The Art of Love
Brief Synopsis
Cast & Crew
Norman Jewison
James Garner
Dick Van Dyke
Elke Sommer
Angie Dickinson
Ethel Merman
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
Paul, a starving American artist in Paris, shocks his unsuccessful roommate, Casey, a writer, when he decides to go back to his wealthy fiancée, Laurie, in the United States. They carry on a drunken debate on the banks of the Seine, and Casey decides that Paul should fake a suicide, thus enhancing the value of his paintings. As Casey composes a suicide note, Paul jumps off a bridge to save Nikki, who is fleeing lascivious attentions. They safely reach a barge, but Casey believes that Paul has really drowned. With great publicity, the paintings begin to sell, and Paul has to hide out in a nightclub to produce more of them. Casey then falls in love with Laurie, who has come to Paris for a visit. For revenge, Paul fakes evidence that points to his own murder by Casey; and Casey is arrested, tried and sentenced to death by the guillotine. Paul saves Casey at the last moment, and he also saves Nikki from a rich admirer.
Director
Norman Jewison
Cast
James Garner
Dick Van Dyke
Elke Sommer
Angie Dickinson
Ethel Merman
Carl Reiner
Pierre Olaf
Miiko Taka
Roger C. Carmel
Irving Jacobson
Jay Novello
Naomi Stevens
Renzo Cesana
Leon Belasco
Louis Mercier
Maurice Marsac
Fifi D'orsay
Marcel Hillaire
Dawn Villere
Nan Martin
Victoria Carroll
Sharon Shore
Astrid De Brea
Emile Genest
Paul Verdier
Crew
Ray Aghayan
Herb Alberty
John P. Austin
Hal Belfer
Carl Beringer
Chick Bourland
Howard Bristol
Milton Carruth
Cy Coleman
De Patie-freleng
Norman Deming
Robert Forrest
James Garner
Larry Germain
Joseph Gershenson
Alexander Golitzen
Herold Goodwin
Douglas Green
Ross Hunter
Bill Jobe
Rollie Lane
Russell Metty
Carl Reiner
Rita Riggs
William Sackheim
Clarence Self
Richard Alan Simmons
Roy Steele
Paul Verdier
Waldon O. Watson
George Webb
Bud Westmore
Film Details
Technical Specs
Articles
The Art of Love
Reiner's screenplay was a comic spoof on the modern art world, with Van Dyke as an unsuccessful young artist living in Paris whose jump into the Seine to save a woman (Sommer) is thought to result in his death. Now his art starts to sell, big-time, and when Van Dyke turns up alive, his roommate (Garner) persuades him to hide out and keep painting. As the works continue to sell, Garner lives it up at Van Dyke's expense, moves in on Van Dyke's girlfriend (Dickinson), and provokes the resentful artist to frame Garner for the supposed "murder."
All through production, Jewison and Reiner had a ball, convinced they were making one of the funniest movies in some time. "It remained fun all the way," Jewison later recalled. "The material cracked me up, even though I'd already spent months with it. That was how much Carl and I loved our own jokes." But at the premiere, no one laughed, and on reflection, Jewison realized why: "It was the movie's basic premise... A painter like our Dick Van Dyke character remains as obscure in death as he had been in life, and his paintings are just as worthless. The bottom fell out of our plot. And the audience knew it. I had directed my first bomb."
Critics weren't much kinder. The New York Times characterized The Art of Love as coming "straight from the assembly line," while Variety was a bit more nuanced: "[It] has sidesplitting moments [and] some unusually fine character performances, but so much of everything it never once settles down to a consistent point of view.... Elke Sommer and Angie Dickinson are gorgeous to look at and perfect for their roles. One even forgives Miss Sommer for emerging from the Seine after attempted suicide with nary a trace of makeup off, her eye shadow still intact and beautifully coiffed."
Exteriors were shot on location in Paris. Jewison had to plead with producer Hunter for this, as the budget didn't permit it, but finally Hunter gave in and allowed Jewison to take Van Dyke to Paris for two weeks. Sommer joined them from Germany. Jewison said he shot the pair "in every scene from the script that featured the two in Paris exteriors. I also shot the French actors, and...scenes that gave up Parisian flavor." The rest of the movie was filmed on a Universal soundstage.
In his memoir, Jewison remembered Van Dyke as "a marvelous comedian, kind of a latter-day Stan Laurel, lanky and rubbery, likeable, a master of the double take." Jewison had some challenges working with supporting actor Pierre Olaf, however, who plays the role of Inspector Carnot. One line of dialogue was especially problematic: "If there is no body, there is no suicide." Olaf kept pronouncing "no body" as "nobuddy" no matter how many times Jewison tried to fix his pronunciation. Jewison felt as if he was directing Inspector Clouseau! "We tried twenty takes to get the scene," he recalled. "Then I gave up. Pierre would never speak the line if we tried one hundred and twenty takes."
Also in the cast: Ethel Merman, as a brothel madam named Coco La Fontaine. The filmmakers' first choice for this role had been Mae West, but upon meeting with her they found that she had penciled in many changes to the script, insisting that she would only do it if it was rewritten to make her the star. Merman dons pink and green wigs through the film, her character is loud and brassy, and she sings a song -- in French. Merman told a reporter at the time, "I can't even say 'oui,' so I had to learn the song phonetically."
The paintings in the film were created by a southern Californian artist named Don Cincone. Sixty-five of his works are shown on screen, including several duplicates that he painted to be comically destroyed by Van Dyke in a wild early scene.
The Art of Love's animated credit sequence was created by David DePatie and Fritz Freleng, the artists behind the Pink Panther movies' cartoon sequences.
By Jeremy Arnold
SOURCES:
Norman Jewison, This Terrible Business Has Been Good to Me
Brian Kellow, Ethel Merman: A Life
The Art of Love
Quotes
Trivia
Notes
Location scenes filmed in Paris.
Miscellaneous Notes
Released in United States July 10, 1965
Released in United States Summer June 23, 1965
Released in United States Summer June 23, 1965
Released in United States July 10, 1965 (Chicago)