Hollywood Boulevard

Words: 489
Pages: 2

Hollywood Boulevard To begin, Everybody wants fame and success. In this day and age a community exists where many people have the opportunity to become rich and famous and I was hopeful that that would happen to me. The first time I went to Hollywood Boulevard I thought everybody in Hollywood was a billionaire. My hypothesis was wrong, there were people like me in Hollywood too. For those who succeed in this community of publicity seekers, none want to be bothered. But for the majority of people in Hollywood their quest for the luxuries of fame go awry. Hollywood is a dirty business. I remember my first day on the boulevard I saw the stars, stars implanted into the ground. I couldn't read the names of the stars because they were vandalized, …show more content…
Then I saw a name that sounded familiar, the Beautiful Marilyn Monroe. Marilyn's life showed the effects of her personal struggles as well as her triumph, Marilyn’s legacy continues to survive alongside her image as the legendary Hollywood diva. I wanted to research more about Marilyn after seeing her star on the walk of fame. I researched Marilyn and this is what turned up. After filming a recent movie, Marilyn and Jane Russell signed their names and placed their hands and feet in wet cement in front of the Chinese Theatre on Hollywood Boulevard permanently marking their names on the walk of fame. After making several movies that cast her as just another Hollywood pretty face, Monroe was getting the fame and success she had always wanted. Only the public can make a star. The studios know this and try to make a system out of it -Marilyn Monroe. Marilyn Monroe’s real name was Norma Jeane Baker. She was a pleasant, innocent, vibrant young lady who got caught up in the bright lights of show business. As fame took hold of her, she became less of herself, and more “Marilyn”. She had forgotten who she truly was. Marilyn Monroe was only an image created by the media, and not truly Norma Jeane at all. On the normal night of Saturday, August 4, 1962, Marilyn Monroe died as a result of prescription drugs. The motion picture star’s death certificate reads “probable suicide” although all the evidence surrounding the death of the movie star indicates one of the most covered-up murders of the