Eunice Murray
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Eunice Murray (1902 - May 3, 1993) is famous for being Marilyn Monroe's housekeeper who was present in the actress' house at the time she died there. Murray has been accused by many authors and LAPD Sergeant Jack Clemmons of being involved in a cover-up of Monroe's death,[1] although no one has proven what Murray's motive was or whom, if anyone, she was aiding and abetting.
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[edit] Early life
She was born Eunice Joerndt in Chicago and raised in Urbana, Ohio, as a Swedenborgian. She was educated at the Swedenborgian Urbana School and Academy until she dropped out at age sixteen in 1918. In 1921, she married John Murray and went on to have three children with him: Jaquelyn, Patricia and Marilyn. By the end of the Second World War in 1945, the Murrays were living in Santa Monica in a Monterrey-style five-bedroom house, which, after she and her husband separated, Eunice sold to psychiatrist Ralph Greenson in 1946. Greenson and other psychiatrists subsequently hired Eunice Murray as a support worker for some of their most prestigious clients. Murray never identified any psychiatrists for whom she may have worked besides Greenson, nor is it known which prestigious people, if any, she may have helped besides Monroe. It is not clear what her husband John Murray did for a living or when he died.
[edit] Eunice Murray and Marilyn Monroe
In 1961, Dr. Ralph Greenson advised Marilyn Monroe, then living in an apartment on North Doheny Drive in Beverly Hills, to recruit Murray as a housekeeper/companion. When Monroe decided to buy a house, Murray located the small dwelling, which had no closets,[2] on Fifth Helena Drive in Brentwood in which Monroe was to spend the last months of her life. After Monroe moved into it, Murray began spending many nights there, although she kept an apartment in nearby Santa Monica. Murray began (according to the testimonies of Monroe's friends) reporting to Greenson on the actress' daily activities. Murray accompanied Monroe on her publicized visit to Mexico in February 1962, even introducing the star to some openly communist people south of the border whose association with Monroe caused the FBI to investigate the actress as a possible risk to national security.
In an attempt to assert her independence from Greenson, Monroe fired Murray in May 1962 but shortly afterward rehired her. However, in August 1962 when Murray requested a month's holiday, Monroe granted it, paid her, and asked her not to return. After spending Friday night, August 3, 1962 at her apartment, Murray arrived at Monroe's house the next day for her last contracted day of work, just hours before Monroe died. Murray said consistently to police and reporters in 1962 and to author Robert Slatzer in 1973 that she and Monroe, the only people in the house, retired to their separate rooms late Saturday evening with Monroe aware that she would be spending the night. When Murray awoke at approximately 3:00 a.m. and knocked on Monroe's door, the actress did not answer. In a 1975 memoir, Murray changed her story slightly, recalling that the sight of a telephone extension cord running under Monroe's bedroom door caused her, at approximately 3:00 a.m., to use another extension to call Dr. Greenson. (In 1962 she had told police that she had contacted Greenson after becoming alarmed by Monroe's bedroom light shining through the space under the door.) In 1985 Murray made major changes to her story by claiming that Robert Kennedy was in the house at some point on Saturday and that "the doctor" arrived to help Monroe while she was unconscious but alive. Murray never said, however, that Monroe might have wanted her out of the house.
Murray never wavered in her claim that during her telephone conversation with Greenson, he instructed her to go outside and look through Monroe's bedroom window. Murray then supposedly saw the actress lying "in an unnatural position," reported this to Greenson and he arrived at the house, broke the window and entered Monroe's room aware that she was dead.
Many days later, when Murray attempted to cash her last paycheck from Monroe, it was declined and marked "deceased." This check, one of the last that Monroe ever wrote on her Roxbury Drive Branch account at City National Bank in Beverly Hills, is today on display at the Hollywood Heritage Museum.
After Monroe's death, Murray lived quietly in various locations in West Los Angeles. From the mid 1960s until the mid 1970s, Murray rented a guest cottage in Santa Monica from relatives of the actor, Richard Cromwell, who had died in 1960. While there in 1973, she was interviewed by Robert Slatzer. In a photograph of them together that is published in his 1974 book The Life and Curious Death of Marilyn Monroe, Murray appears to be laughing.[3] During her years in the guest cottage she pursued her many interests, including sewing, macrame, horticulture, astrology, babysitting, and letter writing. In the mid 1970s she married Franklin Blackmer, a Swedenborgian minister, and moved east with him to Bath, Maine. After his death, she returned to her family in Southern California, living close to Monroe's former home in Brentwood. A crew from the BBC videotaped Murray talking inside "a rundown apartment in Santa Monica" in 1985, according to Anthony Summers,[4] who was interviewing her. Later, Murray lived with her daughter in Tucson, Arizona, until her death in 1993.
After Slatzer found her and talked with her, Eunice Murray published a 1975 memoir, Marilyn: The Last Months (co-authored by Rose Shade) and later talked with other biographers and journalists, including Anthony Scaduto, about Monroe. It was not until she met Anthony Summers, however, that she admitted that Monroe had known the Kennedys or that "the doctor" had been in the star's house while she was unconscious but alive. Donald Wolfe, an author who began work on The Last Days of Marilyn Monroe shortly before Murray's death, theorized that everything in her story was a lie, including her retiring for bed late Saturday evening (with Monroe's approval) and the 3:00 a.m. awakening and phone call to Dr. Greenson.[5] Wolfe based the theory on an interview he conducted with a man who had been Murray's son-in-law in 1962.[6] When the man told Wolfe his story in 1992, he was confined to a wheelchair in his Arkansas home.[7] He died within a year,[8] as did Eunice Murray. It is not known why Murray might have fabricated her story, who coached her (if anyone) or if she simply began experiencing senior moments.
Donald Spoto, working on a Monroe biography in the early 1990s and Rachael Bell, making a television documentary years later, both concluded that Murray was covering up an inadvertently fatal dose of a sedative that a well-meaning person had given a despondent Monroe by enema. Although Spoto and Bell did not investigate the story together, they agree that Murray had no connection to U.S. government officials or criminals. Barbara Leaming, whose Monroe biography came out within weeks of Wolfe's, does not believe that Eunice Murray played a sinister part in the events of August 4-5, 1962.
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- ^ Wolfe, Donald H. The Last Days of Marilyn Monroe. (1998) ISBN-10: 0787118079
- ^ Hitchens, Neal and Riese, Randall. The Unabridged Marilyn: Her Life From A To Z. New York: Congdon & Weed, 1987, p. 88
- ^ Slatzer, Robert. The Life and Curious Death of Marilyn Monroe. New York: Pinnacle Books, Inc., 1975, photo section
- ^ Summers, Anthony. Goddess: The Secret Lives of Marilyn Monroe. New York: Onyx, 1986
- ^ Wolfe, Donald H. The Last Days of Marilyn Monroe. (1998) ISBN-10: 0787118079
- ^ Wolfe, Donald H. The Last Days of Marilyn Monroe. (1998) ISBN-10: 0787118079
- ^ Wolfe, Donald H. The Last Days of Marilyn Monroe. (1998) ISBN-10: 0787118079
- ^ Wolfe, Donald H. The Last Days of Marilyn Monroe. (1998) ISBN-10: 0787118079
[edit] Further reading
- Marilyn Monroe: The Biography, by Donald Spoto (1993)
- Marilyn: The Last Months, by Eunice Murray, with Rose Shade (published in paperback by Pyramid Books, 1975)
- The Life and Curious Death of Marilyn Monroe, by Robert Slatzer, published in hardback by Pinnacle Books, Inc., 1974. Includes a 1973 photograph of Murray with Slatzer.