Marilyn Monroe had a strong liking for intellectual men
Marilyn Monroe's marriage to writer Arthur Miller probably shows that she had a strong liking for intellectual men. Their marriage lasted for five years and it's also her longest marriage. The two were polar opposites: a scholarly, award-winning playwright fell in love with a movie star sex icon. She also enjoyed the idea of being viewed as a professional actor who collaborated with a well-known dramatist. At one point, Monroe said, "This is the first time I've been really in love," expressing her happiness over her marriage. While they collaborated on what would be her last movie, The Misfits, Monroe and Miller's romance came to an end.
But there is additional proof proving intellectual men are her type. Actress Shelley Winters, who was briefly roommates with Marilyn Monroe, recalled that the two developed a list of men they wanted to sleep with just for fun. Nobody under 50 was on hers, according to a later statement by Winters. She never had the chance to ask her before she passed away how much of her list she had actually accomplished, but Albert Einstein was on it, and after she passed away, she saw a silver-framed picture of him on her white piano.