Tony Curtis and Natalie Wood discover some shocking information when they read the book the movie was based on. |
Tony Curtis and Henry Fonda in Sex and the Single Girl, 1964. Henry looks like he's saying, "I don't know why I'm in this movie." |
The lovely Natalie Wood, 1964. |
Natalie looking stunning in her white dress, 1964. |
Sex and the Single
Girl was a change of pace for Natalie Wood as an actress. It was her first
comedic role as an adult, and it was the second of three movies she made with
Tony Curtis, the first being 1958’s Kings
Go Forth, and the last being 1965’s The
Great Race. Sex and the Single Girl was based on Helen Gurley Brown’s 1962
non-fiction best-seller. The movie didn’t really have anything to do with the
book, the studio just wanted the titillating title, and paid $200,000 for the
film rights.
The movie is an example of a very specific genre, the “sex
comedy” that flourished in the late 1950’s and early 1960’s. Of course, thanks
to the production code that was still in effect, the main characters don’t
actually have sex until they are safely married. Perhaps the ne plus ultra of
sex comedies from this era is 1959’s Pillow
Talk, starring Rock Hudson and Doris Day. Sex comedies are replete with
characters assuming false identities, and that becomes integral to the plot of Sex and the Single Girl.
Natalie Wood is cast as Helen Gurley Brown, and the film has
changed her occupation to psychoanalyst. In real life, Gurley Brown worked in
advertising and publishing. In 1965, shortly after the movie was released,
Gurley Brown got the job that she’s best known for, as she became the editor in
chief of Cosmopolitan and transformed
the magazine into one of leading women’s magazines. Tony Curtis plays Bob
Weston, a writer for Stop magazine,
which takes pride in being the lowest of the scandal rags. As the movie opens,
another writer for Stop has just
published a scalding critique of Gurley Brown’s best-selling book, titled Sex and the Single Girl. But Weston
thinks there’s more to this story, and he wants to meet Gurley Brown in person,
as he thinks she’s a virgin who is masquerading as a sex expert. (This is not
the movie to see if you’re looking for enlightened attitudes about men and women.)
It seems odd that Stop magazine would
want to publish another story about Gurley Brown, since their takedown of her
just appeared.
Weston goes to Gurley Brown for treatment, but he doesn’t
tell her his real identity. Instead he tells her the marital problems his
friend Frank, played by Henry Fonda, is having with his wife, played by Lauren
Bacall. Gurley Brown is much too nice to Weston, and quickly develops a crush
on him. Hilarity, or something meant to approximate it, ensues.
And there the plot summary stops. It’s no use telling you
about how “funny” it is when Weston fakes a suicide attempt, only to have
Gurley Brown save him from drowning (it’s always a little sad when Natalie
Wood’s movies feature her in a water tank) or how completely “hilarious” the
ten minute long car chase at the end of the movie is. I put “funny” and
“hilarious” in quotation marks because I didn’t find Sex and the Single Girl to be very funny. It’s a movie that has not
aged very well, and it’s ideas and stereotypes about women are hopelessly dated.
I know, I should let it go, but the movie just didn’t work for me.
Tony Curtis is a charming and funny actor, but he doesn’t
get to do much that’s very funny in this movie. He’s much funnier in Some Like It Hot and Operation Petticoat. I like Tony Curtis
a lot, and his voice is just great. You can tell in Sex and the Single Girl that Tony is starting to lose his hair in
front, as it’s always combed forward. Natalie Wood does the best she can, and
she brings an earnest conviction to the role that is appealing, but the movie
doesn’t give Helen Gurley Brown very much depth. I wonder how the real Helen
Gurley Brown felt about the movie? I would imagine that she was probably excited
that someone as beautiful and talented as Natalie Wood was playing her, but it probably
annoyed her that she was turned into a woman who at the end of the movie gives
up her career for her man.
The real problem with Sex
and the Single Girl is the script. It’s a real dog, and oddly enough, it
was written by Joseph Heller, of Catch-22
fame. The funniest part is probably when Tony Curtis is wearing Natalie
Wood’s nightie (long story) and he remarks that he looks like Jack Lemmon in
that movie where he dresses up like a girl. Curtis’ character can’t remember
the name of the movie, but of course, it’s Some
Like It Hot, which Tony Curtis starred in. It’s a funny joke, but then it
gets overdone as everyone remarks on how Bob Weston looks like Jack Lemmon.
There are also some bewildering jokes about Tony Curtis’ character having to
put coins in everything in the Stop office
building. Curtis even needs a coin so a mirror will be revealed so he can comb
his hair in the men’s room. I assume this was a joke about the popularity of
automats, as after the scene in the men’s room Curtis goes to the automat for
lunch, but automats had been popular for decades before 1964. They weren’t
exactly a new thing, so it seems like an odd joke.
Henry Fonda and Lauren Bacall don’t have much to do in the
movie. But I could listen to Henry Fonda read the phone book. He had such a
great voice. The supporting cast is rounded out by Mel Ferrer, playing the rather
pointless role of Rudy, another doctor in Gurley Brown’s practice whose only
purpose in the movie is to flirt relentlessly with her. Although a successful
actor in his own right, Mel Ferrer is probably best known today for being
married to Audrey Hepburn.
Natalie Wood looks beautiful throughout the film, and her
Edith Head wardrobe is fantastic. In particular the white dress and the white
robe she wears are just jaw-dropping.
Wood’s biographer Suzanne Finstad researched her contract
for Sex and the Single Girl, and
discovered that, in addition to being paid $160,000 for her role, Wood had a
lot of “riders” in her contract. Wood stipulated the color of the phone that was
to be in her dressing room. (Unfortunately, Finstad doesn’t reveal the color.) “She
requested white cigarette holders from a shop in London, a special oil of
gardenia available in Cairo, and stipulated days off during her menstrual period.”
(Natasha: The Biography of Natalie Wood, by
Suzanne Finstad, p.290)
Finstad interviewed Tony Curtis for her book, and she got
some very interesting quotes from him. Curtis told Finstad that he had the best
on screen chemistry of any of his co-stars with Wood. Curtis said, “Natalie and
I had to be careful, because we found each other quite attractive, but I just
didn’t want to degenerate the relationship and neither did she.” Curtis then
tells Finstad the real reason he didn’t sleep with Natalie: “Natalie’s
boom-booms weren’t big enough. To each his own.” (Finstad, p.293) That’s just
the dumbest thing I’ve ever heard. Of course, that might only be Curtis’ lame excuse.
The truth might be that she just didn’t want to sleep with him. Clearly something
happened in their relationship, because by the time they started filming The Great Race, shortly after Sex and the Single Girl wrapped, Curtis
and Wood were estranged. (Finstad, p.295)
Wood was likely less than happy with the way the script of Sex and the Single Girl made fun of
analysis, as during this time in her life she was going to therapy almost
daily. Wood said, “I was in analysis for some time, and I found it very
beneficial…for me it was a different way of looking at things. I think it made
me less introspective, more open to other people. It really changed my life.” (Natalie Wood: A Biography in Photographs, by
Christopher Nickens, p.131)
Sex and the Single
Girl was released in December 1964. Cue
magazine called it “thoroughly coarse, irritating and stupid.” (Nickens,
p.126) Despite unfavorable reviews, it grossed $8 million and was the 20th
highest grossing film released in 1964. It’s an interesting time capsule, but
one that hasn’t aged very well. Despite the movie’s shortcomings, you can still
enjoy the beauty and talent of Natalie Wood in it.
1 comment:
I thought the car chase scene was hilarious. Especially the pretzels. I am surprised you didn't mention anything about the delightful Gretchen.
This movie is odd in the sense that women certainly seemed so complicit in their subjugation. Why does Helen immediately announce that she will stop working to become Bob's wife? When Bob and Gretchen are at the airport about to go to Fiji, Helen strolls up crying, and Gretchen just wanders away, perhaps used to being plan B.
This era seems to be full of productions featuring charismatic male leads who all of the other characters seem to be enthralled with. There's this movie, where two young women agree to be Bob's fake wife, and Helen agrees to meet up with wherever he threatens to commit suicide. And the musical Company by Stephen Sondheim where every character exists to cater to Bobby. What is up with guys named Bob? But that Gretchen tho.
Post a Comment