Making Love
Brief Synopsis
Cast & Crew
Arthur Hiller
Ben Mittleman
Erica Hiller
Joseph G Medalis
Michael Ontkean
Carol King
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
Claire and Zack have been happily married for eight years. She is a successful TV executive, and he's a prominent doctor. They share a consuming passion for the music of Gilbert & Sullivan, are sexually faithful to each other, and have just bought a dream house. But something alarming is eating away inside Zach. When Bart comes to his office, the two seem to connect. Bart thinks the lump on his neck is a tumor; it turns out to be a false alarm. Doctor and patient then go out for lunch and hit-it-off. Weeks later, they have dinner and end up at Bart's house. Zack's curiosity is quenched when they make love. Zack decides soon thereafter that he must leave his wife.
Director
Arthur Hiller
Cast
Ben Mittleman
Erica Hiller
Joseph G Medalis
Michael Ontkean
Carol King
Gwen Arnet
Robert Mikels
Kate Jackson
Doug Johnson
Jason Mikels
Michael J Shannon
Asher Brauner
Johnathan Starr
Arthur Hill
Ann Harvey
Joanne Hicks
Michael Dudikoff
Elli Haydn
Kedren Jones
Mickey Jones
Charles Zukow
Chip Lucia
Stanley Kamel
Stacey Kuhne
Michael Harris
Camilla Carr
David Murphy
Alexander Lockwood
Harry Hamlin
Stephanie Segal
John Dukakis
Andrew Harris
Gary Swanson
Nancy Olson
Scott Ryder
Paul Sanderson
Arthur Taxier
Wendy Hiller
John Calvin
Phoebe Dorin
Mark Schubb
David Knell
Terry Kiser
Dennis Howard
Crew
Alan J Adler
Del Armstrong
Burt Bacharach
Roy Barnes
A. Scott Berg
Janet Beroza
Fred Blau Jr.
Betty Chaplin
Betsy Cox
Bob Edesa
John Farrow
Roberta Flack
Susan Germaine
Raja Gosnell
Syd Greenwood
Wynn Hammer
Maury Harris
William Hartman
James Herbert
Bruce Hornsby
Jon Hornsby
Toni Howard
David M Ice
John Kretchmer
Jerry Macdonald
Roy J Mazza
Daniel Melnick
Richard Moran
William H. Reynolds
Bruce Roberts
Jack Roe
Leonard Rosenman
Carole Bayer Sager
Barry Sandler
Barry Sandler
Rick Simpson
Theodore Soderberg
Richard Sperber
Lynn Stalmaster
James D. Vance
Don S Walden
Bruce Walkup
David M. Walsh
Gordon Webb
Paul Wells
Dorothy Wilde
Douglas O. Williams
Film Details
Technical Specs
Articles
Wendy Hiller, 1912-2003
Wendy Hiller was born on August 15, 1912, in Bramhall, and raised in Manchester, where her father was a cotton-cloth manufacturer. Educated at Winceby House, a girl's school in Sussex, Hiller found herself drawn to the theater, and after completing secondary school, Wendy joined the Manchester Repertory Theater, where she was a bit player and later an assistant stage manager. In 1934, she earned critical acclaim and stardom when Manchester Rep cast her as the lead in the popular drama, Love on the Dole, written by her future husband, Ronald Gow. The play was such a hit, that Hiller would repeat her role in London and triumphed on Broadway.
Back on the London stage, she was playing the lead in George Bernard Shaw's St. Joan, when she caught the eye of the playwright himself. He cast her as the beloved cockney flower girl Eliza Doolittle in Pygmalion (contemporary audiences will no doubt be aware of the musical version - My Fair Lady) on stage in 1936 and in Anthony Asquith's screen adaptation two years later co-starring Leslie Howard. The film was a smash, and Hiller earned an Academy Award nomination for her striking and original Eliza. Shaw would cast her again as an heiress turned Salvation Army worker in the classic Major Barbara for both stage and the 1941 film version.
The ensuing years could very well have been Hiller's time for screen stardom, yet despite her blazing acting ability, regal presence and distinctive voice, her film forays were too few, as she concentrated on the stage and spending time with her husband Gow and two children. Still, when she did make a film appearance, it was often memorable: a materialist turned romantic in Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger's glorious, I Know Where I'm Going! (1945); a lonely hotelkeeper in Delbert Mann's Separate Tables (1958), which earned her an Academy Award as best supporting actress; an obsessive mother in Jack Cardiff's Sons and Lovers (1960); a unfaltering wife to Sir Thomas More in Fred Zinneman's brilliant A Man for All Seasons (1966); and as a compassionate nurse who cares for the deformed David Merrick in David Lynch's The Elephant Man (1980).
Ill health became an issue for Hiller in her later years, but she made one elegant return to the camera when she was cast as a former society beauty who is interviewed 50 years after her fame in Moira Armstrong's The Countess Alice (1992). In a performance that was touching, but never maudlin, Wendy Hiller proved that few could match her for presence, integrity and dignity. Her contribution to her craft did not go unnoticed, as she was made a Dame of the British Empire in 1975. She is survived by her son, Anthony, and daughter, Ann.
by Michael T. Toole
Wendy Hiller, 1912-2003
Quotes
Trivia
Miscellaneous Notes
Released in United States June 15, 1990
Released in United States Winter February 12, 1982
Shown at New York International Festival of Lesbian and Gay Film (Parting Glances Series) in New York City June 15, 1990.
Released in United States Winter February 12, 1982
Released in United States June 15, 1990 (Shown at New York International Festival of Lesbian and Gay Film (Parting Glances Series) in New York City June 15, 1990.)