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Pillow Talk (1959)
In this fluffy yet intelligent 50's 'clean' romantic
sex comedy (Sex and the City for the 50s era) from director
Michael Gordon (it was the first of three successful Day-Hudson romantic
comedies (the others were Lover Come Back (1961) and Send
Me No Flowers (1964)) - it was also an Academy Award winner for
Best Original Screenplay, and Rock Hudson's first comedy!
- the film's sexy opening: a close-up of the long
elegant leg of virginal, conservative-minded, chic, NYC interior
designer career girl Jan Morrow (Oscar-nominated Doris Day), as
she pulled on a stocking while wearing a white silky slip; she
lived alone in a Manhattan Park Avenue apartment
- the many shared party-line phone scenes, filmed with
vertical and other split-screens between two neighbors in nearby
apartment buildings; while sharing a party line, Jan was forced to
listen to the croonings of the same love song ("Inspiration")
by tall, carefree, suave, philandering, womanizing, bachelor, playboyish
songwriter/composer Brad Allen (Rock Hudson) to all of his girlfriends,
while he monopolized phone time
Split-Screen Phone Conversations
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- the early scene of Jan's visit to the offices of
the phone company to complain about her party line and to call
her neighbor a sex maniac, who was regularly tying up the phone
and interrupting her business calls: "That man is always on
the phone with someone. Have you any idea what it's like to be
on a party line with a sex maniac?...He sings love songs at 9 o'clock
in the morning"
- unknowingly, Jan was dating wealthy, three-times-divorced,
neurotic suitor Jonathan Forbes (Tony Randall), Brad's college friend
and millionaire Broadway benefactor, who surprised her with a present
of a new Mercedes convertible sports car, but she refused to accept
the gift because it was too "personal"
- on the phone to work out a cooperative arrangement
or phoning schedule, Brad took an unsympathetic approach to Jan: "Well,
obviously, you're a woman who lives alone and doesn't like it...Don't
take your bedroom problems out on me"
- Jan's drunken, feisty and witty maid Alma (Thelma
Ritter) who had eavesdropped on the conversation on the kitchen extension
phone, admitted that she enjoyed listening in and living vicariously:
"He's brightened up many a dreary afternoon for me"; she
also advised Jan by reiterating: "If there's anything worse than
a woman livin' alone, it's a woman sayin' she likes it"; Jan wouldn't
admit she was unhappily single: "I have a good job, a lovely apartment,
I go out with very nice men to the best places; the theatre, the finest
restaurants...What am I missing?"; Alma wisely replied:
"When you have to ask, believe me, you're missin' it"; Jan
thought to herself that she might indeed have "bedroom problems"
- Jan appeared to have no real sexual desire for Jonathan;
when he asked for her hand in marriage (in Mexico), she point-blank
confessed:
"I don't love you"; they kissed for the first time, but it
was cold and dispassionate - and he quipped: "They didn't hit
the moon with the first missile shot either"; she responded: "I
guess that's what I want. To hit the moon"
- during another phone argument with Brad on the phone,
he bitterly raged at her: "Get off my back, lady. Stop living
vicariously on what you think I do! There are plenty of warm rolls
in the bakery - stop pressing your nose against the window!"
- in his gadget-filled bachelor apartment, Brad had
lots of convenient electrical switches (a couch switch to dim the
lights, lock the door from the inside, and turn on phonographic mood
music, and a switch to convert the couch into a bed)
- the sequence in the Copa del Rio nightclub in NYC
during a party when Jan (with an obnoxious handsy date, the son of
a client) happened to sit in a booth near Brad; realizing who she
was, Brad was instantly attracted to her sexy nature and fanny-wagging
figure on the dance-floor ("So that's the other end of your
party line" - he thought to himself); he decided to seduce her,
and from then on, he hid his real identity and introduced himself
to her as drawling, shy, chivalrous and naive Texan rancher and "country
boy" 'Rex Stetson'
- after helping her to return home, 'Rex' phoned Jan
later that night, requesting a dinner/dance date the following evening,
telling her: "I get a nice warm feeling bein' near you, Ma'am.
It's like, like bein' round a pot-bellied stove on a frosty mornin'" -
but he also switched to his real persona as Brad on the party line
(pretending to listen in to her conversation), warning her to not
be fooled by the phony Texan yokel, and taunted her over her new
affair: "Don't let that yokel act fool ya. This ranch-hand Romeo's
just tryin' to lure you into the next barn"
- during their growing acquaintance, Jan - on their
phone's party line - bragged to Brad about her new-found boyfriend
'Rex'; their famed bathtub scene implied that they were in the same
bathroom and playing footsie with each other - across screens
- with Brad's inside knowledge about her feelings about
'Rex', Brad was able to gauge Jan's growing love of 'Rex'; Jan defended
'Rex' to Brad: "Mr. Allen, this may come as a shock to you,
but there are some men who don't end every sentence with a proposition";
to tease her, Brad's seduction ploy was to suggest that Rex was gay
and might be romantically-uninterested in her - to try to release
her female libido [Note: This was ironic, due to Hudson's later revelation
about his real-life homosexuality.]; Brad told her on the phone: "Must
I spell it out?...There are some men who just, uh, they're very devoted
to their mothers, you know, the type that likes to collect cooking
recipes, exchange bits of gossip..Well, I hope I'm wrong, but, uh,
don't you think you'd better make sure?"
- at the Hidden Door night club during their next date,
'Rex' praised Jan's occupation as a fashion designer: "It must
be very excitin' - workin' with all them colors and fabrics and all" -
he took a drink with an extended pinky finger, causing her some concern
about his sexual orientation
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Extended Pinky Finger
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Steamy Kisses During Date in NYC Club
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- during the same date, Jan challenged and urged 'Rex'
to demonstrate his romantic interest, prove his manhood (and kiss
her) and go beyond being a "perfect gentleman" all the
time: (Jan: "Don't you find me attractive?....Well, then,
why haven't you ever?...Well, being such a perfect gentleman and
all, it's-it's not very flattering." Rex: (in character) "Oh,
well, ma'am, I wouldn't want to do anything that might spoil our
friendship." Jan: (astonished)
"Is that all it is with us, friendship?" Rex:
"Ma'am, that's a direct question. I think it deserves a direct
answer"); he delivered two kisses that were sensational; Jan
was so flustered by the kisses that she had to excuse herself: "I'd
better go to the powder moon, I mean room. Fix my lipstick"
- in a weekend sequence at a Connecticut summer house
(owned by Jonathan) where Brad was supposed to work on Jonathan's
musical scoring compositions, 'Rex' declared his romantic, down-home
love for Jan in front of a roaring fire with a bucket of chilled
alcohol: "Remember when I said that being near you was like
being near a potbellied stove on a frosty morning?...I was wrong...You're
more like a forest fire, completely out of control"
- at the summer house, the scene of Jan's discovery
of Brad's masquerade as Rex, when she found some sheet music (of
"Inspiration") and realized the tune on the piano
was one of Brad's songs; she stormed out, told him off ("Bedroom
problems. At least mine can be solved in one bedroom. You couldn't
solve yours in a thousand!"), and refused to have anything more
to do with Brad
- the hilarious concluding sequence when Jan reluctantly
agreed (a ploy suggested by Alma to Brad to get them back together)
to design and redecorate Brad's bachelor apartment, with carte
blanche power, and without Brad there: (Jan: "Big phony.
He's like a spider and he expects me to redecorate his web!")
- the scene of Brad's discovery of his deliberately-gaudy,
newly-designed, counter-cultural apartment (with animal prints, hanging
beads, a moose head and other statues, a pot belly stove, and harem
decor); he angrily stormed into Jan's apartment ("Are you getting
out of that bed, or am I coming in after you?"), grabbed her
out of bed, and carried her out onto the NYC streets in her pajamas
to take her back to his apartment to explain herself; he angrily
fumed: ("How does it feel, returning to the scene of the crime?...Why
did I spend a fortune having this apartment done over? Why did l
cut myself off from every girl I know? Why does any man destroy himself?
Because he thinks he's getting married. And what does it get me?...This!
You did yourself a great job here. And as far as I'm concerned, you
can stay and charge admission")
- ultimately in the happy ending, she interpreted
his passion as a desire to marry her; she switched the lock on
the door (that dimmed the lights and activated a piano player),
as they both realized that they loved each other and embraced
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Introduction: Jan's Legs
Suitor Jonathan's Sports Car Gift to Jan
Jan's Drunk Maid Alma (Thelma Ritter): "If there's
anything worse than a woman livin' alone, it's a woman sayin' she likes
it"
Jan to Jonathan: "I don't love you"
Brad to Jan: "Get off my back, lady..."
Brad's Convenient Apartment Switches
First Sighting of Jan by Brad at the Copa del Rio
Club
Acting as Both Brad and 'Rex' on the Phone with
Jan
Bathtub Conversation
Brad's Suggestion that "Rex' Might Be Gay
Kisses During Connecticut Getaway Weekend
Jan's Discovery of Rex's Masquerade
Brad's Gaudy, Newly-Redecorated Bachelor Apartment
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