Madonna, Margot Robbie and more stars have taken turns as Hollywood’s most iconic blonde
:max_bytes(150000):strip_icc():focal(753x286:755x288):format(webp)/ana-de-armas-blonde-michelle-williams-my-week-with-marilyn-misty-rowe-goodbye-norma-jean-marilyn-monroe-060225-a6a365824f1f4029b4ff5a682364c375.jpg)
Ana de Armas as Marilyn Monroe in 2022’s ‘Blonde’; Michelle Williams as Marilyn Monroe in 2011’s ‘My Week with Marilyn’; Misty Rowe in 1976’s ‘Goodbye Norma Jean’.
Credit : Netflix; Bbc Films/Kobal/Shutterstock; Mary Evans/Ronald Grant/Everett Collection
Marilyn Monroe is one of the most timeless cultural figures of our time.
From her breakout in the mid-1940s to her tragic death at age 36 on Aug. 4, 1962, the starlet — also known as Norma Jean Baker — left her beauty mark on the world, both literally and figuratively.
Her signature platinum curls, classic minimalist style and soft-spoken mystique have become synonymous with Old Hollywood glamour, while her personal life story continues to fascinate and inspire.
Over the decades, several actresses have portrayed the woman behind the legend.
From Misty Rowe’s early turn in 1976’s Goodbye, Norma Jean to Ana de Armas’ Oscar-nominated performance in 2022’s Blonde, the screen has kept Monroe’s legacy and likeness alive.
Here are all the stars who’ve played Monroe in film and on TV.
Misty Rowe
:max_bytes(150000):strip_icc():focal(731x328:733x330):format(webp)/goodbye-norma-jean-1-ac70d8314bb6455da732efbe5170153d.jpg)
Misty Rowe as Marilyn Monroe in 1976’s ‘Goodbye, Norma Jean’.Mary Evans/Ronald Grant/Everett Collection
Known for her high-pitched voice and bubbly screen presence, Rowe was a fitting choice to play a Monroe in Larry Buchanan’s 1976 film Goodbye, Norma Jean, which chronicles her childhood through her journey to becoming a superstar in the early 1940s.
Paula Lane
:max_bytes(150000):strip_icc():focal(407x1057:409x1059):format(webp)/goodnight-sweet-marilyn-paula-lane-061625-f1e658adec114a73a8ca357c9a366047.jpg)
Paula Lane as Marilyn Monroe in 1989’s ‘Goodnight, Sweet Marilyn’.Studio Entertainment Distribution/Courtesy Everett Collection
Paula Lane starred as Monroe in Buchanan’s 1989 follow-up, Goodnight, Sweet Marilyn — released over a decade after Goodbye, Norma Jean.
The film revolves around the murky circumstances surrounding Monroe’s death, as narrated by her “friend”/alleged killer (Jeremy Slate).
Catherine Hicks
:max_bytes(150000):strip_icc():focal(610x240:612x242):format(webp)/marilyn-the-untold-story-Catherine-Hicks-061625-f458c5d5808c4c889a94e1d369cef494.jpg)
Catherine Hicks as Marilyn Monroe in the 1980 ABC TV movie ‘Marilyn: The Untold Story’.Denis Plehn/American Broadcasting Companies via Getty
Catherine Hicks had to play Monroe in various stages of her life in ABC’s Marilyn: The Untold Story.
Per TVStoreOnline, she auditioned three times for the role and later received an Emmy nomination in 1981 for outstanding lead actress in a limited series or a special.
Theresa Russell
:max_bytes(150000):strip_icc():focal(1066x438:1068x440):format(webp)/insignificance-theresa-russell-061625-f3b097f2fef746e285edf11374daea94.jpg)
Theresa Russell as Marilyn Monroe/’The Actress’ in 1985’s ‘Insignificance’.Silver Screen Collection/Getty
Theresa Russell stepped into Monroe’s shoes (well, heels) when she played her in the 1985 British drama Insignificance. The surreal film imagines an alternate reality where four iconic figures — Monroe, her second husband and baseball legend Joe DiMaggio (Gary Busey), physicist Albert Einstein (Michael Emil) and senator Joseph McCarthy (Tony Curtis) — cross paths in a New York City hotel one night in 1954.
Susan Griffiths
:max_bytes(150000):strip_icc():focal(508x410:510x412):format(webp)/marilyn-and-me-Susan-Griffiths-061625-d7e616c9fee9481888ef2e618e4f865b.jpg)
Susan Griffiths as Marilyn Monroe in 1991’s ‘Marilyn and Me,’.New Films International/Courtesy Everett Collection
In 1991, Susan Griffiths — who had been impersonating Monroe in movies, advertisements and TV shows for decades — got the chance to play the icon in the TV movie Marilyn and Me, which focused on her alleged romance with writer Robert Slatzer (Jesse Dabson), who claimed he secretly married Monroe before Hollywood fame.
Barbara Niven
:max_bytes(150000):strip_icc():focal(706x506:708x508):format(webp)/the-rat-pack-1-2000-734bcc5eb0a6489eaf64033ed94896d2.jpg)
Barbara Niven as Marilyn Monroe in 1998’s ‘The Rat Pack,’.Hbo/Original Film/Kobal/Shutterstock
In HBO’s Emmy-winning 1998 film The Rat Pack, Barbara Niven portrays the screen siren, who is introduced to John F. Kennedy (William L. Petersen) by Frank Sinatra (Ray Liotta) and begins an extramarital affair. The cast also includes Joe Mantegna as Dean Martin and Don Cheadle, who won a Golden Globe for his performance as Sammy Davis Jr.
Melody Anderson
:max_bytes(150000):strip_icc():focal(675x416:677x418):format(webp)/marilyn-and-bobby-1-2000-44bfc55caa0d4bdfb93b00369687e9e3.jpg)
Melody Anderson as Marilyn Monroe in 1993’s ‘Marilyn & Bobby — Her Final Affair,’.Barry Weitz/The Auerbach Company/Kobal/Shutterstock
Melody Anderson played the blonde bombshell in the 1993 TV movie Marilyn & Bobby: Her Final Affair, which was a fictional account of the alleged affair between Monroe and then-U.S. Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy.
Ashley Judd
:max_bytes(150000):strip_icc():focal(682x646:684x648):format(webp)/norma-jean-and-marilyn-1-2000-949e73e95f62499082fab562724b946a.jpg)
Ashley Judd as Norma Jean Doughtery in 1996’s ‘Norma Jean and Marilyn,’.HBO/Kobal/Shutterstock
In the 1996 HBO original movie Norma Jean & Marilyn, Ashley Judd played Norma Jean Dougherty, a fictionalized version of Monroe’s pre-fame self who haunts and confronts her glamorous alter ego (Mira Sorvino) in dream-like scenes. Judd’s performance earned her both an Emmy and a Golden Globe nomination.
Mira Sorvino
:max_bytes(150000):strip_icc():focal(749x262:751x264):format(webp)/mira-sorvino-1-2000-1e8b111e6aba4f7698f933f8b4576d8a.jpg)
Mira Sorvino as Marilyn Monroe in 1996’s ‘Norma Jean and Marilyn,’.HBO/Kobal/Shutterstock
Opposite Judd in Norma Jean & Marilyn, Sorvino stepped into the role of Monroe, channeling the famous actress after she became a superstar. She, too, received Emmy and Golden Globe nominations for her leading performance.
Poppy Montgomery
:max_bytes(150000):strip_icc():focal(625x344:627x346):format(webp)/blonde-poppy-montgomery-061625-3ae1ead237a44c34a8cde2c94a45aa93.jpg)
Poppy Montgomery as Marilyn Monroe in ‘Blonde’.CBS via Getty
Poppy Montgomery took her turn as Monroe in the 2001 miniseries Blonde, the first screen adaptation of Joyce Carol Oates’s Pulitzer Prize-winning novel of the same name.
The Australian actress told Entertainment Weekly in May 2001, “When I told my mother I got the part of Marilyn Monroe, she didn’t even bat an eyelash. She said, ‘Well, you’ve been rehearsing for it your whole life.’ ”
Charlotte Sullivan
:max_bytes(150000):strip_icc():focal(749x0:751x2):format(webp)/the-kennedys-2-540b94bee1854f9bad24d8996905f32d.jpg)
Charlotte Sullivan as Marilyn Monroe on ‘The Kennedys’.ReelzChannel
In 2011, Charlotte Sullivan appeared on one episode of the eight-episode miniseries The Kennedys as the blonde bombshell and performed Monroe’s infamous “Happy Birthday” to President Kennedy on his 45th birthday.
Michelle Williams
:max_bytes(150000):strip_icc():focal(762x555:764x557):format(webp)/michelle-williams-1-f01b02e68231471c97c9c20faa9834a1.jpg)
Michelle Williams as Marilyn Monroe in 2011’s ‘My Week with Marilyn,’.BBC Films/Kobal/Shutterstock
Michelle Williams transformed into Monroe for the 2011 film My Week with Marilyn. Williams won a Golden Globe for her portrayal of Monroe and was nominated for an Academy Award.
That year, Williams told The Hollywood Reporter of portraying Monroe authentically, “For me, the most crucial discovery — the flash — was that the widely accepted image of Marilyn Monroe was a character that Norma Jean played.”
She added, “Unless you study her and understand her a bit better than the commonly accepted view, one could miss who she was underneath that. Marilyn was a part she played.”
Uma Thurman, Katharine McPhee and Megan Hilty
:max_bytes(150000):strip_icc():focal(729x277:731x279):format(webp)/thurman-mcphee-hilty-1-1db23de70c7344d99a67587c3f073213.jpg)
Uma Thurman as Rebecca Duvall as Marilyn Monroe on ‘Smash; Katharine McPhee as Karen Cartwright Marilyn Monroe on ‘Smash’; Megan Hilty as Ivy Lynn as Marilyn Monroe on ‘Smash’.Will Hart/NBCU Photo Bank/NBCUniversal via Getty Images; Mark Seliger/NBCU Photo Bank/NBCUniversal via Getty Images (2)
In 2012, Uma Thurman, Katharine McPhee and Megan Hilty each took their turn as Monroe on Smash, a series about the staging of a fictional musical appropriately named Bombshell.
Blake Lively
:max_bytes(150000):strip_icc():focal(810x281:812x283):format(webp)/gossip-girl-blake-lively-marilyn-monroe-061625-9b471d67435c4ef7bf556dc78d9ba203.jpg)
From left: Chace Crawford as Nate Archibald, Hugo Becker as Louis, Blake Lively as Serena Van Der Woodsen as Marilyn Monroe, Ed Westwick as Chuck Bass (front) and Penn Badgley as Dan Humphrey on ‘Gossip Girl’.Giovanni Rufino/The CW
Blake Lively briefly channeled Monroe for a dream sequence on the 100th episode of Gossip Girl in 2012, donning Monroe’s iconic hot pink outfit and lip-syncing “Diamonds Are a Girl’s Best Friend” from 1953’s Gentlemen Prefer Blondes.
Kelli Garner
:max_bytes(150000):strip_icc():focal(800x502:802x504):format(webp)/kelli-garner-1-1c503e275d48497db468a31211953c79.jpg)
Kelli Garner as Marilyn Monroe in 2015’s ‘The Secret Life of Marilyn Monroe’.Moviestore/Shutterstock
Kelli Garner played Monroe in the 2015 miniseries The Secret Life of Marilyn Monroe. The day the first 84-minute episode premiered on Lifetime, Garner told Today that she was “extremely apprehensive” to take on the role.
“It’s Marilyn Monroe, you know? Those are really, really big shoes. And I wasn’t sure if I could pull it off,” she said.
Alisha Soper
:max_bytes(150000):strip_icc():focal(911x491:913x493):format(webp)/alisha-soper-2-feud-bette-joan-marilyn-monroe-060225-68fd420c01c64a7f93f43d4c67d7b286.jpg)
Alisha Soper as Marilyn Monroe on ‘Feud: Bette and Joan’.FX Network
The first season of Ryan Murphy’s Feud: Bette and Joan was devoted to the notorious rivalry between Hollywood icons Joan Crawford (Jessica Lange) and Bette Davis (Susan Sarandon) during and after the making of the 1962 cult classic What Ever Happened to Baby Jane?
On the pilot, Alisha Soper makes a brief appearance as Monroe, wearing a red sequin gown to accept an acting Golden Globe in 1961 (though Monroe didn’t attend the ceremony IRL) for her performance in Some Like It Hot.
Margot Robbie
:max_bytes(150000):strip_icc():focal(986x453:988x455):format(webp)/margot-robbie-birds-of-prey-marilyn-monroe-060225-d82070ecc7f3449389bdaacdd69a131c.jpg)
Margot Robbie as Harley Quinn as Marilyn Monroe in 2020’s ‘Birds of Prey and the Fantabulous Emancipation of One Harley Quinn,’.Warner Bros.
Margot Robbie’s Harley Quinn embraces the bombshell archetype in the 2020 DC film Birds of Prey (and the Fantabulous Emancipation of One Harley Quinn).
After taking a hit from Roman Sinois/Black Mask (Ewan McGregor) while tied up at his nightclub, Harley falls into a surreal musical fantasy where she becomes Monroe, performing a more violent rendition of “Diamonds Are a Girl’s Best Friend.”
Ana de Armas
:max_bytes(150000):strip_icc():focal(376x272:378x274):format(webp)/blonde-ana-de-armas-061625-ffb7640c0512436b9b3fedfec4e91fd5.jpg)
Ana de Armas as Marilyn Monroe in 2022’s ‘Blonde,’.Netflix
De Armas stars as the late actress in the controversial Netflix film Blonde, a somewhat fictional take on the icon’s life.
According to de Armas, it was hard work perfecting Monroe’s signature breathy voice.
“I tried!” de Armas told The Sunday Times in January 2021. “It only took me nine months of dialect coaching, and practicing, and some ADR sessions.”
She received rave reviews following the film’s Venice Film Festival debut in September 2022, despite the movie itself getting a lukewarm reception. De Armas later landed an Oscar nomination for Best Actress, making history as the first Cuban performer recognized in the category.
Madonna and Chloe Fineman
:max_bytes(150000):strip_icc():focal(756x325:758x327):format(webp)/saturday-night-live-snl-madonna-chloe-fineman-marilyn-monroe-061125-205d3498f1cc4092bbe427ae17c74703.jpg)
Madonna as Marilyn Monroe during the ‘Inaugural Gala’ skit on ‘Saturday Night Live’; Chloe Fineman as Marilyn Monroe during the ‘Blonde’ sketch on ‘Saturday Night Live’.Al Levine/NBC/NBCU Photo Bank via Getty; Will Heath/NBC via Getty
Over the years, Saturday Night Live has seen several stars put on the bottle blonde wig and emulate Monroe’s breathy voice. Madonna played the icon several times throughout the ’80s and ’90s, and Chloe Fineman spoofed the 2022 Netflix film Blonde with a parody of Monroe.
News
💔 “SHE DIDN’T PLAN TO BE A HERO — SHE JUST COULDN’T WALK AWAY.” 🌧️ When Rachel Maddow landed in Jamaica to cover the aftermath of Hurricane Melissa, she expected devastation. What she didn’t expect… was her. A little girl, barefoot in the wreckage, clutching a soaked teddy bear and whispering one word: “Mama.” Reporters looked away. Cameras kept rolling. But Maddow — silent, trembling — stepped forward. That night, she stayed. Days later, she signed the papers that changed both their lives forever. Now, as the world reacts to her unexpected act of love, one haunting question remains: Was this journalism… or destiny?|KF
1. The Storm That Took Everything The storm had no mercy. Hurricane Melissa tore through Jamaica with winds that howled…
😱 “NO CAMERAS. NO PRESS. JUST ACTION.” 💥 When Hurricane Melissa left Jamaica in ruins, everyone expected statements — not silence. But that night, Rep. Jasmine Crockett made a call no one knew about. Hours later, a private shipment — blankets, medicine, and water filters worth $500,000 — quietly left U.S. soil. No press release. No credit. Just a note inside the first box that made rescuers burst into tears. Now, the world wants to know: what did she write?|KF
When Hurricane Melissa finally loosened its grip on Jamaica, what remained was not silence but the faint hum of survival…
💥 “THE TAPES WERE NEVER MEANT TO LEAVE THE BUILDING.” 😳 A Turning Point USA insider has come forward — and what they just leaked about Erika Kirk and the Chief of Staff is sending shockwaves through conservative media. Behind closed doors, secret recordings. Late-night meetings. Deleted emails that someone thought were gone forever. And now, the story is unraveling — faster than anyone can contain it. The insider’s confession doesn’t just expose one scandal… it hints at a network of cover-ups stretching far beyond TPUSA. 👀 Either way, the receipts are coming — and they could change everything. 👉 Full leaked details in the comments (CMT) before they disappear… 🔥👇👇|KF
Late last night, an anonymous insider from Turning Point USA (TPUSA) dropped a bombshell that has sent shockwaves through conservative…
“LIVE MELTDOWN ON NATIONAL TV” — WHOOPI GOLDBERG’S EXPLOSIVE MOMENT LEAVES ‘THE VIEW’ IN CHAOS 😱💥 It started like any other morning at The View. Laughter. Headlines. Controlled chaos. Then — a single note changed everything. As producers slipped Whoopi Goldberg a message mid-segment, cameras caught something no one was supposed to see. With a glare sharper than a knife, she snatched the paper, ripped it to pieces, and tossed it aside — live, unedited, and on national television. The studio froze. Her co-hosts went silent. Viewers at home could feel it — that thick, electric tension pulsing through the screen|KF
Inside Whoopi Goldberg’s Live Meltdown — and the Crisis Shaking Disney’s Daytime Empire It started with a folded piece of…
💥 “NO CAMERAS. NO PRESS. JUST THREE NAMES THE WORLD THOUGHT THEY KNEW.” 🌪️ When the Category-5 monster Hurricane Melissa tore through Jamaica, help was nowhere in sight. Then — without a single announcement — a private jet touched down at dawn. Inside: Rachel Maddow. Stephen Colbert. Joy Reid. No sponsors. No cameras. No entourage. They brought 5 tons of food, medicine, water filters, and $1.5 million in aid, all paid from their own pockets. Locals said they worked through the night — lifting boxes, feeding children, treating wounds — not a single word about fame or press. And when a volunteer asked why they came, Joy Reid quietly answered: “Because the news doesn’t need to cover this — humanity does.” By morning, they were gone. No selfies. No headlines. Just whispers spreading across the island — “Were those really them?” Nobody knows who leaked the flight manifest. But one thing’s certain: this wasn’t charity. This was rebellion — against the silence of comfort. 🕯🌎 👇 Full uncovered story before it disappears…|KF
No cameras. No sponsors. Just three journalists who decided to act, not speak. When Hurricane Melissa struck Jamaica — the…
End of content
No more pages to load






