I Married a Woman


1h 24m 1958
I Married a Woman

Brief Synopsis

A neglected wife sets out to make her adman exec husband jealous.

Film Details

Genre
Comedy
Release Date
May 1958
Premiere Information
Los Angeles opening: 14 May 1958
Production Company
Gomalco Productions, Inc.; RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.
Distribution Company
Universal Pictures Co., Inc.
Country
United States

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 24m
Sound
Mono (RCA Sound System)
Color
Black and White, Color (Technicolor)
Theatrical Aspect Ratio
2.35 : 1

Synopsis

In New York City, good-natured advertising executive Marshall "Mickey" Briggs drops off his young wife Janice downtown, but is too distracted to notice that she heads for her obstetrician's office. At his office, Mickey learns from his malapropism-spewing secretary, Miss Anderson, that agency director Mr. Sutton needs to see him right away. Sutton soon reveals that they are in danger of losing the company's most important account, Luxemberg beer, because the owner's wife no longer appreciates the long-running campaign featuring gorgeous "Miss Luxemberg" models. After instructing Mickey that the future of the company lays in his hands, Sutton gives him only two days to come up with a new campaign. At home, Mickey tries to concentrate on work, but is distracted by Janice, who wants his full attention to inform him that she is pregnant. When she breaks down in tears, Mickey tries to explain his work situation, but a preoccupied Janice refuses to listen, instead insisting that he take her to the movies. There, they watch a movie starring John Wayne as a man so enamored of his wife that he buys her a diamond necklace and waltzes in the moonlight with her. Although Janice is enraptured by this story, Mickey grows frustrated that women are fed overly romanticized views of marriage. They return home, where Mickey correctly predicts that Janice will mope and insist he no longer loves her in order to get his attention. While Mickey tries to work, Janice and her mother, Mrs. Blake, who lives with the couple, commiserate over Mickey's failings as a husband, then persuade him to walk the dog. While he is out, Janice tells her mother about the baby, causing her to cry, especially after she calls Mrs. Blake "Grandma." The next morning, Janice recalls how Mickey treated her when they first met: Janice is one of several lovely Miss Luxembergs being admired by Mickey and his best friend, Bob Sanders. As Janice comes out of her reverie, Mrs. Blake remarks that men are always more attentive when they have competition, prompting Janice to pay the elevator boy, law student Eddie, to phone her that night and pretend to be an admirer. When he calls, however, an anxious Mickey pays no attention, and later, while Mickey is walking the dog, Eddie explains to him that Janice paid him to call her. Thoroughly frustrated, Mickey rushes home and explodes at Janice, calling her "Mrs. Luxemberg." The harangue inspires a campaign idea, in which the famous Miss Luxemberg character has become Mrs. Luxemberg after serving her boyfriend Luxemberg beer. When Mickey's diea secures the Luxemberg beer account, a relieved Mickey sends flowers to Janice, buys her tickets to a ball game, then returns home smudged with lipstick from a grateful co-worker, arousing Janice's suspicion that he has cheated on her. After she and Mrs. Blake accuse him, a flabbergasted Mickey barely manages to pack his suitcase and go over to Bob's. There, he watches the ball game morosely, as does Janice at home. The next day, Sutton informs Mickey that all the former Miss Luxembergs are unsuitable for the campaign, and they must use Mickey and Janice. Upon hearing that the Briggses are separated, Sutton manipulates Mickey into planning a romantic evening to win Janice back, and then secretly assigns a photographer to follow them. The evening of dinner and dancing easily wins back Janice's affections, but after she and Mickey return to their apartment, the photographer snaps her photo from the balcony, prompting Mickey to chase him into the lobby. There, Janice sees the police confiscate his film and assumes that Mickey has contrived the evening in order to complete his ad campaign. Mickey returns to Bob's apartment, where he drinks steadily throughout the next day. Janice asks Bob to take her to dinner, and at the restaurant becomes tipsy and repeatedly calls him Mickey. Bob is at first flirtatious, but after Janice admits she is pregnant, he takes her home. The next morning, Bob rushes to Mickey's office, but a photographer has already dropped off a photo of Janice with Bob, and Mickey challenges his much larger friend to a fistfight. Luckily for Mickey, Sutton interrupts by entering with lawyer Girard, who announces that Janice is suing the company for $100,000 and Mickey for divorce. Mickey, Sutton and Girard race to the Briggs apartment, and in the elevator, Sutton sees the photo of Janice and Bob and realizes that a different brewer's beer is in the picture, a gaffe which could ruin their relationship with their client. Eddie, who unknown to them is acting as Janice's lawyer, overhears and later uses the information to raise the amount of Janice's lawsuit. Mickey, Sutton and Girard follow Janice into the elevator to argue with Eddie, followed by Mrs. Blake. In the lobby, Bob joins the group, finally quieting them by announcing that Janice is pregnant, news that causes Mickey to faint. Weeks later, Mickey takes Janice on a cruise, on which they see John Wayne and his wife bickering. After Mickey then presents Janice with a diamond necklace, she appreciates him more than her former idol, and Mickey realizes that being demonstrative can serve a husband as well as it serves a wife.

Film Details

Genre
Comedy
Release Date
May 1958
Premiere Information
Los Angeles opening: 14 May 1958
Production Company
Gomalco Productions, Inc.; RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.
Distribution Company
Universal Pictures Co., Inc.
Country
United States

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 24m
Sound
Mono (RCA Sound System)
Color
Black and White, Color (Technicolor)
Theatrical Aspect Ratio
2.35 : 1

Articles

I Married A Woman


RKO was in serious trouble after Howard Hughes bought the studio in 1948, and from there, things went on a downward trajectory. By 1955, it was up for sale once again - this time, to the General Tire Company. The number of films produced by RKO dropped off dramatically, and in 1957, the studio had only one film in production - and that was only for retakes of a film shot the previous year - I Married a Woman (1958). The film features the highly unlikely pairing of nightclub comedian-turned-television-star George Gobel (later a regular on The Hollywood Squares) and Britain's answer to Marilyn Monroe, Diana Dors, who had just signed a three-picture deal with RKO. Also in the cast were Adolphe Menjou, Nita Talbot, Jessie Royce Landis, and in a brief cameo, John Wayne.

Produced by William Bloom for George Gobel's company, Gomalco, and directed by Hal Kanter, I Married a Woman was written specifically for Gobel by Goodman Ace, who was most famous for his radio and television show, Easy Aces. The film, which had the original working title of So There You Are, features two prominent themes of the 1950s: the advertising business and the pneumatic bleached blonde sexpot. Gobel plays the ad man, Marshall "Mickey" Briggs, who creates the "Miss Luxemburg Beer Beauty Contest," and ends up marrying the winner, Janice Blake (played by Dors). A series of complications pad out the plot until there is the predictable happy ending. The majority of the film was shot in black and white, but the sequence of John Wayne appearing in a film-within-a-film was shot in Technicolor.

Gobel was riding high when the film initially went into production in mid-July 1956. A former child actor on stage and radio, he had branched out into television with his The George Gobel Show and had made the transition to films with Paramount's, The Birds and the Bees (1956). Like Gobel, Diana Dors had begun her career as a child actor in England and had blossomed into a curvaceous beauty. Dors was an intelligent woman who had a knack for self-promotion, which often got her in trouble with censors and moral crusaders. It also garnered her bad publicity in the United States, who saw her as a Marilyn Monroe knock-off. One such story centered around a dress that she wore to a party given by director Hal Kanter to kick off production of I Married a Woman. According to reporters, Dors showed up at her "coming-out party in Hollywood in a dress which some guests thought let her come out too far. The New York Post quoted a male guest as saying, 'I was too embarrassed to look down. All I could do was stare at the ceiling when I met her.'"

I Married a Woman languished unreleased for over a year as RKO tried to improve it, but to no avail. When it was finally released (through Universal-International) in May, 1958, the critics panned it. Howard Thompson wrote in The New York Times "You have to be a George Gobel fan, and a very patient one, to get much real fun from I Married a Woman [...] [T]he picture laboriously widens one running gag to feature length. [...] But the task of stretching what might have made a pretty good fifteen-minute television sketch into eighty-four minutes just about licks everybody. This includes a fine writer like Mr. Ace, whose wisecracks continually sparkle while the incidents and tempo flounder."

As for RKO, it was sold one last time in 1958 to Lucille Ball (who had once been under contract to the studio) and her husband, Desi Arnaz, who transformed it into Desilu Productions. RKO was no more.

By Lorraine LoBianco

SOURCES:

"World News in Brief" The Age 4 Jul 56
Babington, Bruce British Stars and Stardom: From Alma Taylor to Sean Connery
Erickson, Hal All Movie Guide
McDougal, Dennis The Last Mogul: Lew Wasserman, MCA, and the Hidden History of Hollywood
New Catholic World - Volumes 186 - 187
Thompson, Howard "The Screen; 'I Married a Woman' Stars George Gobel'" The New York Times 4 Nov 58
"At the Movies: Three Good Films on Hold-Over List" The Sunday Herald 13 Jul 58
I Married A Woman

I Married A Woman

RKO was in serious trouble after Howard Hughes bought the studio in 1948, and from there, things went on a downward trajectory. By 1955, it was up for sale once again - this time, to the General Tire Company. The number of films produced by RKO dropped off dramatically, and in 1957, the studio had only one film in production - and that was only for retakes of a film shot the previous year - I Married a Woman (1958). The film features the highly unlikely pairing of nightclub comedian-turned-television-star George Gobel (later a regular on The Hollywood Squares) and Britain's answer to Marilyn Monroe, Diana Dors, who had just signed a three-picture deal with RKO. Also in the cast were Adolphe Menjou, Nita Talbot, Jessie Royce Landis, and in a brief cameo, John Wayne. Produced by William Bloom for George Gobel's company, Gomalco, and directed by Hal Kanter, I Married a Woman was written specifically for Gobel by Goodman Ace, who was most famous for his radio and television show, Easy Aces. The film, which had the original working title of So There You Are, features two prominent themes of the 1950s: the advertising business and the pneumatic bleached blonde sexpot. Gobel plays the ad man, Marshall "Mickey" Briggs, who creates the "Miss Luxemburg Beer Beauty Contest," and ends up marrying the winner, Janice Blake (played by Dors). A series of complications pad out the plot until there is the predictable happy ending. The majority of the film was shot in black and white, but the sequence of John Wayne appearing in a film-within-a-film was shot in Technicolor. Gobel was riding high when the film initially went into production in mid-July 1956. A former child actor on stage and radio, he had branched out into television with his The George Gobel Show and had made the transition to films with Paramount's, The Birds and the Bees (1956). Like Gobel, Diana Dors had begun her career as a child actor in England and had blossomed into a curvaceous beauty. Dors was an intelligent woman who had a knack for self-promotion, which often got her in trouble with censors and moral crusaders. It also garnered her bad publicity in the United States, who saw her as a Marilyn Monroe knock-off. One such story centered around a dress that she wore to a party given by director Hal Kanter to kick off production of I Married a Woman. According to reporters, Dors showed up at her "coming-out party in Hollywood in a dress which some guests thought let her come out too far. The New York Post quoted a male guest as saying, 'I was too embarrassed to look down. All I could do was stare at the ceiling when I met her.'" I Married a Woman languished unreleased for over a year as RKO tried to improve it, but to no avail. When it was finally released (through Universal-International) in May, 1958, the critics panned it. Howard Thompson wrote in The New York Times "You have to be a George Gobel fan, and a very patient one, to get much real fun from I Married a Woman [...] [T]he picture laboriously widens one running gag to feature length. [...] But the task of stretching what might have made a pretty good fifteen-minute television sketch into eighty-four minutes just about licks everybody. This includes a fine writer like Mr. Ace, whose wisecracks continually sparkle while the incidents and tempo flounder." As for RKO, it was sold one last time in 1958 to Lucille Ball (who had once been under contract to the studio) and her husband, Desi Arnaz, who transformed it into Desilu Productions. RKO was no more. By Lorraine LoBianco SOURCES: "World News in Brief" The Age 4 Jul 56 Babington, Bruce British Stars and Stardom: From Alma Taylor to Sean Connery Erickson, Hal All Movie Guide McDougal, Dennis The Last Mogul: Lew Wasserman, MCA, and the Hidden History of Hollywood New Catholic World - Volumes 186 - 187 Thompson, Howard "The Screen; 'I Married a Woman' Stars George Gobel'" The New York Times 4 Nov 58 "At the Movies: Three Good Films on Hold-Over List" The Sunday Herald 13 Jul 58

Quotes

Trivia

Notes

According to a January 1950 Los Angeles Times item, I Married a Woman was originally bought by Jerry Wald and Norman Krasna to be shot as part of their pact with RKO. In May 1956, Hollywood Reporter reported that RKO would coproduce the film with Gomalco, Inc., the production company of George Gobel and his partner, David P. O'Malley. Although the movie was shot in 1956, it was released in 1958 as part of the package of completed films that RKO sold to Universal-International, when that studio took over the U.S. and Canadian distribution and sales of all RKO films.
       Although the film was photographed in black-and-white, the fictional John Wayne movie (entitled Forever and Forever and Forever) that "Janice" and "Mickey" watch is in color, as is Mickey at the end of the film when Janice adores him. Throughout I Married a Woman, Gobel, as Mickey, delivers a voice-over narration about Janice and her romantic notions of marriage. In the final scene, after Mickey says "Women-aren't they...," a written title appears, reading "The End!" The film marked the final starring film role for Gobel and the feature directorial debut of Hal Kanter, producer and head writer of Gobel's television series, The George Gobel Show, which ran on the NBC network from October 2, 1954 -March 1959 and on CBS from October 1959-June 1960.

Miscellaneous Notes

Released in United States Spring March 1958

Released in United States Spring March 1958