The Scotsman

Marilyn and the original #metoo

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0 The Marilyn Conspiracy is gripping

decades rolled by, it began to unravel, and to be exposed by one writer after another as a tissue of lies. The Marilyn Conspiracy, an imperfect but utterly gripping new drama by Guy Masterson and Vicki

Mckellar, set in the living room of Marilyn’s Hollywood house in the six hours after her death, tells, to the best of our current knowledge, the shocking story of how and why that narrative was constructe­d, by the seven people closest to Marilyn at the time.

The play is desperatel­y confusing at first, and urgently needs to use its tableau-like opening moments to let the characters tell us exactly who they are; for those not already in the know, it takes more than half the play before it emerges that Patricia, the wife of Marilyn’s actor friend Peter Lawford, is actually the sister of President Jack Kennedy and Robert Kennedy, both of whom had had affairs with Marilyn.

It’s a measure of the sheer power of the story, though, that the play rivets the attention nonetheles­s, as the two doctors in the room, and even Marilyn’s furious friend Pat Newcombe, are gradually worn down into conniving with the suicide narrative. And most remarkable of all, 56 years on, is the extent to which this tale of casual sexual exploitati­on in Hollywood, and of powerful men willing to go to any lengths to silence women who might expose them, meshes perfectly with the #metoo moment in which we now find ourselves. Marilyn, too, knew all about sexual abuse in and around her industry; and it seems she may have paid the ultimate price of those who know too much, and who threaten to break their silence.

Jojo Desmond’s cabaret show The Marilyn Monroe Story is a fragile little piece by comparison, a brief and simply staged hour of songs and biographic­al narrative tracing Marilyn’s remarkable life, not least through versions of some of her most famous and fabulous costumes. Desmond sings Marilyn’s songs beautifull­y, in a nearperfec­t imitation of her breathily gorgeous voice; and she, too, observes the link with the #metoo moment. Her script, though, never soars into anything like the brilliant writing a life like Marilyn’s invites and for all her charm, she is a long way from even beginning to capture the glowing charisma of the woman herself.

JOYCE MCMILLAN

The Marilyn Conspiracy until 27 August, today 1:45pm. The Marilyn Monroe Story until 26 August, today 9:40pm.

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PICTURE: CONTRIBUTE­D

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