The Trouble with Girls
Brief Synopsis
Cast & Crew
Peter Tewksbury
Elvis Presley
Marlyn Mason
Nicole Jaffe
Sheree North
Edward Andrews
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
In 1927, a chautauqua company comes into Radford Center, Iowa, and its new manager, Walter Hale, is attracted to Charlene, the Story Lady, despite their frequent quarrels over Charlene's attempts to form a union of the performers. Charlene, given the job of choosing a local child for the lead in the pageant, selects Carol Bix, whose mother, Nita, is an employee of the evil druggist Wilby. Local dignitaries are upset over the decision to use the Bix girl because they expected to see one of their own children selected. Wilby's body is found floating in the lake, and gambler Clarence is arrested. Walter realizes that Nita killed Wilby (he had forced her into having an affair with him), and he persuades her to confess publicly as part of the chautauqua performance. As a result of Nita's plea of self-defense against the lecherous Wilby, Clarence is cleared of the charge, and Nita is exonerated and gains enough money to realize her dream of moving to a new town with Carol and starting anew. Although Charlene is outraged at Walter's exploiting a killing for the company's financial advantage and threatens to quit, Walter manages to convince her of his integrity and persuades her to return to the company. Songs include : "Clean Up Your Own Back Yard," "America, the Beautiful," "A Thweet Yellow Tulip," "Toot-Toot-Tootsie," "Mademoiselle From Armantiers," "Rocked in the Cradle of the Deep."
Director
Peter Tewksbury
Cast
Elvis Presley
Marlyn Mason
Nicole Jaffe
Sheree North
Edward Andrews
John Carradine
Anissa Jones
Vincent Price
Joyce Van Patten
Pepe Brown
Dabney Coleman
William Zuckert
Pitt Herbert
Anthony Teague
Med Flory
Robert Nichols
Helene Winston
Kevin O'neal
Frank Welker
John Rubinstein
Chuck Briles
Patsy Garrett
Linda Sue Risk
Charles P. Thompson
Leonard Rumery
William Paris
Kathleen Rainey
Hal James Pederson
Mike Wagner
Brett Parker
Duke Snider
Pacific Palisades High School Madrigals
Crew
John Clarke Bowman
George W. Brooks
George W. Davis
Scott Davis
Henry Grace
Mauri Grashin
Mary Keats
Jonathan Lucas
Jacques Marquette
Wilson Mccarthy
Jack Mills
Franklin Milton
Arnold Peyser
Lois Peyser
Elvis Presley
Billy Strange
Billy Strange
Bill Thomas
William Tuttle
Robert Vreeland
Lester Welch
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The Trouble With Girls
The film is set in a small Iowa town in 1927 that is the lucky recipient of a tent show on the Chautauqua circuit. These were traveling shows growing out of Christian summer camps that had started in 1874 along the shores of Lake Chautauqua in New York. Over time, several communities attracted their own Chautauquas, while smaller towns would host a tent show for a week or so. The programs were a combination of educational lectures, musical performances and sometimes religious revivals and political speeches. The circuit reached its height in the 1920s, providing education and entertainment for otherwise isolated rural communities, but eventually died out as radio, film and, finally, television united small-town America in their own ways.
Elvis plays the recently hired manager of a Chautauqua setting up its tents in Radford Center, Iowa. While sparring romantically with one performer (Marlyn Mason), who's trying to unionize the show, he also tries to help a local widow (Sheree North) whose daughter (Anissa Jones) shows surprising talent. When North's boss (Dabney Coleman) turns up murdered, Presley helps solve the crime, using one of the shows to inspire the killer to confess.
The Trouble with Girls started as a Glenn Ford vehicle at MGM in 1959 with Presley slated for a supporting role. When the production was shelved two of the writers, Day Keene and Dwight Babcock, turned it into the 1960 novel Chautauqua. In 1964, the studio announced a film of that title to star Dick Van Dyke, though it was based on a different book, Gay MacLaren's Merrily We Roll Along. For a time the title passed to Columbia, but it finally came back to MGM, which filmed it with Presley at the end of 1968, this time using the material from the Keene-Babcock novel. The original title was Chautauqua, but during production the producers began to worry that audiences wouldn't know what that meant, so they changed it to the more general and, they hoped, marketable The Trouble with Girls.
From the evidence on and off screen, Presley already seemed to have written off his film career by the time he made The Trouble with Girls. He never met any of the musicians who worked on the five songs he recorded for the film, overdubbing his vocal tracks on his own. In some scenes, he seems to be sleepwalking, letting other performers carry the histrionic load for the film. Only one of his songs was released as a single, "Clean Up Your Own Back Yard," by Mac Davis and Billy Strange. That number peaked at 35 on the Billboard charts. No longer a guaranteed box office draw for MGM, Elvis's second to last film was released as the bottom half of a double bill with the Raquel Welch drama Flareup.
But The Trouble with Girls also has its supporters. Some fans have stated that his work suggests he should have moved into different types of films. Writing in the New York Times, Roger Greenspun was surprisingly positive, calling the film "charming though ineptly titled" and suggesting that it "succeeds so amiably in its parts that the relative weakness of the whole doesn't matter too desperately." Nonetheless, The Trouble with Girls did little to bolster Presley's career as a film star. After one more film at MGM, the medical drama Change of Habit (1969), he ended his acting career. The King turned down later offers like the chance to team with Barbra Streisand for the 1976 remake of A Star Is Born even after live concert tours and the documentary Elvis: That's the Way It Is (1970) had revived his career.
Producer: Lester Welch
Director: Peter Tewksbury
Screenplay: Arnold Peyser, Lois Peyser
Based on the novel Chautauqua by Day Keene and Dwight Babcock Cinematography: Jacques R. Marquette
Score: Billy Strange
Cast: Elvis Presley (Walter Hale), Marlyn Mason (Charlene), Nicole Jaffe (Betty), Sheree North (Nita Bix), Edward Andrews (Johnny), John Carradine (Mr. Drewcolt), Anissa Jones (Carol), Vincent Price (Mr. Morality), Joyce Van Patten (Maude), Dabney Coleman (Harrison Wilby).
C-100. Closed Captioning. Letterboxed.
by Frank Miller
The Trouble With Girls
Quotes
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Notes
The Trouble with Girls marked the feature film debut of actor-composer John Rubenstein, the son of famed pianist Arthur Rubenstein.
Miscellaneous Notes
Released in United States on Video December 6, 1988
Released in United States on Video October 6, 1988
Released in United States Spring May 1969
A traveling medicine-show man arrives in an Iowa town and begins to turn things upside down.
Released in United States Spring May 1969
Released in United States on Video October 6, 1988
Released in United States on Video December 6, 1988