Marilyn Monroe, Part 3: Fame, Control, and Collapse — Hollywood's Biggest Star and the Cost of Being an Icon

This is Part 3 of our three-part series on Marilyn Monroe — marking her centennial on June 1, 2026, what would have been her 100th birthday.

By January 1961, Marilyn Monroe had lost almost everything. Her marriage to playwright Arthur Miller was over. Her latest film The Misfits had flopped. Clark Gable was dead. And somewhere in New York, behind drawn curtains, the most famous woman in the world was alone.

What came next was the last chapter. And the one that still has the world asking questions.

Part 3 traces the final eighteen months of Marilyn Monroe's life: the institutionalization she didn't see coming, the man who got her out, and the psychiatrist who moved into the center of everything. It follows her back to Los Angeles — to the first home she ever owned, to a new film, and to one more fight with Fox. It covers the photo sessions that became her most iconic images, the interview in which she finally said everything she'd always wanted to say, and the night at Madison Square Garden when she sang Happy Birthday to the President of the United States in a dress sewn onto her body.

It also follows what the public couldn't see. The ground giving way beneath the comeback. The doctors who were supposed to be keeping her safe. The last day — unremarkable for most of its hours — and what happened after.

And finally, the goodbye — and a woman gone too soon. 

August 4, 1962. The questions that have never fully gone away. The autopsy. The timeline that didn't quite add up. The investigation that closed the case — and the reason the case has never quite felt closed.

This is the end of the story. And the reason it's never really ended.

Parts 1 and 2 of our three-part series on Marilyn Monroe are available now. 

  • "If it wasn't for them, she'd still be here."

    —Joe DiMaggio, barring the Hollywood crowd from Marilyn Monroe’s funeral

  • "She was one of the most unappreciated people in the world."

    —Director Joshua Logan

  • "She hadn't just scratched out my pictures. She scratched out herself."

    —Bert Stern, on the contact sheets of one of Marilyn Monroe’s final photoshoots

A close-up portrait of a woman with platinum blonde hair styled in vintage waves, wearing red lipstick, a diamond necklace, and looking at the camera with a seductive expression.

A century of Marilyn.

June 1, 2026, marks 100 years since Marilyn Monroe was born. To honor her centennial, WTWMI launches with a three-part series tracing her invention, her rise, and the cost of becoming the most famous woman in the world.

Listen to Part One now. Part Two drops June 2, the day after what would have been her 100th birthday, with Part Three dropping June 9.

A story of strength, ambition, and self-invention — about a girl who shouldn't have had a chance, and the woman she gave everything to become.

WTWMI — listen now, wherever you get your podcasts.