Gidget Goes to Rome
Brief Synopsis
Cast & Crew
Paul Wendkos
Cindy Carol
James Darren
Jessie Royce Landis
Cesare Danova
Danielle De Metz
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
Leaving the surf of southern California, Gidget Lawrence goes to Rome with her boyfriend, Jeff, and their friends Libby, Lucy, Judge, and Clay. The teenagers are chaperoned by Judge's well-preserved Aunt Albertina, who leaves them on their own, much to their delight. Gidget becomes infatuated with Paolo Cellini, who introduces himself as a journalist and takes her on a tour of Rome's high spots, ostensibly for the purpose of writing an article on an American teenager's reactions to the city. Meanwhile, Jeff embarks on a romance with Daniela Serrini, a tour guide who shows him around Rome; and Gidget returns his fraternity pin. She eventually learns the truth about Paolo: he is a happily married man who undertook the chore of escorting her around the city as a favor to her father. Jeff asks Daniela to join him on the trip home, but she admits that she doesn't love him. When they finally leave for the United States, Gidget and Jeff have been reconciled, and they return home happier and somewhat wiser for their Roman holiday.
Director
Paul Wendkos
Cast
Cindy Carol
James Darren
Jessie Royce Landis
Cesare Danova
Danielle De Metz
Joby Baker
Trudi Ames
Noreen Corcoran
Peter Brooks
Lisa Gastoni
Claudio Gora
Don Porter
Jeff Donnell
Joe Kamel
Antonio Segurini
Leonardo Botta
Umberto Raho
Audrey Fairfax
Vadim Wolkonsky
Eddra Gale
Irina Vasailchikoff
Charles Borromel
David Maunsell
Jan Commer
Leon Auerbach
Nona Medici
Matilda Calnan
John Stacy
Carmen Scarpitta
Milena Vukotic
Evi Marandi
Mimo Billi
Milly Monti
Veronica Wells
Sylvia Llore
Maya Sariole
Adria Ramaccia
Tina Lepri
Jim Dolen
Crew
Aldo-italwig (rome)
Enzo Barboni
Pat Barto
Mel Berns
Mara Blasetti
Tony Brandt
Jerry Bresler
Jerry Bresler
Robert Bronner
Serafina Calef
Cyril Collick
Dale Eunson
Katherine Eunson
Milton Feldman
Ruth Brooks Flippen
Ruth Brooks Flippen
Sorelle Fontana (roma)
Al Kasha
William A. Lyon
Amalia Paoletti
Robert Peterson
Stu Phillips
Ferdinando Ruffo
Toni Sarzi-braga
George David Weiss
Johnny Williams
Videos
Movie Clip
Film Details
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Articles
Gidget Goes to Rome
Carol was an 18-year-old who had appeared under her real name of Carol Sydes in films like Cape Fear (1962) and television shows like Leave it to Beaver, My Three Sons, and The New Loretta Young Show, where she was a regular for the show's only season. Columbia bleached her hair, changed her name, paid her (according to Variety) $300 a week, and she was Gidget. Also in the cast was James Darren, reprising his role as Moondoggie, Don Porter as Gidget's father, Mr. Lawrence, (a role he would also play in the television show starring Sally Field, which debuted in 1965) and Joby Baker.
Based on Frederick Kohner's 1962 novel Gidget Goes to Rome, the film has Malibu surfer girl Gidget nowhere near the beach she helped make famous. Instead, as in many films of the 1950s and 1960s, she goes to Italy. With her are her usual friends and a wacky aunt, played by Jessie Royce Landis. Gidget becomes jealous of their pretty Italian tour guide (played by Danielle De Metz) who she thinks is paying too much attention to Moondoggie. She turns to Paolo Cellini (Cesare Danova), a handsome Italian who Gidget thinks is attracted to her, but turns out to be her father's war buddy, asked to keep an eye on her.
The studio and producer Jerry Bresler planned to exploit the film by dispatching forty "field men" around the country to drum up excitement, creating high fashion shows by Italian designers in major US cities, and cementing tie-ins with Italian tourist offices and the Italian airline, Alitalia. Carol and Darren were "slated for national tours when the teenage crowd is out of school - and panting to see them."
On its release in September 1963, The New York Times critic Bosley Crowther dismissed the film as "syrupy," and merely described Cindy Carol's performance as "played with the proper pout and correct ingenuousness." Stylish clothes, famous art, and beautiful Italy weren't enough to get the teenage crowd panting or rushing to the box office to see Gidget Goes to Rome, because it was the last theatrical film in the series. This was fine with James Darren, who was a 27-year-old, twice married father and tired of playing boys. He left acting for a time, telling TV Guide that he was frustrated because he couldn't do "the things I want to do. Forget Gidget. I want a chance to do other things." He got that chance, later becoming a television director. Cindy Carol left the entertainment industry after appearing in Dear Brigitte (1965) and the television program Never Too Young.
By Lorraine LoBianco
SOURCES:
Crowther, Bosley "Gidget Goes to Rome" The New York Times 12 Sep 63
Independent Film Exhibitors Bulletin (1963)
The Internet Movie Database
Lisanti, Tom Drive-In Dream Girls: A Galaxy of B-Movie Starlets of the Sixties
Lisanti, Thomas Hollywood Surf and Beach Movies: The First Wave, 1959-1969 .
Gidget Goes to Rome
Quotes
Trivia
Notes
Filmed in part on location in Rome. This is the third in the series of films featuring the character Gidget.
Miscellaneous Notes
Released in United States 1963
Third installment of the "Gidget" series.
Released in United States 1963