Showing posts with label Kennedy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kennedy. Show all posts

Tuesday, 8 May 2012

"Happy Birthday, Mr. President"

It's 50 years (19th May 1962) since Marilyn Monroe famously (some might say infamously) sang Happy Birthday, Mr. President to John F. Kennedy at a celebration to mark his 45th birthday.



It remains, of course, an incredible and iconic performance that has been copied, mimicked and parodied on many occasions during the past half century, and had been made all the more poignant by the fact this was one of Monroe's last significant public appearances. Added to that poignancy, there is, of course, the speculation of an affair between her and the young President, as well as her sudden death later that year, and his assassination just eighteen months later.

In reality, JFK was still a fledgling President. He'd only been President for a just a little over a year, though, of course, he was nearly halfway through the time he was to actually be in the White House. The 'Bays of Pigs' invasion had already taken place, but this was still before many of his most memorable moments including the standoff that became known as the Cuban Missile Crisis, and well before his "Ich bin ein Berliner" speech about the building of the Berlin Wall.

At the end of 1960, at just 43 years 236 days, John Fitzgerald Kennedy had become the youngest person, and the first Roman Catholic, to be elected to the Presidency of the United States when he narrowly defeated Richard Nixon, the Republican candidate who later went on to become President in 1968 (Theodore Roosevelt was actually the youngest person to ever become President aged just 42, but he had assumed office following William McKinley's assassination and wasn't elected). Kennedy's youthful vitality gave hope to an American population that was beginning to looking forward, standing strong against communism and the threats of the Soviet Union, and, finally, putting memories of the Second World War behind it.


By 1962, Marilyn Monroe was, arguably, the biggest name in all of Hollywood with a string of successful movies already behind her, including Some Like It Hot, The Seven-Year Itch, and Gentlemen Prefer Blondes. As well as her acting, she was also well-known for a number of songs including I Wanna be Loved by You and Diamonds are a Girl's Best Friend. Added to that, she had a private life that was the source of considerable scandal and gossip. Marilyn married three times in total, to James Dougherty, baseball superstar Joe DiMaggio, and playwright Arthur Miller, and, as well as her alleged affair with JFK , she was rumoured to have had several other affairs including with Marlon Brando and JFK's brother, Robert Kennedy, who, like JFK, was also assassinated.


It had been decided to hold a gala evening to mark the President's birthday. It was, as you'd expect, to be a rather over the top and lavish event at Madison Square Garden in New York City, and, it was hoped, that it would help raise funds for the Kennedy's Democratic Party. The event took place on May 19th, 1962, ten days before the President's real birthday, and lasted several hours, featuring a number of performances by various celebrities. Impressively, more than 15,000 people paid to attend the event, which is testament to quite how popular JFK was at that time. One person who wasn't there, though, was Jackie Kennedy, JFK's wife.


Peter Lawford, an English-American actor who was compering the event, introduced Marilyn onto the stage. He was a member of the infamous show business "Rat Pack" group of actors and entertainers which, of course, included the likes of Sammy Davis Jr., Dean Martin and Frank Sinatra. The "Rat Pack" had backed Kennedy's push for the Presidency and this was another opportunity for some of them to show their support and help the Democratic cause. Additionally, Lawford was also JFK's brother-in-law, having married Patricia Kennedy, JFK's sister.


Monroe was notorious for her lateness to events, and also on to movie sets, and had recently been struggling to get over a virus that had badly interrupted her filming of Something's Got To Give, in which she was to co-starr alongside Cyd Charisse and Dean Martin. On the day of the birthday gala, it was reported that Marilyn had a very high temperature and recurrent sinusitis. She had also suffered from several bouts of sickness. As was shown in the recent movie, My Week with Marilyn, Monroe was beset with nerves and doubts about her own abilities as an actress, and she often found it difficult to confront and overcome these nerves, which often lead to her being physically sick.

Lawford decided that he would make a joke of Monroe's notorious lateness. He had decided to introduce her several times throughout the evening, but, of course, on each of those occasions she didn't appear. Eventually though, several hours into the event, she walked out on to the stage, and Lawford amusingly announced to the audience that they were witnessing the "late Marilyn Monroe".


Monroe's performance was astonishing for its racy, saucy and blatantly sexual nature. It had been choreographed by Carol Haney who had made a name for herself as the choreographer of The Pajama Game. Marilyn simpered and oozed sensuousness while she was on stage, in a way that some found surprising and other considered shocking for an event marking the birthday of someone who was, at the time at least, considered to be rather wholesome President, married and with a young family.

Monroe was accompanied by the jazz pianist, Hank Jones, but I doubt that anybody remembers anything about the accompaniment. Singing in her famous breathy and sultry voice, Marilyn sang the traditional "Happy Birthday to You" lyrics, with "Mr. President" inserted at the point when the birthday boy or girl's name is normally sung.


"Happy Birthday to You" is, according to the Guinness Book of World Records, the most performed song in musical history. The melody comes from a song entitled "Good Morning to All" which had been composed by Patty and Mildred J. Hill way back in 1893. Patty was a teacher at a kindergarten, and Mildred, her sister, was a pianist and composer. They hoped that "Good Morning to All" would be song that would be easy for young children to sing at the start of their day at school. The melody wasn't published with the lyrics "Happy Birthday to You" until 1912, but it's thought it is likely that the birthday version of the song existed as part of an aural tradition for a few years before that. Never before Marilyn's performance had anyone seen or heard it sung in such a blatantly sexual and sensuous way - never before had it been vamped up in the way that Marilyn did for JFK on that night in 1962.

Following straight on at the end of "Happy Birthday to You", Marilyn continued with a short snippet from the classic Bob Hope and Shirley Ross song, "Thanks for the Memory", for which she had specially penned some new lyrics aimed at Kennedy:

Thanks, Mr. President
For all the things you've done
The battles that you've won
The way you deal with U.S. Steel
And our problems by the ton
We thank you so much


At the end of the performance, President Kennedy came onto the stage and joked about the performance, saying, quite clearly with his tongue in his cheek, "I can now retire from politics after having had Happy Birthday sung to me in such a sweet, wholesome way," making out, of course, that Monroe's delivery, as well as her racy dress, were more cutesy girl next door and American apple pie than simpering sex symbol.

Alongside Marilyn's actual performance, the other big star of the show was the dress she wore that night. Monroe's dress had been designed by Jean Louis. It was made of a sheer, flesh coloured marquisette fabric, into which an astonishing two and a half thousand rhinestones had been hand-sewn into it. In fact, it wasn't the only thing that had been sewn in by hand - according to reports, the dress was so tight-fitting that Marilyn had to be literally sewn into it. For that self same reason, it is claimed that she wore nothing underneath it either. When the bright stage spotlight was directed onto her, those in the hall were under the impression that the fabric simply "melted away" and she was left appearing to be dressed in nothing more than the spectacularly shining rhinestones. In 1999, the dress was sold at an auction in New York for a sum just over $1.26 million.


Marilyn Monroe's body was found at her home in Brentwood, Los Angeles, less than four months after her performance of "Happy Birthday, Mr. President" on August 5, 1962. She had died from an overdose of barbiturates. She was aged just 36.

John Kennedy was assassinated in Dallas, Texas, on November 22, 1963.

Fifty years on, both of them remain significant iconic figures of post-war America, and her performance of "Happy Birthday, Mr. President" is still remembered as one of the most famous performances in history.

Wednesday, 14 December 2011

TIME Magazine Person of the Year: The Protestor

Ealier Today, Time Magazine announced its Person of the Year in an annual tradition that has dated back to 1927.

1938's Man of the Year cover


This year, a year which has not only seen the Occupy movement around the world but also the Arab Spring, the magazine decided to have "The Protestor" as the Person of the Year. This isn't the first time the magazine has given the nod to a non-specific person - notable mon-specific people of the year include, in 2006, "You" as the winner in acknowledgement of the spread of the Web 2.0 and, back in 1950, it chose to honour the American Fighting-Man. In 1982 and 1988 the "Person of the Year" was a non-human - the computer and the Endangered Earth!

The full list of winners of the Person of the Year (originally the Man of the Year) makes interesting reading - take a look at 1938, 1939, 1942 and 1979 for instance!

1927 Charles Augustus Lindbergh
1928 Walter P. Chrysler
1929 Owen D. Young
1930 Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi
1931 Pierre Laval
1932 Franklin Delano Roosevelt
1933 Hugh Samuel Johnson
1934 Franklin Delano Roosevelt
1935 Haile Selassie
1936 Mrs. Wallis Warfield Simpson
1937 Generalissimo & Mme Chiang Kai-Shek
1938 Adolf Hitler
1939 Joseph Stalin
1940 Winston Leonard Spencer Churchill
1941 Franklin Delano Roosevelt
1942 Joseph Stalin
1943 George Catlett Marshall
1944 Dwight David Eisenhower
1945 Harry Truman
1946 James F. Byrnes
1947 George Catlett Marshall
1948 Harry Truman
1949 Winston Leonard Spencer Churchill
1950 American Fighting-Man
1951 Mohammed Mossadegh
1952 Elizabeth II
1953 Konrad Adenauer
1954 John Foster Dulles
1955 Harlow Herbert Curtice
1956 Hungarian Freedom Fighter
1957 Nikita Krushchev
1958 Charles De Gaulle
1959 Dwight David Eisenhower
1960 U.S. Scientists
1961 John Fitzgerald Kennedy
1962 Pope John XXIII
1963 Martin Luther King Jr.
1964 Lyndon B. Johnson
1965 General William Childs Westmoreland
1966 Twenty-Five and Under
1967 Lyndon B. Johnson
1968 Astronauts Anders, Borman and Lovell
1969 The Middle Americans
1970 Willy Brandt
1971 Richard Milhous Nixon
1972 Nixon and Kissinger
1973 John J. Sirica
1974 King Faisal
1975 American Women
1976 Jimmy Carter
1977 Anwar Sadat
1978 Teng Hsiao-P'ing
1979 Ayatullah Khomeini
1980 Ronald Reagan
1981 Lech Walesa
1982 The Computer
1983 Ronald Reagan & Yuri Andropov
1984 Peter Ueberroth
1985 Deng Xiaoping
1986 Corazon Aquino
1987 Mikhail Sergeyevich Gorbachev
1988 Endangered Earth
1989 Mikhail Sergeyevich Gorbachev
1990 The Two George Bushes
1991 Ted Turner
1992 Bill Clinton
1993 The Peacemakers
1994 Pope John Paul II
1995 Newt Gingrich
1996 Dr. David Ho
1997 Andy Grove
1998 Bill Clinton and Kenneth Starr
1999 Jeff Bezos
2000 George W. Bush
2001 Rudolph Giuliani
2002 The Whistleblowers
2003 The American Soldier
2004 George W. Bush
2005 Bill Gates, Melinda Gates, & Bono
2006 You
2007 Vladimir Putin
2008 Barack Obama
2009 Ben Bernanke
2010 Mark Zuckerberg
2011 The Protestor

Tuesday, 22 November 2011

48 years ago today - the assassination of JFK

48 years ago today, at 12.30 pm on the 22nd November 1963, John F. Kennedy, the 35th President of the United States of America, was assassinated as his motorcade drove through Dallas, Texas.



Today, nearly half a century later, we're still unsure as to who pulled the trigger. Sure, the Warren ommission found that Lee Harvey Oswald acted alone to shoot JFK and Jack Ruby acted alone to kill Lee Harvey Oswald but, as the years have passed, more and more conspiracy theories and potential cover-ups leave us with a situation where it is thought 80% of Americans believe that there was more to it than a lone gunman shooting their President.

Will we ever know the truth? It seems very unlikely now. Most of the main players are now long gone and all the theories seem inconclusive at best and some, well, just crackpot.

What is worth contemplating is what sort of world we might have now had Kennedy lived.

He would, quite likely, have won the 1964 Presidential election, defeating Nixon who might not have ever become President. It's possible that the fall of communism in Eastern Europe might have been sooner than the late 80s/early 90s. If no Nixon, then, possibly, no Reagan and the arms race that threatened the future of the whole world.

Kennedy had his faults as a human being, as do we all, but there is no denying news an inspirational figure, perhaps on a scale not seen until Barrack Obama's election to the White House. Had JFK lived on November 22nd 1963 the is no doubt the world would be a very different place today in 2011.