Funny Farm
Brief Synopsis
Cast & Crew
George Roy Hill
Chevy Chase
Madolyn Smith
Kevin O'morrison
Joseph Maher
Jack Gilpin
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
Andy Farmer, a sportswriter with dreams of being a great novelist, moves with his wife to the New England countryside in order to write his novel with no distractions. Of course, distractions are all Andy finds. The birds sing too loudly, there are snakes in the lake, and it costs 20 cents to make a call from the pay phone in the kitchen. Over time, Farmer grows withdrawn and bitter, and when his wife decides to take a stab at writing, it becomes unclear if their marriage will be able to survive life on the farm.
Directors
George Roy Hill
Mickey Moore
Michael D. Moore
Cast
Chevy Chase
Madolyn Smith
Kevin O'morrison
Joseph Maher
Jack Gilpin
Caris Corfman
William Severs
Mike Starr
Glenn Plummer
William Duell
Helen Lloyd Breed
Kit Lefevre
Dakin Matthews
William Newman
Alice Drummond
Brad Sullivan
Nesbitt Blaisdell
George Buck
Audrie Neenan
Macintyre Dixon
Bill Fagerbakke
Nick Wyman
Raynor Scheine
Peter Boyden
Reg E. Cathey
Dan Desmond
Don Plumley
Brett Miller
Jamie Meyer
David Woodberry
Kevin Murphy
Dennis Barr
Barbara Baker
David Williams
Steve Jonas
Russell Bletzer
Evelyn Mclean
Steve John
Robert Conner
Judson Duncan
Alison Hannas
Robert Ingram
Mary Johnson
Kristin Kellom
Paul Link
Gerard M Cubero
George Flower
Crew
Peter Albiez
Jim Barr
Elmer Bernstein
Jeffrey Boam
Bruce Bodner
Robert Brown
Henry Bumstead
Judy Cammer
Chevy Chase
Greg Coelho
Cynthia R Coulter
Robert L Crawford
Jay Cronley
Cliff Cudney
Mike Cunningham
Patti Dalzell
Deborah Dawson
Albert Delgado
Camille Demave
Bob Depatis
Lee Dichter
Marion Dougherty
Kathy Durning
Eric Feldman
Robert Gaynor
George Goodman
Barbara Greenhoe
Lee Haas
Cathy Haft
Lee Harman
Alan Heim
John Andrew Hill
Tim Hill
Edward Iacobelli
David R Israel
Gene Johnson
Jerry F Johnson
Angela Kaye
Patrick Kelley
Clark King
Richard Kite
Richard Kratina
Richard Kratina
Henry Larrecq
Harold Levinsohn
Mark Livolsi
Lisa Loving
Craig Lyman
Eddie Marks
Marilyn Matthews
John P Mclaughlin
Princess Mclean
Robert Miller
Eytan Mirsky
Gary Muller
Eric Myers
Hugh Aodh O'brien
Matthew O'connor
Miroslav Ondricek
Miroslav Ondricek
Jim Payne
Don Picard
Kaye Pownall
Andrew Priestley
Tom Priestley
Dick Quinlan
Ed Quinn
Sanford Rackow
Michael Rapley
George Robotham
John Robotham
Michael G Ross
Ann Roth
Liz Ryan
Dan Sable
Adeline Leonard Seakwood
Ahmad Shirazi
Dana Stefenson
A J Thrasher
Jim Van Wyck
Jurgen Vollmer
Dan Wallin
Carol Wood
Martha Yates
Film Details
Technical Specs
Articles
TCM Remembers George Roy Hill, 1922-2002
Born on December 20, 1922, to a well-to-do Minneapolis newspaper family, Hill would hang out at the local airfield as a child and watch the barnstorming pilots, fascinated by their theatrics. His intense interest would eventually drive him to earn his pilot's license by age 16. But his love for the performing arts was inspired by a different calling - the stage, where he appeared in student productions at his prep school in Hopkins, Minnesota. After graduating, he majored in music at Yale. A baritone, he became a member of the university Glee Club but he soon discovered that singing wasn't his forte. He found acting more suitable and joined the Dramatic Society, becoming its president and appearing in campus musicals. Ten days after graduating with a bachelor's degree in music in 1943, Hill joined the Navy. After flight school, he transferred to the Marines and piloted transport planes in the South Pacific during World War II.
Following the war, he worked briefly as a cub reporter on a family newspaper in Texas, then used the GI Bill to attend Trinity College in Dublin, Ireland, where he earned a bachelor's degree in literature in 1949 and did a stint with the Abbey theatre. Back in the United States, he received good reviews in an off-Broadway play, Strindberg's The Creditors with Beatrice Arthur, and toured with Margaret Webster's Shakespearean company - a celebrated theatrical company for its time. The Korean War interrupted his career, when Hill was recalled to Marine duty, serving 18 months at a training center in North Carolina, and later emerging as a major. The time spent away from the theater was beneficial to Hill, and he decided to move away from acting toward writing. His scripts soon found their way to television and Hill quickly rose from assistant director to director on several of the most acclaimed live dramas of the '50s including The Helen Morgan Story, the original TV production of Judgment at Nuremberg. He also earned two Emmy Awards for writing and directing a Titanic story, A Night to Remember.
In 1957, Hill moved to Broadway, where he directed the Pulitzer Prize-winning Look Homeward, Angel. After directing Tennessee Williams' Period of Adjustment, Hill kicked off his film career by directing the 1962 film version, which gave Jane Fonda her first major role. He followed that up with the film adaptation of Lillian Hellman's classic play, Toys in the Attic (1963), but it would be his third film that would earn Hill critical acclaim, the marvelous Peter Sellers' comedy The World of Henry Orient (1964). The story concerning two teenage girls who stalk a concert pianist (Sellers) around New York City, established Hill's brisk style and his flair for bittersweet comedy. His next two films, both starring Julie Andrews, were James Michener's epic Hawaii (1966), and the big-budget musical Thoroughly Modern Millie (1967). Although his craftsmanship was always impeccable, both films failed to elevate him to the front ranks of Hollywood directors.
That all changed with Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid. Few associated with the film could have predicted that this light-hearted western would be the box-office smash it became when it was released, but audiences fell in love with this charming and innovative film. Instead of playing Butch (Newman) and Sundance (Redford) as vicious outlaws, Hill and screenwriter William Goldman made them easy-going, sympathetic drifters for whom robbing banks was just a game. As the director, Hill kept the balance between the film's comedy and drama pitch perfect, emphasizing the straightforward storytelling which was free from any heavy-handed editorializing. Also, by giving the characters a modern feel with contemporary dialogue and using an upbeat, pop-oriented Burt Bacharach score, Hill breathed fresh life into the Western genre. The film deservedly received Oscar nominations for Best Picture and Best Director; and earned Oscars for Conrad Hall's cinematography, Burt Bacharach's original score, the Bacharach/Hal David composition "Raindrops Keep Falling on My Head", as well as Goldman's original screenplay.
Newman and Redford would be reunited again with Hill for his next big hit The Sting, as con men who ensnare a brutal gangster (Robert Shaw) in an intricate scheme. A highly stylized piece of work, Hill crafted the film in the style of the old Saturday Evening Post graphics, complete with chapter headings; imitated the flat camera style that was employed for those classic Warner Bros. gangster movies and resurrected the ragtime piano of Scott Joplin for the score (as interpreted by Marvin Hamlisch). For his exceptional work, Hill won the Academy Award for Best Director and the film also bagged Oscars for Best Picture, Best Original Screenplay (David S. Ward), Best Score (Hamlisch), Best Editing (William Reynolds), Best Costume Design (Edith Head) and Best Art Direction (Henry Bumstead and James Payne).
Hill would work with Redford and Newman again, albeit individually, later in the decade. The Great Waldo Pepper (1975), the story of a barnstorming pilot, was culled from some evocative childhood memories, yet despite the star power of Redford, it was not a success. Nor was the Paul Newman vehicle Slap Shot (1977), a raucous look at the lives of minor league ice hockey players. The off-color language and bawdy locker-room antics perplexed audiences and critics at the time, although it's now considered to be one of the best (and funniest) of all sports films.
Although he would never again scale the critical and commercial success of Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid or The Sting, Hill would enjoy later acclaim with the sweet natured A Little Romance (1979), starring Laurence Olivier and a 13-year-old Diane Lane; his ambitious adaptation of John Irving's episodic The World According to Garp (1982); and his final film, the slight, but pleasant Chevy Chase comedy Funny Farm (1988). Soon after that, Hill retired from Hollywood to teach at his old Alma Mater Yale. Hill is survived by his former wife, Louisa Horton, as well as two sons, George Roy Hill III of Roslyn, N.Y., and John Andrew Steele Hill of Ardsley, N.Y; two daughters, Frances Breckinridge Phipps of Dumont, N.J., and Owens Hill of Los Angeles; and 12 grandchildren.
by Michael T. Toole
TCM Remembers George Roy Hill, 1922-2002
Quotes
Trivia
Miscellaneous Notes
Released in United States on Video November 22, 1988
Released in United States Summer June 3, 1988
To write a novel, a New York executive moves to the country with his family to escape the rat race of the city.
Began shooting August 25, 1987.
Completed shooting November 1987.
Released in United States Summer June 3, 1988
Released in United States on Video November 22, 1988