiated, then Marilyn Monroe's getaways to Lake Tahoe during
and after the filming of Arthur Miller's "The Misfits" had nothing to do
with John Kennedy, and more to do with her attraction to Frank Sinatra.
Filming in Nevada began in July 1960 in Reno, and concluded in October after
scenes had been shot in and around Dayton and Pyramid Lake. At long last,
Monroe worked with her childhood film idol Clark Gable, who from an early
age growing up in Los Angeles represented the father she never knew.
Ironically, both Monroe and Gable had experienced Las Vegas divorces, Gable
from his second wife Ria Langham in 1939, and Monroe from James Dougherty in
1946. Meanwhile, in the summer and fall of 1960, John Kennedy was busy
campaigning for the presidency of the United States after winning the
Democratic nomination at the Los Angeles convention in July.
There is nothing on record at the JFK Presidential
Library in Boston that identifies President Kennedy, officially or
unofficially, visiting Lake Tahoe or northern Nevada prior to his
assassination in Dallas in November 1963. Marilyn Monroe is known to have
made her last visit to Lake Tahoe at the invitation of the Lawfords during
the weekend of July 27-29, 1962 just prior to her apparent suicide. The
events surrounding Marilyn's short stay at Sinatra's Cal-Neva Lodge are
controversial, confusing, and contested, making it very hard to separate
fact from fiction. We know that she met Dean Martin briefly to discuss a
movie project. Joe DiMaggio, her second husband was there, and according to
one account there was a reconciliation and talk of marriage. Still other
accounts have Peter Lawford telling Monroe that all communication with John
and Bobby Kennedy was cut off. There have even been unsubstantiated claims
that Monroe tried to commit suicide or was drugged while staying at the
Cal-Neva.
The truth in its entirety will likely never be known
about the JFK-Monroe affair. However, the stories about a liaison between
John Kennedy and Marilyn Monroe at Lake Tahoe are unsupported, and may well
represent a titillating, modern-day presidential version of the "George
Washington slept here" myth.
|
|
|