Dr. T and the Women
Brief Synopsis
Cast & Crew
Robert Altman
Richard Gere
Helen Hunt
Farrah Fawcett
Laura Dern
Shelley Long
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
Dr. Sullivan Travis is a man at the top of his game, a rich and successful Dallas gynecologist whose "religion" is women. In his immediate family and in his office, they surround him. He is loving and giving to each and every one at all times--he is their savior and would have it no other way. And as in the story of Job, one day a higher force decides to test his faith. Once a man in complete control of his universe, Dr. T now finds himself surrounded by chaos and confusion. The doctor of choice for the city's society elite, Dr. T is steadily losing ground to his overbooked scheduled. His home life starts to boil over with his zealous wife planning their daughter's wedding. Adding to the chaos, Dr. T's champagne-loving sister-in-law Peggy has moved in with her three kids. Overwhelmed, Dr. T begins spending more time at his country club's golf course, adding a new woman to his life--an easy-going golf pro. This burgeoning affair further adds to the whirlwind of confusion surrounding him.
Director
Robert Altman
Cast
Richard Gere
Helen Hunt
Farrah Fawcett
Laura Dern
Shelley Long
Tara Reid
Kate Hudson
Liv Tyler
Robert Hays
Matt Malloy
Andy Richter
Lee Grant
Janine Turner
Holly Pellham-davis
Jeanne Evans
Ramsey Williams
Dorothy Deavers
Ellen Locy
Cameron Cobb
Mike Scott
Irene Cortez
Clara Peretz
Mackenzie Fitzgerald
Juliette Loraine Gauntt
Susan Mclaughlin
Oliver Tull
Kelli Finglass
Judy Trammell
Wren Arthur
Scarlett Mcalister
Angee Hughes
Tina Parker
Marsha Mcclelland
Angie Bolling
Pam Dougherty
Nancy Drotning
Candace Evans
Shawne Fielding
Greta Ferrell
Andrea Lynch
Susana Gibb
Meagan Mangum
Yvonna Lynn
Lyn Montgomery
Shawna Mcgovern
Laurel Whitsett
Andrea Moor
Morgana Shaw
Riley Kirk
Louanne Stephens
Jane Simoneau
Sarah Wallace
Libby Villari
Gail Cronauer
Kim Terry
Gina Hope
Katherine Bongfeldt
Hollie Stenson
Erin Mcgrew
Linda Comess
Robert Elliott
Cynthia Dorn
Christie Abbott
Audrea Ulmer
Sara Overall
Nance Watkins
Elizabeth Ware
Nina Austin
Uta Acosta
Dijonee Macias
Norma Clayton
Shaylene Ruiz
Irene Gonzalez
Angela Landini
Eric Ryan
Lyle Lovett
Matt Rollins
Stuart Duncan
John Hagen
Crew
Leigh Altman
Michael Altman
Robert Altman
Stephen Altman
David Ascher
Joshua Astrachan
Joe Barnett
Joe Barnett
Javier Bennassar
Pat Bergeson
Tim Boggs
John E Bucklin
Doug Camp
Jeanine Cazalas-fleming
Julie Clark
Bridget M. Cook
Cindy Cowan
Paul Deely
Pam Dixon Mickelson
Jed M Dodge
Paul Dowdidchuck
Matt Dubin
David Fein
Berry Fleming
Paul Franklin
Alan Freedman
Robert Getty
Charles Gibson
John Glaeser
Dona Granata
David Grant
Cate Hardman
Michael Hertlein
Mike Hitch
Frederick Howard
Jason Irwin
Chad Jackson
Robert C Jackson
Buffi Jacobs
Doug Jeeves
David Jobe
Margaret Johnson
Thomas Johnson
Craig Jurkiewicz
Michael Kamper
Susan Kaufmann
Liz Keigley
Sar E Keigley
Jan Kiesser
Jan Kiesser
Pamela Klamer
Viktor Krauss
Johanna Kreamer
Russ Kunkel
Russ Kunkel
Edmund J Lachmann
Edmund J Lachmann
Helena Lea
David Levy
Jason Lim
Lyle Lovett
Lyle Lovett
Lyle Lovett
Betsy Mackey
Diane Marshall
Shelli Mathews
James Mclindon
James Mclindon
Guy Monroe
Randy E Moore
Michael Mullane
Kelly Nelson
James J. Passanante
Aaron Pazanti
Geraldine Peroni
John Patrick Pritchett
Anne Rapp
John Reneau
Tina Roesler-kerwin
John Ross
Tyson Sawyer
Chris Spellman
Jeff Stamper
Lucy Sustar
Tommy Thompson
Tommy Thompson
Micheline Trepanier
Victoria Vaus
Billy Williams
Billy Williams
Robert Winn
Film Details
Technical Specs
Articles
Dr. T and the Women - Richard Gere in Robert Altman's DR. T AND THE WOMEN on DVD
Synopsis: Doctor Sullivan Travis, known as "Dr. T" (Richard Gere) is the gynecologist of choice for hordes of spoiled, bored Dallas housewives. Some patients fantasize about him; one comes every other week suffering from imaginary problems. Dr. T's kindly tolerance is soon put to the test. His beautiful wife Kate (Farah Fawcett) retreats into a state of infantilism and must be institutionalized. Psychiatrist Dr. Harper (Lee Grant) won't even allow Sullivan to visit. Dr. T falls fast for the new helper at the golf shop, Bree (Helen Hunt), a no-nonsense pro tired of the big-time golf circuit. Adding to the confusion is the upcoming wedding of Dr. T's daughter Dee Dee (Kate Hudson) and the unending dramatics provided by Dee Dee's sister Connie (Tara Reid) and her aunt Peggy (Laura Dern). Back at the clinic, Sullivan's office manager Carolyn (Shelley Long) has unrealistic romantic ideas about her handsome boss.
Robert Altman certainly seems to enjoy satirizing the behavior of women. The first reel becomes a stampede of females that mobs Dr. T's waiting room like a bunch of attention-hungry harpies. They seem never to stop talking, which may be the reason why the DVD doesn't even attempt English-language subtitles. One wants to cheer the old lady that uses her cane to maliciously trip one of these show horses. Meanwhile, the Travis women invade the slick jewelry emporium to work on wedding plans. Sullivan's monstrously selfish daughter Connie plays the social game while the alcoholic Aunt Peggy guzzles champagne. Left on her own, Dr. T's wife Kate flips out, sheds her clothes and goes skinny dipping in the mall fountain.
Altman and his writer Anne Rapp present Dr. T's Dallas socialites as artificial creatures insulated from reality. Wealth and security are givens in a mini-culture where the only interest is self-interest; the outside world doesn't exist. Most of the men are sexless drones and their trophy wives live in constant frustration. Considering the context, going nuts is an entirely rational choice for Kate. In the middle of this bad dream of luxury and entitlement Dr. T ministers to feminine problems, anatomical and emotional. It's a full-time job.
As is his nature, director Altman uses his energies to create an entire satirical world on screen, a canvas where his actors can 'do their thing.' Altman is all for dramatic freedom but his choices more often than not opt for the easy way out. Farrah Fawcett is given a mostly non-verbal role, as if that's all Altman felt she could handle. Other actresses behave as if they were handed paper cards with party game instructions. Laura Dern's card might read, "Airhead, spineless, closet boozer." Her entire role hits those notes and goes no further.
Kate Hudson's shallow, insufferable princess Dee Dee is more sharply drawn. Utterly convinced that the world revolves around her desires, she's incapable of respecting the minimal rules of her pro cheerleading squad. Tara Reid's Connie adds tension to Dee Dee's wedding plans by dissing the proposed Maid of Honor, Marilyn (Liv Tyler). Connie also provides Altman and Rapp with a lazy opportunity to lampoon the Kennedy assassination cult industry. When asked by a customer what she thinks of the one-assassin theory, tour guide Connie happily chirps, "Well, there's many conspiracy theories about that. You'll have to decide which one you believe."
Shelley Long is Dr. T's neurotic office manager, a clownish characterization several steps down from her role on the old Cheers TV show. Carolyn isn't even smart, and the script punishes her feeble attempts to be organized. Helen Hunt's independent Bree is the only candidate likely to redeem the female sex, as she's Dr. T's equal and above the pack of overdressed madwomen that crowd his office (which should be called The Snake Pit Women's Clinic).
When the movie finally gets around to making its main points, they turn out to be good ones. Bree confronts Dr. T with the ultimate horror, a woman quite content to play the field as selfishly as men do. The Doc believes he knows all female secrets, yet proves just as foolish and vulnerable as his shotgun-toting beer pals. Dr. T is a great hand-holder for neurotic housewives, but he's incapable of dealing with a thinking woman, let alone a real issue like Lesbianism. Yes, poor Kate has retreated to the asylum for a reason.
To bring a superficial sense of closure to his story, Altman reverts to a storm-tossed replay of A Wedding. In the fantastic coda that follows Dr. T regains his footing by doing what he does best, delivering a baby. The baby is a boy, a fact presented as a major victory in a film overrun by women. The desert setting of the fade-out also carries apocalyptic connotations, suggesting that the Dallas Anglos are doomed and another culture will rise in its place.
Altman is clearly more concerned with subtext than dramatics, which makes Dr T & the Women funny and clever but emotionally cold. Psychiatrist Lee Grant invokes a classical reference to Hestia when she says that Kate, the good wife and keeper of the hearth, has lost the ability to love. And indeed, Altman has Kate paint a watercolor of a heart during crafts period, just so we'll get the connection. Mr. Hipster Altman's message is surprisingly conservative: the spoiled / neglected Dallas women have gone mad and the men have forgotten how to be men. When Altman has to amuse himself with puns based on department store signs ("Guess"), the film's fingerpaint fun goes a little limp.
Lionsgate's Special Edition Dr T & the Women will please both the Altman faithful and the more casual fans of his work. The excellent enhanced transfer flatters the glossy art direction. Except for the doctor's Cadillac, every luxury item on view looks brand new and unused. Although the first reel seems intentionally mixed to make dialogue difficult to understand, the soundtrack eventually settles down. Lyle Lovett's score is unobtrusive.
The disc producers have come up with an attractive set of extras. Altman, his writer and his interesting cast (Gere, Long, Fawcett, Janine Turner, Reid, Dern, Matt Malloy, Andy Richier, Robert Hays, Wren Arthur) contribute to an enthusiastic edited commentary that starts with everyone's impressions of Dallas women. One of the actors describes Altman as a painter, open to change at every step of the process. The first of three featurettes presents writers and actors (from earlier shows as well) remarking enthusiastically on the director's working style. Altman holds forth in a separate interview. The best featurette is an excellent piece on the director's apprenticeship at a Kansas City industrial film company and his repeated attempts to break into Hollywood. We hear from Richard Bakalyan and Tom Laughlin, the stars of his first Kansas City feature The Delinquents. Director Reza Badiyi is present as well; he also assisted on Herk Harvey's KC epic Carnival of Souls.
A trailer and TV spots round out a pleasing special edition.
For more information about Dr. T and the Women, visit Lionsgate. To order Dr. T and the Women, go to TCM Shopping.
by Glenn Erickson
Dr. T and the Women - Richard Gere in Robert Altman's DR. T AND THE WOMEN on DVD
Quotes
Trivia
Miscellaneous Notes
Released in United States 2000
Released in United States Fall October 13, 2000
Released in United States October 2000
Released in United States on Video February 6, 2001
Released in United States September 2000
Shown at Austin Film Festival October 12-19, 2000.
Shown at Toronto International Film Festival (Gala) September 7-16, 2000.
Shown at Vancouver International Film Festival September 22 - October 5, 2000.
Shown at Venice International Film Festival (in competition) August 30 - September 9, 2000.
Began shooting November 15, 1999.
Completed shooting January 31, 2000.
Co-producer Tommy Thompson died of a heart attack on March 3, 2000.
Released in United States 2000 (Shown at Vancouver International Film Festival September 22 - October 5, 2000.)
Released in United States 2000 (Shown at Venice International Film Festival (in competition) August 30 - September 9, 2000.)
Released in United States on Video February 6, 2001
Released in United States September 2000 (Shown at Toronto International Film Festival (Gala) September 7-16, 2000.)
Released in United States October 2000 (Shown at Austin Film Festival October 12-19, 2000.)
Released in United States Fall October 13, 2000