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Posts Tagged with Some Like It Hot

Published March 29, 2019

SOME LIKE IT HOT AT 60: THE AWARDS

Marilyn Monroe holding her Golden Globe Award for her preformance in “Some Like It Hot.”

When we think of “Some Like It Hot,” we can’t help but feel how overlooked it was during the 1960 Academy Awards, only winning 1 Oscar out of its 6 nominations in total. However that doesn’t take away from the fact that it was universally praised and awarded with nominations from all around the globe at various entertainment award ceremonies. Not only that, but it was the 4th highest grossing film of 1959 in the United States, grossing nearly $10.2million at the box office after its initial budget of $2.8million.

Awards:

Academy Awards 1960:

Won:
Best Costume Design: (Orry Kelly.)

Nominated:
Best Actor in a leading role: Jack Lemmon
Best Director: Billy Wilder
Best Writing and Screenplay: Billy Wilder and I.A.L Diamond
Best Cinematography: Charles Lang
Best Art Direction and Set Decoration: Ted Hayworth and Edward G. Boyle.


Golden Globes 1960

Won:
Best Motion Picture Comedy
Best Actress In A Musical Or Comedy: Marilyn Monroe
Best Actor In A Musical Or Comedy: Jack Lemmon


BAFTA Awards 1960

Won:
Best Foreign Actor: Jack Lemmon

Nominated:
Best Film From Any Source: Billy Wilder

Bambi Awards 1960

Nominated: Best International Actor: Tony Curtis


Directors Guild Of America 1960

Nominated: Outstanding Directorial Achievement In Motion Pictures: Billy Wilder

Grammy Awards 1959

Nominated: Best Soundtrack Album

Laurel Awards 1960

Nominated:

Top Female Comedy Performance: Marilyn Monroe
Top Male Comedy Performance: Jack Lemmon

National Board Of Review 1959

Won:
NBR Award Top Ten Films


Venice Film Festival 1959

Nominated:
Golden Lion Award: Billy Wilder

Writers Guild Of America 1960

Won:
Best Written American Comedy: Billy Wilder and I.A.L Diamond

Published March 29, 2019

“SOME LIKE IT HOT” TURNS 60!

“To this day, I have never read a better comedy script in the history of film.”
Jack Lemmon

60 years have passed since Sugar, Joe/Josephine/Shell Oil Junior and Jerry/Daphne stole our hearts and made us laugh in the comedy that proclaimed “nobodies perfect!” and secured its place in history as a bonafied classic, still loved and adored around the world today.

This film simply needs no introduction, but if you are new to Marilyn films (or even to films in general) here is a brief synopsis of the film the AFI once ranked the ‘Funniest American Movie Of All Time.’

“When Chicago musicians Joe (Tony Curtis) and Jerry (Jack Lemmon) accidently witness a gangland shooting, they quickly board a southbound train to Florida, disguised as Josephine and Daphne, the two newest and homeliest members of an all girl jazz band. Their cover is perfect, until a lovelorn singer (Marilyn Monroe) falls for “Josephine”an ancient playboy (Joe E. Brown) falls for “Daphne” and a mob boss (George Raft) refuses to fall for their hoax!
Nominated for 7 Academy Awards, ‘Some Like It Hot’ is the quintessential madcap farce and ‘one of the greatest of all film comedies’ (The Motion Picture Guide.) “


“Some Like It Hot” made its debut around the world in March 1959. Premiere’s were held in Chicago (which Marilyn attended) and Memphis on 17th March and then in Washington on the 21st March. But it was the New York premiere at the Lowe’s Capital Theatre on 29th March 1959 that fans remember most for the photographs and video footage of Marilyn arriving at the theatre arm in arm with her then husband Arthur Miller, greeting fans and photographers and still looking every inch the movie star in a gorgeous silver evening gown and fur wrap.

 

So much has been said and written about the problems that occurred on the set of “Some Like It Hot.” And if we’re to believe everything we read, it’s any wonder the film was finished at all! But we are here today to celebrate this wonderful film and not to dwell on the trials and tribulations of its creation.
One thing that has always stood out, is the love and appreciation that everyone involved in the making of the film has shown throughout the years. You feel a sense of pride from them at having been a part of such genuine, well loved and highly respected film. Marilyn sadly only lived for a further 4 years after completing “Some Like It Hot,” so little is known of her opinion of the finished film once it had been released to the general public. But I like to think that had she lived, she too would have felt the same sense of love and pride at having been involved with a film that has brought so much joy and laughter into so many peoples lives.

“The film did go considerably over budget. However, when it was all done and we looked at the film, I must say we were immensely enthused and we genuinely felt that this was a truly wonderful comedy. I don’t know that I would have believed then that it could have stood the test of all the time that has passed since it was first shown, but we sure thought it was good. I didn’t know it would last fifty or a hundred years.
It became the cornerstone of the long relationship that we developed with Billy because he remained with us the longest of all the directors that we booked to our company. The film was a huge success and of course was a great launching pad for our company because it was very early on in our history and so it’s highly significant in my life and my career. With all the incredible movies that Billy’s made, this is in the top three. I like to think that it’s maybe the best American comedy ever made.”
Walter Mirisch (Producer.)


“It’s interesting that when Billy Wilder and I were shooting “Some Like It Hot” then a year later “The Apartment,” the general feeling in Hollywood was Billy was nuts and that neither one of the films would work. In “Some Like It Hot” he had Tony Curtis and me in drag for eighty five percent of the picture and the premise was really just a five minute burlesque sketch stretched to two hours. But Billy sensed it would work and he was right.. it became a classic.”
Jack Lemmon

“Years after our picture was finished, I looked at it and realised that it was bigger than all of us put together. Could they have done it with someone else in my part? Or Jack’s part? Or Marilyn’s part? No. Could someone remake it now? Of course not. Billy and Izzy tailored the characters to us as we were creating them. We had to adjust ourselves to that. It was demanding and trying and sometimes exhausting, but it was worth it. Because of that process, ‘Some Like It Hot’ is truly our movie. It was tailored to our individual talents and to our collective talents. Brilliantly conceived and brilliantly tailored.” Tony Curtis.

“Some Like It Hot” was like the greatest souffle ever made. It had the perfect ingredients, it had the greatest script, a great director, a great cast… of course the greatest Chef was Billy Wilder, but it really was like the greatest souffle ever made in history…… I was very happy to be a part of it.”
Sandra Warner (‘Emily’ from Sweet Sue’s Society of Syncopators)

“It’s well written, well directed, it’s well acted, the camera work was fantastic.. the cinematography was sensational….everything!”
Marion Collier (‘Olga’ from Sweet Sue’s Society of Syncopators)

“It was funny and it’s a comedy and comedies are the hardest type of writing there is and to make it come off the way Billy Wilder and I.A.L Diamond did was fantastic.”
Joan Nicholas (‘Betty’ from Sweet Sue’s Society of Syncopators, pictured playing the saxophone.)

“When it was all over you know, I was naturally absolutely drained and I knew I had the final shots and I looked at the rushes… it was kind of like an exhaustion. There was a moment of ‘never again’…… well all I can tell you is if Marilyn was around today I would be on my knees begging ‘please let’s do it again.”
Billy Wilder

It’s hard to believe that “Some Like It Hot” is the grand old age of 60, with frequent screenings on Television, revivals at the Cinema and fans being able to access it through online streaming services as well as the film being updated to Blu Ray quality, this is truly a classic of cinema that will NEVER be forgotten and fans old and new can continue to enjoy this wonderful movie for the next 60 years and beyond.

 
Let’s raise a toast to “Some Like It Hot” which proves that whilst “nobodies perfect”… this film certainly is!
 
Cheers!



Published March 27, 2019

REMEMBERING BILLY WILDER AND MILTON BERLE

Today in history, March 27th 2002, two giants of the entertainment industry, Oscar winning writer and Director Billy Wilder and beloved American comedian Milton Berle with a career spanning over 8 decades, passed away.

Billy Wilder directed Marilyn in her two most successful comedies: “The Seven Year Itch” (1955) and “Some Like It Hot” (1959).  In his many statements to biographers and journalists, his full appreciation for her talents, and dispair at the strains of working with her, are eloquently and directly expressed.  Wilder defined Marilyn’s special magnetism on camera as “flesh impact- she looks on the screen as if you could reach out and touch her… she had a quality no-one else ever had on the screen expect Garbo.”   And years after her death, he summed up his feelings: “I miss her.  It was like going to the dentist, making a picture with her.  It was hell at the time, but after it was over, it was wonderful.  “

Dubbed “Hollywood’s most mischievous immigrant,” Wilder was behind some of the most iconic and highly respected movies ever to come out of Tinsletown.  His impressive list of credits also include “Double Indemnity” (1944), “A Foreign Affair” (1948), “Sunset Boulevard” (1950), “Stalag 17” (1953), “Sabrina” (1954), all of which were Oscar nominated, as well as “The Lost Weekend” (1945), and “The Apartment” (1960), both of which won Oscars.  In 1986, Wilder recieved a Life Achievement Award from the American Film Institute.

After Wilder passed away in 2002, he was buried at Westwood Villiage Memorial Park Cemetery in Los Angeles, the same final resting place as Marilyn (and only two plots away from his long time friend and colleague Jack Lemmon.)  His headstone reads:


A tribute to arguably one of his greatest gifts to the world: “Some Like It Hot.“

Milton Berle was one of America’s best known TV entertainers, he first met starlet Marilyn on the Columbia lot in her first co-starring roles: “Ladies Of The Chorus” (1949) as he was romantically linked with Adele Jergens, the star of the movie at the time.  Marilyn and Milton met again in 1955 at Madison Square Gardens, she was riding a pink elephant at the circus benefit, and he was the ringmaster for the day.  He announced “Here comes the only girl in the world who can make Jane Russell look like a boy!”  The crowd of 18,000 roared in delight.  Berle also made a cameo as himself in one of Marilyn’s later pictures: “Let’s Make Love.”  (1960)

Published March 19, 2019

$200M HOTEL DEL CORONADO RECONSTRUCTION

The iconic “Hotel Del Coronado” in San Diego is currently undergoing a massive $200 million renovation. The Hotel, made famous in the 1959 classic comedy “Some Like It Hot” starring Marilyn Monroe, Jack Lemmon and Tony Curtis, is set to benefit from 142 new guest rooms, an underground car park, a brand new conference center and a relocation of the main enterance.

Construction is expected to last 2/3 years, with completion being aimed for 2021.

For more information, head here:
https://www.10news.com/news/local-news/200m-hotel-del-coronado-renovation-underway

“Some Like It Hot” celebrates its 60th anniversary this month, enjoy these gorgeous shots of Marilyn, Jack and Tony taken on Coronado beach in 1958.

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