More famous as a sex goddess than an actress, her personal fame has far outlived all but a handful of Marilyn Monroe's movie roles. Long before women’s lib, Monroe tired of being typecast as a dimwit sexpot, even as the roles in high-profile classic movies brought her fame and fortune.
Never a truly great actress, the tragic beauty nevertheless delivered a few performances that showed solid comic chops and real dramatic ability. Her skills improved after her late-career studies with legendary coach Lee Strasberg at the Actor’s Studio in New York. Here are a few of her notable films.
1. ‘All About Eve’ - 1950
This Best Picture winner belongs to Bette Davis in a bravura role as a fading Broadway leading lady. Monroe had only a bit part in All About Eve, but this early performance cemented her status as the go-to dumb blonde and archteypical gold digger in classic Hollywood movies. Despite the limited screen time, her star quality is evident. She sparkles in the role of theater critic George Saunders arm-candy date at a disastrous birthday party for the star.
2. 'Gentlemen Prefer Blondes’ - 1953
3. ‘The Seven-Year Itch’ - 1955
Director Billy Wilder drew a solid comic performance from his difficult star in this dated version of a stage hit about a businessman tempted by his sexy neighbor while his wife’s away. Mildly amusing, The Seven-Year Itch produced the most famous film image of all time: the skirts of Marilyn’s white halter dress billowing about her as she stands on a New York City subway grate. The ‘50s plot sensibility can be summed up in the fact that her character doesn’t even have a name. She’s known only as “The Girl.“
4. ‘Bus Stop’ - 1956
5. ‘Some Like it Hot’ - 1959
Four years after Seven-Year Itch, Monroe hid in her trailer, drank too much, took pills and generally behaved so badly off-screen that director Billy Wilder vowed never to work with her again. Yet despite take after take when the actress couldn't remember her lines, Wilder drew out her finest comic performance in a movie that the American Film Institute has dubbed the greatest American comedy of all time. Her ditsy, bubbly Sugar Kowalski is simply terrific, played opposite Tony Curtis and a brilliantly funny Jack Lemmon in drag.







