Showing posts with label Dean Martin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dean Martin. Show all posts

Monday, April 16, 2012

Marie Wilson And My Friend Irma





Marie Wilson played "My Friend Irma" on the radio show and later television. The old Zasu Pitts and Thelma Todd radio series doesn't seem to have been an influence as series' basic situation of the two girls living together with one of them being a screwball was based on MY SISTER EILEEN.

 But the MY FRIEND IRMA movie does have some things in common with the Zasu Pitts and Thelma Todd comedies of the 1930's.

 My Friend Irma (film)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
    
My Friend Irma

Theatrical release poster
Directed byGeorge Marshall
Produced byHal B. Wallis
Written byCy Howard
Parke Levy
StarringJohn Lund
Marie Wilson
Diana Lynn
Don DeFore
Dean Martin
Jerry Lewis
Hans Conreid
Distributed byParamount Pictures
Release date(s)August 16, 1949 (1949-08-16)
Running time102 minutes
LanguageEnglish
My Friend Irma is a comedy film directed by George Marshall and is most notable as the film debut of comedy team Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis. The film was released on August 16, 1949 by Paramount and is based upon the CBS radio series My Friend Irma that first aired in 1947.

Plot

The storyline follows two women, Irma Peterson (Marie Wilson) and Jane Stacey (Diana Lynn), who room together in New York. Irma is a somewhat dim-witted blonde who deep down has good intentions. Jane is an amibitious woman who dreams of marrying a rich man. She winds up as a secretary for a millionaire, Richard Rhinelander (Don DeFore).
Meanwhile, Irma is in love with Al (John Lund), who is a con-artist looking to get rich quick. Al visits an orange-juice stand and encounters Steve Laird (Dean Martin) singing. He convinces him to leave his job and promises to make him famous. Steve and his partner Seymour (Jerry Lewis) then wind up living at Irma & Jane's apartment through the invitation of Al. She is angry, but Irma convinces her to let them stay. This opens up a romantic arc where Jane and Steve fall in love.
After a successful singing debut, Steve gets upset with Jane's wishes to marry a wealthy man and he leaves and returns to the juice stand. Meanwhile, Irma gets into a situation and decides to end her life. However, she finds out a radio station is about to call her for a $50,000 question, so she rushes home to answer the question. She wins the prize and all live happily ever after.

 Production

My Friend Irma was filmed from February 22 through April 12, 1949. Although filming was already underway, producer Hal B. Wallis thought it would be a low-risk introduction of the team of Martin & Lewis to the screen. They had been approached by several film studios before signing a five-year contract with Paramount Pictures.
Lewis was originally cast to play a comparatively straight role, but after the first day of screen tests it was obvious that he was wrong for the part that the studio had selected for him. Concerned that he would be left out of the film and that they were abandoning the formula that had created the Martin & Lewis team's comedic success ("handsome guy with the monkey"), a frantic Lewis quickly came up with the idea of playing a comical sidekick to Steve, and the character Seymour was written into the script. Lewis reminisces in detail about this career turning point in his book on Martin (Dean and Me) as well as his lengthy online Archive of American Television videotaped interview.
Marie Wilson, Hans Conried, and Gloria Gordon played the same characters in the movie that they did on the radio show. Felix Bressart was cast in the film, but died during filming, Hans Conried took over his role.

 Cast

John Lund .......... Al
Marie Wilson....... Irma Peterson
Diana Lynn ........ Jane Stacy
Don DeFore ....... Richard Rhinelander III
Dean Martin ....... Steve Laird
Jerry Lewis ........ Seymour
Hans Conried ..... Professor Kropotkin
Kathryn Givney ... Mrs. Rhinelander
Percy Helton ...... Mr. Z. Clyde
Gloria Gordon ..... Mrs. O'Reilly, the Landlady

 Sequel

It was followed the following year by a sequel, My Friend Irma Goes West, the only sequel that Martin & Lewis ever made.

 In pop culture

In the 2002 film Martin and Lewis, a biopic about the comedy team starring Sean Hayes and Jeremy Northam. A scene from the film portrays that Lewis originally wanted to play the role of Al, but Wallis suggested that he play a new character, Seymour, instead, to which Lewis reluctantly agreed.

 DVD releases

My Friend Irma has been released twice on DVD. It was originally released on a two-film collection with its sequel, My Friend Irma Goes West, on October 25, 2005. A year later it was included on an eight-film DVD set, the Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis Collection: Volume One, released on October 31, 2006.

References

  • Lewis, Jerry and James Kaplan. Dean & Me (A Love Story). New York: Doubleday, 2005. ISBN 0-7679-2086-4

 External links

   

One of Marie Wilson's first film roles was as "Mary, Quite Contrary" in BABES IN TOYLAND at the Roach studio.











Marie Wilson in background, right, at the end of the movie.



Here we see Marie Wilson with Thelma Todd and Patsy Kelly as well as Jeanette MacDonald at a Hollywood party in 1935.





1936 Patricia Ellis Jeanne Madden Jean Muir Marie Wilson. A display of filters for photography. Marie Wilson's name is behind the first girl on the left, while Marie Wilson herself is on the right.


Marie Wilson as "Miss Murgatroyd" in SATAN MET LADY, 1936. This was a slightly different remake of THE MALTESE FALCON and Miss Murgatroyd was in place of "Effie".



Marie Wilson and Anne Nagel are so cool in this picture.




Seems to me I've seen that guy somewhere before.




Oh yeh. He was one of Thelma Todd's costars.





The movie version MY FRIEND IRMA had it that the girls' dates were always at Coney Island, something they'd also had in ON THE LOOSE with Thelma Todd and Zasu Pitts. Both movies in fact had the same director, George Marshall. But MY FRIEND IRMA had the same problem on the radio show before the movie was made, too. Still, it was reusing the same situation as well as the same director.



My Friend Irma's trip to Coney Island ( radio show ):

Another site where you can listen to "My Friend Irma" radio show:


BABES IN TOYLAND reviewed at "Scared Silly":



BABES IN TOYLAND Page at Way Out West:



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Monday, April 2, 2012

FILM FUN

More on the British publication FILM FUN.



From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 
Film Fun was a British comic book that ran from (issues dates) 17 January 1920 to 15 September 1962, when it merged with Buster, a total of 2225 issues. There were also annuals in the forties and fifties. It was renamed Film Fun and Thrills in 1959. As the title suggests, the comic mainly featured comic strip versions of people from films from the 1920s to the 1960s.
The cover of the first edition featured Harold Lloyd but named as "Winkle", the screen name by which he was known in Britain at the time.

 Eddie the Happy Editor

Frederick George Cordwell was better known to Film Fun fans as Eddie the Happy Editor. Cordwell edited the comic until his death in 1949, aged 62 in Richmond, Surrey. Cordwell wrote many scripts for the strips as well as text stories for Film Fun. He introduced the idea of characters receiving huge plates of bangers and mash, giant Christmas puddings, pies and such from grateful beneficiaries of their efforts. Cordwell even made it into the stories himself, meeting Laurel and Hardy a number of times, Joe E Brown, Wheeler and Woolsey and other characters.

 Mergers

Picture Fun merged with Film Fun soon after its launch in 1920, followed by Kinema Comic in 1932, Film Picture Stories in 1935, Illustrated Chips in 1953 and Top Spot in 1960.[1][2] In 1962, sales of Film Fun dropped below 125,000 a week, prompting IPC to merge the comic with Buster.

 References



1932, Harold Lloyd. At the top of the page: Laurel and Hardy, Harold Lloyd, Jackie Coogan, Buster Keaton, Joe E. Brown



1950, Laurel and Hardy. They have the names with the pictures of the characters at the top of the page. "Old Mother Riley" was Arthur Luncan: he did an act dressed as an old woman.



1953. Th same characters depicted at the top of the page, but without the names.



1956. Laurel and Hardy. Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis as well as Red Skelton are depicted at the top of the page.



Laurel and Hardy. The blonde in the first panel of the third row looks like Marie Wilson as "My Friend Irma", but the resemblance could be coincidental. The supporting cast in Laurel and Hardy's movies didn't usually seem to make it into the team's comics, although Jack Kirby put Jimmy Finlayson into a JIMMY OLSEN story.



Oliver Hardy fantasy. Amoung the caricatures at the top of the page are Laurel and Hardy, Red Skelton, Old Mother Riley, Joe E. Brown, and Abbott and Costello.

 








Laurel and Hardy. At the top of the page: Laurel and Hardy, Abbott and Costello, Old Mother Riley, Red Skelton


Book about FILM FUN