The Thrill of It All (film): Difference between revisions
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| director = |
| director = [[Norman Jewison]] |
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| writer = |
| writer = [[Larry Gelbart]]<br />[[Carl Reiner]] |
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| starring = |
| starring = [[Doris Day]]<br />[[James Garner]]<br />[[Arlene Francis]] |
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| released = [[ in film| in film]] |
| released = [[ in film| in film]] |
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| runtime = min. |
| runtime = 108 min. |
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| country = [[U.S.A.]] |
| country = [[U.S.A.]] |
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| language = [[English language|English]] |
| language = [[English language|English]] |
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| imdb_id = 0057581 |
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'''''The Thrill of It All''''' is a [[1963]] [[romantic comedy film]] directed by [[Norman Jewison]] starring [[Doris Day]], [[James Garner]], [[Arlene Francis]], and [[ZaSu Pitts]]. The screenplay was written by [[Larry Gelbart]] and [[Carl Reiner]]. Reiner also plays a cameo as a character actor appearing on TV in various nasty roles. |
'''''The Thrill of It All''''' is a [[1963]] [[romantic comedy film]] directed by [[Norman Jewison]] starring [[Doris Day]], [[James Garner]], [[Arlene Francis]], and [[ZaSu Pitts]]. The screenplay was written by [[Larry Gelbart]] and [[Carl Reiner]]. Reiner also plays a cameo as a character actor appearing on TV in various nasty roles. |
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The story of the film centres around urban housewife Beverly Boyer (Day) and her |
The story of the film centres around urban housewife Beverly Boyer (Doris Day) and her husband, an obstetrician and devoted family man, Gerald (James Garner). Beverly is offered the opportunity to star for a [[television]] commercial advertising [[soap]]. After a shaky start, she gets a contract of $85,000 per year to appear on the weekly TV commercials, but soon the TV studio places greater and greater demands on the unlikely TV star. Gerald becomes jealous of the fact that she is now out-earning him, and how their relationship slowly deteriorates through to its eventual reconciliation. |
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Reiner had originally conceived the project for [[Judy Holliday]], who died before the film could be made, according to Reiner's reminiscence during his videotaped "[[Archive of American Television]]" interview. |
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'''''The Thrill of It All''''', a 1963 movie comedy, features '''[[Doris Day]]''' as a housewife who accidentally winds up a popular TV commercial personality, much to the irritation of her husband ('''[[James Garner]]'''), who couldn't bear the thought of his wife working (this was 1963). The film was written by '''[[Larry Gelbart]]''' and '''[[Carl Reiner]]''', and directed by '''[[Norman Jewison]]'''. Reiner had originally conceived the project for [[Judy Holliday]], who died before the film could be made, according to Reiner's reminiscence during his videotaped "[[Archive of American Television]]" interview. |
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==External link== |
==External link== |
Revision as of 23:42, 16 February 2007
The Thrill of It All | |
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Directed by | Norman Jewison |
Written by | Larry Gelbart Carl Reiner |
Starring | Doris Day James Garner Arlene Francis |
Release date | in film |
Running time | 108 min. |
Country | U.S.A. |
Language | English |
The Thrill of It All is a 1963 romantic comedy film directed by Norman Jewison starring Doris Day, James Garner, Arlene Francis, and ZaSu Pitts. The screenplay was written by Larry Gelbart and Carl Reiner. Reiner also plays a cameo as a character actor appearing on TV in various nasty roles.
The story of the film centres around urban housewife Beverly Boyer (Doris Day) and her husband, an obstetrician and devoted family man, Gerald (James Garner). Beverly is offered the opportunity to star for a television commercial advertising soap. After a shaky start, she gets a contract of $85,000 per year to appear on the weekly TV commercials, but soon the TV studio places greater and greater demands on the unlikely TV star. Gerald becomes jealous of the fact that she is now out-earning him, and how their relationship slowly deteriorates through to its eventual reconciliation.
Reiner had originally conceived the project for Judy Holliday, who died before the film could be made, according to Reiner's reminiscence during his videotaped "Archive of American Television" interview.
External link