So, I think that Marilyn, what she gave the world, and in many ways Kennedy too, was that they had dreams and they didn't allow anybody to take away their dreams.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
Marilyn was a great actress, not a dumb blond bombshell. She was very smart, very astute and a good businesswoman.
Marilyn was terrible to work with. I was fond of her, she was a nice girl, but she was a damaged girl. She was very difficult. You couldn't get her on the set; she didn't know the words.
In the case of Marilyn and John Kennedy, I think they did affect change.
I respect John Kennedy for saying that he had a dream that we'd go to the moon before the end of the decade.
I like Marilyn Monroe; she was super glam, weren't she?
I never wanted to be Marilyn - it just happened. Marilyn's like a veil I wear over Norma Jeane.
The energy of the Kennedy years was completely compelling... I had a sense of a generous society eager to change the world. Idealism was very contagious. So that's why I went to America. I didn't intend to stay.
Robert Kennedy was such an inspiring figure. His interest in politics seemed to come not from a desire for power, but from a need to help our society live up to its ideals.
When you've experienced the real Marilyn, it's difficult to watch a movie about her.' I didn't want to have the memories of my experience tarnished in any way.
There was something about Marilyn. She couldn't act her way out of a bag, but she became an icon because something happened between her and the lens, and no one knows what it is.
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