Screening from Series Marilyn Monroe: Hollywood Icon
Gentlemen Prefer Blondes with Monkey Business in 4K
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Fri, Jun 12, 2026

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The Girl Rush in 4K
Fast-talking Rosalind Russell (His Girl Friday, 1940) is absolutely captivating as Kim Halliday, the daughter of a deceased career gambler who joins her father’s former business partner to run a Vegas casino. Russell's unflappable confidence is a fine match for the swagger of Fernando Lamas as Victor Monte, a rival club owner who vies for Kim’s affections—and her casino. There’s nothing quite like the neon lights of Sin City captured in high-definition VistaVision and vibrant Technicolor, which appear here in gorgeous documentary footage of the Strip; like most studio productions of the era, however, the bulk of this musical comedy was shot on producer Paramount’s lot.
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Anything Goes in VistaVision
Seasoned performer Bill Benson (Bing Crosby) and rising star Ted Adams (Donald O’Connor) team up to find the perfect leading lady for their new Broadway show. Each performer finds a compelling talent—American Patsy Blair (Mitzi Gaynor) and French nightclub star Gaby Duval (Jeanmaire)—and the conflict of who to cast heightens the stakes. Blending backstage drama with a bit of farce, this beloved narrative offers a musical spectacle driven as much by personal risk as ambition. The film represents a significant first: Robert Lewis’s solo directorial debut after a storied career with The Group Theater. It also marks a historic last as Crosby’s final film for Paramount Pictures during the waning years of his film career.
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Niagara
Newlyweds Ray and Polly Cutler (Jean Peters and Casey Adams) take a postponed honeymoon at Niagara Falls, where they encounter Rose and George Loomis (Marilyn Monroe and Joseph Cotten). The Loomis’s rocky relationship hangs over the couple’s romantic getaway, further complicated by a murder. 1953 was an important year for Monroe with the successes of Gentlemen Prefer Blondes and How to Marry a Millionaire in the following months, and her breakout performance as the sensual Rose in Niagara catapulted the actor into superstardom.
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All About Eve in 35mm with Lorraine Nicholson
In person: Vanity Fair Contributing Editor Lorraine Nicholson
35mm

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Clash by Night with Don’t Bother to Knock
Clash by Night
In the small seaside town of Monterey, the elusive Mae Doyle (Barbara Stanwyck) returns after a 10-year absence, to the disappointment of her brother Joe (Keith Andes). Mae’s arrival comes on the heels of an affair with a married politician, a scandal that ended with his death. Marilyn Monroe co-stars as Joe’s girlfriend, Peggy, who offers Mae a warmer homecoming. Finding a kindred spirit in Mae, Peggy yearns for excitement and independence. This screen adaptation of Clifford Odets’s play of the same name was directed by German émigré Fritz Lang, who struggled to maintain control of his production when the press acquired 3-year-old nude photos of Monroe and began swarming the studio during the shoot.
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Ladies of the Chorus in 35mm
Peggy Martin (Marilyn Monroe), a burlesque-show chorus girl who works alongside her mother, Mae (Adele Jergens), gets her big break after the lead unexpectedly quits. When Peggy is pursued by the wealthy society man, Randy Carroll (Rand Brooks), Mae worries their class differences will doom the relationship and tries to protect Peggy from the same heartbreak she once suffered. Ladies of the Chorus features Marilyn’s first starring role, and her only film role during her short stint on contract at Columbia Pictures. The film also marked the first time Monroe sang and danced in a film.
35mm

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How to Marry a Millionaire
Schatze, Pola, and Loco (Lauren Bacall, Marilyn Monroe, Betty Grable) are Manhattan models on a mission to marry rich husbands. Although they set their sights on Vanderbilts and Rockefellers, their plans go awry when they become attracted to men who look to be penniless. How to Marry a Millionaire was released at the end of Monroe’s breakout year, having starred in Gentlemen Prefer Blondes and Niagara in 1953. The film is notable as the first to be completed in CinemaScope, and Monroe had such broad appeal that 20th Century-Fox used her to advertise this new widescreen format: a slogan above an image of Marilyn claimed she was “Big as life and a million times more fun in Cinemascope!”
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River of No Return
Marilyn Monroe’s appearance in Western genre films required designer Travilla to create costumes ranging from saloon-style gowns to casual denim looks. Monroe wanted her character, Kay—a kind-hearted saloon singer torn between an ex-convict (Robert Mitchum) and her troubled fiancé (Rory Calhoun)—to have a natural feel. Her acting coach, Natasha Lytess, and director Otto Preminger clashed over whether Monroe should use her typical breathy voice, with the studio backing Monroe’s decision to forgo it.
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There's No Business Like Show Business
The Donahue clan, led by husband and wife Molly and Terry (Ethel Merman and Dan Dailey), navigate the ups and downs of show biz, from their beginnings in Vaudeville to the Great Depression, in this musical comedy with songs by Irving Berlin. The family’s close bond is further tested with the arrival of the talented and driven Vicky Parker (Marilyn Monroe). Costume designer Travilla played an integral role in shaping Marilyn Monroe’s public image on- and off-screen. Together they famously produced looks that evaded censorship while still courting controversy. His designs for her showgirl characters are of particular note.
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The Prince and the Showgirl in 35mm with Bus Stop
The Prince and the Showgirl in 35mm
In this sole collaboration between Warner Bros. and Marilyn Monroe Productions, Monroe plays Elsie Marina, a witty American showgirl who gets noticed by the eccentric Prince Regent Charles (Laurence Olivier). Set in Edwardian London and directed by Olivier, the film was a famously troubled production, with tension between co-stars and cinematographer Jack Cardiff. The film was shot at Pinewood Studios outside London; Monroe’s difficulties on and off set were adapted into Simon Curtis’s fictional My Week with Marilyn (2011), with Michelle Williams starring as Monroe.
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Let’s Make Love
Director George Cukor’s musical comedy was Monroe’s second-to-last completed film. She plays a bohemian off-Broadway actor who is in a show satirizing a French billionaire, Jean-Marc Clément (Yves Montand). While scoping out the production, Clément is cast in the play and the two fall in love, though deception threatens to ruin everything. Monroe worked closely with costume designer Dorothy Jeakins to draw inspiration from her personal style for the film’s looks.
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Some Like It Hot in 4K
Marilyn Monroe’s work in director Billy Wilder’s comedic classic is often cited as her best. The film was controversial for its racy humor and story about two musicians (Tony Curtis and Jack Lemmon) who disguise themselves as women to evade the Mafia. But of equal scandal were the Oscar-winning costumes made by Orry-Kelly for Monroe’s Sugar Kane Kowalczyk. Both dresses are on display in the exhibit Marilyn Monroe: Hollywood Icon, on view through February 28, 2027. Some Like It Hot was made during a year of dramatic highs and lows for Monroe, with this film standing as a high point.
4K DCP

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The Misfits in 4K
Penned by Arthur Miller, this contemporary Western centers on the recently divorced Roslyn (Marilyn Monroe) and her relationship with an aging former cowboy, Gay (Clark Gable), who now survives by rounding up wild mustangs to sell them to a slaughterhouse. Considered a commercial failure at the time of its original release, the film has since been regarded as a classic by critics and audiences, perhaps notably because it was the final completed film of both Gable and Monroe, and a fitting bookend to Monroe’s career—she credited Huston for her first big break in his The Asphalt Jungle (1950).
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