Joy Harmon Movies

Joy Harmon may not be too well remembered by name with only ten feature films to her credit and not that many more television appearances, but in 1967 she managed to make her mark on screen history, in a single scene that is still regarded as one of the most sexually suggestive in the history of mainstream movies. Born Patricia Joy Harmon in St. Louis, MO, in 1943, she moved with her family to Connecticut in 1946. Her father was connected to the exhibition end of the movie business and became an employee of the Roxy in Manhattan, one of the most prestigious theaters in New York. During her childhood, Harmon appeared in newsreels made by Fox Movietone News and was taken with the idea of a movie career. At 13, she was hired as an extra in The Man in the Gray Flannel Suit, an experience that only reinforced her determination to become an actress. Deciding to take advantage of her natural attributes, she entered beauty contests and began seeking out roles on stage -- she was a runner-up for Miss Connecticut and later was cast in the Broadway show Make a Million. Harmon also posed in the pin-up magazines of the pre-Playboy era, and it was as a pin-up that she was best known for many years.
Harmon got a small role in Harry Foster's jukebox movie Let's Rock in 1958, but her breakthrough came after she was invited to appear on Groucho Marx's quiz/comedy show You Bet Your Life. Marx was so taken with the cheerful, outgoing, and well-endowed Harmon that he hired her to appear as one of his two assistants on his 1962 midseason replacement show Tell It to Groucho, billed as Patty Harmon. Around this same period, she also played a small role in Burt Balaban's period crime thriller Mad Dog Coll (1961). From there she moved to performances in episodes of The Beverly Hillbillies, Burke's Law, My Three Sons, Batman, The Rounders, Gomer Pyle, USMC, and Bewitched through 1966, and a memorable pre-credit appearance in an episode of That Girl ("Pass The Potatoes, Ethel Merman"). With her blonde hair, eager smile, and ample bosom, she was mostly used as eye candy. As with many actresses known for their physiques, her film appearances were in projects of widely varying quality, from high-profile, big-budget productions such as David Swift's frothy sex comedy Under the Yum Yum Tree (1963) to Terry O. Morse's Young Dillinger (1965) and Bert I. Gordon's Village of the Giants (1965). The latter, in particular, took advantage of Harmon's physical attributes, as her bikini clad character is one of a group of anti-social teenagers enlarged to 50 feet tall. In 1965, she got the only starring screen role of her career, in the low-budget comedy-caper movie One Way Wahini, which co-starred Anthony Eisley (Hawaiian Eye) and Edgar Bergen -- that movie (which was shot in widescreen, no less, making any close-ups of Harmon that much more impressive) barely got any distribution, however, and soon disappeared.
Joy Harmon's most lasting screen contribution came in 1967 when she was cast in Stuart Rosenberg's Cool Hand Luke. In a scene almost legendary for its suggestiveness, she portrayed a girl seen washing a car in the hot sun within a few feet of the working, straining prison work-camp inmates. Wearing a short, tight-fitting dress, she slides a soapy sponge over the car, reaching ever further and straining the fabric of her clothes, front and back, her cleavage easily visible, and sweating and getting ever wetter as she slides the sponge around and the men watching her get ever more distracted. It was to be her best moment onscreen -- a year later, Harmon married Jeff Gourson, a producer, and she retired from movies after one more big-screen appearance in Angel in My Pocket (1969), though she would appear on television through 1972 in episodes of Love American Style and The Odd Couple. Today, she is mostly remembered for Cool Hand Luke; among her three children, her son Jason is a film editor, and her older daughter Jamie is an actress. ~ Bruce Eder, All Movie Guide
1968  
 
Minister Sam (Andy Griffith) and his wife Mary Elizabeth (Lee Meriweather) move to a Kansas town divided by political concerns that stall the town's progress. Will Sinclair (Henry Jones) and Alex Gresham (Edgar Buchanan) have allowed a long-standing family argument to impede the progress of the small rural community. Sam must contend with his mother-in-law (Kay Medford) and his wild brother-in-law Bubba (Jerry Van Dyke) when Bubba sets up a moonshine still in the church basement with the help of his friend Calvin (Parker Fennelly). Art Shields (Gary Collins) is the ambitious young country lawyer who runs for mayor in hopes of bringing peace to the families, and he works for the best interests of the divided community. ~ Dan Pavlides, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Andy GriffithJerry Van Dyke, (more)
1967  
 
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Paul Newman was nominated for an Oscar and George Kennedy received one for his work in this allegorical prison drama. Luke Jackson (Paul Newman) is sentenced to a stretch on a southern chain gang after he's arrested for drunkenly decapitating parking meters. While the avowed ambition of the captain (Strother Martin) is for each prisoner to "get their mind right," it soon becomes obvious that Luke is not about to kowtow to anybody. When challenged to a fistfight by fellow inmate Dragline (George Kennedy), Luke simply refuses to give up, even though he's brutally beaten. Luke knows how to win at poker, even with bad cards, by using his smarts and playing it cool. Luke also figures out a way for the men to get their work done in half the usual time, giving them the afternoon off. Finally, when Luke finds out his mother has died, he plots his escape; when he's caught, he simply escapes again. Soon, Luke becomes a symbol of hope and resilience to the other men in the prison camp -- and a symbol of rebelliousness that must be stamped out to the guards and the captain. Along with stellar performances by Newman, Kennedy, and Martin, Cool Hand Luke features a superb supporting cast, including Ralph Waite, Harry Dean Stanton, Dennis Hopper, Wayne Rogers, and Joe Don Baker as members of the chain gang. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Paul NewmanGeorge Kennedy, (more)
1966  
 
Unable to decide whether to finish his work at home or to take Samantha on a long-overdue vacation, Darrin wishes aloud that he were two people. Obligingly, Endora splits Darrin into two separate personalities: one a super-dedicated worker, the other an irresponsible hedonist. The fun really begins when the two Darrins confront each other (though it might have been even more fun if the real "two Darrins," actor Dick York and his successor Dick Sargent, were to square off). Written by Paul Wayne, "Divided He Falls" was originally broadcast on May 5, 1966. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Elizabeth MontgomeryDick York, (more)
1965  
 
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Based on the same H.G. Wells story as his later Food of the Gods, this silly but good-looking fantasy from Bert I. Gordon is among his more entertaining films. The young Ron Howard plays Genius, who develops a substance which causes animals to grow to monstrous size. After eight kids (led by Beau Bridges and Tisha Sterling) crash their car in the mud, they dance and get drunk, then steal some food containing the growth-gunk, causing them to attain huge physical size as well. It's up to the good teens of the town (including Tommy Kirk, Johnny Crawford from The Rifleman, and "Mickey" crooner Toni Basil) to set things right. That involves a gas-like antidote and a lot of subpar musical numbers from the likes of Freddy Cannon and the Beau Brummels. Joseph Turkel and Rance Howard are also in the cast, and a jokey ending features a number of midgets including Felix Silla, best known as Cousin Itt on TV's The Addams Family. The first in a projected 13-picture production deal with Joseph E. Levine, Gordon followed this with the William Castle-inspired Picture Mommy Dead. ~ Robert Firsching, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Tommy KirkJohnny Crawford, (more)
1965  
 
Set in Hawaii and featuring a mixture of thrills, comedy and tropical splendor, two young women on vacation find themselves entangled with a scheme to rob a pair of bankrobbers of their loot. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Joy HarmonAnthony Eisley, (more)
1965  
 
Gidget (Sally Field) thinks it's high time that she declare her independence--that is, she's tired of depending upon her friends to drive her to the beach. Though she's not yet 16, Gidge begins to make payments on a unique form of transportation: a dilapidated old hearse. This is one of several Gidget episodes directed by William Asher, who was concurrently working on Bewitched (and incidentally, you can see the home of Darrin and Samantha Stevens only a few yards away from Gidget's house.) ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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1965  
 
Gidget (Sally Field) despairs when she's unable to line up a date for her class luau. Her brother-in-law John (Peter Deuel) offers to escort her, not so much out of gallantry as to gather research for a psychology paper on typical teenage behavior. Unfortunately, John's wife (and Gidge's sister) Anne (Betty Conner) is unaware of her husband's motives--and for the second time in as many weeks, she jumps to the wrong conclusion. Keep an eye out for Beverly Adams, a sexy starlet best known for her appearances as Lovey Kravezit (sic!) in Dean Martin's "Matt Helm" films. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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1961  
 
This gangland crime story about the life and death of mobster Vincent "Mad Dog" Coll (John Chandler) is most notable for the array of relatively unknown actors in bit parts who later became famous. Otherwise, there is a lot of bloodshed, surface characterization, and a great deal of fiction in the violent tale. Coll is first shown suffering extreme abuse from his father, and then he segues into the development of a neighborhood gang at the age of seventeen. From there, he gets on the wrong side of gangster Dutch Schultz which ultimately is a big mistake. Director Burt Balaban depicts Coll as increasingly insane, before his last killing leads to his violent death. Among those "new" faces are Telly Savalas as Lt. Dawson, Jerry Orbach as Joe, Coll's Judas, Gene Hackman in his first screen role as a cop, and Vincent Gardenia as Dutch Schultz. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
John ChandlerNeil Nephew, (more)
1958  
 
Singer Julius LaRosa, whose greatest fame lies in the fact that he was fired on the air by radio-TV personality Arthur Godfrey, heads the cast of the near-plotless musicfest Let's Rock. LaRosa plays a top recording star who suffers a dip in popularity when rock-n-roll becomes the national craze. With the help of girlfriend Phyllis Newman, LaRosa is able to recapture his audience by adjusting to the "new sound." Forget the plot: this the film in which Danny and the Juniors perform their hit single "At the Hop" and the Royal Teens participate in a production-number version of their smash "Short Shorts". And besides, who couldn't love a film which offers not only Paul Anka and Della Reese, but also the legendary Wink Martindale!!! Let's Rock was later reissued as Keep It Cool. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Julius LaRosaPhyllis Newman, (more)

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