In confidential recordings made for her therapist, Hollywood icon Marilyn Monroe did not disclose any involvement with JFK but expressed regret over her inability to end a relationship with his married brother Bobby, a shocking report reveals.
The actress also disclosed a brief encounter with fellow actress Joan Crawford and her enduring love for former husband Joe DiMaggio, while expressing dissatisfaction with the intimacy in her marriage to playwright Arthur Miller, as per records obtained by the Los Angeles Times.
On the 43rd anniversary of Monroe's passing, former L.A. County prosecutor John Miner shared previously unpublished transcripts of tape recordings purportedly created by the actress for Dr. Ralph Greenson just before her death.
Although the actual tapes were reportedly destroyed by Greenson, Miner claims to have taken extensive notes when the psychiatrist played them during an investigation into Monroe's fatal drug overdose in 1962.
Now aged 86, Miner decided to unveil the transcripts because he disputes the notion that the star of “Some Like It Hot” and “The Misfits” committed suicide, believing that the therapy sessions demonstrate her happiness and optimism about the future, the newspaper reported.
Contrary to the image often portrayed by the media of a distressed woman on the verge of self-destruction, the 36-year-old Monroe appeared cheerful and positive in the transcripts.
She attributed her recovery from s–ual issues to the therapist and openly discussed her relationships with husbands, lovers, and acquaintances, including DiMaggio, President Kennedy, and Frank Sinatra.
In her own words, sometimes referring to herself in the third person, Monroe expressed her thoughts as follows, based on the transcripts:
Regarding JFK, she declared, ”