Files shedding new light on Marilyn Monroe's last night alive and her relationships with President John F Kennedy and his younger brother Bobby have emerged 51 years after her death.
Documents belonging to the late Fred Otash, one of Hollywood's most notorious private detectives, were uncovered by his daughter Colleen after being found in a suburban storage unit.
According to Otash, who died in 1992, Monroe had a sexual relationship with the brothers and complained about being 'passed around like a piece of meat'.
'Passed around': President John F Kennedy and his brother Bobby (left) with Marilyn Monroe
Otash, who had installed bugging devices in her Los Angeles home, has long been derided by Kennedy admirers for his claims to have listened to a tape of Monroe and JFK in bed together.
But the notes published by The Hollywood
Reporter magazine last week contained a detailed account of his bugging
activities and what he heard.
Shortly before his death, he told an
interviewer: 'They were having a sexual relationship ... but I don't
want to get into the moans and groans.'
And in his notes, Otash claimed: 'I listened to Marilyn Monroe die.'
He recorded that on August
5 1962, she had a violent argument with the Kennedys and that she felt
that she had been 'passed around like a piece of meat'.
The notes read: 'She was really screaming and they were trying to quiet her down.
'She's in the bedroom and Bobby gets
the pillow and he muffles her on the bed to keep the neighbors from
hearing. She finally quieted down and then he was looking to get out of
there.'
Otash only found out she had died later on.
Notorious: Private detective Fred Otash (right)
on the stand before a state legislative committee in Los Angeles about
photographs he ordered several of his employees to take of actress Anita
Ekberg
Marilyn Monroe singing Happy Birthday to the
President at Madison Square Gardens, in New York, in May 1962, shortly
before she died
At that point Otash was the most
famous private eye in Hollywood and the first choice for any celebrity
with a potential problem.Otash, a former Los Angeles detective, had set up his own bureau in Hollywood where he specialised in 'fact-checking' for a celebrity gossip magazine called Confidential.
Among the stars he bugged was Rock Hudson, whose wife apparently confronted him about his homosexuality decades before the public knew he was gay and told him to 'grow out of it'.
Hudson, who died in 1985 aged 59 due to complications related to AIDS, had been considered one of the most desirable men of his day, starring alongside female screen icons such as Doris Day in classics such as 'Pillow Talk'.
His other files include information on Judy Garland and how in 1963 he cleaned her Beverly Hill apartment out of all the pills and alcohol she had stashed during her bitter split from third husband Sid Luft.
The late U.S. President John F Kennedy (left)
and his wife, late Jacqueline Kennedy (right) riding in a motorcade in
Dallas, Texas, moments before his assassination on November 22, 1963
Otash died in 1992 having been used
as the inspiration for the shady PI played by Jack Nicholson in the
Oscar-winning 1974 film Chinatown.
James
Ellroy, the crime novelist and author of LA Confidential, who met Otash
several times, turned his career into a novel, Shakedown, published
online and is now writing the script for a television version.
According
to The Hollywood Reporter, it was the negative portrayal of Otash in
Ellroy's book that persuaded Colleen to search through her father's old
records and make some of them public.
'I
was very aggrieved,' she said. '[I thought]: what can we do to stop
[Ellroy] from taking my father's life and turning it into just a
horrible fictional depiction?'
The
Otash notes published so far do not reveal what, if anything, the
detective discovered when he searched Monroe's house and the tapes of
the Hollywood star's alleged encounters with the Kennedys have never
surfaced.
A red filing
cabinet that contained Otash's most sensitive material was removed from
his apartment by his lawyer after he collapsed from an apparent heart
attack. Its contents were never seen again.
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