Dear Dorian---
Wilder never could make up his mind on her. For years after her death he either called her "the meanest woman I ever met in Hollywood," or cry that she was no longer alive to make films. Apparently, he was somehow offended by the "cult" of MM that grew after her death. As if anybody really cared one way or another what he thought. And I am not so sure on the "pain" she caused him. I think they were both power-tripping during "SLIH." And she was pregnant again. There were no major problems, other than her already legendary tardiness, during "The Seven Year Itch." He would even praise her for preforming so well under the strain of the DiMaggio marriage collapsing. Of course, when she abandoned Hollywood, he joined in with everybody else, mocking her. (How many of Wilder's cruel 1954/55 remarks came back to her, as she worked on "Hot" I wonder?)
Marilyn herself was disappointed in her screen time in "Some Like It Hot." She wrote to her friend Norman Rosten about it, after the premiere. Rosten seemed to agree that there should have been more of her, but tried to assure her she was fabulous anyway. And yet ,with screen time on her mind, how could she have accepted a REALLY minor role in "Let's Make Love." It boggles the mind. As if Arthur Miller knew a thing about writing comedy?! His lines for her are absurd, like a rough draft of "The Misfits." And her character has nothing to do. During production of "The Misfits" she would say in an interview that "Let's Make Love" was incredibly difficult because: "There was absolutely nothing for that girl to do!"
Marilyn was depressed over the Show Business Illustrated story--which was one of quite a few suggesting that she was fading. But when she accidentally ran into the author of the piece--an old friend--she said, "Do you really believe what you wrote? Do you think my career is over?" He was embarrassed, and MM let him off the hook. She laughed: "Oh, forget it. I'm sure that's just the way they wanted the story to read."
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