Dave Barry Movies
Unrelated to the syndicated humor columnist of the same name, Las Vegas comic Dave Barry appeared sporadically in film, though he gained the majority of his popularity in his eight-year stint as the opening act for Wayne Newton.A Brooklyn, NY, native who began his career at the age of 16 on radio and throughout the Catskills, Barry also served as an entertainer in the Army's Special Services Unit during WWII. Kicking off his Las Vegas career performing at the El Rancho Hotel and later appearing in the Desert Inn's Hello America revue, Barry also made feature appearances in such popular films as Some Like It Hot (1959) and provided voice work for The Pink Panther television series. Also opening for acts such as Frank Sinatra, Barry would later take his act to cruise ships and the Palm Springs Follies variety show.
On August 16, 2001, Dave Barry died in his Beverly Hills home. He was 82. ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide
Though they have proven their courage and grit on many an emergency call, paramedics Roy Desoto (Kevin Tighe) and John Gage (Randolph Mantooth) look forward to giving a safety demonstration on TV with a mixture of fear and loathing. The main problem is that our heroes have no time to prepare for their appearance, due to a number of urgent calls to the station house. This week's case roster include a child who has swallowed an illegal pesticide, and a heart patient trapped on a stalled ferris wheel--not to mention a wholly unanticipated emergency in front of the TV cameras. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
This sex farce stars Angus Duncan as a lothario on a mission to sleep with five very different women. ~ Jason Ankeny, All Movie Guide
Locking Jeannie (Barbara Eden) in her bottle, her wicked lookalike sister Jeannie II (also Barbara Eden) trails Tony (Larry Hagman) to the Cocoa Beach Cabana. In her efforts to win Tony's affections, Jeannie II also replaces the nightclub's regular singer and renders a seductive ballad ("Electric Days, Electric Nights"). Alas, from this point forward everything goes wrong, with Tony being publicly embarrassed and Dr. Bellows (Hayden Rorke) virtually being hand-delivered enough evidence to wash Tony out of the space program! ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
In the conclusion of a three-part story arc, Oliver (Eddie Albert) has successfully argued that Arnold the pig should be the sole heir to a 20,000,000 dollar legacy bestowed by an eccentric meat packer. Thus it is that Arnold returns to a huge congratulatory celebration in his home town of Hooterville. Unfortunately, the porcine millionaire is also besieged by a battalion of salesmen, who want to shower him with every luxury and convenience that he has previously managed to live without. Want to bet that the one who suffers most from this situation is poor old Oliver? ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Roland Winters, Dave Barry, (more)
Elvis Presley plays rock singer and racecar driver Mike McCoy in the typical musical romp Spinout, directed by Norman Taurog. His band includes Curly Jack Mullaney, Larry Jimmy Hawkins and the female tomboy drummer Les Deborah Walley. Mike is coveted by a bevy of beauties that include the intellectual journalist Diana St. Clair Diane McBain, Susan Dodie Marshall and the spoiled rich girl Cynthia Foxhugh Shelley Fabares. Cynthia's millionaire father Howard Carl Betz wants Mike to race his newly built auto. All the girls want Mike, but he manages to marry them off to different paramours and in the end falls for his replacement drummer Susan. The 12-song album of the same title contained a musical curiosity, Bob Dylan's Tomorrow Is A Long Time. It was the only Dylan song ever recorded by Presley -- and the longest, at over five minutes in length. ~ Dan Pavlides, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Elvis Presley, Shelley Fabares, (more)
The launching pad for Billy Wilder's comedy classic was a rusty old German farce, Fanfares of Love, whose two main characters were male musicians so desperate to get a job that they disguise themselves as women and play with an all-girl band in gangster-dominated 1929 Chicago. In this version, musicians Joe (Tony Curtis) and Jerry (Jack Lemmon) lose their jobs when a speakeasy owned by mob boss Spats Columbo (George Raft) is raided by prohibition agent Mulligan (Pat O'Brien). Several weeks later, on February 14th, Joe and Jerry get a job perfroming in Urbana and end up witnessing a gangland massacre in a parking garage. Fearing that they will be next on the mobsters' hit lists, Joe devises an ingenious plan for disguising their identities. Soon they are all dolled up and performing as Josephine and Daphne in Sweet Sue's all-girl orchestra. En route to Florida by train with Sweet Sue's band, the boys (girls?) make the acquaintance of Sue's lead singer Sugar Kane (Marilyn Monroe, in what may be her best performance). Joe and Jerry immediately fall in love, though of course their new feminine identities prevent them from acting on their desires. Still, they are determined to woo her, and they enact an elaborate series of gender-bending ruses complicated by the fact that flirtatious millionaire Osgood Fielding (Joe E. Brown) has fallen in love with "Daphne." The plot gets even thicker when Spats Columbo and his boys show up in Florida. Nominated for several Oscars, Some Like It Hot ended up the biggest moneymaking comedy up to 1959. Full of hilarious set pieces and movie in-jokes, it has not tarnished with time and in fact seems to get better with each passing year, as its cross-dressing humor keeps it only more and more up-to-date. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Marilyn Monroe, Tony Curtis, (more)
In this sensitive drama, a commercial artist is devastated by his tiny daughter's death and takes to drinking to numb the terrible pain. Soon he has become a full-blown alcoholic. His loving wife and caring doctor are unable to help. He wants to stop drinking, but he simply cannot until he meets another alcoholic who is also desperate to stop. Together, they support each other as they withdraw from the debilitating drug. Later the fellow founds an organization designed to help other drunks dry out by offering them the same kind of support he had. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Richard Egan, Julie London, (more)
Four Girls in Town is essentially an excuse by Universal-International to test out several of their newer contractees. The plot is motivated by a worldwide movie talent hunt, which naturally arouses the attentions of a bevy of pretty young aspiring actresses. The four girls of the title are Kathy Sonway (Julie Adams, who'd been appearing in films since 1950), Ina Schiller (Germany's Marianne Cook, nee Koch), Maria Antonelli (Italy's Elsa Martinelli) and Vicki Dauray (Gia Scala, also from Italy but herein portraying a Frenchwoman). Conducting the screen tests is budding director Mike Snowden (George Nader), who predictably falls in love with one of the hopefuls. Some laughs are had at the expense of Universal's rival 20th Century-Fox in the person of Helene Stanton, cast as a Marilyn Monroe clone named "Rita Holloway". ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- George Nader, Julie Adams, (more)
This Bowery Boys opus gets under way when Sach (Huntz Hall) is informed that he is heir to a fortune. Sach and his buddy Slip (Leo Gorcey) head to the mansion of the late Terwilliger Debussy Jones to sign the necessary legal papers. Here they discover that the rightful heir is young Terwilliger III (Ronald Keith), who is being cheated out of his legacy by crooked relative Stuyvesant Jones (Dayton Lummis) and his confederate Clarissa (Amanda Blake). After all sorts of slapstick complications, honesty prevails. Believe it or not, High Society earned an Academy Award nomination for "Best Original Story," all because the Academy confused this Bowery Boys endeavor with the big-budget Frank Sinatra/Bing Crosby/Grace Kelly musical of the same name. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Leo Gorcey, Huntz Hall, (more)
Shelley Winters was still in the sex-symbol phase of her career when she headed the cast of Universal's Playgirl. Ms. Winters plays Fran, a nightclub vocalist whose main squeeze is married publisher Mike Marsh (Barry Sullivan). When Mike makes a play for new employee Phyllis Matthews (Colleen Miller), the jealous Fran shoots him down. The ensuing scandal ruins Phyllis' reputation, whereupon she, and not Fran, becomes the libertine $100-dollar-a-night playgirl of the title. When Phyllis' life is endangered by gangsters, Fran unexpectedly comes to her rescue. Though dealing with a censorable subject, Playgirl manages to stay within the bounds of good taste, for better or worse. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Shelley Winters, Barry Sullivan, (more)
In her second film appearance, Marilyn Monroe stars as Peggy Martin, a second-generation showgirl who begins a romance with a rich young man (Randy Brooks), an action that strains her relationship with her mother (Adele Jurgens). ~ Jason Ankeny, All Movie Guide
A leering Hollywood wolf enters a movie house to drool over sexy film diva Laurie BeCool, currently costarring with Bogey GoCart in their latest film epic "To Have. . .To Have. . .To Have. . . " (PLEASE don't tell us you can't figure out what's being parodied here!) First, however, the Wolf must sit through the "Warmers Newsreel" and put up with a variety of obnoxious movie patrons. Once the main feature gets under way, Wolfie goes into wild paroxysms of passion every time Laurie BeCool slinks into view--and even bums a discarded cigarette from Bogey! ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide












