The Academy Museum of Motion Pictures comes down firmly on the side of agency. Opening May 31 to coincide with the centennial of her birth, Marilyn Monroe: Hollywood Icon explores how the star’s public image was created during the heyday of the Hollywood studio system. Associate Curator Sophia Serrano says the show is designed to reach visitors who know Monroe’s face better than her films. They may recognize the look but not understand the story.
The exhibition opens with costumes—what Serrano calls the “hook”—before moving through items reflecting the publicity machinery that swirled around her, a film montage, and archival material including footage from Monroe’s unfinished final film, Something’s Got to Give (1962). Evidence of Monroe’s image-making precision turns up in the contact sheets from her photography sessions, where she went through the images and crossed out any she didn’t want used. “You start to realize this is not just some kind of phenomenon,” Serrano says. “It was a very carefully planned, orchestrated image.”
















