| Photos (see all 3 | slideshow) |
| Shirley MacLaine | ... | Louisa May Foster | |
| Paul Newman | ... | Larry Flint | |
| Robert Mitchum | ... | Rod Anderson, Jr. | |
| Dean Martin | ... | Leonard 'Lennie' Crawley | |
| Gene Kelly | ... | Pinky Benson | |
| Robert Cummings | ... | Dr. Victor Stephanson (as Bob Cummings) | |
| Dick Van Dyke | ... | Edgar Hopper | |
| Reginald Gardiner | ... | Painter | |
| Margaret Dumont | ... | Mrs. Foster | |
| Lou Nova | ... | Trentino | |
| Fifi D'Orsay | ... | Baroness | |
| Maurice Marsac | ... | Rene | |
| Wally Vernon | ... | Agent | |
| Jane Wald | ... | Polly | |
| Lenny Kent | ... | Hollywood Lawyer | |
| rest of cast listed alphabetically: | |||
| Fred Aldrich | ... | Restaurant Patron (uncredited) | |
| Army Archerd | ... | TV Announcer (uncredited) | |
| Anton Arnold | ... | Mr. Foster (uncredited) | |
| Phil Arnold | ... | Publicity and Press Agent (uncredited) | |
| Mark Bailey | ... | Private Airline Pilot (uncredited) | |
| Marjorie Bennett | ... | Mrs. Freeman (uncredited) | |
| Nesdon Booth | ... | (uncredited) | |
| Eugene Borden | ... | Bit part (uncredited) | |
| Lynn Borden | ... | Bit Part (uncredited) | |
| Barbara Bouchet | ... | Girl on Plane (uncredited) | |
| John Cliff | ... | Waiter (uncredited) | |
| Christopher Connelly | ... | Ned (uncredited) | |
| Tom Conway | ... | Lord Kensington (uncredited) | |
| Bill Corcoran | ... | Leonard Crawley, Jr., age 7 (uncredited) | |
| Carol Daniels | ... | Bathing Beauty (uncredited) | |
| Douglass Dumbrille | ... | (uncredited) | |
| Anthony Eustrel | ... | Willard (uncredited) | |
| Pamelyn Ferdin | ... | Geraldine Crawley, age 4 (uncredited) | |
| Jeff Fithian | ... | Jonathan Crawley, age 5 (uncredited) | |
| Jacques Foti | ... | Policeman (uncredited) | |
| Milton Frome | ... | Lawyer (uncredited) | |
| Teri Garr | ... | Dancer in Shipboard Number (uncredited) | |
| Roy Gordon | ... | Minister (uncredited) | |
| Sid Gould | ... | Movie Executive (uncredited) | |
| Joe Gray | ... | Patron (uncredited) | |
| Jack Greening | ... | Chester (uncredited) | |
| Arlene Harris | ... | Older woman in club audience (uncredited) | |
| Marcel Hillaire | ... | French Lawyer (uncredited) | |
| Paula Lane | ... | Movie Executive's Girl (uncredited) | |
| Queenie Leonard | ... | Lady Kensington (uncredited) | |
| Burt Mustin | ... | Crawleyville Lawyer (uncredited) | |
| Patrick O'Moore | ... | Bit Part (uncredited) | |
| Cleo Ronson | ... | Bit Part (uncredited) | |
| Myrna Ross | ... | Party Girl at Ron Anderson's 'Orgy' (uncredited) | |
| Jack Shea | ... | Restaurant Patron (uncredited) | |
| Justin Smith | ... | Bit Part (uncredited) | |
| Dick Wilson | ... | Driscoll (uncredited) | |
| Helene Winston | ... | Doris (uncredited) | |
Directed by | |||
| J. Lee Thompson | |||
Writing credits | ||
| Gwen Davis | (story) | |
| Betty Comden | (screenplay) and | |
| Adolph Green | (screenplay) | |
Produced by | |||
| Arthur P. Jacobs | .... | producer | |
Original Music by | |||
| Nelson Riddle | |||
Cinematography by | |||
| Leon Shamroy | (director of photography) | ||
Film Editing by | |||
| Marjorie Fowler | |||
Art Direction by | |||
| Ted Haworth | |||
| Jack Martin Smith | |||
Set Decoration by | |||
| Stuart A. Reiss | |||
| Walter M. Scott | |||
Makeup Department | |||
| Margaret Donovan | .... | supervising hair stylist | |
| Sydney Guilaroff | .... | hair stylist: Miss MacLaine | |
| Ben Nye | .... | makeup artist | |
Production Management | |||
| William Eckhardt | .... | unit production manager | |
Second Unit Director or Assistant Director | |||
| Fred R. Simpson | .... | assistant director | |
| John Flynn | .... | second assistant director (uncredited) | |
Sound Department | |||
| Bernard Freericks | .... | sound | |
| Elmer Raguse | .... | sound | |
Special Effects by | |||
| L.B. Abbott | .... | special photographic effects | |
| Emil Kosa Jr. | .... | special photographic effects | |
Costume and Wardrobe Department | |||
| Edith Head | .... | gowns: Miss MacLaine | |
| Moss Mabry | .... | wardrobe: men | |
Music Department | |||
| Arthur Morton | .... | orchestrator | |
Other crew | |||
| Leon Charles | .... | dialogue coach | |
| Richard Humphrey | .... | assistant: Mr. Kelly | |
| Gene Kelly | .... | choreographer | |
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| City of Shoulders and Noses | Giant | Edvard Munch | Gone with the Wind | The Good Earth |
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| Full cast and crew | Company credits | External reviews |
| IMDb Comedy section | IMDb USA section | Add this title to MyMovies |
MacLaine gets a huge workout in this episodic comedy about a woman from humble beginnings who is satisfied with the smaller things in life, but who keeps marrying men who make a fortune and then die, leaving her a wealthy widow four times over! Each one of the marriages sees MacLaine experiencing a new level of frustration and enveloping herself in an increasingly over-the-top super-glam wardrobe. As she relates the marriages to the rather manipulative psychologist Cummings, each relationship is seen as if it were a certain movie genre. Van Dyke lives a simple existence as a small-time store owner and their sequence contains an old silent-movie vignette. Newman is an expatriate artist living in Paris, so theirs is a slightly naughty French art film. Mitchum is a businessman loaded with dough which lends itself to a parody of the fur-and-fashion Ross Hunter women's pictures. Then marriage to small town hoofer Kelly includes a big song and dance number out of a 1940's musical. Also on hand is loutish playboy Martin, who plays the man her mother (Dumont) wanted her to marry in the first place. MacLaine gives a worthy performance with lots of physical comedy and an impressive dance sequence. She's occasionally a little shrill, but that's the character. Van Dyke is solid, Newman is sexy (and shows more skin here - albeit G-rated - than in the bulk of his other movies), Mitchum is charming, Kelly is appropriately self-involved and Martin is his usual suave, laid-back self. All of the actors establish a nice chemistry with MacLaine (who lived many a gal's dream when she got to pair up with all the leading men of this film!) It's fun to see these actors hamming it up and having fun with their unusual roles. The real star, however, apart from MacLaine, is the eye-popping, jaw-dropping parade of costumes and wigs. Some are breathtakingly glamorous, some are atrociously eye-assaulting, but they really steal the show, especially during the Mitchum sequence. Edith Head clearly had a field day (but lost the Oscar to equally-gifted Cecil Beaton for his "My Fair Lady" gowns.) There are also some attention-getting set designs. It's the kind of frothy, harmless, yet beautiful film that rarely gets made today. Some modern movie-goers will note MacLaine's uncanny resemblance to Renee Zellweger at times in this film. She gave this type of frothy flick a go in "Down With Love", but no one came (of course, it wasn't as good, so it isn't surprising!) The pattern of the movie threatens to become tiresome, but the changes in stars and venues and the clever scripting of Comden and Green help keep it afloat.