Wife for a Night


1h 22m 1952

Brief Synopsis

A poor musician hires a courtesan to pose as his wife so he can "give" her to a wealthy count in return for patronage.

Film Details

Genre
Comedy
Foreign
Romance
Release Date
1952
Production Company
Camerini
Distribution Company
Edward Harrison Releasing

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 22m

Synopsis

A poor musician hires a courtesan to pose as his wife so he can "give" her to a wealthy count in return for patronage.

Film Details

Genre
Comedy
Foreign
Romance
Release Date
1952
Production Company
Camerini
Distribution Company
Edward Harrison Releasing

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 22m

Articles

Wife for a Night - Wife For A Night


Hollywood's penchant for remakes is not a new development but a strategy that has served some of our most acclaimed directors in often surprising and unique reworkings of the original source material. Take, for instance, Billy Wilder's 1964 sex comedy, Kiss Me, Stupid. It was actually adapted from Anna Bonacci's 1944 play, L'ora della fantasia [The Dazzling Hour], which, in turn, became the 19th century costume farce Bride for a Night (1952, aka Moglie per una notte), directed by Mario Camerini, a popular Italian film director who is best known for a number of 1930s hit comedies starring Vittorio de Sica and a 1954 version of the Greek myth Ulysses with Kirk Douglas.

Bride for a Night is one of Camerini's more successful later efforts and generated considerable publicity during its original release because it cast Gina Lollobrigida against type as an unglamorous and seemingly dowdy housewife. This was quite a departure from her more typical roles as a saucy and often provocative sex symbol though in the course of the film she gets the beauty treatment as part of a deception designed to help her husband's career. Yet Bride for a Night and Billy Wilder's Kiss Me, Stupid are miles apart in style and approach and would make a fascinating double feature for the sake of comparison.

Bride for a Night is a lightweight but often witty and effervescent chamber comedy in the grand tradition of the Commedia dell'Arte with a plot that juggles the big emotional themes of love, jealousy and adultery. The story opens with the lecherous Count D'Origo (Gino Cervi), who while traveling on official government business, decides to spend the night at a local village where he is pursuing Geraldine (Nadia Gray), a stunningly beautiful courtesan he wants to add to his list of conquests. The town mayor, Agusto (Paolo Stoppa), decides to take advantage of the situation in order to help his nephew, Enrico (Armando Francioli), a struggling composer of operas, and convinces Enrico to enact a charade that could earn him the Count's sponsorship, leading to a public performance of his new work. As part of the ruse, Enrico's wife Ottavia (Gina Lollobrigida), agrees to switch places with Geraldine so that the Count will think the latter is Enrico's wife and be more favorable toward helping the composer's career if he can secretly seduce his wife. As expected, the plan goes awry; Ottavia, hidden away at Geraldine's house, is forced to entertain two of the courtesan's gentleman callers. With the assistance of Geraldine's assistant, Ottavia transforms herself from a plain Jane with a matronly hairdo into a ravishing beauty. However, the unexpected arrival of the amorous Count complicates the situation further as he dismisses Ottavia's two admirers and begins to court her in earnest. Will she remain faithful to her husband or will she sacrifice her honor for his career?

In contrast to Bride for a Night with its cast of elegantly dressed aristocrats cavorting against the background of Parma high society, Billy Wilder's 1964 remake is at the other end of the spectrum. Set in an economically depressed backwater desert town - Climax, Nevada - the opera composer has become a frustrated songwriter (Ray Walston) who sees his big break when a famous Las Vegas singer (Dean Martin as "Dino," a parody of his own persona) is stranded in his town. Felicia Farr plays the songwriter's ignored and lonely wife and Kim Novak, in one of her most underrated performances, is Polly the Pistol, a local prostitute. Unlike Camerini's film, Kiss Me, Stupid is much more cynical, crude and leering in its exploration of the morality - or lack of it - on display. Unlike Bride for a Night, none of the characters in Kiss Me, Stupid emerge with their honor intact yet they all seem to get what they want in the end. The result is a very sour and acerbic look at fidelity, marriage and relationships which earned it a Condemned rating by the Legion of Decency at the time of its release.

Bride for a Night takes a much more upbeat and playful approach to its subject and one of its charms is watching Gina Lollobrigida's character emerge from her homely cocoon and turn into a beautiful butterfly. It's a sly, subtle comic performance with a hint of danger in it - she threatens to poison herself at a climactic moment and means it. The icing on the cake, however, is the excellent ensemble cast, all of them expert farceurs displaying the sort of precise comic timing a tale of mistaken identity demands. Gino Cervi, a veteran of more than 100 films (most of them Italian), is endlessly amusing as the blustery, skirt-chasing Count, Armando Francioli makes a dashing but appropriately temperamental musical genius and the luminous Nadia Gray almost steals the movie from Ms. Lollobrigida with her portrayal of the worldly wise yet still romantic Geraldine who understands the importance of allusion and deception. Most moviegoers will remember Gray from her sensational strip scene in the jet scene party sequence that concludes Federico Fellini's La Dolce Vita (1960).

Although Bride for a Night was not a huge box office hit in Europe or abroad, it did garner mostly positive reviews from the critics with Gina Lollobrigida receiving the major praise. The New York Times called it "a frank but lightweight little sex bauble, smoothly handled and consistently amusing...The humor comes from the ensuing confusion and crossed suspicions and, finally, from Lollobrigida's awkward attempt to play a libertine." The New York Herald Tribune reviewer, voicing a similar sentiment, wrote "Miss Lollobrigida in the voluminous gowns of a century ago is, curiously enough, a rather refreshing departure from what her couturiers have accustomed us to of late, and her performance has more conviction, perhaps because of it."

Screenplay: Franco Brusati, Mario Camerini, Paolo Levi; Anna Bonacci (play "L'Ora della Fantasia")
Cinematography: Aldo Giordani
Music: Alessandro Cicognini
Film Editing: Adriana Novelli
Cast: Gino Cervi (Count D'Origo), Gina Lollobrigida (Ottavia), Nadia Gray (Geraldine), Armando Francioli (Enrico Belli), Paolo Stoppa (Agusto), Galeazzo Benti (Maurizio), Paolo Panelli (Gualteri), Eugenia Tavani (Grand Duchess), Nietta Zocchi (Yvonne), Marisa Pintus (Bettaldi), Silvio Bagolini (Silvio).
BW-84m.

by Jeff Stafford

SOURCES:
The Films of Gina Lollobrigida by Maurizio Ponzi (Citadel Press)
www.wikipedia.com
IMDB
Wife For A Night - Wife For A Night

Wife for a Night - Wife For A Night

Hollywood's penchant for remakes is not a new development but a strategy that has served some of our most acclaimed directors in often surprising and unique reworkings of the original source material. Take, for instance, Billy Wilder's 1964 sex comedy, Kiss Me, Stupid. It was actually adapted from Anna Bonacci's 1944 play, L'ora della fantasia [The Dazzling Hour], which, in turn, became the 19th century costume farce Bride for a Night (1952, aka Moglie per una notte), directed by Mario Camerini, a popular Italian film director who is best known for a number of 1930s hit comedies starring Vittorio de Sica and a 1954 version of the Greek myth Ulysses with Kirk Douglas. Bride for a Night is one of Camerini's more successful later efforts and generated considerable publicity during its original release because it cast Gina Lollobrigida against type as an unglamorous and seemingly dowdy housewife. This was quite a departure from her more typical roles as a saucy and often provocative sex symbol though in the course of the film she gets the beauty treatment as part of a deception designed to help her husband's career. Yet Bride for a Night and Billy Wilder's Kiss Me, Stupid are miles apart in style and approach and would make a fascinating double feature for the sake of comparison. Bride for a Night is a lightweight but often witty and effervescent chamber comedy in the grand tradition of the Commedia dell'Arte with a plot that juggles the big emotional themes of love, jealousy and adultery. The story opens with the lecherous Count D'Origo (Gino Cervi), who while traveling on official government business, decides to spend the night at a local village where he is pursuing Geraldine (Nadia Gray), a stunningly beautiful courtesan he wants to add to his list of conquests. The town mayor, Agusto (Paolo Stoppa), decides to take advantage of the situation in order to help his nephew, Enrico (Armando Francioli), a struggling composer of operas, and convinces Enrico to enact a charade that could earn him the Count's sponsorship, leading to a public performance of his new work. As part of the ruse, Enrico's wife Ottavia (Gina Lollobrigida), agrees to switch places with Geraldine so that the Count will think the latter is Enrico's wife and be more favorable toward helping the composer's career if he can secretly seduce his wife. As expected, the plan goes awry; Ottavia, hidden away at Geraldine's house, is forced to entertain two of the courtesan's gentleman callers. With the assistance of Geraldine's assistant, Ottavia transforms herself from a plain Jane with a matronly hairdo into a ravishing beauty. However, the unexpected arrival of the amorous Count complicates the situation further as he dismisses Ottavia's two admirers and begins to court her in earnest. Will she remain faithful to her husband or will she sacrifice her honor for his career? In contrast to Bride for a Night with its cast of elegantly dressed aristocrats cavorting against the background of Parma high society, Billy Wilder's 1964 remake is at the other end of the spectrum. Set in an economically depressed backwater desert town - Climax, Nevada - the opera composer has become a frustrated songwriter (Ray Walston) who sees his big break when a famous Las Vegas singer (Dean Martin as "Dino," a parody of his own persona) is stranded in his town. Felicia Farr plays the songwriter's ignored and lonely wife and Kim Novak, in one of her most underrated performances, is Polly the Pistol, a local prostitute. Unlike Camerini's film, Kiss Me, Stupid is much more cynical, crude and leering in its exploration of the morality - or lack of it - on display. Unlike Bride for a Night, none of the characters in Kiss Me, Stupid emerge with their honor intact yet they all seem to get what they want in the end. The result is a very sour and acerbic look at fidelity, marriage and relationships which earned it a Condemned rating by the Legion of Decency at the time of its release. Bride for a Night takes a much more upbeat and playful approach to its subject and one of its charms is watching Gina Lollobrigida's character emerge from her homely cocoon and turn into a beautiful butterfly. It's a sly, subtle comic performance with a hint of danger in it - she threatens to poison herself at a climactic moment and means it. The icing on the cake, however, is the excellent ensemble cast, all of them expert farceurs displaying the sort of precise comic timing a tale of mistaken identity demands. Gino Cervi, a veteran of more than 100 films (most of them Italian), is endlessly amusing as the blustery, skirt-chasing Count, Armando Francioli makes a dashing but appropriately temperamental musical genius and the luminous Nadia Gray almost steals the movie from Ms. Lollobrigida with her portrayal of the worldly wise yet still romantic Geraldine who understands the importance of allusion and deception. Most moviegoers will remember Gray from her sensational strip scene in the jet scene party sequence that concludes Federico Fellini's La Dolce Vita (1960). Although Bride for a Night was not a huge box office hit in Europe or abroad, it did garner mostly positive reviews from the critics with Gina Lollobrigida receiving the major praise. The New York Times called it "a frank but lightweight little sex bauble, smoothly handled and consistently amusing...The humor comes from the ensuing confusion and crossed suspicions and, finally, from Lollobrigida's awkward attempt to play a libertine." The New York Herald Tribune reviewer, voicing a similar sentiment, wrote "Miss Lollobrigida in the voluminous gowns of a century ago is, curiously enough, a rather refreshing departure from what her couturiers have accustomed us to of late, and her performance has more conviction, perhaps because of it." Screenplay: Franco Brusati, Mario Camerini, Paolo Levi; Anna Bonacci (play "L'Ora della Fantasia") Cinematography: Aldo Giordani Music: Alessandro Cicognini Film Editing: Adriana Novelli Cast: Gino Cervi (Count D'Origo), Gina Lollobrigida (Ottavia), Nadia Gray (Geraldine), Armando Francioli (Enrico Belli), Paolo Stoppa (Agusto), Galeazzo Benti (Maurizio), Paolo Panelli (Gualteri), Eugenia Tavani (Grand Duchess), Nietta Zocchi (Yvonne), Marisa Pintus (Bettaldi), Silvio Bagolini (Silvio). BW-84m. by Jeff Stafford SOURCES: The Films of Gina Lollobrigida by Maurizio Ponzi (Citadel Press) www.wikipedia.com IMDB

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