Boy, Did I Get a Wrong Number!


1h 39m 1966
Boy, Did I Get a Wrong Number!

Brief Synopsis

A real estate agent tries to keep a runaway movie star hidden from the press--and his wife.

Film Details

Genre
Comedy
Action
Release Date
Jan 1966
Premiere Information
New York opening: 8 Jun 1966
Production Company
Admiral Pictures
Distribution Company
United Artists
Country
United States

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 39m
Sound
Mono
Color
Color (DeLuxe)

Synopsis

When Didi, the bubble bath queen of the French cinema, arrives in Hollywood for her first dramatic film and discovers that the script once more calls for her to immerse herself in suds, she leaves in a rage and takes refuge in a hotel in Rocky Point, Oregon. Tom Meade, the real estate operator in the area, tries to get his wife, Martha, on the telephone and by mistake is connected with Didi. Immediately grasping the publicity possibilities of the situation, he sneaks her some food, tries to persuade her to stay at one of his cabins, and gets thrown out of his car. After promising to take his wife to their cabin for the weekend, Tom learns that Didi has changed her mind and is staying at the cabin. Meanwhile, his maid, Lily, has been listening on the telephone and knows of the mixup. Tom tells his wife that he must go to the cabin alone because forest rangers have reported a broken waterpipe. No sooner does he arrive and find Didi sleeping in her bubble bath than Lily arrives on a motorcycle to warn him that Martha is on her way. Frantically, Tom and Lily hide Didi in a wall bed, then in the basement, and finally in a fire locker behind the house. But all attempts to conceal Didi fail. Martha storms out, but Didi drives off in her car, hits a bump, and plunges into the lake. The police are alerted about the movie star's disappearance, Tom becomes the prime suspect, and the police arrest him. He escapes in a police car, unaware that Didi is sleeping in the back seat. The chase ends when Tom hits a fire hydrant and crashes into a soap factory. And all ends well as Didi makes an appearance covered in bubbles.

Film Details

Genre
Comedy
Action
Release Date
Jan 1966
Premiere Information
New York opening: 8 Jun 1966
Production Company
Admiral Pictures
Distribution Company
United Artists
Country
United States

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 39m
Sound
Mono
Color
Color (DeLuxe)

Articles

Boy, Did I Get a Wrong Number!


At an age when most Americans were facing mandatory retirement, comedian Bob Hope continued to maintain a punishing schedule of feature films, TV specials, public appearance and goodwill tours around the globe. After playing the apoplectic father of wayward teenager Tuesday Weld in United Artists' I'll Take Sweden (1965), the 62 year-old Hope traveled to the Dominican Republic to entertain US troops. At the behest of the Department of Defense, Hope, Weld and Joey Heatherton performed for Marines deployed there since 1965 to quell a percolating civil war and to serve as a bulwark against a feared Cuba-style Communist takeover. Back in the states, Hope dove straight into his fifty-first film. Produced jointly by United Artists and Hope Enterprises, Boy, Did I Get a Wrong Number! (1966) costarred Berlin-born bombshell Elke Sommer, then coasting on the infamy of her near-nude appearance in Blake Edwards' A Shot in the Dark (1964), and was helmed by George Marshall, who had first directed Hope in The Ghost Breakers (1940).

Boy, Did I Get a Wrong Number! marked the first of three film collaborations for Hope and comedienne Phyllis Diller, cast as the acerbic housekeeper of Hope's scheming real estate developer. Born in Lima, Ohio, in 1917, Diller had aspired to the life of a comic after hearing Hope on the radio. Hope was a long-time admirer and supporter of Diller's trademark frazzled housewife act (Diller was at the time a newly-divorced single mother of five children), which she perfected in clubs and on The Tonight Show with Johnny Carson. Dubbed by columnists "the female Bob Hope," Diller became a frequent guest on Hope's TV specials for NBC. A close friend of both Hope and his wife Dolores, Diller modeled the mordant, unpredictable domestics she played for Hope after his real life housekeeper, Eileen Taylor. In her 2006 memoirs, Diller suggested there was more than mutual respect to their professional relationship:

Bob was mad about me and I was nuts about him; yet nothing ever happened between us. I knew a relationship was an impossibility. Then again, I also had the theory that I reminded him of his mother. She sang and played the piano, and when I saw a picture of her I thought we resembled one another."

Postproduction, Hope invited Diller on his 1966 Christmas USO tour of Vietnam and helped her to retool her nightclub material to appeal to the troops.

Filmed at Big Bear Lake in California's San Bernardino National Forest (with interiors captured at the Producer's Studio in Hollywood, on the old Sam Goldwyn lot), Boy, Did I Get a Wrong Number! was a pleasant shoot for all involved – particularly for Diller, who had suffered through her film debut in The Fat Spy (1966) in mosquito-infested Cape Coral, Florida, opposite a dissolute (and pregnant) Jayne Mansfield.

Principal photography for Boy, Did I Get a Wrong Number! was marked by a couple of embarrassing experiences for Diller. Knowing that Hope used cue cards for his TV specials, Diller never learned her own lines – only to discover on set that Hope always memorized his lines for films. In one scene in which her character must ride a motorcycle, Diller was doubled by a slim-bodied stuntman, who donned Diller's costume and a "fright wig" to seal the illusion. Arriving late to the set as an observer was Diller's new husband, Warde Tatum, who approached the motorcycle rider from the rear, slapped "her" on the backside and planted a deep kiss on the rider's lips. Although Boy, Did I Get a Wrong Number! was a hit with neither critics nor moviegoers, Hope enjoyed Diller's second banana act enough to invite her on his 1966 Christmas tour of Vietnam, where he helped the comedienne tailor her act to appeal to US soldiers.

Producer: Edward Small
Director: George Marshall
Screenplay: George Kennett, Albert E. Lewin, Burt Styler; George Beck (story)
Cinematography: Lionel Lindon
Art Direction: Frank Sylos
Music: 'By' Dunham, Richard LaSalle
Cast: Bob Hope (Thomas J. 'Tom' Meade), Elke Sommer (Didi), Phyllis Diller (Lily), Cesare Danova (Pepe Pepponi), Marjorie Lord (Mrs. Martha Meade), Kelly Thordsen (Det. Schwartz), Benny Baker (Det. Regan), Terry Burnham (Doris Meade), Joyce Jameson (Telephone operator), Harry von Zell (Newscaster/Off-Screen Narrator), Kevin Burchett (Larry Meade), Keith Taylor (Plympton), John Todd Roberts (Newsboy)
C-99m. Letterboxed.

by Richard Harland Smith

Sources:
Bob Hope: A Life in Comedy by William Robert Faith (Da Capo Press, revised edition, 2003)
Bob Hope: A Biography by Michael Freedland (Chivers Press, 1999)
Bob Hope: The Road Well Traveled by Lawrence J. Quirk (Applause Books, 2000)
The Secret Life of Bob Hope: An Unauthorized Biography by Arthur Marx (Barricade Books, 1993)
Like a Lampshade in a Whorehouse: My Life in Comedy by Phyllis Diller with Richard Bushkind (Tarcher, 2006)
Boy, Did I Get A Wrong Number!

Boy, Did I Get a Wrong Number!

At an age when most Americans were facing mandatory retirement, comedian Bob Hope continued to maintain a punishing schedule of feature films, TV specials, public appearance and goodwill tours around the globe. After playing the apoplectic father of wayward teenager Tuesday Weld in United Artists' I'll Take Sweden (1965), the 62 year-old Hope traveled to the Dominican Republic to entertain US troops. At the behest of the Department of Defense, Hope, Weld and Joey Heatherton performed for Marines deployed there since 1965 to quell a percolating civil war and to serve as a bulwark against a feared Cuba-style Communist takeover. Back in the states, Hope dove straight into his fifty-first film. Produced jointly by United Artists and Hope Enterprises, Boy, Did I Get a Wrong Number! (1966) costarred Berlin-born bombshell Elke Sommer, then coasting on the infamy of her near-nude appearance in Blake Edwards' A Shot in the Dark (1964), and was helmed by George Marshall, who had first directed Hope in The Ghost Breakers (1940). Boy, Did I Get a Wrong Number! marked the first of three film collaborations for Hope and comedienne Phyllis Diller, cast as the acerbic housekeeper of Hope's scheming real estate developer. Born in Lima, Ohio, in 1917, Diller had aspired to the life of a comic after hearing Hope on the radio. Hope was a long-time admirer and supporter of Diller's trademark frazzled housewife act (Diller was at the time a newly-divorced single mother of five children), which she perfected in clubs and on The Tonight Show with Johnny Carson. Dubbed by columnists "the female Bob Hope," Diller became a frequent guest on Hope's TV specials for NBC. A close friend of both Hope and his wife Dolores, Diller modeled the mordant, unpredictable domestics she played for Hope after his real life housekeeper, Eileen Taylor. In her 2006 memoirs, Diller suggested there was more than mutual respect to their professional relationship: Bob was mad about me and I was nuts about him; yet nothing ever happened between us. I knew a relationship was an impossibility. Then again, I also had the theory that I reminded him of his mother. She sang and played the piano, and when I saw a picture of her I thought we resembled one another." Postproduction, Hope invited Diller on his 1966 Christmas USO tour of Vietnam and helped her to retool her nightclub material to appeal to the troops. Filmed at Big Bear Lake in California's San Bernardino National Forest (with interiors captured at the Producer's Studio in Hollywood, on the old Sam Goldwyn lot), Boy, Did I Get a Wrong Number! was a pleasant shoot for all involved – particularly for Diller, who had suffered through her film debut in The Fat Spy (1966) in mosquito-infested Cape Coral, Florida, opposite a dissolute (and pregnant) Jayne Mansfield. Principal photography for Boy, Did I Get a Wrong Number! was marked by a couple of embarrassing experiences for Diller. Knowing that Hope used cue cards for his TV specials, Diller never learned her own lines – only to discover on set that Hope always memorized his lines for films. In one scene in which her character must ride a motorcycle, Diller was doubled by a slim-bodied stuntman, who donned Diller's costume and a "fright wig" to seal the illusion. Arriving late to the set as an observer was Diller's new husband, Warde Tatum, who approached the motorcycle rider from the rear, slapped "her" on the backside and planted a deep kiss on the rider's lips. Although Boy, Did I Get a Wrong Number! was a hit with neither critics nor moviegoers, Hope enjoyed Diller's second banana act enough to invite her on his 1966 Christmas tour of Vietnam, where he helped the comedienne tailor her act to appeal to US soldiers. Producer: Edward Small Director: George Marshall Screenplay: George Kennett, Albert E. Lewin, Burt Styler; George Beck (story) Cinematography: Lionel Lindon Art Direction: Frank Sylos Music: 'By' Dunham, Richard LaSalle Cast: Bob Hope (Thomas J. 'Tom' Meade), Elke Sommer (Didi), Phyllis Diller (Lily), Cesare Danova (Pepe Pepponi), Marjorie Lord (Mrs. Martha Meade), Kelly Thordsen (Det. Schwartz), Benny Baker (Det. Regan), Terry Burnham (Doris Meade), Joyce Jameson (Telephone operator), Harry von Zell (Newscaster/Off-Screen Narrator), Kevin Burchett (Larry Meade), Keith Taylor (Plympton), John Todd Roberts (Newsboy) C-99m. Letterboxed. by Richard Harland Smith Sources: Bob Hope: A Life in Comedy by William Robert Faith (Da Capo Press, revised edition, 2003) Bob Hope: A Biography by Michael Freedland (Chivers Press, 1999) Bob Hope: The Road Well Traveled by Lawrence J. Quirk (Applause Books, 2000) The Secret Life of Bob Hope: An Unauthorized Biography by Arthur Marx (Barricade Books, 1993) Like a Lampshade in a Whorehouse: My Life in Comedy by Phyllis Diller with Richard Bushkind (Tarcher, 2006)

THE ROAD TO HONG KONG, THE FACTS OF LIFE and Other Comedies Are Featured in Bob Hope: MGM Movie Legends Collection


"I do Bob Hope all the time. The reason people don't see it is that I'm not as good." When Woody Allen commented on his idol he could easily have been speaking of millions of people who turned to Hope for some laughs and a little entertainment. He seemed to be everywhere in a career that stretched nearly a century and encompassed stage, radio, records, movies, television, USO shows, comic books – anything was fair game. But no matter where or what, he was still recognizably Bob Hope. Contrasted to somebody with an equally varied career like Orson Welles who took each medium as a new challenge, Hope's basic persona stayed mostly the same. If you saw a wisecracking, somewhat cowardly layabout but who got the job done, then that's Hope (and clearly much of Allen's early work as well).

This is plainly visible in the sampling of his films on the DVD set Bob Hope: MGM Movie Legends Collection. Ranging over three decades, the films show Hope in full Hope mode whether he's rushing merrily through some trifling story or trying to heat up a script that somebody should have rethought. His film career started with several shorts in the mid-30s before moving to a few supporting spots and finally graduating to lead roles in 1938's Give Me a Sailor. (He gained a theme song in that February's The Big Broadcast of 1938 and then used it for a film title before the year was out: "Thanks for the Memory".) In 1940 he was teamed with Bing Crosby in Road to Singapore and Hope's place on the silver screen was assured. He consistently found time for a string of starring roles until 1972 and then settled into cameo appearances after that.

The earliest film here, 1943's They Got Me Covered, is also one of the best. Hope plays a hapless reporter in wartime Washington DC who blunders into a spy ring, dragging girlfriend Dorothy Lamour along with him. The film looks like it was shot quickly and has a charming disregard for reality: the Nazi spy base is an improbably large fashion salon and their safe house has--for no apparent reason--Donald Meek who believes he's protecting President Lincoln from the Confederates. But reality hardly matters. Hope is in fine form tossing off sharp gags and standing up to the spies when his first impulse is to flee in panic. Lamour matches him move for move and provides a solid foil for Hope's antics, not just a straight person to play against but a full and smarter partner.

Two more efforts toss Hope into genre films. The Princess and the Pirate (1944) imagines him as one of the world's worst touring actors accidentally captured by pirates and eventually rescuing disguised princess Virginia Mayo. In Alias Jesse James (1959), Hope is a New York insurance agent who unknowingly takes out a life policy on Jesse James and then has to head out West to be sure nothing happens to his client. Among the sagebrush, he gets tangled up with saloon girl Rhonda Fleming. You see the pattern of pairing him against beautiful leading ladies though neither Mayo nor Fleming are up to Lamour's standard, which could be due to the scripts. Both films are lively though Princess is clearly the funnier and more inventive of the two. Western fans will definitely want to see an inspired sequence at the end of Alias Jesse James that can't be revealed here without ruining the gag.

Moving into the 60s, studios seemed to have less idea of what to do with Hope. His comic approach never completely went out of style, just changed forms. Still, it was easy to see Hope as outdated when surrounded by the dissolving studio system, TV's challenges and the new breed of comics (Lenny Bruce, Nichols & May, Bob Newhart). Hope no longer fit into a clear position, something the later films in the set show. Boy, Did I Get a Wrong Number! (1966) imagines Hope as a bland, devoted family man who gets tangled up with Elke Sommer as a European sex kitten running away from the set of her latest film. Probably envisioned as a classic farce, this is really the type of film whose story would fall completely apart if Hope only revealed to his wife that Sommer was hiding in their cabin. Like many films of the period, it plays at being "naughty" or "free spirited" but is utterly conventional (even Hope's gags are more restrained). At least Phyllis Diller is on hand as an assertive housemaid to spark up the proceedings.

The same faux naughtiness can be seen in 1965's I'll Take Sweden where single father Hope packs teenaged daughter Tuesday Weld off to Sweden to keep her out of the hands of her layabout, quasi-beatnik boyfriend. It's an example of how far out of touch the film is that the layabout boyfriend is Frankie Avalon. There are a few halfhearted moves toward unmarried hankypanky and several jokes at the openness of Swedish romantic life as Sweden drifts among the same realm of supposedly free-spirted farce as Wrong Number. In the end nothing out of the ordinary happens unless you count Avalon's stop-the-story and never-campy-enough songs. The film does close with a classic door-slamming, in-and-out of room sequence but overall is pretty dreary despite the best efforts of Hope and Weld (but almost nobody else).

One highlight of these later years is the seventh and final "Road" film, Road to Hong Kong from 1962. Dorothy Lamour, co-star of the previous films, was replaced by Joan Collins, probably because Collins was two decades younger but also due to a British production company wanting to showcase their own talent. As it turns out, Collins didn't showcase impressively and Lamour's brief cameo appearance proves she was smarter, funnier and simply more attractive. Nevertheless, while Hong Kong is the weakest in the series (the spies and space travel plot was barely enough for a TV skit and has dated badly) it shows why Hope and Crosby were such a good team and doesn't completely deserve its reputation as a stumbling end to the series. The duo's gags come across as actual dialogue rather than bits of something the writers concocted and both create a feeling of relaxed humor that many more aggressive comics would do well to emulate (if they can). Peter Sellers appears as an Indian doctor in a small segment that's a mini-masterpiece of double-talk. The film does have a couple of misguided sequences (one involving a feeding maching in the space capsule is particularly humiliating) and some comments about Asia are a bit dubious today but overall Hope and Crosby still displayed enough charm that you almost wish they could have done one more film.

The anomaly here is 1960's The Facts of Life, Hope's attempt at a more-or-less straight dramatic role. There are still jokes-Hope wasn't about to leap into a void-but this time they come from his character and even bring out criticism from others. Most notably that's Lucille Ball as a friend's wife who can't stand the humorous commentary and good-fellow cheerfulness in a critique, however mild, of Hope's usual persona. During a group vacation to Mexico where most of the group gets waylaid, Hope and Ball follow the Hollywood rule that opposites attract and start an affair. Played mostly straight, The Facts of Life is fairly reliable melodrama with a smear of comedy (one sequence where Hope gets lost among identical motels is clever) but never quite pulls together. The big problem is that Hope either didn't have this type of acting in him or needed more firm guidance from the director. Ball on the other hand is completely plausible as a lonely wife, almost single-handedly keeping the film from feeling by-the-book. Viewed today it's odd to think this gathered five Oscar® nominations, winning one for best black-and-white costume design.

Bob Hope: MGM Movie Legends Collection has each film on a separate disc in a slim clase. There are no extras beyond trailers though a couple of the later films have a choice of full-screen or letterboxed (but none are fully widescreen). The transfers are solid though there are a few moments in The Princess and the Pirate where it appears as if the Technicolor strips were briefly out of registration. Nothing major and a lot of viewers won't even notice. The set On The Road With Bob Hope And Bing Crosby which collects the first four "Road" films is still the best place to see Hope in action but this is a good if uneven follow-up.

For more information about Bob Hope: MGM Movie Legends Collection, visit MGM. To order Bob Hope: The MGM Movie Legends Collection, go to TCM Shopping.

by Lang Thompson

THE ROAD TO HONG KONG, THE FACTS OF LIFE and Other Comedies Are Featured in Bob Hope: MGM Movie Legends Collection

"I do Bob Hope all the time. The reason people don't see it is that I'm not as good." When Woody Allen commented on his idol he could easily have been speaking of millions of people who turned to Hope for some laughs and a little entertainment. He seemed to be everywhere in a career that stretched nearly a century and encompassed stage, radio, records, movies, television, USO shows, comic books – anything was fair game. But no matter where or what, he was still recognizably Bob Hope. Contrasted to somebody with an equally varied career like Orson Welles who took each medium as a new challenge, Hope's basic persona stayed mostly the same. If you saw a wisecracking, somewhat cowardly layabout but who got the job done, then that's Hope (and clearly much of Allen's early work as well). This is plainly visible in the sampling of his films on the DVD set Bob Hope: MGM Movie Legends Collection. Ranging over three decades, the films show Hope in full Hope mode whether he's rushing merrily through some trifling story or trying to heat up a script that somebody should have rethought. His film career started with several shorts in the mid-30s before moving to a few supporting spots and finally graduating to lead roles in 1938's Give Me a Sailor. (He gained a theme song in that February's The Big Broadcast of 1938 and then used it for a film title before the year was out: "Thanks for the Memory".) In 1940 he was teamed with Bing Crosby in Road to Singapore and Hope's place on the silver screen was assured. He consistently found time for a string of starring roles until 1972 and then settled into cameo appearances after that. The earliest film here, 1943's They Got Me Covered, is also one of the best. Hope plays a hapless reporter in wartime Washington DC who blunders into a spy ring, dragging girlfriend Dorothy Lamour along with him. The film looks like it was shot quickly and has a charming disregard for reality: the Nazi spy base is an improbably large fashion salon and their safe house has--for no apparent reason--Donald Meek who believes he's protecting President Lincoln from the Confederates. But reality hardly matters. Hope is in fine form tossing off sharp gags and standing up to the spies when his first impulse is to flee in panic. Lamour matches him move for move and provides a solid foil for Hope's antics, not just a straight person to play against but a full and smarter partner. Two more efforts toss Hope into genre films. The Princess and the Pirate (1944) imagines him as one of the world's worst touring actors accidentally captured by pirates and eventually rescuing disguised princess Virginia Mayo. In Alias Jesse James (1959), Hope is a New York insurance agent who unknowingly takes out a life policy on Jesse James and then has to head out West to be sure nothing happens to his client. Among the sagebrush, he gets tangled up with saloon girl Rhonda Fleming. You see the pattern of pairing him against beautiful leading ladies though neither Mayo nor Fleming are up to Lamour's standard, which could be due to the scripts. Both films are lively though Princess is clearly the funnier and more inventive of the two. Western fans will definitely want to see an inspired sequence at the end of Alias Jesse James that can't be revealed here without ruining the gag. Moving into the 60s, studios seemed to have less idea of what to do with Hope. His comic approach never completely went out of style, just changed forms. Still, it was easy to see Hope as outdated when surrounded by the dissolving studio system, TV's challenges and the new breed of comics (Lenny Bruce, Nichols & May, Bob Newhart). Hope no longer fit into a clear position, something the later films in the set show. Boy, Did I Get a Wrong Number! (1966) imagines Hope as a bland, devoted family man who gets tangled up with Elke Sommer as a European sex kitten running away from the set of her latest film. Probably envisioned as a classic farce, this is really the type of film whose story would fall completely apart if Hope only revealed to his wife that Sommer was hiding in their cabin. Like many films of the period, it plays at being "naughty" or "free spirited" but is utterly conventional (even Hope's gags are more restrained). At least Phyllis Diller is on hand as an assertive housemaid to spark up the proceedings. The same faux naughtiness can be seen in 1965's I'll Take Sweden where single father Hope packs teenaged daughter Tuesday Weld off to Sweden to keep her out of the hands of her layabout, quasi-beatnik boyfriend. It's an example of how far out of touch the film is that the layabout boyfriend is Frankie Avalon. There are a few halfhearted moves toward unmarried hankypanky and several jokes at the openness of Swedish romantic life as Sweden drifts among the same realm of supposedly free-spirted farce as Wrong Number. In the end nothing out of the ordinary happens unless you count Avalon's stop-the-story and never-campy-enough songs. The film does close with a classic door-slamming, in-and-out of room sequence but overall is pretty dreary despite the best efforts of Hope and Weld (but almost nobody else). One highlight of these later years is the seventh and final "Road" film, Road to Hong Kong from 1962. Dorothy Lamour, co-star of the previous films, was replaced by Joan Collins, probably because Collins was two decades younger but also due to a British production company wanting to showcase their own talent. As it turns out, Collins didn't showcase impressively and Lamour's brief cameo appearance proves she was smarter, funnier and simply more attractive. Nevertheless, while Hong Kong is the weakest in the series (the spies and space travel plot was barely enough for a TV skit and has dated badly) it shows why Hope and Crosby were such a good team and doesn't completely deserve its reputation as a stumbling end to the series. The duo's gags come across as actual dialogue rather than bits of something the writers concocted and both create a feeling of relaxed humor that many more aggressive comics would do well to emulate (if they can). Peter Sellers appears as an Indian doctor in a small segment that's a mini-masterpiece of double-talk. The film does have a couple of misguided sequences (one involving a feeding maching in the space capsule is particularly humiliating) and some comments about Asia are a bit dubious today but overall Hope and Crosby still displayed enough charm that you almost wish they could have done one more film. The anomaly here is 1960's The Facts of Life, Hope's attempt at a more-or-less straight dramatic role. There are still jokes-Hope wasn't about to leap into a void-but this time they come from his character and even bring out criticism from others. Most notably that's Lucille Ball as a friend's wife who can't stand the humorous commentary and good-fellow cheerfulness in a critique, however mild, of Hope's usual persona. During a group vacation to Mexico where most of the group gets waylaid, Hope and Ball follow the Hollywood rule that opposites attract and start an affair. Played mostly straight, The Facts of Life is fairly reliable melodrama with a smear of comedy (one sequence where Hope gets lost among identical motels is clever) but never quite pulls together. The big problem is that Hope either didn't have this type of acting in him or needed more firm guidance from the director. Ball on the other hand is completely plausible as a lonely wife, almost single-handedly keeping the film from feeling by-the-book. Viewed today it's odd to think this gathered five Oscar® nominations, winning one for best black-and-white costume design. Bob Hope: MGM Movie Legends Collection has each film on a separate disc in a slim clase. There are no extras beyond trailers though a couple of the later films have a choice of full-screen or letterboxed (but none are fully widescreen). The transfers are solid though there are a few moments in The Princess and the Pirate where it appears as if the Technicolor strips were briefly out of registration. Nothing major and a lot of viewers won't even notice. The set On The Road With Bob Hope And Bing Crosby which collects the first four "Road" films is still the best place to see Hope in action but this is a good if uneven follow-up. For more information about Bob Hope: MGM Movie Legends Collection, visit MGM. To order Bob Hope: The MGM Movie Legends Collection, go to TCM Shopping. by Lang Thompson

Quotes

Trivia

Miscellaneous Notes

Released in United States 1966

Released in United States on Video October 1989

Released in United States 1966

Released in United States on Video October 1989