Showing posts with label Lilia Skala. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lilia Skala. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 27, 2021

Caprice (1967)

 
Caprice - 1967

Our next film is 1967's "Caprice", a movie about a woman who is a double agent spy for dueling cosmetic companies.  Her role, however, drastically changes when she discovers that someone she knows very well within one of the companies has ties to her father's murder and now she knows too much.

The film's cast includes Doris Day, Richard Harris, Edward Mulhare, Ray Walston, Lilia Skala, Irene Tsu, Jack Kruschen, Michael Romanoff, Lisa Seagram, Michael J. Pollard, and Fritz Feld.


In Paris, France, cosmetic company industrial designer named Patricia Foster reads of the murder of an INTERPOL agent in Switzerland.  Saddened, she heads off to an appointment.


The appointment is with the owner of a rival cosmetic company.  She sells him some plans for a new product.  Patricia is caught and fired.  Her boss reprimands her, "Don’t you realize the enormity of your crime?  You were caught in the act of trying to sell the top-secret plans for our new roll-on underarm deodorant!"

After being fired, Patricia is hired by the rival company whom she was attempting to sell secrets to.  She tells her new boss that she won't be divulging any more secrets to him.


Patricia is courted by her new boss's right hand man, Christopher White.  Over the course of their early relationship, Christopher administers a truth serum to Patricia in an effort to find out information.  However, she is fully on to his antics and feeds him false info.




We later find that Patricia's firing and subsequent hiring was all a ruse to infiltrate this cosmetic company in order to find out about a secret formula for a new water repellant hairspray.  Sitting in a well-appointed private jet, Patricia says to her boss, "Sir Jason, you didn’t tell me you had a 707-superjet private office."  "It's only a charter," he shrugs.  (I mean, look at this thing.  It's got chandeliers, a giant movie screen, and a travel piano!)


At a lunch in California, Christopher tells Patricia that he is really working for Sir Jason, just like she is.  She, however, does not trust him one bit.

And things take a totally different turn when Patricia finds some narcotics involved in the whole cosmetic business.

Over the course of the film, Patricia finally breaks down and tells Christopher her real history.  Her father was on the trail of a narcotics ring when he was murdered in Switzerland.  She's trying to find out exactly what happened and who is responsible.

So, off they go to Switzerland, where Patricia is able to get her hands on a bottle of that water repellant hairspray.

She's also very interested in the exact spot where the INTERPOL agent was killed.  The proprietor of the inn she is staying out points her in the right direction.





There on the slopes of the Swiss Alps, Patricia is pursed by a person in black.  To make matters worse, they are actively shooting a gun at her while they zoom across the mountains.


Christopher arrives with help in the nick of time.  She goes careening off a sharp precipice when he is able to grab her hand and pull her to safety.



Naturally, Christopher and Patricia fall in love and begin a relationship.  But Patricia is determined to find out what happened to her father.

And Patricia can't believe it when she discovers exactly who is responsible for the crime.


Things get pretty dire for Patricia.  She's forced to fly solo in a helicopter, and she's got no idea how to land it.  She does, though, on top of the Eiffel Tower in Paris!

Cast rundown:

Doris Day - Caprice
   Doris Day.....................................Patricia Foster

Richard Harris - Caprice
   Richard Harris...............................Christopher White

Edward Mulhare - Caprice
   Edward Mulhare............................Sir Jason Fox

Ray Walston - Caprice
   Ray Walston.................................Stuart Clancy

Lilia Skala - Caprice
   Lilia Skala....................................Madame Piasco

Irene Tsu - Caprice
   Irene Tsu.....................................Su Ling

Jack Kruschen - Caprice
   Jack Kruschen..............................Matthew Cutter

Michael Romanoff - Caprice
   Michael Romanoff..........................Butler

Lisa Seagram - Caprice
   Lisa Seagram................................Mandy

Michael J. Pollard - Caprice
   Michael J. Pollard...........................Barney

Fritz Feld - Caprice
   Fritz Feld......................................Swiss Innkeeper

And that's all for Caprice.  Doris Day named this as one of her least favorite films in her autobiography.  She was reading the script when she expressed her dissatisfaction to her husband and manager, Martin Melcher, but her told her that he had already committed her to the project.  Richard Harris reportedly hated working on the film so much that he refused to see the finished product.  It's definitely not one of the better Doris Day films, but film students today have expressed renewed appreciation for it because of its satire, slapstick comedy, and action sequences.

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Tuesday, June 30, 2020

Call Me Madam (1953)

Call Me Madam - 1953
The hostess with the mostest lives in the form of 1953's "Call Me Madam", a film in which Ethel Merman reprises her Broadway starring role as Sally Adams, everyone's favorite socialite as she rises to the rank of ambassador and finds love where she least expects it.

The film's cast includes Ethel Merman, Donald O'Connor, Vera-Ellen, George Sanders, Billy De Wolfe, Helmut Dantine, Walter Slezak, Steven Geray, Ludwig Stossel, and Lilia Skala.



We meet Mrs. Sally Adams as she's sworn in as the United States Ambassador to the Grand Duchy of Lichtenburg.  Sally is very excited to be going, but "where the heck is Lichtenburg?" she asks around the room.




We're given a little of Sally's backstory as it pertains to Washington D.C. society, and we find out that she's "The Hostess With The Mostest On The Ball".


At her farewell party, Sally meets young Kenneth Gibson who volunteers himself to be her press attache.  She quickly finds out how valuable his services are.


Kenneth goes ahead to the embassy in Lichtenburg, where he finds out that the charge d'affairs is not happy about Sally's appointment and plans on running things himself.  "Like to make a little bet?" asks Ken.


The charge d'affairs, Pemberton Maxwell, is definitely unimpressed when he meets Sally.  "Call the duke and duchess, will you?  And tell them I'll drop in around four, sort of get acquainted."



Meanwhile, the charming Lichtenburg Secretary of State comes calling, and Sally is instantly smitten.  A feeling that is mutually shared by General Cosmo Constantine.




Warned by the American government not to offer cash poor Lichtenburg any money, Sally succumbs to Cosmo's charm and sings "Can You Use Any Money?".  Cosmo tells her he doesn't want any loans.  He believes Lichtenburg has enough natural resources to pay its own way.  Sally doesn't take him seriously when it comes to the loan.  She brushes past the subject and invites him for a future dinner date.


While out shopping, Kenneth inadvertently meets the heir to the throne of Lichtenburg, Princess Maria.  Both of them are smitten with each other.


On the evening of Sally's presentation at the palace, we meet the Princess's fiance, Prince Hugo, whom she's in no hurry to marry.



Waiting in an anteroom, Sally is given last minute instructions on greeting the Grand Duke and Grand Duchess.  She also struggles to maneuver the train of her gown.



When the time comes, Sally gracefully enters the room and makes her way towards the Grand Ducal family.



However, she falls flat on her keester when making her final curtsy.  She also makes a little impromptu speech.  "And I want to tell you how happy I am to be in this Grand Duchy of Lichtenburg.  I think one reason is it just so happens that one of my ancestors was Dutch.  So, you can understand how happy I am to be in this Grand Duchy and to meet all you grand Dutchmen."



When it comes time for dancing, Kenneth whisks Princess Maria onto the floor, while Sally dances with Cosmo.


Sally even dances with the Grand Duke who asks her about the differences between parties in Lichtenburg and in America.  "Well, we have a good time," smiles Sally.




She's even prevailed upon to sing "That International Rag" as a way to spice things up.  "Real razzmatazz, Highness," she jokes with the Grand Duke as she takes to the stage to belt out her number.


Kenneth and Princess Maria, however, sneak off to the gardens for some more romantic dancing.


Before she leaves, Pemberton Maxwell corners her and puts doubts into Sally's head about Cosmo's intentions and sincerity.  She plans to get to the bottom of it.




 The next day, Kenneth finds himself pining for the Princess.  Sally mentors him with some advice.  "You're Not Sick, You're Just In Love," she sings.




At Lichtenburg's annual fair a few days later, celebrations are in high gear as Princess Maria dances the "Ocarina".



Sally meets with Cosmo, though she is on her guard as to his intentions.  And Kenneth is thrilled to see Princess Maria for a few moments after her dance.  Though, she is cautious about being seen with him.  "It is not permitted for me to talk to a young man in public," she tells him.  "I'm willing to make it private," he says with a smile.


Prince Hugo interrupts them, and Kenneth is put in his place by the jealous fiance.


That night, Kenneth goes to a local tavern and gets drunk, causing some disturbance.  The next day, he apologizes to Sally, who promptly tears up a report on the matter written by Maxwell.


Maxwell confronts Sally about it, but she puts him in his place.  She informs him that if things went by regulations, he would've been out a long time ago because of the things he's pilfered from the embassy, things she is supposed to take inventory of.



Sally arranges for Kenneth and Princess Maria to meet in the underground tunnels that connect the palace with the embassy, which leads to some more enthusiastic dancing.


For her dinner with Cosmo, Sally goes over some details with Maxwell.  It's funny to watch them later as Maxwell is confused over some signals Sally is not sending him as previously discussed.  She gets exasperated and tells him to "Beat it.  Get it?  Beat it!"



Sally continues to get closer to Cosmo, still dismissing his supposed not wanting any money from America.  When the two kiss, Cosmo tells her that they've made history because it was the first time a foreign minister ever kissed an ambassador.  "Cosmo, let's make more history," she suggest gladly.



Sally's good-intentioned meddling in the loan business and with Princess Maria and Kenneth is enough to earn her Cosmo's anger and her recall back to Washington.



Upon arrival, Sally does what she does best: throws a party.  At the party, Kenneth tells Sally that Cosmo has just been named Lichtenburg Ambassador to the US.  Nervously, Sally prepares to receive him.



They patch everything up, and Cosmo presents her with a decoration from the Grand Duke.  "This order entitles you to be called a Dame," says Cosmo.  "A dame?  Say, that's quite a promotion," exclaims Sally.


Kenneth is surprised when he sees Princess Maria.  She tells him she's given up Prince Hugo and the throne of Lichtenburg in order that they might be together.


Everyone returns to the ballroom to join in a medley of the film's hit songs.

Cast rundown:


   Ethel Merman.................................Sally Adams


   Donald O'Connor.............................Kenneth Gibson


   Vera-Ellen......................................Princess Maria


   George Sanders..............................General Cosmo Constantine


   Billy De Wolfe.................................Pemberton Maxwell


   Helmut Dantine...............................Prince Hugo


   Walter Slezak..................................August Tantinnin


   Steven Geray..................................Prime Minister Sebastian


   Ludwig Stossel................................Grand Duke Otto


   Lilia Skala.......................................Grand Duchess Sophie

And that's it for Call Me Madam.  Ethel Merman received a Golden Globe for her portrayal of the hostess with the mostest.  Sally Adams is actually based off of Perle Mesta, who served as the US Ambassador to Luxembourg, and was a powerhouse society hostess herself.

As always, if you wish to leave a comment, please remember our posting rules.