Friday, March 29, 2024

Lemmon and Dennis: An Unlikely Screen Dream Team


When I think of iconic screen couples, so many come to mind. Gable and Harlow. Rita Hayworth and Glenn Ford. Tracy and Hepburn. Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis (now that was chemistry!).

Jack Lemmon and Sandy Dennis are not among them. (Lemmon and Matthau, yes.) But maybe they should be. 

I tend to think of Lemmon chiefly as a light comedic actor in films like Bell, Book and Candle, Some Like It Hot and The Fortune Cookie. (Though, on the other hand, he did break my heart in Days of Wine and Roses.) Dennis brings to mind heavy drama, stürm and drang, with the anxious, neurotic and damaged characters she created for movies like The Fox, Come Back To The Five and Dime, Jimmy Dean, Jimmy Dean and of course, her Oscar-winning turn as that very high-strung young housewife in Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf.

Jack Lemmon as George Kellerman

Sandy Dennis as Gwen Kellerman

In Neil Simon’s The Out-of-Towners (1970), both play against type to enact the misadventures of George and Gwen Kellerman, a pair of hapless and harried travelers from Twin Oaks, Ohio, on an unfortunate trip the New York City. Here, Lemmon is intense and complicated as the uptight, controlling (and occasionally explosively angry) husband, while Dennis ironically gives one of her most engaging performances as his dutiful, ‘go with the flow’ spouse who wants nothing more than to make her husband happy and support his choices. (Though she loses her cool once or twice as well!)

A New York story that depicts The Big Apple as sprawling, tough and hard-as-nails, The Out-of-Towners lampoons every negative stereotype about the city that never sleeps, and about the rigors of travel in general. (Writer Neil Simon was, of course, a lifelong New Yorker himself.)

The films other main character: “Is that a beautiful city?” “That is a beautiful city.”

Famous for his witty, lightning-fast dialogue that’s funny and human and honest and relatable all at the same time, Simon treads into more serious territory here than many of the comedic plays that made him famous. This is an edgier, darker story than the feather-light Come Blow Your Horn or Barefoot in the Park, or even his hilarious mismatched buddy comedy The Odd Couple.

Here, Simon crafts a hilarious and often terrifying comedy of errors, using Murphy’s law to plot an unbelievably bad trip for the Kellermans. Anything that can go wrong, does. First there’s a delay in landing the plane, then the flight is diverted to Boston due to bad weather. A crowded claustrophobic train from Boston to New York becomes a cattle car. When they arrive in the city there’s a garbage strike, a transit strike, a heavy rainstorm; the hotel did not hold their reservation. Gwen steps on a bottle and breaks the heel of her shoe; the couple is robbed at gunpoint. And so on.

Comedy is not the wheelhouse of Method actress Sandy Dennis, but as Gwen Kellerman she has impeccable instinctive timing, and many moments, mostly priceless reaction shots, that make you laugh out loud. Harvard-educated Lemmon, who won his first Oscar as the insecure but lovable Ensign Pulver in Mister Roberts, depicts what is his darkest character to date in George Kellerman, a seemingly mild-mannered salesman who is triggered by circumstances into rage and utter despair. (Later, Lemmon will a second Academy Award playing an even darker character in Save the Tiger.) Interestingly, both Dennis and Jack Lemmon studied under Herbert Berghof and Uta Hagen (Respect for Acting) at the HB Studio in New York and even appeared together in an Off-Broadway play years before teaming for this film.


Two wet, insignificant out-of-town travelers.”
Oh my God, I think I lost an eyelash.”

George?? Can you hear me?”

We could ask Traveler’s Aid...”

I think I broke a tooth. Yep, there goes my smile.”

At first, it seems that the couple are mismatched to their environment—a classic fish-out-of-water theme, two Midwesterners vs. the Big City. But the travails of George and Gwen point out their mismatched personalities in the way that they deal with the vicissitudes that await them around every corner. Here, Lemmon overplays and Dennis underplays; he rages like King Lear while she assumes inscrutable blank expressions that try to hide her feelings. Their interplay is a joy to watch, though; together, they create a real chemistry and are totally believable as a married couple from Ohio.

Bringing the Kellermans’ urban nightmare to vivid life are a bevy of consummate character actors to lend support and expertly spout Simon’s acerbic dialogue at a rapid-fire pace. Most portray service people trying in vain to calm irate customers; all give unforgettable cameo performances: Ann Prentiss (sister of Paula) as a deadpan stewardess; Billy Dee Williams (Lady Sings the Blues)  from the airline Lost & Found; Johnny Brown as the smiling dining car waiter with nothing but bad news for the hungry travelers; Anthony Holland at the Waldorf Astoria front desk;  Ron Carey (High Anxiety) as a Boston cab driver; Graham Jarvis as a Good Samaritan with an ulterior motive; Anne Meara (mom of Ben Stiller) as a nonplussed purse-snatching victim.

Anne Meara: “You carry a pocketbook in this city, you’re a marked woman.”

Billy Dee Williams as Clifford: “I see no reason to assume it won’t show up.”


Graham Jarvis: “Just tell them that Murray sent you.”

Dolph Sweet, Johnny Brown, Anthony Holland and Ron Carey

Director Arthur Hiller paces the film as a frantic run that keeps you on the edge of your seat and as breathless as our protagonists. (Hiller’s masterful direction provided the engine that also made Silver Streak and The In-Laws such memorably fast-moving comedic sprints.) With his bold and original scoring, Quincy Jones skillfully underlines the urban tension and frantic urgency, and displays a sense of humor, too, adding comic musical counterpoint to the proceedings.

But it’s the Sandy Dennis and Jack Lemmon who hold the entire film together with their outstanding performances and palpable screen chemistry, a seemingly mismatched couple but actually a Classic Movie Dream Team. They are the reason I return to this movie again and again.

 (The less said about the execrable 1990s remake, the better, despite the presence of Goldie Hawn and Steve Martin, whom I love in other films.)

This is an entry in the Mismatched Couples Blogathon hosted by Realweegiemidget Reviews and Cinematic Catharsis. What fun we’ll all have this weekend!




23 comments:

  1. Lemmon can take even less outstanding material and make it work. Have you ever gotten around to seeing "How to Murder Your wife"? I know you said you hadn't seen it in the comments when I posted the review back in 2017, but you've had time... :-D Like me, though, it probably was one you are still "meaning to get around to watching"... (I do that all the time). BTW, keep an eye out for the neighbors themed blogathon that Rebecca at Taking Up Room and I are initiating. (Unless she changed it the title is going to be "There Goes the Neighborhood" and I will be doing the last Belushi/Aykroyd movie "Neighbors".)

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    1. Hi Quiggy, thanks so much for stopping by! LOL, No I still have not seen How To Murder Your Wife; was also recommended to see Jack with Doris Day in a movie called It Happened To Jane. I have a long, long lsit....
      -C

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  2. Great review! Although I've seen several Neil Simon adaptations and Lemmon films, most of Sandy Dennis' work has eluded me. This movie seems the perfect way to remedy this oversight. As a (somewhat) frequent traveler, I'm sure there's quite a bit I can relate to. Thanks a million for joining the Mismatched Couples Blogathon!

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    1. I think you'll love it, Barry, you'll laugh out loud. I think it's among Neil Simon's best screenplays, and the cast led by Dennis and Lemmon can't be beat. Thanks for reading and cohosting the blogathon!

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  3. Good recommendation. I have the dvd somewhere that I need to find. I recently watched Lemmon in the obscure ALEX AND THE GYPSY (1976). He plays a probation officer with a bad mustache.

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    1. Hi Dan, thanks for stopping by and commenting. I have heard of Alex and the Gypsy but never saw it. Love to stumble across obscure films featuring favorite stars.

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  4. Anonymous3:32 AM

    Totally agree; this is way better than the remake, and that's because this one is very reflective of when it was made.

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    1. You're right, it is very much 'of its time' - depicts the city during a real period of decline. Also, Quincy Jones's very contemporary score is so so 1970; it couldn't be any other time! The remake just had no magic and no edge at all. Very flat and Goldie in particular played such a dull version of the character with a mousy brown wig. It was so un-Goldie.

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  5. I am so happy you highlighted this film couple - and I am definitely going to check these out. I've only seen Sandy in about three films, and she's an actress I need to watch more. I always wonder how they cast these couples as this sounds an interesting pair. Added this to Day 2... it's live now.

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    1. Hi Gill, thanks as always for cohosting and coaxing me to join. I really think you'll appreciate this movie! Would not be surprised if Neil Simon himself had a lot of input on the casting of this--

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  6. I've seen this a couple of times over the years and have gotten a big kick out of it, even though I'm a nervous traveler myself. In some ways it's like watching a train wreck in slow motion, but it's a fun and quirky slow train wreck. The various "you can't get there from here"-type cameos keep you smiling in a bittersweet sort of way.

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    1. Hi Brian, thanks for visiting and commenting. I too am a pretty nervous traveler but have thankfully never experienced all these setbacks all at once! Glad you've seen and enjoyed this film too...

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  7. I tried watching this when I was a kid flipping through TV channels, but I couldn't relate. But now, as an adult, I'd love to re-visit it. Your review was enchanting.

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    1. Thank you so much for stopping by and commenting! Hope you will give it another chance...it's one of Neil Simon's very best.

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  8. A very entertaining review, Chris that makes me wonder why I've never watched the out-of-towners! It sounds darkly hilarious and twisted. Plus, Jack lemmon and Sandy Dennis would be reason enough for me to watch!

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    1. John, I think you're going to love it. Great writing and great acting, perfectly paced direction, a memorable score by Quincy Jones and a time capsule of 1970 NYC. Let me know if you see it! Thanks as always for stopping by!

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  9. My husband and I love this film. We love films where we can take a peak into the New York of yesterday. I am a big Jack Lemmon and Sandy Dennis fan too. This film is bonkers in all the funny ways. xox

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    1. Thanks so much for stopping by and commenting! I grew up in NYC in the early 70s. so that is also part of the film's appeal for me. ( I remember watching the World Trade Center being built and at the time they were the tallest buildings in the world, my dad told me.) This is a funny, funny film but the humor springs from reality--very Neil Simon!
      -C

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  10. Another great analysis, Chris! Haven't seen this film in decades but I remember it mined comic gold out of situations that weren't really funny, but of course that's a staple of comedy. Now I'm going to look for the DVD/

    Chris, is there a way for you to fix it so that people are notified of new posts? I just check periodically.

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    1. Hi Bill, thank you so much for your support and encouragement! Yes, do see this movie again; though a time capsule of a bygone era, it is so well written, acted and directed.
      I am not sure if I have that notify function on this old version of blogspot but will look through the widgets. Thank you for checking in periodically! I know I am not prolific like you are!
      -Chris

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  11. This looks like a fun one, and wow, Billy Dee Williams looks so young here.

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    1. Hi rebecca - yes, it is a lot of fun, and I think it's one of Billy Dee's first roles...my favorite performance of his is in Lady Sings the Blues. Thanks for stopping by!

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  12. I didn't see this post until this morning. What a nice treat to see it here. This was one of those movies I saw on afternoon television as a kid and it stuck with me always. I remember being stunned to see Billy Dee Williams pop up (who I knew from "Mahogany," which my mother took me to see at the theater. Gay enough for you?? Ha ha!!) I recall cracking up every time Dennis said, "Oh my God," which was a lot! The whole "start out dressy and slowly become more disheveled" thing was already on my radar even then. But I truly think that watching this movie at that age gave me a lifelong aversion to The Big Apple. It's had quite a few ups and downs and re-dos over the years, but I've still never been tempted. Glad to see you writing again. Thanks!

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