Anthony Summers, the author of the book
Goddess (1985), explains he began researching Marilyn Monroe after he learned that the
Los Angeles County District Attorney was reopening the case of her death. Summers subsequently spent three years collecting 650 tape-recorded interviews with people who either knew Monroe in her lifetime or had knowledge concerning her death. The audio of the interviews is original, but actors perform lip-synced reenactments. As Monroe began acting, she had affairs with multiple powerful men who helped advance her career. Fellow actor
Jane Russell notes Monroe had a particularly strong work ethic. However, Monroe suffered from poor mental health stemming from a troubled childhood. Monroe's third husband, writer
Arthur Miller, was affiliated with
communism. Both he and Monroe were observed by the
FBI, and the couple was known to socialize with communist American
expatriates while abroad. As their marriage deteriorated, Monroe abused
prescription drugs and she became increasingly difficult to work with. In 1961, she and Miller divorced. In 1954, Arthur James, who knew Monroe through
Charles Chaplin Jr., saw
President John F. Kennedy and Monroe walking on the shore, near the
Malibu Pier, and drinking at the hangout,
Malibu Cottage. Monroe met the Kennedy family in the early 1950s, through Hollywood connections that likely evolved from the founding role of
Joseph P. Kennedy Sr. at
RKO Pictures during the 1920s. In the early 1960s, actor
Peter Lawford and his wife,
Patricia Kennedy Lawford, had a beach house in Malibu, California, where they hosted many social gatherings. Monroe had affairs with both President Kennedy and
United States Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy, often meeting them at the beach house. Summers pieces together that Monroe was in a risky political position, as she and the Kennedy brothers would discuss current events, including
nuclear weapons testing. This was in 1962, during the height of the
Cold War. Because of Monroe's leftist politics, the FBI worried she could pass along or make public anything the Kennedys told her. As a result, the Kennedy brothers eventually attempted to cut off all contact with her. Monroe died on August 4, 1962, and it was ruled a probable suicide. The official timeline reports Monroe's housekeeper,
Eunice Murray, checked on Monroe around 3 am and found the bedroom door locked. Murray called Monroe's psychiatrist, Dr.
Ralph Greenson, who arrived around 3:30 am, broke in through a window, and discovered Monroe was dead. Paramedics and police arrived at 4:25 am. Her death was ruled a probable suicide due to a drug overdose. Summers discounts this timeline, as multiple interview subjects corroborate a rough sequence of events, although there are discrepancies. In this version, Monroe's medical emergency began earlier that night. Her public relations manager,
Arthur P. Jacobs, arrived at Monroe's residence as early as 11 pm. An
ambulance was called, and Dr. Greenson rode with a
comatose Monroe as she was transported to a hospital. She either died at the hospital or on the way. Her body was returned to her house, where she was placed in her bed and "discovered" in the early morning hours. Private investigator
Fred Otash and surveillance expert Reed Wilson claim they were hired by Peter Lawford to clear Monroe's home of any evidence that connected her to the Kennedy family before police and reporters arrived. Despite Summers having accumulated information that was previously unknown about Monroe's death, he doesn't believe she was murdered. Rather, he maintains Monroe died by suicide or an accidental drug overdose. He suspects any type of
cover-up was due to her connection with the Kennedy brothers. In 1982, the Los Angeles district attorney ended its review of the case and upheld the original recorded cause of death. == Interview subjects ==