According to the biographer, the president’s spouse answered the actor’s strange phone call.
The relationship between actress Marilyn Monroe and President John F. Kennedy has been the subject of speculation for decades. A great deal has been written on the subject over the years.
A new biography has been written about the president’s spouse, Jacqueline Kennedy, which does not appear to be published in Finnish. Jackie: Public, Private, Secretin has written J. Randy Taraborrelli, who has been studying Kennedy for 25 years. He has also interviewed the family and loved ones of the president’s spouse.
E Online writes about an interesting phone call that, according to the author, haunted Kennedy. According to Taraborrell, the president’s wife answered the phone in her bedroom in April 1962. The other end of the phone asked if “Jack” was home.
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According to the interviewees, Jackie recognized the questioner as an iconic movie star – there was no mistaking the voice of the biggest star of the time. Just a month earlier, Monroe had performed her famous version of the birthday song for the 45-year-old president.
When Monroe realized that it was the president’s wife on the other end of the phone, she asked to forward the call request. The actor had said that he just wanted to say hello.
Two things were worth noting in the call. The call first came from the bedroom of the Kennedys’ Massachusetts apartment, which was the only family phone not tapped by the Secret Service.
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– There was something in that call. Jackie later told family members that there was something creepy about Marilyn’s voice that stuck with her, the biographer says.
Kennedy had described Marilyn’s voice as having the tone of a sad and lost little girl. According to the author, Kennedy had described the phone call as disturbing.
Monroe died in August of that year, about four months after the phone call. President John F. Kennedy, on the other hand, was assassinated in November of the following year.
Widowed Jackie Kennedy married an entrepreneur in 1968 Aristotle Onassis with.
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