Dick Van Dyke plays the title role in this gentle comedy about the staff of an
eccentric old woman who thinks herself far richer than she is. Dame Edith
Evans's money disappeared a long time ago, but she's such a grand old girl that
no one can tell her otherwise. So she dispenses checks as a leading philanthropist
while Van Dyke and her entire household staff have become experts at pulling
heists to pay her to the manor born style of living. Not incidentally as a side
benefit, they live pretty good too.
It all might fall apart though when Barbara Feldon is hired as a secretary to
help with one of Evans's projects, Dictionary For Dummies. Staff always gets
cleared through Van Dyke as the butler. He's thrown for a loss. Equally
Feldon gets suspicious of strange things going on.
Van Dyke and Feldon have a good chemistry going with them. Evans is
properly dotty as the role calls for. Best in the supporting cast as John McGiver as one of the servants who is a former minister. He needs reassurance
from Scripture every time the crew pulls a heist.
There's a hilarious final caper during Christmas shopping season at Gimbels
which as we know is no more in New York City. I guess someone decided that
Gimbels needed a cinema advertiser the way Miracle On 34th Street is for
Macy's.
After 50 years Fitzwilly still holds up quite well.