
Jennifer Lopez's producing partner shares shocking information on Marilyn Monroe's 'murder' in tell-all book
Elaine Goldsmith-Thomas has drawn from her years in show business to write her debut novel, Climbing in Heels.
On Tuesday she talked to People about the page turner as she offered excerpts.
And one of her stories has to do with the death of Marilyn Monroe at age 36 in 1962 as she offered a Hollywood insider's take on it.
'I was working in the theater department and one day an old man came shuffling up and said he was here to see my boss,' she recalled.
'He said to no one in particular, "They killed Marilyn." I said, "Excuse me?"
'He said, "I didn't want it to happen. I really liked the kid. She called me Uncle Milty." But she was just getting out of control ... so they killed her.'
When Goldsmith-Thomas later asked her boss who the man was, she showed her a book with photos of Frank Sinatra, Sammy Davis and JFK's brother-in-law, Peter Lawford and told her.
'Milt Ebbins. There was a time when his name could open any door in Hollywood. He was Peter Lawford's manager. He was the keeper of their secrets,' she said.
Milton Keith Ebbins was an American trumpeter, bandleader, songwriter, talent manager and movie/television producer. He began his career as a trumpet player and bandleader in the early-1930s. He died in 2008 at the age of 96.
Elaine used to be a secretary before she started producing movies.
Her book follows three young women working at one of Tinseltown's biggest talent agencies and some of its biggest stars including Julia Roberts, Madonna and Nicolas Cage.
Goldsmith-Thomas, who began her own career at the William Morris Agency in the early 1980s, told Page Six it was like working in the 'Wild Wild West.'
'You know, people like Harvey Weinstein were not the anomaly, they were the norm,' she told the outlet.
Details in the book include a male assistant who is allowed to listen in on his boss while he is having sex with actresses auditioning for a role.
'That was a story I had heard from a trainee who was allowed to listen in as his boss, that was his bonus … his little treat. His boss let him listen in as he f***ed actresses.'
Goldsmith-Thomas recalled her own close call when she met Bill Cosby.
The Cosby Show star threw a luncheon for all the William Morris secretaries to show his thanks for the success of the sitcom.
During a brief encounter, the Emmy winner asked her about her future plans.
She had recently graduated from college and Goldsmith-Thomas told the comic she would love to represent him one day.
'Later, I got a call from the executive secretary on the first floor saying, "Mr. Cosby was very impressed by you. And we're going to give you contracts to sign, bring them over to his hotel, The Beverly Wilshire,"' she explained.
'And I went into the bathroom, I was really excited getting ready — oh my God, I felt seen, I felt really seen.
'And my friend who worked for the president of the agency happened to be there. I told her and she said, "Don't do it." I said, "Why?" She said, "Don't do it."
'Now she didn't say anything bad would happen … there was just something about the way she said it that frightened me enough that I didn't go.'
Cosby has been accused by some 60 women of drugging and raping them.
He was convicted of aggravated indecent assault in 2018.
The conviction was later overturned, and Cosby, who has denied all the allegations, was released in 2021.
Writing the book 'made me look back,' she recalled, revealing that when she was still fresh in the business when agents in Los Angeles would have their secretaries send cocaine cross-country in something called the 'New York pouch that went back and forth to New York overnight.'
Sexual harassment was common in the workplace when the Second Act producer was still new in the business.
'I mean the guys in the mail room, they'd go, "Hey, could I have a little keppy?" — meaning, "Can I have a little [oral sex]?" I'd go, "How can you ask me that? We're friends" … "Well, you don't ask, you don't get," they'd say.'
Lopez and her future producing partner met when they were both attending a performance of Cabaret starring the late Natasha Richardson in 1998 and the two connected 'on a very visceral level.'
Together they have worked on more than a dozen projects together including Hustlers, Kiss of the Spider Woman, which will be released in October, and Office Romance, in which Lopez is starring with Ted Lasso's Brett Goldstein.
It was the Hustlers star who insisted Goldsmith-Thomas write the book.
'Jennifer is extraordinary because here's a dancer who became an actor, who became a singer, who became a global brand, who is probably one of the biggest stars on earth and she's incredibly kind,' she said of her friend.
'I felt when I worked with Jennifer that I had a partner — that she put her shoulder next to mine and we'd push. It sounds funny, but the sky wasn't the limit; it was a resting place.'
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an hour ago
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Buckley Jr. Last week, they launched the game in the UK. The creators told Metro they felt it was right to relocate its premiere due to the turbulent political situation in the US, one which they had 'never imagined' when they began production two years ago. The game experience was run for a month and saw people take part in recreating the events of January 6th (Picture: Izzie Jones and Owen Davies/Metro) How it works is, players are broken up into sides – the 'red team' or the 'blue team' – and asked strategy-based questions about how they're going to proceed, similar to Warhammer. In fact, the game was designed by Alessio Cavatore, a renowned Warhammer games designer responsible for penning the rules to Games Workshop's flagship three tabletop titles – Warhammer, Warhammer 40k, and The Lord of the Rings. If you're a bit lost here and need a sense of how important this guy is, he was given a cameo in Lord of the Rings: Return of the King. 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Owen pledged his allegiance to the flag before the game (Picture Izzie Jones and Owen Davies/Metro) While Izzie pledged her allegiance to…Aladdin's Proud of Your Boy (Picture Izzie Jones and Owen Davies/Metro) We were also assigned real-life individuals who were at the Capitol that day. Owen was given the role of Commander Robert Glover of the DC Metropolitan Police while Izzie was appointed Enrique Tarrio, chairman of the Proud Boys. Neal Wilkinson, co-creator and designer, told Metro the game was created in consultation with DC police officers, who were present on January 6th. The tabletop battle was, to put it bluntly, totally one-sided. Just like on the day, police officers at the Capitol were vastly outnumbered by the insurrectionists, hell bent on forcing their way inside the building. Needless to say, the only way the police could win any clashes at all was through sheer luck. While playing it, we found it gave us just a small glimpse into what the mindset of the police must have been on the day – it was soon no longer about 'winning', it was about buying time for the people inside to get out with their lives. Each unit had a corresponding number of dice to be rolled – a group of Proud Boys were worth three dice, for example – and they could be backed by other units to increase that number, in turn increasing the likelihood of success (Picture: Izzie Jones and Owen Davies/Metro) Lose a dice roll by more than three and the losing unit is removed from the board completely (Picture: Izzie Jones and Owen Davies/Metro) Even against the overwhelming odds, only one Proud Boy unit made it inside the Capitol before time was up, although Owen's forces had been reduced to just a single riot police squad to guard the doors. The final minigame now was to find then-Vice President Mike Pence, hiding within the Capitol Building. One mad scramble later and he was discovered. But the highs of winning were short-lived. Almost immediately after victory was declared, TV screens in the venue displayed real-life footage of January 6th – showing the maiming that we had been so gleefully recreating for the past couple of hours. While we had not devised the game, its rules or its irreverent tone, it was hard not to feel a sense of guilt at taking part in it. Christopher McElroen, one of the games' directors, emphasised that despite being a fun time, there are serious messages about the current state of American democracy at the piece's heart. 'We decided to pursue this as a game, as a metaphor for democracy because a game only works if people participate,' he told Metro. 'Democracy only works if people participate.' Neal added they had initially planned to premiere the piece in New York City on January 6th earlier this year. But these plans changed after Trump was re-elected. 'We quickly came to realise that a New York crowd would not be willing or interested in gaming about those events,' he said. 'We thought a critical distance of an ocean would be good for us.' Certainly none of the audience showed any signs of trepidation about the evening's premise. The mini figures were mocked up to look like members of the police and also of the insurrectionists (Picture: Izzie Jones and Owen Davies/Metro) At the end of the game, the goal was to find former Vice-President Mike Pence (Picture: Izzie Jones and Owen Davies/Metro) Izzie, who played on the side of the insurrectionists, won the game. But at what cost?(Picture: Izzie Jones and Owen Davies/Metro) Before the game began, Christopher said: 'It was a violent insurrection and that history is actively being rewritten. On the President's first day in office, he chose to pardon or commute the sentences of everyone who participated in that act of violence.' Indeed, this included Izzie's 'character' for the evening, Enrique. He is currently suing the US government for $100 million alleging that they 'violated his constitutional rights'. It seems that even if we did, for a moment, consider the events of January 6th a game, there are quite a few who have never taken it seriously at all. Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at webnews@ For more stories like this, check our news page. Arrow MORE: 'Hide your bridesmaids': The inside story of Wedding Crashers as it celebrates 20 years Arrow MORE: Maga faithful warn Trump 'we won't fall in line' over Epstein investigation Arrow MORE: Rosie O'Donnell posts fiery response after Trump threatens to revoke citizenship