A letter, handwritten by Marilyn Monroe on Hotel Bel-Air stationary, is expected to achieve up to $50,000 when it goes under the hammer on May 30.
The undated letter, addressed to Monroe's acting coach Lee Strasberg, details the star's deepening depression, which would lead to her taking her own life in 1962.
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Monroe writes: "I'm embarrassed to start this, but thank you for understanding and having changed my life. Even though you changed it I am still lost. I mean I can't get myself together. You once said the first time I heard you talk at the actors studio that there is only concentration between the actor and suicide [sic].
"My will is weak but I can't stand anything. I sound crazy but I think I'm going crazy.
"It's just that I get before the camera and my concentration and everything I'm trying to learn leaves me. Then I feel like I'm not existing in the human race at all."
The soul-searching missive, offered from an anonymous American collection, is believed to date from shortly before the actress' death. It is to sell as part of an online auction overseen by American auction house Profiles in History.
Marilyn Monroe memorabilia remains hot property among investors and collectors alike. The second part of Milton Greene's extraordinary archive of Monroe photographs auctioned for $12,883 in Poland in December 2012. We currently have this rare, Marilyn-Monroe autographed magazine cut out in our inventory.
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