Some Like It Hot (1959)

Some Like It Hot (1959)

Tagline: Marilyn Monroe and her bosom companions.

Some Like It Hot movie storyline. When two Chicago musicians, Joe and Jerry, witness the the St. Valentine’s Day massacre, they want to get out of town and get away from the gangster responsible, Spats Colombo. They’re desperate to get a gig out of town but the only job they know of is in an all-girl band heading to Florida. They show up at the train station as Josephine and Daphne, the replacement saxophone and bass players.

They certainly enjoy being around the girls, especially Sugar Kane Kowalczyk who sings and plays the ukulele. Joe in particular sets out to woo her while Jerry/Daphne is wooed by a millionaire, Osgood Fielding III. Mayhem ensues as the two men try to keep their true identities hidden and Spats Colombo and his crew show up for a meeting with several other crime lords.

The all-time outrageous, satirical, comedy farce favorite, Some Like It Hot (1959) is one of the most hilarious, raucous films ever made. The ribald film is a clever combination of many elements: a spoof of 1920-30’s gangster films with period costumes and speakeasies, and romance in a quasi-screwball comedy with one central joke – entangled and deceptive identities, reversed sex roles and cross-dressing.

Some Like It Hot (1959)

In fact, one of the film’s major themes is disguise and masquerade – e.g., the drag costumes of the two male musicians, Joe’s disguise as a Cary Grant-like impotent millionaire, and Jerry’s happiness with a real wealthy, yacht-owning retiree. It’s also a black and white film (reminiscent of the early film era) filled with non-stop action (e.g., the initial car chase), slapstick, and one-liners reminiscent of Marx Brothers and Mack Sennett comedies. An earlier Bob Hope film had the same title: Some Like It Hot (1939). The film’s working title was Not Tonight, Josephine! (its origin was reportedly taken from Napoleon Bonaparte’s response when refusing sex with Empress Josephine).

The exceptional film was the all-time highest-grossing comedy up to its time, one of the most successful films of 1959, and Wilder’s funniest comedy in his career. The film was inspired by director Kurt Hoffmann’s German movie comedy/musical Fanfares of Love (1951) (aka Fanfaren der Liebe) with a similar plot element that writer/director Wilder borrowed: two down-on-their-luck, unemployed jazz musicians dress up as women in order to get two weeks of work in an all-women’s dance band bound for Florida, after witnessing a gang-land massacre in Prohibition-Era Chicago and being pursued by the mob.

Only a few other cross-dressing comedies have come close to approximating the film’s daring hilarity: Tootsie (1982), La Cage Aux Folles (1978) and Victor/Victoria (1982). Some Like It Hot also inspired the Broadway musical Sugar that opened in 1972. This was Marilyn Monroe’s second film with director Billy Wilder, her first being The Seven Year Itch (1955).

Countless stories have circulated regarding her erratic behavior and health / personal problems, her ‘no-shows’ and frequent tardiness to the set, her self-doubts and numerous re-takes required for some scenes, and her inability to remember her lines. Director Billy Wilder’s original choice for the role of Sugar was Mitzi Gaynor, not Marilyn Monroe, and Danny Kaye and Bob Hope were to be the two male leads. The film’s preview in December 1958 at a greater LA theatre, when it was paired with the Tennessee Williams Southern drama Suddenly, Last Summer (1959) about cannibalism and a threatened lobotomy, was also a disaster.

Some Like It Hot Movie Poster (1959)

Some Like It Hot (1959)

Directed by: Billy Wilder
Starring: Marilyn Monroe, Tony Curtis, Jack Lemmon, George Raft, Pat O’Brien, Joe E. Brown, Nehemiah Persoff, Joan Shawlee, Billy Gray, George E. Stone, Mike Mazurki, Harry Wilson, Beverly Wills
Screenplay by: Billy Wilder, I.A.L. Diamond
Production Design by:
Cinematography by: Charles Lang
Film Editing by: Arthur P. Schmidt
Set Decoration by: Edward G. Boyle
Art Direction by: Ted Haworth
Music by: Adolph Deutsch
Distributed by: United Artists
Release Date: March 29, 1959

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