New York Post

THE KISS OF DEATH

- By ASIA GRACE

Just after 3 a.m. on Aug. 5, 1962, mere hours after arguing with her supposed lover — then-US Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy — at her Brentwood, Calif., estate., Marilyn Monroe’s nude, lifeless body was reportedly found by her housekeepe­r. As the story goes, the glamorous star was surrounded by several bottles of sleeping pills and, an hour or so later, the police arrived on the scene.

High-profile affairs

But some say that’s not quite how it happened.

“No, she wasn’t [dead at home],” says ambulance company owner Walter Schaefer in the new Netflix documentar­y “The Mystery of Marilyn Monroe: The Unheard Tapes,” out tomorrow.

One of his former drivers, Ken Hunter, had been dispatched to Monroe’s home on the night of her death. Schaefer says that the silverscre­en superstar was comatose, but alive, when Hunter picked her up and began transporti­ng her to an emergency room in Santa Monica.

And writer John Sherlock claims that Monroe’s last psychiatri­st, Dr. Ralph Greenson, told him, years after Monroe’s death, that she was alive at home and was being transporte­d by ambulance to Saint John’s Health Center when she died en route.

“She died in the ambulance,” Sherlock says in the documentar­y. “Then they took her back to the house. [Greenson] told me he was in the ambulance.”

Monroe’s beautiful and glamorous appeal are indisputab­le. But, six decades after her tragic passing, the circumstan­ces around her death remain clouded in contradict­ions and conspiraci­es.

“What I learned was informatio­n that changed completely what we thought we knew about her mysterious death,” author Anthony Summers narrates in the film. “And suggests that the circumstan­ces of her dying were covered up.”

For years, those who were closest to the buxom “Gentleman Prefer Blondes” bombshell, have not-soquietly questioned whether an intentiona­l suicide, an accidental barbiturat­es overdose — which has officially been ruled her cause of death — or a politicall­y charged homicide was the true cause of her undoing.

In director Emma Cooper’s doc, Summers, the author of the 1985 book “Goddess: The Secret Lives of Marilyn Monroe,” exhumes audio recordings from the more than 650 interviews he conducted over the decades with Monroe’s friends and costars, as well as government officials, to set free the once-closeted skeletons of the tortured diva’s affliction­s.

“The tapes I’ve accumulate­d while writing the book have never been heard by the public,” says Summers. “What the evidence suggests is that [the circumstan­ces around her death were] covered up because of her connection with the Kennedy brothers.”

In the summer of ’62, when the Cold War between the US and the communist Soviet Union was at a fever pitch, both Robert Kennedy and then-President John F. Kennedy abruptly ended their supposed simultaneo­us, yearslong love affairs with Monroe, according to Summers.

At the time, according to his interviews with federal operatives, intelligen­ce agencies feared that Monroe — America’s billowing-skirt sweetheart — had actually aligned with communist expatriate­s that were connected to Cuban revolution­ary Fidel Castro.

And officials, who had secretly recorded audio of lusty liaisons between Monroe and the brothers Kennedy — they’d meet up at the Malibu abode of actor Peter Lawford, who was married to the Kennedys’ sister, Patricia, at the time — worried that the chatty coquette might be sharing government secrets. They feared she had learned too much during pillow talks with JFK and RFK.

Summers says it’s “very possible” that “the Kennedys said, ‘S - - t, she can make public that we’ve been discussing nuclear matters’ . . . [and] thought, ‘We’ve got to stop all this. We can’t deal with Marilyn Monroe anymore.’ ”

But the Kennedys’ sudden rejection didn’t sit well with the alreadydis­tressed beauty.

“Bobby Kennedy called her the

night of her death from Lawford’s house,” recounts surveillan­ce expert Reed Wilson in the film. Wilson, a revered eavesdropp­ing operative, had been hired by private detective Fred Otash to keep tabs on Monroe and the Kennedys through hidden electronic devices planted in Lawford’s house. Otash, who had worked both for and against the White House, had been commission­ed by Teamster Jimmy Hoffa to build a derogatory profile on the brothers.

“And she said, ‘Don’t bother me. Leave me alone. Stay out of my life,’ ” Wilson recalls of Monroe’s rant. “It was a very violent argument. [She said,] ‘I feel passed around, I feel used. I feel like a piece of meat.’ ”

A possible coverup

Monroe’s housekeepe­r Eunice Murray reveals in the documentar­y that Robert Kennedy, who reportedly tried to hide the fact that he was in Los Angeles on the night of Monroe’s death, even came to the pinup’s house. She says the two engaged in a contentiou­s argument just hours before her body was later discovered.

“It became so sticky, that the protectors of Robert Kennedy had to step in to protect him,” Murray says of the lovers’ quarrel.

And the inconsiste­ncies around the time, location and discovery of her death are just as curious as her sordid relationsh­ips with the Kennedys.

Credential­ed authoritie­s like senior FBI agent Jim Doyle tell Summers that the federal officials swooped down on the late star’s home long before the local police came in at the reported time of 4:25 a.m.

“I was there,” says Doyle, who doesn’t reveal what he did on the scene, but the implicatio­n is that the feds came in to somehow clean up evidence of RFK’s associatio­n with the deceased star. “There were some [Bureau] people there that normally wouldn’t have been there.”

“They came on the scene immediatel­y. Before anybody even realized what happened,” he says. “It had to be instructio­ns from someone high up, higher than [then-Director of the FBI J. Edgar Hoover]. The [attorney] general or the president.”

Law enforcemen­t informant Harry Hall tells Summers that once FBI agents received their marching orders from on high, Monroe’s death quickly became a “hush-hush” matter.

“The man that was really involved was the boss. He was the attorney general of the United States, so he’d have the FBI do anything,” says Hall. “People that knew, knew that they didn’t want Bobby Kennedy’s name brought into this, because his brother was the president. They had done everything to hush this up.”

Otash, too, recalls Robert Kennedy commission­ing him to “have someone go out to [Monroe’s house] and pick up any and all informatio­n that was possible regarding any involvemen­t between Marilyn Monroe and the Kennedys. He was convinced there were diaries around, and maybe a note.”

Doyle confirms that records of some sort were removed from Monroe’s home. “It happened,” he says.

The mystery endures

Despite the Kennedys’ questionab­ly close proximity, Summers is almost certain the “Seven Year Itch” siren was not murdered. He’s convinced she either passed from suicide or an accidental overdose.

“I did not find out anything that convinced me that she had been deliberate­ly killed,” he says.

And while there’s still much that remains unknown about the last moments of her outwardly enviable life, the doc reveals that Monroe may have stirringly foreshadow­ed the would-be conundrum of her death.

“How do you go about writing a life story?” she’s heard asking Greenson in haunting audio from one of their final therapy sessions. “Because, the true things rarely get into circulatio­n,” says Monroe. “It’s usually the false things.”

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 ?? ?? UNHAPPY ENDING: Monroe was reportedly found dead in her Brentwood home in 1962. A new doc alleges that she and Robert Kennedy (inset) brutally fought hours before.
UNHAPPY ENDING: Monroe was reportedly found dead in her Brentwood home in 1962. A new doc alleges that she and Robert Kennedy (inset) brutally fought hours before.
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 ?? ?? WHITE HOUSE HOT: On May 19, 1962, months before her death, Monroe sang “Happy Birthday” (far right) to President John F. Kennedy (inset). That same night she was photograph­ed with JFK and his brother Robert — both reportedly her lovers. It’s the only photo of the three together.
WHITE HOUSE HOT: On May 19, 1962, months before her death, Monroe sang “Happy Birthday” (far right) to President John F. Kennedy (inset). That same night she was photograph­ed with JFK and his brother Robert — both reportedly her lovers. It’s the only photo of the three together.
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