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60 Minutes Overtime shares one of our
favorite stories from the 60 Minutes archives. Originally aired on
November 15, 1987, it's a revealing interview between Mike Wallace
and the man who, in many respects, was an unlikely match for Monroe:
the star's husband for 5 years, Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright
Arthur Miller.
His name graced the pages of the
theater section, while hers was splashed across tabloids and gossip
columns. But in fact, Miller said, Monroe was the innocent one,
particularly as she moved into the role of wife and step-mother. But
at the end of the day, "she wanted to be a star," Miller
told Wallace, and that's ultimately what killed her.
Arthur Miller was 72 years old at the
time of the interview, and 25 years had passed since the death of his
former wife. Nevertheless, Wallace managed to strike a chord with
Miller when the two men reflected on Monroe:
WALLACE: Your face changes when you
talk about her.
MILLER: Excuse me?
WALLACE: Your face changes when you
talk about her.
MILLER: In what way?
WALLACE: Well I think you still –
those were tough years. Wonderful years and terrible years.
MILLER: Sure they were. Oh, there was a
lot of pain certainly for her and certainly for me.
WALLACE: Why? What did it do to you?
MILLER: Well, it's a defeat. It always
is.
During their relationship, Miller wrote
the screenplay for "The Misfits," with the lead role played
by Monroe. She played a wounded young woman, who falls in love with a
much older man. It would be her last film.
Despite the success of 1961's "The
Misfits," Miller's marriage to Monroe had been struggling for
months, and the couple ultimately separated. In addition to drug and
alcohol dependency, Monroe had endured several miscarriages and was
battling depression.
"I guess to be frank about it, I
was taking care of her. I was trying to keep her afloat," Miller
told Wallace. "She was a super-sensitive instrument, and that's
exciting to be around until it starts to self-destruct."
When Wallace asked Miller if he knew
Monroe's life was destined for disaster, he said, "I didn't know
it was doomed, but I certainly felt it had a good chance to be."
Less than two years later, Monroe was found dead at the age of 36 in
her California home.
(from CBS 60 minutes archives)