During the difficult 1958 production of Some Like It Hot, director Billy Wilder found himself caught between frustration, exhaustion, and admiration while working with Marilyn Monroe. The film would later become one of the greatest comedies in Hollywood history, but behind the scenes, some of its simplest moments were anything but simple.
One of the most famous examples involved a short line spoken by Monroe’s character, Sugar Kane. The scene seemed easy enough: Sugar was supposed to rummage through drawers and say, “Where’s the bourbon?” Just three words. For most actors, it might have taken only a few takes. For Monroe, however, the line became a mountain.
As the cameras rolled, Monroe repeatedly forgot the words, changed the phrasing, or froze under the pressure. Wilder, already dealing with a demanding production schedule, grew increasingly desperate. In an attempt to help her, the crew reportedly hid slips of paper inside the drawers with the line written on them. The idea was simple: wherever Monroe looked, the words would be there.
But even that did not solve the problem immediately. Take after take collapsed into confusion. The set became a strange mix of comedy and tension, with everyone waiting to see whether Monroe would finally deliver the line correctly. By the time the scene was completed, it had reportedly taken 59 takes.
For Wilder, the experience was exhausting. Yet the result proved why Monroe remained so unforgettable. When the film was released, audiences saw only the final magic, not the chaos behind it. Her delivery had a nervous, funny, natural quality that fit Sugar Kane perfectly. What had been painful on set became effortless on screen.
Some Like It Hot went on to become a major success, earning more than $25 million at the box office and securing its place as a classic. Wilder later recognized that, despite the delays and difficulties, Monroe brought something rare to the role. Her timing, vulnerability, and screen presence could not be easily copied.
The “Where’s the bourbon?” moment became more than a production headache. It became a symbol of Marilyn Monroe’s complicated genius: unpredictable, fragile, frustrating, but dazzling when the camera captured the right spark. In the end, take 59 was not just a successful line reading. It was proof that sometimes Hollywood magic is born from total chaos.