Bob and Mary, recently divorced, reunite to settle tax issues. Bob plans to marry Tiffany, while Mary is drawn to Dirk, a Hollywood star. Tensions arise as Bob fears being alone with Mary, r... Read allBob and Mary, recently divorced, reunite to settle tax issues. Bob plans to marry Tiffany, while Mary is drawn to Dirk, a Hollywood star. Tensions arise as Bob fears being alone with Mary, reflecting their complicated dynamic after split.Bob and Mary, recently divorced, reunite to settle tax issues. Bob plans to marry Tiffany, while Mary is drawn to Dirk, a Hollywood star. Tensions arise as Bob fears being alone with Mary, reflecting their complicated dynamic after split.
- Cleaning Woman
- (uncredited)
- Woman at Restaurant
- (uncredited)
- Husband in Elevator
- (uncredited)
- Secretary
- (uncredited)
- Old Timer
- (uncredited)
- Wife in Elevator
- (uncredited)
- Doorman
- (uncredited)
- Newscaster
- (voice)
- (uncredited)
- Waiter
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
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Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThis is one of the few instances when a movie was released while the Broadway play was still running.
- GoofsWoken by a ringing bell Mary opens the door and lets Tiffany in who crosses the room and opens the curtains revealing that it's daylight . Strong shadows point in all directions as being from studio lights.
- Quotes
Bob McKellaway: [lovingly] I married Mary because she was so direct, and straightforward, and said exactly what she meant.
Oscar Nelson: Why did you divorce her?
Bob McKellaway: [sternly] Because she was so direct, and straightforward, and said exactly what she meant.
- ConnectionsReferenced in To Tell the Truth: Tom Poston, Betty White, Barry Nelson, Kitty Carlisle (1962)
Of course, we know that charming Barry Nelson and suave Michael Rennie repeated their stage roles. Given his long list of screen roles as the perfect British detective, it's amazing John Cromwell didn't repeat his stage role as Oscar Nelson, the accountant who brings the formerly married but still fond Bob and Mary (Nelson and...we'll get to that) together to go over tax matters. Presumably Cromwell was busy, because the film makers went with his first stage replacement, Hiram Sherman (who did the role on Broadway from May 13 to September 1, 1963).
Diane McBain didn't do her role on Broadway, but was excellent as the deceptively pretty but self aware young thing Bob is currently dating.
The film's unappreciated coup sprang from the Hollywood gimmick of insisting on a MOVIE name to help with the box office. In this case it was the oft' over praised Debbie Reynolds, and she was just fine as the brittle but brilliant Mary.
What made it a "coup" was that Reynolds was a far better mimic than she was (based on Hollywood outings in things like THE UNSINKABLE MOLLY BROWN or BUNDLE OF JOY or her Broadway fumble in IRENE) actress. It wasn't until I saw Barbara Bel Geddes, the original Broadway Mary, years later in another Jean Kerr play on stage that I realized that what Reynolds had given us in this delightful film was Bel Geddes' original Broadway performance - very movement, gesture and vocal inflection - letter perfect!
An intimate, five character, wonderfully written comedy, and with "three and a half" of the Broadway cast. One might say "no wonder it worked so well," but also credit film producer/director Mervyn Leroy who got the appropriate screen performances (performances don't always transfer intact - stage star Stockard Channing, while fine in SIX DEGREES OF SEPARATION, isn't nearly as effective on screen as she had been on stage with better direction) and Harry Stradling's perfect cinematography for never allowing the piece to seen static, confined or "stagey."
Thank heavens for films like this that once kept mature, literate audiences both young and old coming back to the movies all the time.Modern movie fans accustomed to expect nothing but action, titillation and pratt falls in a "comedy" may be amazed how good a film can be when dialogue matters - whether in a little gem like this or in lavish, big films like MOONSTRUCK or Shakespeare IN LOVE!
To quote Bob and Mary: "Mmmm. That's good coffee!"
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Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Meine geschiedene Frau
- Filming locations
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- Runtime2 hours 6 minutes
- Aspect ratio
- 1.66 : 1