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Jackie Kennedy apparently he had something to say to her husband about his rumors relationship with Marilyn Monroe.
According to a writer J. Randy Taraborrellishall JFK: Public, Private, ConfidentialJackie was told once President John F. Kennedy Oh Monroe, “This is different Jack. This worries me.”
“That has someone who was right there in the White House who heard that conversation,” the The author said People In a conversation published on Saturday, June 28. “It was reported to me 25 years ago, when I was writing an earlier book, Jackie, Ethel and Joan. “
“She (Jackie) did not know the nature of the relationship but knew him well enough to suspect something was happening. What is very important is her use of the language: ‘This is different,’ and very strongly suggested that she was right with the other (women) but this one was different,” added Taraborrelli.
The author also claimed that the Kennedys had spoken about Monroe ahead of the President’s birthday -the President’s birthday on May 19, 1962 in Madison Square’s garden, where the actress sang famously an attractive presentation of a happy birthday.
“She didn’t want anything to do with him. She had a barbecue with the Auchinclosses (her mother Janet Auchincloss and courtesy, Hugh Auchincloss) Instead of going because she didn’t want to approve it, ”explained Taraborrelli about the incident.
Despite that, the author insisted that “I do not have enough evidence to support” rumors that JFK and Monroe have a long -term relationship.
Jackie Kennedy
Getty’s imagesThe author also said that Monroe’s death deeply affected Jackie on August 4 of the same year. “What’s interesting is that she didn’t know whether JFK was about her or not. She had just taken her. What I know is after Marilyn died, Jackie was boring,” he said.
To support the allegation, he shared a conversation allegedly told by a friend of Jackie’s half -sister, Janet Rutherford Auchincloss. According to the author, Janet said to Jackie and her mother, “The world destroyed Marilyn.”
“No, Janet,” replied Jackie. “The world did not destroy Marilyn. The world built Marilyn up. The men in her life destroyed Marilyn.”
The author also claims in that book JFK had a relationship With a flight assistant a month after Jackie gave birth to their dead daughter. Taraborrelli used details of Joan Lundberg’s An unpublished biography to confirm the story.
Apparently, the President and Lundberg met on August 19, 1956, in a bar in Santa Monica, although nothing happened between the pair that night, and Jackie gave birth to their dead daughter Arable Days later. The President promised to return, and he and Lundberg attended a “lunch party” in September.
“According to what Joan later remembered, Jack admitted that he and Jackie were a ‘organized marriage’ product and, such that marriages were going, he said it was ‘right. Not great, but okay,’” the author claimed.
He also wrote that JFK told his wife about his affairs.
“He explained that Joan was someone he had met in Los Angeles,” the author added. “Joan is ambiguous in her unpublished biography of how much Jack told Jackie, just telling her almost everything.”