Ranking the onscreen portrayals of Marilyn Monroe

(from left) Ana de Armas in Blonde; Blake Lively in Gossip Girl; Mira Sorvino in Norma Jean & Marilyn; Michelle Williams in My Week With Marilyn.
(from left) Ana de Armas in Blonde; Blake Lively in Gossip Girl; Mira Sorvino in Norma Jean & Marilyn; Michelle Williams in My Week With Marilyn.
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Hollywood continues to prefer one blonde among them all: Marilyn Monroe. A pop culture centerpiece since the 1950s, Monroe has gone from one of the most iconic and fascinating movie stars of all time to one of the most sought-after characters an actress could ever hope to play.

In the new Netflix film Blonde, Ana de Armas emerges as the latest performer to inhabit both the enduring idol’s astonishing outward glamour, palpable erotic allure and fierce inner demons on screen, one of a long line of women—some established, high-profile Hollywood stars burnishing their reputations, others up-and-comers seeking to make their name tackling such a towering figure—who’ve taken their turn in Monroe’s billowing white silk dress.

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From sketches lampooning the legend to searing cinematic explorations, The A.V. Club takes a deep-dive look at 20 prominent screen Marilyns, everything from the godawful to the goofy to the glorious.

18. Misty Rowe – Goodbye, Norma Jean (1976)


‘Goodbye Norma Jean’ Movie Commercial (1976)

Headlining this schlocky, tawdry and cheaply made early stab at a highly fictionalized Monroe “biopic,” Rowe—an otherwise reliable light comedy actress specializing in sunny/ditzy/sexy blondes who’s best remembered for her two-decade stint on Hee-Haw—enjoys a rare, let’s-be-charitable-and-call-it-dramatic role. Rowe’s out of her depth even in such threadbare, shamelessly exploitative material, and does little to even superficially evoke Monroe’s persona, on screen or off; notwithstanding the similar hourglass figure, this performance is utterly flat.

17. Blake Lively – Gossip Girl (2012)


Blake Lively as Marilyn Monroe on Gossip Girl Episode 100 G.G. [HD]

In a lavishly produced dream sequence for Gossip Girl’s 100th episode, Lively’s character Serena van der Woodsen projects herself into the eternally iconic “Diamonds Are A Girl’s Best Friend” musical sequence from Gentlemen Prefer Blondes. Lively ably masters lip-syncing to Monroe’s vocal track and nailing all the hip-shimmying choreography … and that’s about it. She gamely delivers a fond tribute to Monroe, but doesn’t make a strong case for a more ambitious follow-up opportunity to channel the star.

16. Charlotte Sullivan – The Kennedys (2011)


Marilyn Monroe in The Kennedys

In a relatively brief and underdeveloped turn in the miniseries chronicling the rise and fall of the ill-fated Kennedy brothers, Sullivan, an accomplished Canadian actress with numerous TV credits, delivers on old-school movie star glamour, but lacks the distinctive spark to truly conjure a fully formed Monroe. She neither leans into the familiar iconography nor makes the role her own, leaving scenes such as Marilyn’s overt attempts to seduce Bobby Kennedy (a terrific Barry Pepper) to fizzle when they should sizzle.

15. Theresa Russell – Insignificance (1985)


INSIGNIFICANCE Trailer (1985) - The Criterion Collection

This offbeat film adaptation of Terry Johnson’s play imagined an evening that brought together a surprisingly physics-savvy version of Monroe—or, more specific to the script, “The Actress”—with the Albert Einstein-ian “Professor” (Michael Emil). Although she had the advantage of eschewing the need for genuine authenticity by playing an alt-history take for frequent collaborator Ken Loach, Russell’s really only playing a pop culture shorthand version of the screen legend, all signature coos, platinum locks and billowy white dress. Under those trappings, she remains too distinctively Theresa Russell to be subsumed by Monroe—though it should be noted that too much Theresa Russell is rarely a bad thing.

14. Charlize Theron – Saturday Night Live (2000)

(from left) Chris Kattan, Charlize Theron, and Jimmy Fallon on Saturday Night Live.
(from left) Chris Kattan, Charlize Theron, and Jimmy Fallon on Saturday Night Live.

Emerging screen superstar Theron was up for some breathy fun playing the broadest of broad strokes while tweaking the most fabled of Monroe lore: the visceral displeasure of Marilyn’s then-husband Joe DiMaggio (Jimmy Fallon) as he watched his wife film the famed subway-grate scene from The Seven Year Itch. As her billowy skirt lingers longer and longer in the air and prompts constant attention from the all-male crew, Theron is deliriously oblivious to the increasingly lascivious attention lavished upon her—making for both an amusing sketch and an ahead-of-its-time commentary on the male gaze.

13. Gillian Anderson – American Gods (2017)


American Gods - Gillian Anderson’s Media as Marilyn Monroe

It’s difficult to think of two actresses further apart in screen allure than sultry, innocent-yet-available blonde Monroe and the cool, intellect-driven redhead Anderson, yet the latter manages to tap something of the essence of Marilyn, fused with her American Gods role Media, the new deity personifying popular mass communication. Drawing from the stereotypical but indelible tropes springing from The Seven Year Itch and the conspiratorial mythos that proliferated after Monroe’s death, Anderson—who always delivers the unexpected, from The X-Files to The Crown to The Great—layers on an otherworldly, mysterioso topspin befitting Media’s metaphysical origins to eerie, and amusing, effect.

12. Madonna – Saturday Night Live (1985; 1993)


MADONNA ON SNL 1993 *RARE*

With her 1985 music video for “Material Girl,” one of the finest homages to Monroe’s “Diamonds Are A Girl’s Best Friend” performance as well as a canny commentary on her own era’s excessive materialism, Madonna unabashedly underlined her connection to Marilyn, reimagined as an empowered, sex-positive female icon for a new era. So it was no surprise that during her first stint guesting on SNL that same year she was tapped to play Monroe; though her impression was pretty wan, she at least had Randy Quaid as JFK and Robert Downey, Jr. as Elvis to liven up a downright wackadoo sketch; much improved was her return stint as Monroe in a 1993, singing a seductively baby-voiced “Happy Inauguration, Mr. President” to then-newly elected commander-in-chief Bill Clinton (Phil Hartman), much to his delight—and to the displeasure of his first lady, Hilary Clinton (Jan Hooks).

11. Melody Anderson – Marilyn & Bobby: Her Final Affair (1993)

Melody Anderson in Marilyn & Bobby: Her Final Affair.
Melody Anderson in Marilyn & Bobby: Her Final Affair.

Riffing on the long-speculated-about, never-convincingly-proven relationship between Monroe and Robert Kennedy, Anderson—best remembered as Dale Arden in the 1980 cult-classic film Flash Gordon—delivers more than this tawdry, tabloid-style story so characteristic of its era deserves. But her fresh-faced, bright-eyed interpretation would’ve been better suited for an earlier incarnation—spirited, plucky early-era Marilyn; she’s never fully convincing as the spiraling, emotionally unraveling end days Monroe depicted here.

10. Uma Thurman, Katharine McPhee & Megan Hilty – Smash (2012)


Dig Deep (Uma Thurman) | SMASH (TV Series) | TUNE

While none of the three actresses playing the performers cast in Smash’s Marilyn-inspired Broadway-show-within-the-show “Bombshell” were given the opportunity to truly deep-dive into Monroe’s persona, each found distinctive ways into the icon via Marc Shaiman and Scott Whitman’s songs. As a non-Broadway belter, Thurman—as a Hollywood star drafted into the role to boost the production’s profile—delivered a soft and sensual shrewdness to Marilyn’s evolution into Method actor through “Dig Deep.” Better suited to the ladder-climbing Norma Jean aspect with her brassy vocals, McPhee captured the ambition, hope and ego in numbers like “Let Me Be Your Star.” But it was the versatilely voiced stage sensation Hilty who delivered the most fully rounded, knowing takes on Marilyn, channeling her savvy sense of own allure in “National Pastime,” the increasingly mechanical, soul-stifling nature of selling her sex appeal in “Let’s Be Bad” and the show-stopping and encapsulating her dream of cultural immortality in the show-stopping “Don’t Forget Me.”

9. Susan Griffiths – Marilyn And Me (1991)


MARILYN AND ME (1991) | Official Trailer | 4K

Griffiths’ take on the ultimate screen goddess certainly stuck a chord with Hollywood: a professional Monroe lookalike, she’s been cast as the actress (or a version thereof) multiple times, including in the TV series Growing Pains, Dark Skies, Cybil, Timecop, The Strip, Curb Your Enthusiasm and Nip/Tuck, and, perhaps most memorably, as the Marilyn-themed waitress at Jackrabbit Slim’s in Pulp Fiction. Griffiths got her chance to most deeply immerse herself in the role in an otherwise by-the-numbers TV-movie inspired by Marilyn superfan Robert Slatzer’s unsupported, unconvincing malarky in which he claimed to have been romantically involved—even briefly married!—to Monroe, and, of course, supposedly helped steer the early career movies that launched her superstardom. Owing primarily to her well-cultivated physical resemblance to the icon, Griffiths is mostly passable in this weakly written, cheaply produced telepic, but fares slightly better in another more extended stint as Marilyn: a 1993 episode of Quantum Leap, “Goodbye, Norma Jean” as Sam Beckett (Scott Bakula) tried to unravel the mystery of Monroe’s final days.

8. Poppy Montgomery – Blonde (2001)


Blonde (2001) | Official Trailer | HD

Although neither as thematically harrowing or inventively if luridly stylized as the 2022 Netflix film based but derived from the same source material, the heavily fictionalized novel by Joyce Carol Oates, this two-part miniseries similarly features a Monroe seemingly with little personal agency, self-reflection or humor, constantly shaped and buffeted by the whims of others and frequently victimized at the hands of the male-dominated Hollywood power structure. In some ways, Montgomery, always a capable performer (Without a Trace, Unforgettable), is a keen choice for this interpretation: she resists attempting imitation and risking caricature, yet she never puts a distinctive enough stamp on Monroe to make her feel fully alive, either. The result is something of a cipher—which may or may not be the point of the whole exercise.

7. Kelli Garner – The Secret Life Of Marilyn Monroe (2015)


Lifetime’s “The Secret Life of Marilyn Monroe” Trailer 2015

Walking an opposite path than that trod by Blonde, this Lifetime miniseries centers around a Marilyn Monroe that is almost preternaturally hyperaware of her existence and its freighted meaning, even when she’s supposed to be falling apart. A generally underrated actress (Lars And The Real Girl, Pan Am) in an overlooked turn, Garner elevates this overwritten, well-worn material with her endearing take on Monroe, keeping its always-articulated self-reflection, often bordering on the annoying, at arm’s length through a thoughtful, well-fleshed out performance full of wit, charm and vulnerability. A different type of bombshell than Monroe, Garner emanates a distinctive allure and screen presence, but subtly morphs it into something akin to Monroe’s without treading into mimicry.

6. Jayne Mansfield – Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter? (1957)


Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter? (1957) ORIGINAL TRAILER [HQ]

Hear us out: no, Mansfield isn’t playing a formal take on Monroe, whose popularity paved the way for Mansfield’s own success in Hollywood. But she’s certainly delivering a winking satire of her fellow bombshell’s public image, down to those sexually charged squeals, exactly at the moment that Marilyn dominated the real-world zeitgeist. Indeed, everything about Mansfield’s Rita Marlowe is more Marilyn than Marilyn: a shrewder career player, a more irresistible, aggressive maneater, more layered with vapid Hollywood artifice, twice as platinum blonde and with even more staggering curves. And in the end, she’s just a good-hearted vulnerable woman looking for real love. Perfectly capturing a portrait of a screen sex siren in excess—an image that Mansfield calculatedly cultivated but, sadly, was never able to transcend herself—the actress earned a special spot in the annals of those who played Monroe.

5. Ashley Judd – Norma Jean & Marilyn (1996)


Norma Jean and Marilyn Monroe movie trailer

The film, which views the screen icon as a fractured personality in explicitly literal terms, casts Judd—just stepping into her movie star status—as the striving starlet Norma Jean, driven to succeed as any cost (opposite Mira Sorvino as her Hollywood incarnation). The actress delivers on girl-next-door-but-more-glamourous packaging with the grit and determination of a steel-backboned survivor. Judd’s Norma Jean takes no prisoners, often coming off more strident, demanding and entitled than one suspects the real proto-Monroe might have been, but that’s by design; after she’s physically supplanted by Sorvino’s more wounded, splintering screen goddess, Norma Jean sticks around metaphysically as a devil on Marilyn’s shoulder, tormenting her whenever she threatens to veer off the path to bigger, greater, more. That is, except in moments where Norma Jean actually feels Marilyn’s pain and offers empathy and comfort, allowing Judd—who earned Golden Globe and Emmy nominations—to show even greater range in a role already tricky to navigate.

4. Catherine Hicks – Marilyn: The Untold Story (1980)


Marilyn: The Untold Story (1980) Catherine Hicks sings Diamonds Are A Girl’s Best Friend

In one of the first TV-movie attempts to try to accurately depict Monroe’s increasingly legendary history, Hicks—later an accomplished actress best known for Seventh Heaven and her winning genre turns in Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home and Child’s Play—delivers a career-making performance that’s the bedrock foundation for the whole effort. Hicks’ portrayal evokes a wealth of Monroe’s many key facets, notably her knowing wit, the warm, winsome charm that instantly aligned people with her and the darks shadows that always lurked beneath the glossy, inviting surface—she’s a Marilyn to root for, not to pity or sneer at. Hicks was Emmy-nominated for her efforts, somehow capturing the essence of Monroe’s movie star mannerisms while still infusing the role with relatable humanity.

3. Ana de Armas – Blonde (2022)


BLONDE | From Writer and Director Andrew Dominik | Official Trailer | Netflix

In a dubiously fictionalized narrative that reconceives Monroe’s life and career trajectory into a ceaseless series of marginalizations, humiliations and degradations at the hands not just of Hollywood but a long series of men and women using her for their ends, de Armas delivers one of the most brave and unflinching interpretations of Marilyn yet committed to the screen. Rising above writer-director Andrew Dominik’s almost cartoonishly stylized and relentlessly punishing interpretation of Joyce Carol Oates’ novel, de Armas gives herself over seemingly body and soul to summon Marilyn’s spirit in a startling transformation, finding that elusive path between the actress’ oh-so-familiar iconography and believable flesh-and-bone character. She fully embodies a Marilyn paying the price of fame while navigating a Hollywood hellscape, even as the film, in its focus on victimization, denies any sense of Monroe’s own agency, ambition, wit and self-possession—it’s Symbolic Marilyn, serving a thematic agenda. But even within the confines of the material, de Armas’ delivers something transcendent in her commitment.

2. Michelle Williams – My Week With Marilyn (2011)


My Week With Marilyn Official Trailer - In UK Cinemas November 25th

Other than Williams, no performer has better evoked both the magnetic, alluring spell that Monroe exerted on anyone who entered her orbit and the maddeningly mercurial, achingly insecure nature that so often vexed intimates and acquaintances alike. Coming into her own as a major screen actress and bona fide movie star, she delivers a tour de force turn, electrifying an otherwise minor episode in the icon’s life and career. The story is based on the memoirs of British filmmaker Colin Clark (Eddie Redmayne) who befriended and enjoyed a flirtation with Monroe during his early career break working on her 1957 romantic comedy The Prince And The Showgirl with exacting co-star/director Lawrence Olivier (Kenneth Branagh, in top form). One part Little Girl Lost, one part Been Around the Block, Williams’ Oscar-nominated performance brims with empathy and understanding, particularly about how Monroe was frequently at the mercy of the powerful aura of her stardom and the potent desire she provoked, yet also able to turn those qualities to her advantage—even weaponize them—when she chose to do so.

1. Mira Sorvino – Norma Jean & Marilyn (1996)


Ending scene of “Norma Jean & Marilyn” (HBO)

In playing one half of the psyche-splintered Marilyn in her fully realized iconic screen siren mode—in tandem with Ashley Judd’s relentlessly ambitious Norma Jean—Sorvino rises to a uniquely challenging task as she physically, powerfully embodies Monroe the Hollywood Creation while also trying to flesh out the fragile, uncertain woman struggling for air under the glamorous but smothering façade she’s created. Golden Globe and Emmy-nominated for the role, Sorvino uniquely matches Monroe for sheer onscreen luminosity, and also delivers the most authentic take on the actress’ vocal quality and mannerisms without ever veering into verbal karaoke. She seems to channel the most vulnerable and yearning core of Monroe (leaving Judd to tackle her earthier qualities) as each advancement on the ladder of fame, and each attempt to self-medicate her disappointments away, threatens to leave her more adrift and confused than the last. No less than playwright Arthur Miller, one of Monroe’s husbands, relayed his appreciation for Sorvino’s understanding of his ex’s pain to the actress, who set a gold—or perhaps platinum blonde—standard for all actresses playing Monroe to follow.