"I'll never forget my honeymoon -- with the 45th Division"Marilyn Monroe in Korea, February 16-19, 1954
Where possible the individual photographer and/or copyright holder has been or will be cited. Some images (noted), may also be downloaded in a larger size. More images will also be added as found. There are two image galleries, the one on this page (images from the Internet, printed matter etc.) and also a second page featuring images sourced from The Corbis Collection
The story of Mariln Monroe's trip to entertain the troops begins in early 1954 just after her marriage to baseball hero Joe Di Maggio read on... The big question from American reporters was whether she (MM) would visit the troops in Korea. War against "the Reds" had ended (at least the shooting had stopped) a few months before. But there were still a million American men, stuck (and as they feared, half-forgotten) in miserably makeshift front-line camps. There was no one they'd rather see than Marilyn Monroe. And the brass had promised, she would be invited.
"The response across the Sea of Japan from the troops in Korea was prompt: " 'What does he mean WE? It's Marilyn we want. She doesn't need an act.' " Lefty O'Doul would say, years later, that trip marked the first time Joe realized what a big star his wife had become -- she put DiMaggio in the shade, and that's when he turned surly. But Joe was well aware of Marilyn's fame. He just didn't like what she was famous for. What he learned on that honeymoon trip was how little influence he would have on the content of her stardom -- and how inessential to it he was. His mood did not improve the next day, when a U.S. Army officer came to visit at the suite, to press upon Miss Monroe an invitation to Korea, from General John E. Hull, commander of U.S. forces in the Far East. Actually, what made Joe sour was Marilyn's excitement. Joe was going off to coach baseball at the training camps for Japan's Central League. And Marilyn had it all figured: she could go to Korea then -- wouldn't that be perfect? "Go if you want to," DiMaggio said. "It's your honeymoon." So it was. And within days, she got her shots and papers (an ID card that missed the point, entirely: "Mrs. Norma Jeane DiMaggio," it read) . . . and she was on her way to Korea, with a piano player and Mrs. Jean O'Doul.
note : Marilyn is listed as an Entertainter!
She shouted to the pilot to circle low, so she could wave to the boys. Two soldiers in the belly of the chopper slid the main door open. And she shouted to them to hold her feet, as she slid out the door on her belly, to hang in midair over the gimballing ground, waving and blowing kisses while the men below screamed their delight. Four times she circled that mountainside, till the Marines were in a fever for her -- a fever that matched her own. On the ground, she changed (in ten minutes!) from her flight jacket and combat boots into a plum-purple cocktail dress and stiletto heels. She parted the burlap curtains and fairly sauntered to the front of a plywood stage, to caress the waiting microphone, and breathe in her baby voice a greeting to the boys who were whistling and cheering. Marilyn was unaccustomed to live performance. On a movie set, the idea of facing the cameras could immobilize her with panic, and she'd break out in hives. But she loved her power to provoke want in men -- and this was the tops -- she was without fear. To the accompaniment of an upright piano, she sang "Diamonds Are a Girl's Best Friend" -- and the boys went crazy.
"In mid performance she stopped singing and walked over to a soldier in the wings who was about to snap her picture...she gently plucked a lens cover from his camera saying "Honey, you forgot to take it off""The Marines were dressed in hooded parkas and boots. Marilyn's silk dress was held up by thin spaghetti straps. Her shoulders and arms were bare. That didn't matter. To the consternation of the general in command (who feared a riot), she followed up with a Gershwin tune -- "Do It Again." Oooohhh, do it again. I may say, no, no, no, no -- But do it again. Oooohh, no one is near. I may cry, oh, oh, ohhhh -- But no one will hear. As she recalled for Ben Hecht in her memoir:
"They were all yelling at me at the top of their lungs. I stood smiling at them. It had started snowing, but I felt as warm as if I was standing in a bright sun. Even the snowflakes falling on my bare arms felt warm. "I've always been frightened by an audience -- any audience. . . . My stomach pounds, my head gets dizzy and I'm sure my voice has left me. "But standing in the snowfall facing these seventeen thousand yelling soldiers, I felt for the first time in my life no fear of anything. I felt only happy....I felt at home."For four days, the Marilyn Monroe show traveled by helicopter, airplane, and Jeep. She didn't see any of Korea -- from one landing field to another, as she remembered -- but at ten camps, she did see (by Army estimate) a hundred thousand American men . . . and she loved them all. She could never forget; it was the boys in uniform -- thousands of letters from Korea to the studio -- who convinced Twentieth Century Fox to give her a chance, her first good parts. Now she could return the favor.
"You fellas are always whistling at sweater girls. Well, take away the sweaters and what have you got?"One party at an officers club turned into such a bacchanal that Marilyn tried to cut a cake with a bayonet -- and put a pretty good cut in her wrist instead. Then, of course, a surgeon was called -- and for Miss Monroe, it was a surgeon general -- who treated the gash, and then gave orders that the drunken party never had occurred. The newspaper Stars & Stripes was ordered to spike the story. Those in attendance had to surrender all photographic film -- which was duly burned. Another night, another officers club: the Signal Corps had hooked up a call to Japan -- so Marilyn could talk to her husband -- and both ends of the call would be broadcast over loudspeakers. "Do you still love me, Joe?" Marilyn's voice cooed over the camp. "Do you miss me?" And then the voice of DiMaggio -- rather curt, it was thought. "I do. Yeah." Joe did not appreciate being a prop in her show. But Marilyn was in her glory. She would call it the greatest experience of her life. ("This is what I've always wanted, I guess.") . . . And as she told one crowd of frenzied men: "I'll never forget my honeymoon -- with the 45th Division."
By the time she got back to Joe and Japan, her fever was real. Doctors would call it pneumonia. But Marilyn was still exuberant. She had to tell Joe how wonderful it was. They loved everything she did! They loved her! Thousands of men, screaming her name. . . . "Joe, you never heard such cheering." "Yes I have," he said. and continued, though often, as with the essay on ESPN (above), edited out..
"Yes I have," he replied. "Don't let it go to your head. Just miss the ball once. You'll see that they can boo as loud as they can cheer"Back in Japan February 19, 1954
The tour finished, Marilyn arrives back in Japan and although suffering from laringitis and pneumonia, Marilyn was reported as being elated at the success of the trip.
ImagesPage One | Page Two : The Corbis Collection
Arriving at Seoul City Airbase, Korea
image : 'Marilyn and Aeroplanes'
Happy to be 'here' ! image : eBay.com, April, 2001
Happy to be 'here' ! image : eBay.com, April, 2001
Happy to be 'here' ! image : eBay.com, April, 2001
Happy to be 'here' !
[ download larger copy ]
On stage
On stage
On stage
Arriving by jeep
Arriving by jeep
On stage
On stage
On stage
On stage
Posing for photographs
Where IS that poster today ?
Arrival, Char Won Valley, Korea 1954
Arrival, Char Won Valley, Korea 1954
The Blue Dress, Char Won Valley, Korea 1954
On stage
On stage, Feb 18, 1954
Taegu, Korea, Feb. 19, 1954
Taegu, Korea, Feb. 19, 1954
Taegu, Korea, Feb. 19, 1954
Possibly Taegu, Korea, Feb. 19, 1954
Taegu, Korea, Feb. 19, 1954
Possibly Taegu, Korea, Feb. 19, 1954
Korea, Feb., 1954
PIC Magazine, Feb., 1954
further reading
ellensplace.net [Marilyn] was asked to go on a USO tour of Korea in February to entertain the troops, beginning on the 16th for four days. She entertained over 60,000 soldiers, many who had never seen a Monroe film...having been in the service during her rise to stardom... most had seen still photos of her in many magazines and newspapers. She was a huge success. Joe did not accompany her on this trip...explaining,
"Joe hates crowds and glamour...standing in the snowfall facing these yelling soldiers, I felt for the first time in my life no fear of anything, I felt only happy." Marilyn Monroe visits Heart Break Ridge http://www.bakersfield.com/special/vets99/marilyn.html Sometime in late January or early February 1954, Marilyn Monroe came to Korea to entertain the troops. Although she did not come to our Division area she did come to a sector right next to ours and that was close enough for bunch of bored guys in our radio section. On the designated day, a very cold, grey day I might add, several of us piled into the radio truck and went off seeking Marilyn Monroe.... more
Video of Marilyn in Korea
cinematographer unknown
Marilyn Monroe, Korea, 1954 : The National Portrait Gallery
photograph by David Geary
Back to the Top or return to The Denny Radioplane |