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{{Short description|1975 film by James Ivory}}
{{Infobox film
{{Infobox film
| name = The Wild Party
| name = The Wild Party
| image = The Wild Party.jpg
| image = The Wild Party.jpg
| caption = Film poster
| caption = Film poster
| writer = [[Walter Marks (composer)|Walter Marks]]
|based on = the poem by [[Joseph Moncure March]]
| starring = [[James Coco]]<br>[[Raquel Welch]]<br>[[Perry King]]<br>[[Tiffany Bolling]]<br>[[Royal Dano]]<br>[[David Dukes]]
| director = [[James Ivory]]
| director = [[James Ivory]]
| music = [[Walter Marks (composer)|Walter Marks]]<br>[[Louis St. Louis]] (song)
| screenplay = [[Walter Marks (composer)|Walter Marks]]
| based_on = ''[[The Wild Party (poem)|The Wild Party]]''<br> by [[Joseph Moncure March]]
| producer = [[Ismail Merchant]]
| starring = {{Plain list|
* [[James Coco]]
* [[Raquel Welch]]
* [[Perry King]]
* [[Tiffany Bolling]]
* [[Royal Dano]]
* [[David Dukes]]
}}
| cinematography = [[Walter Lassally]]
| cinematography = [[Walter Lassally]]
| music = Walter Marks
| producer = [[Ismail Merchant]]<br>''executive''<br>[[Edgar Lansbury (producer)|Edgar Lansbury]]<br>Joseph Beruh
| studio = The Wild Party<br>[[American International Pictures]]
| studio = The Wild Party
| distributor = [[American International Pictures]]
| released = {{Film date|1975|5|9|Washington, D.C.|ref1=<ref>Arnold, Gary (May 7, 1975). "Northern Virginia Arts Festival". ''[[The Washington Post]]''. C11. "...begins an exclusive engagement at the K-B Fine Arts this Friday."</ref>|ref2=<ref name="merchant-ivory" />}}
|distributor= [[American International Pictures|AIP]] (theatrical cut version)<br>[[MGM]] (DVD, directors cut)
| released = March 1975
| runtime = 91 minutes
| country = United States
| runtime = 91 mins (studio release)<br>109 min. (director's cut)
| language = English
| language = English
| budget =$900,000<ref name="warga"/>
| budget = $900,000<ref name="warga"/>
|}}
}}


'''''The Wild Party''''' is a 1975 [[Merchant Ivory Productions]] film directed by [[James Ivory]], produced by [[Ismail Merchant]], and starring [[James Coco]] and [[Raquel Welch]].<ref name=NYT>{{cite web|work=[[The New York Times]]|url=https://www.nytimes.com/movie/review?res=9C07E1DA113BF937A25753C1A967948260|title=The Wild Party (1974) IVORY'S ORIGINAL 'WILD PARTY'|authorlink=Vincent Canby|first=Vincent|last=Canby|date=October 14, 1981}}</ref>
'''''The Wild Party''''' is a 1975 American [[comedy-drama]] film directed by [[James Ivory]] and produced by [[Ismail Merchant]]<ref name="canby" /> for [[Merchant Ivory Productions]]. Loosely based on [[Joseph Moncure March]]'s [[narrative poetry|narrative poem]] [[The Wild Party (poem)|of the same name]], the screenplay is written by [[Walter Marks (composer)|Walter Marks]], who also composed the score. The plot follows an aging [[silent film|silent movie]] comic star of the 1920s named Jolly Grimm ([[James Coco]]) attempts a comeback by staging a party to show his new film.


Shot in [[Riverside, California]], the poem was also made into two musicals, a [[The Wild Party (LaChiusa musical)|Broadway show]], composed by [[Michael John LaChiusa]], which followed the poem very closely, and an [[The Wild Party (Lippa musical)|off-Broadway production]], composed by [[Andrew Lippa]], which took some artistic liberties but still less than this film.
An aging silent movie comic star of the 1920s named Jolly Grimm attempts a comeback by staging a party to show his new film. But the party turns into a sexual free-for-all and the comic ends up killing his mistress, Queenie, and an actor who has taken an interest in her.

The film was loosely based on a [[The Wild Party (poem)|poem]] by [[Joseph Moncure March]] and filmed in [[Riverside, California]]. The poem was also made into two musicals, a [[The Wild Party (LaChiusa musical)|Broadway show]], composed by [[Michael John LaChiusa]], which followed the poem very closely, and an [[The Wild Party (Lippa musical)|off-Broadway production]], composed by [[Andrew Lippa]], which took some artistic liberties with the poem but still less than this movie.


A dance scene was choreographed by [[Patricia Birch]].
A dance scene was choreographed by [[Patricia Birch]].


==Plot==
==Plot==
Once a great star of silent film, Jolly Grimm has wealth, a mansion, a manservant, Tex, and a beautiful and faithful woman in his life, Queenie, but no longer has Hollywood's interest. He desperately tries to get studio executives interested in his latest project, which he has financed himself, so he decides to throw a huge party at his house and show the film footage to those who come.
The year is 1929 and [[sound film]]s are arriving.<ref name="canby" /> Once a great star of [[silent film|the silent era]], Jolly Grimm has wealth, a mansion, a manservant, Tex, and a beautiful and faithful mistress, Queenie, but no longer Hollywood's interest. He desperately tries to get studio executives interested in his self-financed latest project, so he decides to throw a huge party at his house and show the film footage to the attendees.


The party turns into a loud, alcohol-fueled orgy. Jolly is unable to impress a Hollywood mogul, eager to move on to a more important social engagement, with the outdated humor and pathos of his movie. The more he drinks, the more angry Jolly becomes. The arrival of an underage girl brings out a protective, possibly perverted interest on Jolly's part, while the attention paid to Queenie by the virile young actor Dale Sword ignites a jealous fury in the sad comic that leads to violence and tragedy.
The party turns into a loud, alcohol-fueled orgy. Jolly is unable to impress a Hollywood mogul, eager to move on to a more important social engagement, with the outdated humor and pathos of his work. The more he drinks, the more angry Jolly becomes. The arrival of an underage girl brings out a protective, possibly perverted interest on Jolly's part, while the attention paid to Queenie by virile young actor Dale Sword ignites a jealous fury in the sad comic that leads to violence and tragedy.


==Cast==
==Cast==
*[[James Coco]] as Jolly Grimm
* [[James Coco]] as Jolly Grimm
*[[Raquel Welch]] as Queenie
* [[Raquel Welch]] as Queenie
*[[Perry King]] as Dale Sword
* [[Perry King]] as Dale Sword
*[[David Dukes]] as James Morrison
* [[David Dukes]] as James Morrison
*[[Tiffany Bolling]] as Kate
* [[Tiffany Bolling]] as Kate
*[[Mews Small]] as Bertha
* [[Mews Small]] as Bertha
*[[Royal Dano]] as Tex
* [[Royal Dano]] as Tex
*[[Paul Barresi]] as the Bartender
* [[Paul Barresi]] as the Bartender
* Annette Ferra as Nadine Jones


==Production==
==Production==
===Development===
The script was based on Joseph Moncure March's 1926 narrative poem about a party given by a vaudeville comic in his walk-up apartment in Greenwich Village. Lyricist-composer Walter Marks thought the poem might make the basis for a musical film, and decided to write a film adaptation which relocated the action to Hollywood at the end of the silent-movie era. Marks took the project to Edgar Lansbury and Joseph Beruh, producers of Broadway musicals such as ''[[Godspell]]'' and they agreed to executive produce.
The script was based on [[Joseph Moncure March]]'s [[The Wild Party (poem)|1926 narrative poem]] about a party given by a [[vaudeville]] comic in his walk-up apartment in [[Greenwich Village]]. Lyricist-composer [[Walter Marks (composer)|Walter Marks]] thought the poem might make the basis for a [[musical film]], and decided to write a [[film adaptation]], which relocated the action to Hollywood at the end of the [[silent film|silent-movie]] era. Marks took the project to [[Edgar Lansbury (producer)|Edgar Lansbury]] and [[Joseph Beruh]], producers of [[Broadway theatre|Broadway]] musicals such as ''[[Godspell]]'' and they agreed to executive produce. Lansbury thought the poem was so "wildly unconventional" it was only worth making with a budget of $200,000, "as an experiment in which the risks were minimised".<ref name="warga"/>


Marks' brother Peter introduced Marks to director [[James Ivory]] and producer [[Ismail Merchant]], who had just made ''[[Savages (1972 film)|Savages]]''. As fans, Lansbury and Beruh hired Ivory and Merchant. After Ivory became involved, the film stopped being a musical and became a drama with music.<ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.merchantivory.com/film/thewildparty | title=''The Wild Party'' (1974) | website=MerchantIvory.com}}</ref> [[Fatty Arbuckle]] was an inspiration for the main character.<ref name="warga">{{cite news|author=Warga, W. |date=Jun 16, 1974|title=Mission Inn: Film break for a faded lady|work=Los Angeles Times|id={{ProQuest|157524668}}}}</ref>
Lansbury thought the poem was so "wildly unconventional" it was only worth making with a budget of $200,000, "as an experiment in which the risks were minimised".<ref name="warga"/>


Lansbury says "as we worked on it, the project sort of gathered momentum."<ref name="warga"/> [[Raquel Welch]] agreed to play the female lead and the budget expanded. The film was financed by [[American International Pictures]] which normally specialised in [[exploitation films]]. Studio president [[Samuel Z. Arkoff]] said AIP usually made movies for the "[[F. W. Woolworth Company|Woolworths]] line" but admitted with this film, the company was "going to add a higher line" and that it was a "wildly artistic film".<ref>{{cite news|author=A. H. |date=Aug 4, 1974|title=-The dime-store way to make movies-and money|work=The New York Times|id={{ProQuest|120103271}}}}</ref>
Marks' brother Peter introduced Marks to director James Ivory and producer Ismail Merchant who had just made ''Savages''. Lansbury and Beruh liked that movie and hired Ivory and Merchant. After Ivory became involved, the film stopped being a musical and became a drama with music.<ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.merchantivory.com/film/thewildparty | title=''The Wild Party'' (1974) | website=MerchantIvory.com}}</ref> [[Fatty Arbuckle]] was an inspiration for the main character.<ref name="warga">Warga, W. (1974, Jun 16). "Mission Inn: Film break for a faded lady". ''Los Angeles Times'' (1923-Current File) Retrieved from https://search.proquest.com/docview/157524668</ref>


===Casting===
Lansbury says "as we worked on it, the project sort of gathered momentum."<ref name="warga"/> Raquel Welch agreed to play the female lead and the budget expanded. The film was financed by [[American International Pictures]] which normally specialised in exploitation films. Studio president [[Samuel Z. Arkoff]] said AIP usually made movies for the "Woolworths line" but admitted with this film the company were "going to add a higher line" and that it was a "wildly artistic film".<ref>By, A. H. (1974, Aug 04). "The dime-store way to make movies-and money". ''The New York Times'' (1923-Current File) Retrieved from https://search.proquest.com/docview/120103271</ref>
[[James Coco]] was cast in the lead. "There isn't anything I don't get to do and that's terribly appealing to any actor", said Coco. "It's full, fleshed out. And part of it is silent. I get to do love scenes with Raquel, I don't get that opportunity too often. I usually get the mule. She isn't what I expected. She's small. She's very serious, an organic actor and I love that. We have a marvelous relationship."<ref name="warga"/>


===Filming===
James Coco was cast in the lead. "There isn't anything I don't get to do and that's terribly appealing to any actor," said Coco. "It's full, fleshed out. And part of it is silent. I get to do love scenes with Raquel, I don't get that opportunity too often. I usually get the mule. She isn't what I expected. She's small. She's very serious, an organic actor and I love that. We have a marvelous relationship."<ref name="warga"/>
Filming started on 29 April 1974 at the [[The Mission Inn Hotel & Spa|Riverside Mission Inn]] in California. Shooting took five weeks. Ivory said the inn was chosen because "it's typical of the palatial, beautifully rococo architecture of the period."<ref>{{cite news|author=A. H. W. |date=Apr 14, 1974|title=News of the screen|work=The New York Times|id={{ProQuest|120084226}}}}</ref>


"Raquel Welch was a very, very difficult actress to work with", said Ivory. "She fired the cameraman, she fired Ismail, she would have fired [co-star] Perry King...and it was our film!... I did not enjoy making ''The Wild Party''."<ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.screenreport.com/news/07/ivory.html | title=An Evening with James Ivory | first=Pamela | last=Cole | date=October 20, 2007 | work=Southern Screen Report | accessdate=November 11, 2018}}</ref>
Filming started on 29 April 1974 at the [[The Mission Inn Hotel & Spa|Riverside Mission Inn]] in California. They shot there for five weeks. Ivory said the inn was chosen because "it's typical of the palatial, beautifully rocco architecture of the period."<ref>By, A. H. W. (1974, Apr 14). News of the screen. ''The New York Times'' (1923-Current File) Retrieved from https://search.proquest.com/docview/120084226</ref>


Welch demanded that the cinematographer [[Walter Lassally]] be fired after he made an "impertinent" remark to her. She also wanted Ivory fired and replaced as director by her then boyfriend [[Ron Talsky]]. The [[Directors Guild of America|Directors Guild]] became involved and threatening letters were sent to Welch. Filming continued.<ref name="book"/>
"Raquel Welch was a very, very difficult actress to work with," said James Ivory. "She fired the cameraman, she fired Ismail, she would have fired [co-star] Perry King…and it was our film!... I did not enjoy making ''The Wild Party''."<ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.screenreport.com/news/07/ivory.html | title=An Evening with James Ivory | first=Pamela | last=Cole | date=October 20, 2007 | work=Southern Screen Report | accessdate=November 11, 2018}}</ref>


"She's very insecure when she's working", said Lansbury.<ref name="warga"/>
Welch demanded that the cinematographer Walter Lassally be fired after he made an "impertinent" remark to her. She also wanted Ivory fired and replaced as director by her then boyfriend [[Ron Talsky]]. The [[Directors Guild of America|Directors Guild]] became involved and threatening letters were sent to Welch. Filming continued.<ref name="book"/>

"She's very insecure when she's working," said Lansbury.<ref name="warga"/>


Ivory later said "the egos and temper tantrums in the heat of May and June, the large crowds of extras, the festering atmosphere reminded me of working among those tempestuous movie stars in Bombay."<ref name="los"/>
Ivory later said "the egos and temper tantrums in the heat of May and June, the large crowds of extras, the festering atmosphere reminded me of working among those tempestuous movie stars in Bombay."<ref name="los"/>


==Re-editing==
===Post-production===
Two [[test screening]]s in [[Santa Barbara, California|Santa Barbara]] and [[San Diego]] in late January-early February 1975 went badly; the Santa Barbara preview audience consisting mostly of [[University of California, Santa Barbara|University of California]] students reported liking the orgy and fight scenes but hated Perry King and the new "serious" Raquel Welch, while the San Diego audience of mainly middle-class people had the exact opposite reaction.<ref name="merchant-ivory">Ivory, James. "Hollywood versus Hollywood". ''Merchant-Ivory: Interviews'', edited by Laurence Raw. University Press of Mississippi, 2012, pp. 55-57. {{ISBN|9781617032387}}.</ref> Unsure about how to handle the contradictory results, AIP heavily re-edited the film.<ref name="merchant-ivory" /> "They did more than recut it", said Ivory. "They turned it upside down and they distributed two versions. I never knew which is being shown."<ref name="los">{{cite news|author=Blume, M.|date=Feb 15, 1976|title=Movies|work=Los Angeles Times|id={{ProQuest|157936553}}}}</ref> There was talk within the company of showing one version in cities and the other in small towns.<ref name="merchant-ivory" />
The film was heavily edited by AIP. "They did more than recut it," said Ivory. "They turned it upside down and they distributed two versions. I never knew which is being shown."<ref name="los">Blume, M. (1976, Feb 15). Movies. Los Angeles Times (1923-Current File) Retrieved from https://search.proquest.com/docview/157936553</ref>


Ivory said the main changes were softening James Coco's character, adding discarded sex scenes and introducing flashbacks and flashforwards. Ivory wrote that the "patched-together remnants" of the film "proves once more that you cannot effectively re-edit a picture and change its character in order to "save" it."<ref>Kilday, G. (1976, Aug 28). FILM CLIPS. Los Angeles Times (1923-Current File) Retrieved from https://search.proquest.com/docview/157973449</ref>
Ivory said the main changes were softening Coco's character, adding discarded sex scenes, and introducing flashbacks and flashforwards. Ivory wrote that the "patched-together remnants" of the film "proves once more that you cannot effectively re-edit a picture and change its character in order to 'save' it."<ref>{{cite news|author=Kilday, G.|date=Aug 28, 1976|title=FILM CLIPS|work=Los Angeles Times|id={{ProQuest|157973449}}}}</ref> While Lansbury, Beruh and Marks approved the re-cut, Welch hated it. Stanzas from the source poem are read in a narrative voice-over by actor [[David Dukes]] during the film. "It's a simple, linear story but I think the poem adds a dimension to it", said Lansbury. "It is literary and it has the various textures of a mosaic."<ref name="warga"/>


==Release and reception==
While Lansbury, Beruh and Mark approved the re-cut version, Welch hated it.
Contrary to Ivory's wishes to get a New York City premiere (where he expected it to gain a following) as quickly as possible, the film instead premiered in Washington, D.C., and then made its way to [[Denver]] and [[Boston]].<ref name="merchant-ivory" /> Reviews in the early cities were terrible and box office performance poor,<ref name="merchant-ivory" /> and the film didn't get a theatrical release in New York until 1981.<ref name="canby" />
Stanzas from the [[The Wild Party (poem)|poem]] that inspired this story are read in a narrative voice-over by actor [[David Dukes]] during the film. "It's a simple, linear story but I think the poem adds a dimension to it," said Lansbury. "It is literary and it has the various textures of a mosaic."<ref name="warga"/>


''[[Variety (magazine)|Variety]]'' published a fairly positive review, calling the film "overly talky" but "a magnificent showpiece for Coco's talents. He successfully covers a spectrum from silly comedy, warm humor, sober anger, maddening frustration and drunken psychosis. Holding her own as his mistress is Raquel Welch, registering very strongly."<ref>"Film Reviews: The Wild Party". ''[[Variety (magazine)|Variety]]''. June 18, 1975. 16.</ref> Other reviews were much more negative. [[Vincent Canby]] of ''[[The New York Times]]'' wrote, "The movie often looks very good ... but the script is, I think, really terrible. Never do Mr. Ivory, Mr. Coco, Miss Welch and the others discover the proper way to play it, probably because it's unplayable."<ref name="canby">Canby, Vincent (October 14, 1981). [https://www.nytimes.com/1981/10/14/movies/ivory-s-original-wild-party.html "Film: Ivory's Original 'Wild Party'".] ''[[The New York Times]]''. C22.</ref> [[Charles Champlin]] of the ''[[Los Angeles Times]]'' stated, "It is impossible to know exactly what Merchant, Ivory and scriptwriter Walter Marks had in mind for 'The Wild Party.' It is too simple-minded to be taken seriously but too earnest to work as a piece of campy nostalgia."<ref>Champlin, Charles (January 21, 1976). "Hollywood's 'Wild Party'". ''[[Los Angeles Times]]''. Part IV, p. 1.</ref> [[Gene Siskel]] of the ''[[Chicago Tribune]]'' gave the film 1 star out of 4 and noted in a brief review that "Collectors of trash movies" might want to catch it while it played town.<ref>Siskel, Gene (October 21, 1975). "Hepburn, Wayne undone in a 'Rooster' reprise". ''[[Chicago Tribune]]''. Section 3, p. 5.</ref> Gary Arnold of ''[[The Washington Post]]'' wrote that the film "can be recommended with a fairly clear conscience to connoisseurs of bad movies, but anyone looking for a serious night's entertainment will have only himself to blame. Although it's never as energetically, uproariously preposterous as ''[[The Carpetbaggers (film)|The Carpetbaggers]]'' and ''[[The Oscar (film)|The Oscar]]'', the most diverting stinkers of the '60s, ''The Wild Party'' gives it the old college try."<ref>Arnold, Gary (May 10, 1975). "Giving It The Old College Try". ''[[The Washington Post]]''. D5.</ref> [[Jonathan Rosenbaum]] of ''[[The Monthly Film Bulletin]]'' stated that "it is difficult to imagine how even the longer versions of the film could overcome the formidable handicap of a miscast James Coco, an actor well-suited to the broad overkill of recent [[Otto Preminger|Preminger]] but quite inadequate for the emotional range and shading of a tragi-comic silent star." Rosenbaum did go on to state, however, "The songs and musical numbers are particularly delightful."<ref>{{cite journal |last=Rosenbaum |first=Jonathan |date=September 1975 |title=The Wild Party |journal=[[The Monthly Film Bulletin]] |volume=42 |issue=500 |page=206 }}</ref>
==Release==
The ''Los Angeles Times'' called the film "an ambitiously dreadful business."<ref>Champlin, C. (1976, Jan 21). MOVIE REVIEW. Los Angeles Times (1923-Current File) Retrieved from https://search.proquest.com/docview/157909114</ref>


The film was a [[Box-office bomb|financial flop]]. Ivory thought a problem, apart from the re-editing, was that the audience could not identify with any of the characters. "I think its mixed style part musical, part [[melodrama]], part character piece would have gone down better if the audience could have entered more into those characters' lives."<ref name="book">{{cite book|url=https://archive.org/details/jamesivoryinconv0000ivor|url-access=registration|quote=the wild party.|title=James Ivory in Conversation: How Merchant Ivory Makes Its Movies|first1=James|last1=Ivory|first2= Robert Emmet|last2= Long|publisher=University of California Press|date=2005|isbn=9780520234154}}</ref>
After the film's original release in 1975, other versions varying in length resurfaced on VHS and DVD, as well as a director's cut, 20 minutes longer, briefly released to French cinemas in 1976 and US cinemas in 1981.


After the film's original release in 1975, other versions varying in length resurfaced on [[VHS]] and [[DVD]], as well as a director's cut, 20 minutes longer, briefly released to French cinemas in 1976 and US cinemas in 1981.
The film was a financial flop. Ivory thought a problem, apart from the re-editing, was that the audience could not identify with any of the characters. "I think its mixed style - part musical, part melodrama, part character piece - would have gone down better if the audience could have entered more into those characters' lives."<ref name="book">{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Ot4Su8eT5ngC&pg=PP10&lpg=PP10&dq=%22the+wild+party%22+%22james+ivory%22+interview&source=bl&ots=OYKSneSDA3&sig=QAYDQeHyyhWJVPDX72-iB-HQ0wI&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwiMwraYke_UAhWmg1QKHSPIAu44ChDoAQg5MAQ#v=onepage&q=%22the%20wild%20party%22&f=false|title=James Ivory in Conversation: How Merchant Ivory Makes Its Movies|first1=James|last1=Ivory|first2= Robert Emmet|last2= Long|publisher=University of California Press|date=2005}}</ref>


The film was banned in the United Kingdom until 1982, when the [[British Board of Film Classification|BBFC]] gave it a "18" rating.<ref>{{Cite web|last=BBFC|title=The Wild Party|url=https://www.bbfc.co.uk/release/the-wild-party-q29sbgvjdglvbjpwwc0yodmymdc|access-date=2020-11-01|website=www.bbfc.co.uk|language=en}}</ref>
==Further reading==
*{{cite book | author=Parish, James Robert | title=Fiasco - A History of Hollywood’s Iconic Flops| location=Hoboken, New Jersey | publisher= John Wiley & Sons | year=2006 | ISBN=978-0-471-69159-4 | pages = 359 pages.}}


==References==
==References==
{{reflist}}
{{reflist}}
* {{cite book | author=Parish, James Robert | title=Fiasco A History of Hollywood's Iconic Flops | url=https://archive.org/details/fiascohistoryofh00pari/page/359 | url-access=registration | location=Hoboken, New Jersey | publisher=John Wiley & Sons | year=2006 | isbn=978-0-471-69159-4 | pages=[https://archive.org/details/fiascohistoryofh00pari/page/359 359 pages] }}


== External links ==
== External links ==
*{{IMDb title|0073903|The Wild Party}}
* {{IMDb title|0073903|The Wild Party}}
* {{TCMDb title|id=95880}}
*[https://www.jonathanrosenbaum.net/1975/09/the-wild-party-1975-review/ Review of film] by Jonathan Rosenbaum
* {{allMovie title|54570}}
* {{AFI film|54831}}
* [https://jonathanrosenbaum.net/2023/02/the-wild-party-1975-review/ Review of film] by Jonathan Rosenbaum

{{Merchant Ivory Productions}}
{{Merchant Ivory Productions}}
{{James Ivory}}
{{James Ivory}}
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[[Category:1975 films]]
[[Category:1975 films]]
[[Category:Merchant Ivory Productions films]]
[[Category:American comedy-drama films]]
[[Category:Films directed by James Ivory]]
[[Category:Films shot in California]]
[[Category:Films about actors]]
[[Category:Films about actors]]
[[Category:1970s comedy-drama films]]
[[Category:Films about filmmaking]]
[[Category:Films about films]]
[[Category:Films about Hollywood, Los Angeles]]
[[Category:Films based on poems]]
[[Category:Films based on poems]]
[[Category:Films directed by James Ivory]]
[[Category:Films set in 1929]]
[[Category:Films set in country houses]]
[[Category:Films set in Los Angeles]]
[[Category:Films shot in California]]
[[Category:1975 comedy-drama films]]
[[Category:1970s English-language films]]
[[Category:Merchant Ivory Productions films]]
[[Category:Films originally rejected by the British Board of Film Classification]]
[[Category:Films about parties]]
[[Category:English-language comedy-drama films]]

Latest revision as of 17:42, 8 September 2024

The Wild Party
Film poster
Directed byJames Ivory
Screenplay byWalter Marks
Based onThe Wild Party
by Joseph Moncure March
Produced byIsmail Merchant
Starring
CinematographyWalter Lassally
Music byWalter Marks
Production
company
The Wild Party
Distributed byAmerican International Pictures
Release dates
  • May 9, 1975 (1975-05-09) (Washington, D.C.)[1]
Running time
91 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$900,000[2]

The Wild Party is a 1975 American comedy-drama film directed by James Ivory and produced by Ismail Merchant[3] for Merchant Ivory Productions. Loosely based on Joseph Moncure March's narrative poem of the same name, the screenplay is written by Walter Marks, who also composed the score. The plot follows an aging silent movie comic star of the 1920s named Jolly Grimm (James Coco) attempts a comeback by staging a party to show his new film.

Shot in Riverside, California, the poem was also made into two musicals, a Broadway show, composed by Michael John LaChiusa, which followed the poem very closely, and an off-Broadway production, composed by Andrew Lippa, which took some artistic liberties but still less than this film.

A dance scene was choreographed by Patricia Birch.

Plot

[edit]

The year is 1929 and sound films are arriving.[3] Once a great star of the silent era, Jolly Grimm has wealth, a mansion, a manservant, Tex, and a beautiful and faithful mistress, Queenie, but no longer Hollywood's interest. He desperately tries to get studio executives interested in his self-financed latest project, so he decides to throw a huge party at his house and show the film footage to the attendees.

The party turns into a loud, alcohol-fueled orgy. Jolly is unable to impress a Hollywood mogul, eager to move on to a more important social engagement, with the outdated humor and pathos of his work. The more he drinks, the more angry Jolly becomes. The arrival of an underage girl brings out a protective, possibly perverted interest on Jolly's part, while the attention paid to Queenie by virile young actor Dale Sword ignites a jealous fury in the sad comic that leads to violence and tragedy.

Cast

[edit]

Production

[edit]

Development

[edit]

The script was based on Joseph Moncure March's 1926 narrative poem about a party given by a vaudeville comic in his walk-up apartment in Greenwich Village. Lyricist-composer Walter Marks thought the poem might make the basis for a musical film, and decided to write a film adaptation, which relocated the action to Hollywood at the end of the silent-movie era. Marks took the project to Edgar Lansbury and Joseph Beruh, producers of Broadway musicals such as Godspell and they agreed to executive produce. Lansbury thought the poem was so "wildly unconventional" it was only worth making with a budget of $200,000, "as an experiment in which the risks were minimised".[2]

Marks' brother Peter introduced Marks to director James Ivory and producer Ismail Merchant, who had just made Savages. As fans, Lansbury and Beruh hired Ivory and Merchant. After Ivory became involved, the film stopped being a musical and became a drama with music.[4] Fatty Arbuckle was an inspiration for the main character.[2]

Lansbury says "as we worked on it, the project sort of gathered momentum."[2] Raquel Welch agreed to play the female lead and the budget expanded. The film was financed by American International Pictures which normally specialised in exploitation films. Studio president Samuel Z. Arkoff said AIP usually made movies for the "Woolworths line" but admitted with this film, the company was "going to add a higher line" and that it was a "wildly artistic film".[5]

Casting

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James Coco was cast in the lead. "There isn't anything I don't get to do and that's terribly appealing to any actor", said Coco. "It's full, fleshed out. And part of it is silent. I get to do love scenes with Raquel, I don't get that opportunity too often. I usually get the mule. She isn't what I expected. She's small. She's very serious, an organic actor and I love that. We have a marvelous relationship."[2]

Filming

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Filming started on 29 April 1974 at the Riverside Mission Inn in California. Shooting took five weeks. Ivory said the inn was chosen because "it's typical of the palatial, beautifully rococo architecture of the period."[6]

"Raquel Welch was a very, very difficult actress to work with", said Ivory. "She fired the cameraman, she fired Ismail, she would have fired [co-star] Perry King...and it was our film!... I did not enjoy making The Wild Party."[7]

Welch demanded that the cinematographer Walter Lassally be fired after he made an "impertinent" remark to her. She also wanted Ivory fired and replaced as director by her then boyfriend Ron Talsky. The Directors Guild became involved and threatening letters were sent to Welch. Filming continued.[8]

"She's very insecure when she's working", said Lansbury.[2]

Ivory later said "the egos and temper tantrums in the heat of May and June, the large crowds of extras, the festering atmosphere reminded me of working among those tempestuous movie stars in Bombay."[9]

Post-production

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Two test screenings in Santa Barbara and San Diego in late January-early February 1975 went badly; the Santa Barbara preview audience consisting mostly of University of California students reported liking the orgy and fight scenes but hated Perry King and the new "serious" Raquel Welch, while the San Diego audience of mainly middle-class people had the exact opposite reaction.[10] Unsure about how to handle the contradictory results, AIP heavily re-edited the film.[10] "They did more than recut it", said Ivory. "They turned it upside down and they distributed two versions. I never knew which is being shown."[9] There was talk within the company of showing one version in cities and the other in small towns.[10]

Ivory said the main changes were softening Coco's character, adding discarded sex scenes, and introducing flashbacks and flashforwards. Ivory wrote that the "patched-together remnants" of the film "proves once more that you cannot effectively re-edit a picture and change its character in order to 'save' it."[11] While Lansbury, Beruh and Marks approved the re-cut, Welch hated it. Stanzas from the source poem are read in a narrative voice-over by actor David Dukes during the film. "It's a simple, linear story but I think the poem adds a dimension to it", said Lansbury. "It is literary and it has the various textures of a mosaic."[2]

Release and reception

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Contrary to Ivory's wishes to get a New York City premiere (where he expected it to gain a following) as quickly as possible, the film instead premiered in Washington, D.C., and then made its way to Denver and Boston.[10] Reviews in the early cities were terrible and box office performance poor,[10] and the film didn't get a theatrical release in New York until 1981.[3]

Variety published a fairly positive review, calling the film "overly talky" but "a magnificent showpiece for Coco's talents. He successfully covers a spectrum from silly comedy, warm humor, sober anger, maddening frustration and drunken psychosis. Holding her own as his mistress is Raquel Welch, registering very strongly."[12] Other reviews were much more negative. Vincent Canby of The New York Times wrote, "The movie often looks very good ... but the script is, I think, really terrible. Never do Mr. Ivory, Mr. Coco, Miss Welch and the others discover the proper way to play it, probably because it's unplayable."[3] Charles Champlin of the Los Angeles Times stated, "It is impossible to know exactly what Merchant, Ivory and scriptwriter Walter Marks had in mind for 'The Wild Party.' It is too simple-minded to be taken seriously but too earnest to work as a piece of campy nostalgia."[13] Gene Siskel of the Chicago Tribune gave the film 1 star out of 4 and noted in a brief review that "Collectors of trash movies" might want to catch it while it played town.[14] Gary Arnold of The Washington Post wrote that the film "can be recommended with a fairly clear conscience to connoisseurs of bad movies, but anyone looking for a serious night's entertainment will have only himself to blame. Although it's never as energetically, uproariously preposterous as The Carpetbaggers and The Oscar, the most diverting stinkers of the '60s, The Wild Party gives it the old college try."[15] Jonathan Rosenbaum of The Monthly Film Bulletin stated that "it is difficult to imagine how even the longer versions of the film could overcome the formidable handicap of a miscast James Coco, an actor well-suited to the broad overkill of recent Preminger but quite inadequate for the emotional range and shading of a tragi-comic silent star." Rosenbaum did go on to state, however, "The songs and musical numbers are particularly delightful."[16]

The film was a financial flop. Ivory thought a problem, apart from the re-editing, was that the audience could not identify with any of the characters. "I think its mixed style – part musical, part melodrama, part character piece – would have gone down better if the audience could have entered more into those characters' lives."[8]

After the film's original release in 1975, other versions varying in length resurfaced on VHS and DVD, as well as a director's cut, 20 minutes longer, briefly released to French cinemas in 1976 and US cinemas in 1981.

The film was banned in the United Kingdom until 1982, when the BBFC gave it a "18" rating.[17]

References

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  1. ^ Arnold, Gary (May 7, 1975). "Northern Virginia Arts Festival". The Washington Post. C11. "...begins an exclusive engagement at the K-B Fine Arts this Friday."
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Warga, W. (Jun 16, 1974). "Mission Inn: Film break for a faded lady". Los Angeles Times. ProQuest 157524668.
  3. ^ a b c d Canby, Vincent (October 14, 1981). "Film: Ivory's Original 'Wild Party'". The New York Times. C22.
  4. ^ "The Wild Party (1974)". MerchantIvory.com.
  5. ^ A. H. (Aug 4, 1974). "-The dime-store way to make movies-and money". The New York Times. ProQuest 120103271.
  6. ^ A. H. W. (Apr 14, 1974). "News of the screen". The New York Times. ProQuest 120084226.
  7. ^ Cole, Pamela (October 20, 2007). "An Evening with James Ivory". Southern Screen Report. Retrieved November 11, 2018.
  8. ^ a b Ivory, James; Long, Robert Emmet (2005). James Ivory in Conversation: How Merchant Ivory Makes Its Movies. University of California Press. ISBN 9780520234154. the wild party.
  9. ^ a b Blume, M. (Feb 15, 1976). "Movies". Los Angeles Times. ProQuest 157936553.
  10. ^ a b c d e Ivory, James. "Hollywood versus Hollywood". Merchant-Ivory: Interviews, edited by Laurence Raw. University Press of Mississippi, 2012, pp. 55-57. ISBN 9781617032387.
  11. ^ Kilday, G. (Aug 28, 1976). "FILM CLIPS". Los Angeles Times. ProQuest 157973449.
  12. ^ "Film Reviews: The Wild Party". Variety. June 18, 1975. 16.
  13. ^ Champlin, Charles (January 21, 1976). "Hollywood's 'Wild Party'". Los Angeles Times. Part IV, p. 1.
  14. ^ Siskel, Gene (October 21, 1975). "Hepburn, Wayne undone in a 'Rooster' reprise". Chicago Tribune. Section 3, p. 5.
  15. ^ Arnold, Gary (May 10, 1975). "Giving It The Old College Try". The Washington Post. D5.
  16. ^ Rosenbaum, Jonathan (September 1975). "The Wild Party". The Monthly Film Bulletin. 42 (500): 206.
  17. ^ BBFC. "The Wild Party". www.bbfc.co.uk. Retrieved 2020-11-01.
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