The Seven Year Itch

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The Seven Year Itch
Directed by Billy Wilder
Produced by Charles K. Feldman
Billy Wilder
Written by George Axelrod
Billy Wilder
Starring Marilyn Monroe
Tom Ewell
Cinematography Milton R. Krasner
Distributed by 20th Century Fox
Release date(s) June 3, 1955; premier June 1
Running time 105 minutes
Language English
Budget $3,200,000 (est.)
Allmovie profile
IMDb profile

The Seven Year Itch is a three-act play, written by George Axelrod. Billed as a romantic comedy, the play was first presented by Courtney Burr and Elliot Nugent at the Fulton Theatre, New York City, on 20 November 1952. The cast included Tom Ewell (Richard Sherman), Neva Patterson (Helen Sherman), Vanessa Brown (The Girl), Robert Emhardt (Dr. Brubaker) and George Keane (Tom Mackenzie). The production was directed by John Gerstad, with set and lighting by Frederick Fox.

In 1955, 20th Century Fox released a film adaptation starring Marilyn Monroe and Tom Ewell. It was directed by Billy Wilder and presented in CinemaScope and color by DeLuxe. Often cited as one of the great comedies of its time, the film version won critical acclaim and became the biggest US box office hit in the summer of 1955. It contains one of the most iconic images of the 20th century in which Marilyn Monroe's dress is blown up above her waist by a passing train underneath a subway grate she is standing on. Her line when this happens, "Isn't it delicious?", has become famous.

Since the film's release, the titular phrase, which refers to a disinterest in a monogamous relationship after seven years of marriage, has entered the popular culture and has even been used by psychologists.[2]

Contents

[edit] Cast

The main characters include:

  • Marilyn Monroe as The Girl, a beautiful 22-year-old blonde model and actress on a toothpaste commercial whose name is never revealed in the film.
  • Tom Ewell as Richard Sherman, a paperback novel publisher who lives in the same apartment building as the Girl.
  • Evelyn Keyes as Helen Sherman, Richard's wife.

Other cast

[edit] Plot

After sending his wife and son to Maine to escape the sweltering summer, Richard Sherman meets the nameless model, who is renting the apartment upstairs. Despite recent paranoia about becoming unfaithful -- he is reading a book his company is going to publish about the "7-Year Itch" with the book claiming a significant proportion of men have extra-marital affairs after seven years of marriage -- Richard invites the girl downstairs for a drink. However, his over-active imagination works overtime, to the point where he imagines his wife carrying on in Maine with their hunky neighbor, Tom McKenzie. He is torn between silly fantasies of seduction, and horrible thoughts of his wife catching (and, in one fantasy sequence, shooting) him.

[edit] Critical response

The original 1955 review in Variety was largely positive concerning the performances and the comedy, but expressed disappointment that Sherman remains chaste throughout the film.[3] Today, despite some of the film's shortcomings, the film is considered a classic and mostly remembered for Monroe's performance and, more specifically, for the subway/skirt scene.[4]

[edit] Making the Movie

The movie was filmed between 1 September 1954 and 4 November 1954, and was the only Wilder film released by 20th Century Fox.

Many lines and scenes from the play had to be cut and/or re-written because they were deemed to be indecent by the Hays office. A frustrated Wilder complained that the film was being made under straitjacketed conditions. This also led to a major plot change: in the play, Sherman and The Girl become intimate, but in the movie, their romance is all in his head.

Another change: footage showing Monroe's dress clearly blowing above her waist was removed from the final movie because authorities considered it inappropriate, even though stills from this footage were used in print ads for the film. That particular footage was shot twice: The first take was shot at Manhattan's Lexington Avenue at 52nd Street and the second on a sound stage. The sound stage footage is what made its way into the final film, as the original on-location footage's sound had been rendered useless by the over excited crowd present during filming[1].

Walter Matthau also screen-tested for the lead role. The test footage is featured in the DVD of the film.

[edit] Trivia

[edit] Awards

The film was listed at number 51 on the American Film Institute's list of the top 100 American comedy films of the past 100 years. Also, Tom Ewell won a Golden Globe Award for Best Actor - Motion Picture Musical or Comedy. Director Billy Wilder was nominated for a DGA Award for his work on this film, but lost to Delbert Mann for his work on Marty.

[edit] Sources

  1. ^ [1]


[edit] External links

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