Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter?


1h 34m 1957
Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter?

Brief Synopsis

A lowly adman tries to better his lot by courting a glamorous Hollywood star.

Film Details

Also Known As
Oh! For a Man!
Genre
Comedy
Adaptation
Release Date
Aug 1957
Premiere Information
not available
Production Company
Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.
Distribution Company
Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.
Country
United States
Screenplay Information
Based on the play Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter? by George Axelrod, as produced by Jule Styne (New York, 13 Oct 1955).

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 34m
Sound
Mono, Mono (Westrex Recording System)
Color
Color (DeLuxe)
Theatrical Aspect Ratio
2.35 : 1

Synopsis

Rockwell P. Hunter, a middling Madison Avenue television commercial writer at the La Salle agency, eagerly awaits a raise so that he can marry secretary Jenny Wells. Rock's marriage plans are dashed, however, when his friend, Henry Rufus, the account executive for Stay Put lipstick, informs him that they have lost the account and are therefore "slated for the chute." With one last chance to woo Stay Put, Rock is encouraged by Jenny to think of something creative. Struggling for inspiration, Rock hits upon the idea of asking actress Rita Marlowe, Hollywood's "Goddess of Love," to endorse his product. Meanwhile, Rita is winging her way from Los Angeles to New York because the man of her dreams, actor Bobo Branejansky, the "Jungle Man," has left her for another woman. Rita's fan club, led by Rock's niece April, enthusiastically welcomes her at the airport. Eager to share his inspiration, Rock bursts into the office of Irving La Salle, Jr. and is promptly fired. Rock angrily insults La Salle and then stumbles out of the office and bumps into Mr. Ezzarus, the president of Stay Put. The impact causes Rock to drop his drawings, and after Rock departs, Ezzarus picks them up and scrutinizes them. To drown his sorrows, Rock visits the local tavern, where Jenny later finds him passed out under a table. Jenny bubbles that Ezzarus loved the campaign and will allow La Salle to keep the account on the condition that Rock win Rita's endorsement. After bribing April to divulge Rita's New York address, Rock hurries to her hotel room and finds her chiding Bobo on the telephone. To make Bobo jealous, Rita pretends that she is romantically interested in Rock, whom she dubs "lover doll." To spite Rita, Bobo holds a press conference and announces that Rita has fallen in love with an ad agency executive named Lover Doll, but will come crawling back to him on her hands and knees. The next morning, Rock awakens to find the street in front of his apartment building mobbed with Rita's adoring fans. As Jenny, Rock's upstairs neighbor, aims a plant at his head, Rita squeals in a television interview that she has found love at first sight. Soon after, Rita appears at Rock's doorstep and offers to endorse Stay Put if Rock agrees to continue their romantic charade, thus boosting her publicity rating. Rita stages a number of publicity stunts to remake Rock in the image of "Lover Doll," and soon Bobo phones to apologize to her. Rita, however, has become addicted to Rock's kissing prowess, and decides that she is in love with him. Violet, Rita's companion, derides her employer's infatuation as delusional, insisting that Rita is still in love with Georgie Schmidlap, a small-time actor. Although Rock reassures Jenny that he still loves her, she attempts to mold herself into a semblance of Rita, buying padded bras and exercising herself to exhaustion. Mobbed by fans outside Rita's hotel one day, Rock slips down an open manhole and emerges with a shredded and soaked suit. Determined to snag Rock for herself, Rita redoubles her efforts to reshape him into the figure of a great lover, insisting that he wear elevator shoes for height and Bobo's broad-shouldered suit for breadth. The next day, Rock presents his employer with Rita's signed endorsement, and La Salle apologizes for his previous behavior and asks Rock to call him by his Christian name. La Salle then confides that in his heart he is a horticulturist and not an advertising man, and that he entered the business to please his overbearing father, whose portrait looms over the office. Rock replies that he had always wanted to raise chickens, but deemed it not important enough. Promoted to vice president and awarded the key to the executive washroom, Rock is overcome that he has finally achieved "executive status." When Rock tells Jenny that they can finally afford to get married, she imitates Rita's squeal and states they are "through." Rita and Rock then embark upon a world-wide publicity tour, sending Stay Put sales soaring. Upon returning to New York, Rock is installed in La Salle's vacant office and learns that his boss has retired to raise roses. Blinded by success, visions of glory dance in Rock's head until Jenny appears at his desk to return his engagement ring. Finally realizing that true success lies in being an "average guy," Rock proposes to Jenny again. On the night of Rita's big Stay Put television spectacular, Georgie Schmidlap strolls onstage, reclaiming Rita's heart. All ends happily as Rock and Jenny retire to the country to tend a chicken farm, La Salle's Irving rose wins first prize at the flower show and Rufus is appointed boss with Violet as his solicitous secretary. Rock then concludes that real success is the art of just being happy.

Film Details

Also Known As
Oh! For a Man!
Genre
Comedy
Adaptation
Release Date
Aug 1957
Premiere Information
not available
Production Company
Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.
Distribution Company
Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.
Country
United States
Screenplay Information
Based on the play Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter? by George Axelrod, as produced by Jule Styne (New York, 13 Oct 1955).

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 34m
Sound
Mono, Mono (Westrex Recording System)
Color
Color (DeLuxe)
Theatrical Aspect Ratio
2.35 : 1

Articles

Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter?


Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter? (1957) is a live-action comedy directed by a man who specialized, for 15 years, in Porky Pig cartoons, and the relationship between Frank Tashlin's long career as a gag animator and his later blooming as an auteur who used real actors and real spaces is almost unique in the history of movies. Without being overly cartoonish, his features always feel on the edge of collapsing into two dimensions, and of existing in a contrived ether that is as self-conscious and manufactured as a puppet show. There's always a comic distance with Tashlin - there's no need to empathize with these characters, anymore than there was with Porky. They are pure, silly spectacle, personas erected as paradigms of our own folly, and their travails roll out before us like a circus choreography of acrobats and dancing bears.

This artificiality reverbs beautifully in Rock Hunter, because the story is about television advertising - a heinous form of culture unrivaled for its trafficking in pure prevarication. Tony Randall, as the titular ad exec, must save a big lipstick account, along with his own job, by securing the endorsement of Rita Marlowe (Jayne Mansfield), a bazooka of a movie star parody in high heels and push-up bra, and gets himself embroiled in her publicity scheme as her new lover. The scenario, from the George Axelrod play, practically oozes with mock advertising, mistaken appearances, visual lies, gossip spread and misunderstood, characters gone insane trying to synch up reality with its fabricated media representation, and on and on. Anything could appear to happen in a Porky Pig cartoon without ever "happening" at all, but in Rock Hunter, "happening" is a depleted and pointless quantity to begin with, a non-starter beside whatever baloney appears, or is made to appear.

The film is frothily content with the advertising-ization of America, or at least fiercely amused, but its ire is saved for the movie-threatening medium of television, using its widescreen compositions to spite the pan-&-scan boys at the networks, mocking fourth-wall-decimating direct address common on TV then and now, and even lashing out at the boob tube in a deft intermission, where Randall extols TV's virtues even as the screen shrinks and the vertical hold runs amok. There may not be another American film made in the '50s that has such lacerating things to say about the entire infrastructure of modern culture, as it had recently coalesced as a nexus of Hollywood, publicity, advertising, gossip, television and materialistic youth culture. The whole shebang takes a shellacking, if with a smirk and a wink, and the film is nothing if not stone cold proof that Hollywood and its audiences were far, far more cynical about celebrity than we are today.

Tashlin's primary weapon here is not Randall - who never quite achieved in films the comic timing and character esprit that he managed so beautifully on The Odd Couple, 13 years after Rock Hunter. No, the film's arsenal is led by Mansfield, who is a monstrous caricature of the Monroe/Hayworth/Gardner/Ekberg matinee goddess, while at the same time a wide-open lampoon of herself as well, heaving her bust and hips around in Tashlin's tightly composed frames like a jack-in-the-box with a stuck lid. There's no question, Mansfield was a skilled comedienne, and her Marlowe is a blast, blathering in babbling-brook monologues like a hyperactive schoolgirl and punctuating every paragraph with an overdubbed squeal that could weaken pane glass. (As Hunter gets deeper and deeper into the gossip morass, Betsy Drake, as Hunter's skinny, unglam fiancée, begins imitating her with beluga-like squeaks.) Mansfield never quite had the opportunity to display herself as a comic force again; exploited for her figure and her sex-doll fame, she appeared as a walking joke in films and in nightclubs for another decade, before famously dying on Route 90 between Biloxi and New Orleans, when her car slammed into an insecticide truck, shearing the top of the car, and most of Jayne's head, off.

No one mourns for Mansfield the way they do for Marilyn Monroe or even Elvis (who didn't die young or tragically), but in Rock Hunter her performance has more self-knowing wit and irony than, say, Monroe's in Billy Wilder's Some Like It Hot (1959) - for one thing, Rita Marlowe is not the idiot her stereotype suggests, and her irrepressible zeal in manipulating her public and living it up in the limelight makes her a wise and hilarious creation. For another, Mansfield was obviously ripping through her own persona, making something crafted and sharp out of her mess of a life and embarrassing public profile, in the same spirit of what Mickey Rourke brought to The Wrestler (2008). Just as Rourke seemed more like a documentary found object than a calculated "character" - more Grey Gardens than Method - so does Mansfield here, ditzy and vavoom-y, orchestrating an utterly unreal life like a film director herself.

Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter? is not quite the whole-package entertainment it wanted to be, and maybe that's because of its metafictional slippages and the fact that Mansfield is so commanding and lushly riotous that she seems larger than the screenplay. It is, in any case, a wildly inventive piece of all-out social satire, and an acidic antidote to those of us romantically besotted with the '50s ad world as portrayed in AMC's Mad Men series.

Producer: Frank Tashlin
Director: Frank Tashlin
Screenplay: Frank Tashlin (screenplay and story); George Axelrod (play)
Cinematography: Joe MacDonald
Art Direction: Leland Fuller, Lyle R. Wheeler
Music: Cyril J. Mockridge
Film Editing: Hugh S. Fowler
Cast: Tony Randall (Rockwell P. Hunter/Himself/Lover Doll), Jayne Mansfield (Rita Marlowe), Betsy Drake (Jenny Wells), Joan Blondell (Violet), John Williams (Irving La Salle, Jr.), Henry Jones (Henry Rufus), Lili Gentle (April Hunter), Mickey Hargitay (Bobo Branigansky), Georgia Carr (Calypso Number), Dick Whittinghill (T.V. Interviewer).
C-93m. Letterboxed. Closed Captioning.

by Michael Atkinson
Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter?

Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter?

Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter? (1957) is a live-action comedy directed by a man who specialized, for 15 years, in Porky Pig cartoons, and the relationship between Frank Tashlin's long career as a gag animator and his later blooming as an auteur who used real actors and real spaces is almost unique in the history of movies. Without being overly cartoonish, his features always feel on the edge of collapsing into two dimensions, and of existing in a contrived ether that is as self-conscious and manufactured as a puppet show. There's always a comic distance with Tashlin - there's no need to empathize with these characters, anymore than there was with Porky. They are pure, silly spectacle, personas erected as paradigms of our own folly, and their travails roll out before us like a circus choreography of acrobats and dancing bears. This artificiality reverbs beautifully in Rock Hunter, because the story is about television advertising - a heinous form of culture unrivaled for its trafficking in pure prevarication. Tony Randall, as the titular ad exec, must save a big lipstick account, along with his own job, by securing the endorsement of Rita Marlowe (Jayne Mansfield), a bazooka of a movie star parody in high heels and push-up bra, and gets himself embroiled in her publicity scheme as her new lover. The scenario, from the George Axelrod play, practically oozes with mock advertising, mistaken appearances, visual lies, gossip spread and misunderstood, characters gone insane trying to synch up reality with its fabricated media representation, and on and on. Anything could appear to happen in a Porky Pig cartoon without ever "happening" at all, but in Rock Hunter, "happening" is a depleted and pointless quantity to begin with, a non-starter beside whatever baloney appears, or is made to appear. The film is frothily content with the advertising-ization of America, or at least fiercely amused, but its ire is saved for the movie-threatening medium of television, using its widescreen compositions to spite the pan-&-scan boys at the networks, mocking fourth-wall-decimating direct address common on TV then and now, and even lashing out at the boob tube in a deft intermission, where Randall extols TV's virtues even as the screen shrinks and the vertical hold runs amok. There may not be another American film made in the '50s that has such lacerating things to say about the entire infrastructure of modern culture, as it had recently coalesced as a nexus of Hollywood, publicity, advertising, gossip, television and materialistic youth culture. The whole shebang takes a shellacking, if with a smirk and a wink, and the film is nothing if not stone cold proof that Hollywood and its audiences were far, far more cynical about celebrity than we are today. Tashlin's primary weapon here is not Randall - who never quite achieved in films the comic timing and character esprit that he managed so beautifully on The Odd Couple, 13 years after Rock Hunter. No, the film's arsenal is led by Mansfield, who is a monstrous caricature of the Monroe/Hayworth/Gardner/Ekberg matinee goddess, while at the same time a wide-open lampoon of herself as well, heaving her bust and hips around in Tashlin's tightly composed frames like a jack-in-the-box with a stuck lid. There's no question, Mansfield was a skilled comedienne, and her Marlowe is a blast, blathering in babbling-brook monologues like a hyperactive schoolgirl and punctuating every paragraph with an overdubbed squeal that could weaken pane glass. (As Hunter gets deeper and deeper into the gossip morass, Betsy Drake, as Hunter's skinny, unglam fiancée, begins imitating her with beluga-like squeaks.) Mansfield never quite had the opportunity to display herself as a comic force again; exploited for her figure and her sex-doll fame, she appeared as a walking joke in films and in nightclubs for another decade, before famously dying on Route 90 between Biloxi and New Orleans, when her car slammed into an insecticide truck, shearing the top of the car, and most of Jayne's head, off. No one mourns for Mansfield the way they do for Marilyn Monroe or even Elvis (who didn't die young or tragically), but in Rock Hunter her performance has more self-knowing wit and irony than, say, Monroe's in Billy Wilder's Some Like It Hot (1959) - for one thing, Rita Marlowe is not the idiot her stereotype suggests, and her irrepressible zeal in manipulating her public and living it up in the limelight makes her a wise and hilarious creation. For another, Mansfield was obviously ripping through her own persona, making something crafted and sharp out of her mess of a life and embarrassing public profile, in the same spirit of what Mickey Rourke brought to The Wrestler (2008). Just as Rourke seemed more like a documentary found object than a calculated "character" - more Grey Gardens than Method - so does Mansfield here, ditzy and vavoom-y, orchestrating an utterly unreal life like a film director herself. Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter? is not quite the whole-package entertainment it wanted to be, and maybe that's because of its metafictional slippages and the fact that Mansfield is so commanding and lushly riotous that she seems larger than the screenplay. It is, in any case, a wildly inventive piece of all-out social satire, and an acidic antidote to those of us romantically besotted with the '50s ad world as portrayed in AMC's Mad Men series. Producer: Frank Tashlin Director: Frank Tashlin Screenplay: Frank Tashlin (screenplay and story); George Axelrod (play) Cinematography: Joe MacDonald Art Direction: Leland Fuller, Lyle R. Wheeler Music: Cyril J. Mockridge Film Editing: Hugh S. Fowler Cast: Tony Randall (Rockwell P. Hunter/Himself/Lover Doll), Jayne Mansfield (Rita Marlowe), Betsy Drake (Jenny Wells), Joan Blondell (Violet), John Williams (Irving La Salle, Jr.), Henry Jones (Henry Rufus), Lili Gentle (April Hunter), Mickey Hargitay (Bobo Branigansky), Georgia Carr (Calypso Number), Dick Whittinghill (T.V. Interviewer). C-93m. Letterboxed. Closed Captioning. by Michael Atkinson

Jayne Mansfield Collection, The - The Jayne Mansfield Collection on DVD including THE GIRL CAN'T HELP IT


You can split movie buffs into two groups based on their reaction to the newly released The Jayne Mansfield Collection, a set of three films previously unavailable on DVD. The first group would look at this and think "Wow, a Jayne Mansfield collection" while the second would think "Wow, a Frank Tashlin collection." Mansfield, of course, was one of the Fifties' string of famously bountiful blondes that ran from Marilyn Monroe at the top to Mamie Van Doren down to Cleo Moore. As such Mansfield will always have her fans but Frank Tashlin was a different matter. A former animator (boasting Disney and Warners' infamous "Termite Terrace" under his belt), Tashlin was addicted to speed, bright colors and uncontrollable comic twitches. Whether he learned this from his time in the cartoon trenches or was driven to animation by innate tendencies doesn't much matter; Tashlin was American cinema's gut-bucket satirist and a direct, openly acknowledged influence on the French New Wave. He directed many of Jerry Lewis' wildest films (such as Artists and Models) and possibly for that reason has often been dismissed. If you want to know why Tashlin deserves full respect then just watch two of his best films that are included in this set.

For a start check out the opening to The Girl Can't Help It (1956). Tom Ewell (The Seven-Year Itch) walks "on stage" and directly addresses the audience inside a movie image that's an almost-square black-and-white box. He seems a bit dissatisfied then uses his fingers to flick the sides of the box until it expands to wide CinemaScope proportions. Ewell then calls for color by DeLuxe and sure enough a vibrant wash of color spreads across the image. Gimmicky? Perhaps but played with lightness and a wink that perfectly sets the tone for the film.

In The Girl Can't Help It Ewell is a washed-up talent agent hooked by a washed-up mobster (DOA's Edmond O'Brien) to turn his girlfriend into the newest singing sensation. The girlfriend (Mansfield of course) is a strictly hands-off proposition for Ewell but of course nothing turns out quite as planned. Not the most promising story and it was pretty threadworn even at the time (even echoed decades later in Pulp Fiction). But that's hardly the point. The studio apparently saw the film as an opportunity to cash in on the newest musical fad (some now-forgotten style called rock 'n' roll) while Tashlin and his script collaborator Herbert Baker took the opportunity to unleash their imaginations, most famously on a string of quasi-vulgar sight gags when Mansfield first walks to Ewell's apartment. But it avoids both crudeness and post-vaudevillean schtick because of the lack of bitterness in Tashlin's view; his sentimental streak poked through from time to time and he was never able to condemn any character to a fated doom, however comic.

For rock fans, the movie is simply required viewing. A string of greats make appearances including Little Richard, Gene Vincent, Fats Domino and Eddie Cochran, at the top of their powers and mostly playing songs uninterrupted (one unfortunate exception being brief dialogue in the middle of a Little Richard performance.) Half a century later you can still feel the transgressive energy powering them and that in fact becomes a plot point in the film. Even the now partially forgotten The Treniers turn in one of their best songs and though she's not remotely rock 'n' roll Julie London's singing is, well, unforgettable. It's interesting in hindsight how much the film gets right about early rock but there are still a couple of ringers such as The Chuckles (formerly The Three Chuckles), a pre-rock Italian combo that featured an accordion! By the way, that is indeed Little Richard's theme "The Girl Can't Help It" currently sampled by pop singer Fergie in her song "Clumsy."

However amazing The Girl Can't Help It is, Tashlin was just warming up. Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter?, released the following year, is an astonishing free-for-all against pop culture and celebrating it: advertising, fan clubs, television, sex symbols, media manipulation and even Tashlin's own films (The Girl Can't Help It is mentioned twice and not necessarily favorably). Originally Rock Hunter was a Broadway play by George Axelrod (The Seven-Year Itch again) but apparently that source wasn't followed very strictly so that in some ways the film resembles The Girl Can't Help It. This time it's Tony Randall who encounters Mansfield. He's a low-level advertising writer happily engaged to be married who decides that the best way to save his company's chief money-making account (Stay-Put lipstick) is to enlist movie star Rita Marlowe (Mansfield). He manages to sneak a meeting to discover that she's more interested in creating a fictional romance to create jealousy in her boyfriend (Mansfield's real-life amour and future husband Mickey Hargitay) but is willing to play along with Randall's game.

Again nothing goes quite as planned. Everybody in Rock Hunter is pursuing their own version of the American Dream: a key to the private executive washroom, celebrity, money, a quiet home life. That they don't all agree on the Dream is part of the point; they're all frantic and driven towards something they may or may not really want. And it only gets more complex when you realize that pretty much everybody in the film is also manipulating everybody else's idea of the Dream. Again a more cynical filmmaker would have created a different, darker film (see Billy Wilder's Ace in the Hole for an example) but for Tashlin it's almost like he was kidding members of his own family. Maybe that's one reason Tony Randall's common-guy likability and open confusion works so well. He has just the right plausibility as he swings from meek writer to a temporary Great Lover to just a conflicted man. Rock Hunter is farce but with a human heart.

What about Mansfield in all this? She was nearly perfect for Tashlin's purposes, a celebrity mostly famous for being famous, and not her fairly routine talents. She was always excessive and not entirely respectable, "sexy" but never sexy. So Tashlin never uses her straight but makes twists to her characters. In The Girl Can't Help It Mansfield may appear to be a blonde bombshell but deep down she really just wants to be domestic. Ewell shouldn't be attracted to her but, well, can't help it. In Rock Hunter she may be a media-circus film star but slowly decides maybe that's not right for her (though this strand isn't really resolved in the film). Randall should be attracted to her but the film's most charming aspect is that he's so deeply in love with his fiancee that Mansfield's character registers only as an abstraction.

Rounding out the set is a non-Tashlin film Mansfield made in 1958, the Western-comedy The Sheriff of Fractured Jaw. Directed by a past-his-prime Raoul Walsh and supposedly the first Western filmed in Spain, Sheriff is practically a catalog of anything you'd expect to see in a Western including a range war, Indian attacks, poker game, saloon shootout, tenderfoot pistol training and of course a crash course in sheriffing. Throw in some song-and-dance numbers (Mansfield is a saloon keeper) and it's a somewhat entertaining but completely lightweight outing.

The DVDs in the Jayne Mansfield Collection have clean transfers of the films and even more importantly are properly letterboxed. Nobody quite makes 'Scope films like these anymore; they probably wouldn't even be worth watching panned-and-scanned. The extras include a few trailers and an interesting but predictable A&E Biography episode about Mansfield. The two Tashlin films have commentaries, both a bit too professorial to be particularly interesting if you're not getting class credit.

For more information about The Jayne Mansfield Collection, visit Fox Home Entertainment. To order The Jayne Mansfield Collection, go to TCM Shopping.

by Lang Thompson

Jayne Mansfield Collection, The - The Jayne Mansfield Collection on DVD including THE GIRL CAN'T HELP IT

You can split movie buffs into two groups based on their reaction to the newly released The Jayne Mansfield Collection, a set of three films previously unavailable on DVD. The first group would look at this and think "Wow, a Jayne Mansfield collection" while the second would think "Wow, a Frank Tashlin collection." Mansfield, of course, was one of the Fifties' string of famously bountiful blondes that ran from Marilyn Monroe at the top to Mamie Van Doren down to Cleo Moore. As such Mansfield will always have her fans but Frank Tashlin was a different matter. A former animator (boasting Disney and Warners' infamous "Termite Terrace" under his belt), Tashlin was addicted to speed, bright colors and uncontrollable comic twitches. Whether he learned this from his time in the cartoon trenches or was driven to animation by innate tendencies doesn't much matter; Tashlin was American cinema's gut-bucket satirist and a direct, openly acknowledged influence on the French New Wave. He directed many of Jerry Lewis' wildest films (such as Artists and Models) and possibly for that reason has often been dismissed. If you want to know why Tashlin deserves full respect then just watch two of his best films that are included in this set. For a start check out the opening to The Girl Can't Help It (1956). Tom Ewell (The Seven-Year Itch) walks "on stage" and directly addresses the audience inside a movie image that's an almost-square black-and-white box. He seems a bit dissatisfied then uses his fingers to flick the sides of the box until it expands to wide CinemaScope proportions. Ewell then calls for color by DeLuxe and sure enough a vibrant wash of color spreads across the image. Gimmicky? Perhaps but played with lightness and a wink that perfectly sets the tone for the film. In The Girl Can't Help It Ewell is a washed-up talent agent hooked by a washed-up mobster (DOA's Edmond O'Brien) to turn his girlfriend into the newest singing sensation. The girlfriend (Mansfield of course) is a strictly hands-off proposition for Ewell but of course nothing turns out quite as planned. Not the most promising story and it was pretty threadworn even at the time (even echoed decades later in Pulp Fiction). But that's hardly the point. The studio apparently saw the film as an opportunity to cash in on the newest musical fad (some now-forgotten style called rock 'n' roll) while Tashlin and his script collaborator Herbert Baker took the opportunity to unleash their imaginations, most famously on a string of quasi-vulgar sight gags when Mansfield first walks to Ewell's apartment. But it avoids both crudeness and post-vaudevillean schtick because of the lack of bitterness in Tashlin's view; his sentimental streak poked through from time to time and he was never able to condemn any character to a fated doom, however comic. For rock fans, the movie is simply required viewing. A string of greats make appearances including Little Richard, Gene Vincent, Fats Domino and Eddie Cochran, at the top of their powers and mostly playing songs uninterrupted (one unfortunate exception being brief dialogue in the middle of a Little Richard performance.) Half a century later you can still feel the transgressive energy powering them and that in fact becomes a plot point in the film. Even the now partially forgotten The Treniers turn in one of their best songs and though she's not remotely rock 'n' roll Julie London's singing is, well, unforgettable. It's interesting in hindsight how much the film gets right about early rock but there are still a couple of ringers such as The Chuckles (formerly The Three Chuckles), a pre-rock Italian combo that featured an accordion! By the way, that is indeed Little Richard's theme "The Girl Can't Help It" currently sampled by pop singer Fergie in her song "Clumsy." However amazing The Girl Can't Help It is, Tashlin was just warming up. Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter?, released the following year, is an astonishing free-for-all against pop culture and celebrating it: advertising, fan clubs, television, sex symbols, media manipulation and even Tashlin's own films (The Girl Can't Help It is mentioned twice and not necessarily favorably). Originally Rock Hunter was a Broadway play by George Axelrod (The Seven-Year Itch again) but apparently that source wasn't followed very strictly so that in some ways the film resembles The Girl Can't Help It. This time it's Tony Randall who encounters Mansfield. He's a low-level advertising writer happily engaged to be married who decides that the best way to save his company's chief money-making account (Stay-Put lipstick) is to enlist movie star Rita Marlowe (Mansfield). He manages to sneak a meeting to discover that she's more interested in creating a fictional romance to create jealousy in her boyfriend (Mansfield's real-life amour and future husband Mickey Hargitay) but is willing to play along with Randall's game. Again nothing goes quite as planned. Everybody in Rock Hunter is pursuing their own version of the American Dream: a key to the private executive washroom, celebrity, money, a quiet home life. That they don't all agree on the Dream is part of the point; they're all frantic and driven towards something they may or may not really want. And it only gets more complex when you realize that pretty much everybody in the film is also manipulating everybody else's idea of the Dream. Again a more cynical filmmaker would have created a different, darker film (see Billy Wilder's Ace in the Hole for an example) but for Tashlin it's almost like he was kidding members of his own family. Maybe that's one reason Tony Randall's common-guy likability and open confusion works so well. He has just the right plausibility as he swings from meek writer to a temporary Great Lover to just a conflicted man. Rock Hunter is farce but with a human heart. What about Mansfield in all this? She was nearly perfect for Tashlin's purposes, a celebrity mostly famous for being famous, and not her fairly routine talents. She was always excessive and not entirely respectable, "sexy" but never sexy. So Tashlin never uses her straight but makes twists to her characters. In The Girl Can't Help It Mansfield may appear to be a blonde bombshell but deep down she really just wants to be domestic. Ewell shouldn't be attracted to her but, well, can't help it. In Rock Hunter she may be a media-circus film star but slowly decides maybe that's not right for her (though this strand isn't really resolved in the film). Randall should be attracted to her but the film's most charming aspect is that he's so deeply in love with his fiancee that Mansfield's character registers only as an abstraction. Rounding out the set is a non-Tashlin film Mansfield made in 1958, the Western-comedy The Sheriff of Fractured Jaw. Directed by a past-his-prime Raoul Walsh and supposedly the first Western filmed in Spain, Sheriff is practically a catalog of anything you'd expect to see in a Western including a range war, Indian attacks, poker game, saloon shootout, tenderfoot pistol training and of course a crash course in sheriffing. Throw in some song-and-dance numbers (Mansfield is a saloon keeper) and it's a somewhat entertaining but completely lightweight outing. The DVDs in the Jayne Mansfield Collection have clean transfers of the films and even more importantly are properly letterboxed. Nobody quite makes 'Scope films like these anymore; they probably wouldn't even be worth watching panned-and-scanned. The extras include a few trailers and an interesting but predictable A&E Biography episode about Mansfield. The two Tashlin films have commentaries, both a bit too professorial to be particularly interesting if you're not getting class credit. For more information about The Jayne Mansfield Collection, visit Fox Home Entertainment. To order The Jayne Mansfield Collection, go to TCM Shopping. by Lang Thompson

Quotes

That's right Sweetie, I'm president of Rita Marlowe Productions, Incorporated, but Miss Marlowe is the titular head.
- Rock Hunter
I picked him up, I can pick him down.
- Rita Marlowe
I'm not a failure. I'm the largest success there is. I'm an average guy. And all us average guys are successes. We run the works! Not the big guy behind the big desk!
- Rockwell Hunter

Trivia

- The name of Jayne Mansfield's character, "Rita Marlowe", is a combination of *Rita* Hayworth, Jean H*arlow*, and Marilyn *M*onr*oe*.

Rita Marlowe's screen credits - The Girl Can't Help It, Kiss them For Me, and The Wayward Bus - have the same titles as three of Jayne Mansfield's films.

Notes

The working title of this film was Oh! For a Man! The film's opening credits are presented by Tony Randall, who introduces himself to the audience and plays all the musical instruments used in the Twentieth Century-Fox fanfare. Then as a series of comic commercial pitches appear on one side of the screen, Randall snaps his fingers, and the names Jayne Mansfield, Betsy Drake and Joan Blondell flash on the other side. When Randall pretends to forget the name of the film, the images of Mansfield, Drake and Blondell fade into focus and chime in unison "Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter?." The device of using commercials interspersed with written credits continues throughout the opening. Frank Tashlin's credits are represented as "produced and directed by Frank Tashlin." The plot of the film then formally begins with Tony Randall, as "Rock Hunter," introducing the characters in a voice-over narration. Approximately halfway through the film, Rock interrupts the plot with an intermission to "accomodate TV fans accustomed to constant interruptions." His voice-over narration also concludes the picture as he enumerates the fate of the characters and closes with the words "The Very Living End."
       The plot of the film differs significantly from that of the play. In an interview published in a modern source, Tashlin claimed that Fox bought the rights to the play to secure the services of Jayne Mansfield. A January 1956 Hollywood Reporter news item supports his statement by noting that the studio paid $150,000 for the screen rights, which included the provision that Mansfield reprise her Broadway role of "Rita Marlowe." Tashlin stated that he disliked the play, and so completely changed the story.
       The original play dealt with a young fan magazine writer who sold his soul to a Faustian Hollywood agent with Satanic powers. The character of Rock did not exist in the play, but was a character in a story within the play. Tashlin then excerpted this character and made him the protagonist of the film. According to a June 1957 Hollywood Reporter news item, Tashlin decided to add the ending gag featuring Groucho Marx one month after the completion of filming. Modern sources note that Jerry Lewis was originally set to play the gag role, but producer Hal Wallis, who had Lewis under contract, vetoed his appearance in the film. An April 1957 Hollywood Reporter production chart places Rachel Stevens and Judy Busch in the cast, but their appearance in the released picture has not been confirmed. Although a Hollywood Reporter news item states that Tom Ewell, Clifton Webb and Thelma Ritter were cast in November 1956, they do not appear in the film. At the time of production, Mansfield and Mickey Hargitay were married. Tashlin had previously directed Mansfield in the 1956 film The Girl Can't Help It.

Miscellaneous Notes

Released in United States on Video July 2, 1996

Released in United States Summer August 1957

Selected in 2000 for inclusion in the Library of Congress' National Film Registry.

CinemaScope

Released in United States on Video July 2, 1996

Released in United States Summer August 1957