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Love in a Goldfish Bowl

  • 1961
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 28m
IMDb RATING
5.1/10
158
YOUR RATING
Fabian, Toby Michaels, and Tommy Sands in Love in a Goldfish Bowl (1961)
ComedyMusicalRomance

A college student and his best female friend and fellow student plan to spend the Easter holidays together. Then an Italian seaman shows up and creates a love triangle.A college student and his best female friend and fellow student plan to spend the Easter holidays together. Then an Italian seaman shows up and creates a love triangle.A college student and his best female friend and fellow student plan to spend the Easter holidays together. Then an Italian seaman shows up and creates a love triangle.

  • Director
    • Jack Sher
  • Writers
    • Jack Sher
    • Irene Kamp
  • Stars
    • Tommy Sands
    • Fabian
    • Toby Michaels
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.1/10
    158
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Jack Sher
    • Writers
      • Jack Sher
      • Irene Kamp
    • Stars
      • Tommy Sands
      • Fabian
      • Toby Michaels
    • 8User reviews
    • 3Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos10

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    Top cast25

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    Tommy Sands
    Tommy Sands
    • Gordon Slide
    Fabian
    Fabian
    • Giuseppe La Barba
    Toby Michaels
    Toby Michaels
    • Blythe Holloway
    Edward Andrews
    Edward Andrews
    • Sen. Clyde Holloway
    John McGiver
    John McGiver
    • Dr. Frawley
    Denny Miller
    Denny Miller
    • Oscar Flegler
    Dee J. Thompson
      Majel Barrett
      Majel Barrett
      • Alice
      Susan Silo
      Susan Silo
      • Jenny
      Elizabeth MacRae
      Elizabeth MacRae
      • Jackie
      Robert Patten
      Robert Patten
      • Lt. J.G. Marchon
      Shirley O'Hara
      Shirley O'Hara
      • Clara Dumont
      Tom Quain
      • Playboy at Party
      Tiger
      • Gaugin
      Jan Sterling
      Jan Sterling
      • Sandra Slide
      Phillip Baird
      • Gregory
      • (uncredited)
      Nancy Downey
      • Wet Girl at Party
      • (uncredited)
      Dolores Faith
      Dolores Faith
      • Pie-Throwing Girl
      • (uncredited)
      • Director
        • Jack Sher
      • Writers
        • Jack Sher
        • Irene Kamp
      • All cast & crew
      • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

      User reviews8

      5.1158
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      Featured reviews

      4bkoganbing

      Dyed blond to not confuse the two idols

      I saw this film way back when it first came out and the only thing I remembered about it was that Tommy Sands dyed his hair blond for this production. Seeing it now I think it was clear that they wanted both him and Fabian to have a distinct look. Tommy's hair was as black as Fabian and they could have been related. Since Jan Sterling was playing Tommy's mother it was Sands who got to become a blond like her.

      The other thing I learned that the title song which is sung by Sands over the opening credits was written by Burt Bacharach and Hal David one of their early numbers. The song Love In A Goldfish Bowl is hardly counted as one of their masterworks, pleasant though it is.

      With the Code still firmly in place the film is an innocuous teen comedy about a boy and girl with parent issues who run away from school in Colorado and live at the boy's mother beach house in Balboa over spring break. The boy being Sands and the girl being Toby Michaels. You might best remember Toby Michaels whose career wasn't long as the ill fated trading post owner's daughter in Sergeant Rutledge. Her father is a rather well meaning but pompous US Senator played by Edward Andrews as only Andrews can play it.

      Tommy's mother is Jan Sterling a jet setting socialite who probably didn't halt partying even having Tommy. He's a free spirit like his mother.

      Things go all right until a sailing accident brings in the Coast Guard and a handsome sailor played by Fabian. After that all kinds of complications set in.

      Love In A Goldfish Bowl was no strain on any of the performers. I'm only guessing about Tommy Sands's blond hair. Someone ought to ask him about it.
      8adrienneenterprises

      A Beach Movie before there were beach movies

      I am a great fan of the beach movie genre, i know they are corny and dated, but that's their charm. They are a great snapshot of 60's America. However, this isnt a Beach Movie as it came out two years before the first one, but its like the bluepront of genre before it got started. Tommy Sands plays the Frankie Avalon character and Toby Micheals plays Annette. Fabian plays the bad guy as he would in subsequent films. I kept expecting a cheezy surf number to come on, with Dick Dale and Donna Loren, but I guess thats before their time in the movies and isnt the point here. Edward Andrews and John McGiver play the father and school teacher elements and well cast they are too. It was a pleasant suprise to find this online, as I thought I had seen all the films of this genre, but it just goes to show you have to keep looking. Watching the once, but not something you would want to watch again. Recommended.
      5wes-connors

      Tommy Sands and Fabian in Love Triangle

      Seeking a peaceful Easter vacation without parents, handsome blond Tommy Sands (as Gordon Slide) and likewise cute light-haired Toby Michaels (as Blythe Holloway) decide to spend their break at Mr. Sands' empty Balboa beach house. The two college students are not lovers; they are, and appear intent on remaining, platonic. After moving in, Ms. Michaels sends out signals she may be available for intimacy, but Sands doesn't seem interested. Following a boating mishap, Sands and Michaels are rescued by the Coast Guard. Leading the group, handsome Hampton Bays, LI clam-digger Fabian (as Guiseppi "Seppi" La Barba) is attracted to Michaels. The two begin dating, which leads Sands to question his feelings for Michaels...

      Whatever made Sands bleach his hair for this one erred. If the goal was differentiate Sands from Fabian, it wasn't needed; young viewers of the time would certainly know Tommy Sands from Fabian. If anything, they made Sands look like a blond Frankie Avalon. Sands sings the title song (by Burt Bacharach and Hal David) and Fabian is credited with singing the chorally-sung "You're Only Young Once"; both were at the end of their hit record careers, and neither song made the national charts. Adults Jan Sterling (as Sandra Slide) and Edward Andrews (as Clyde Holloway) are adept as the parents who just don't understand. Elizabeth MacRae (as Jackie) is an older floozy who amusingly tries to get Sands aroused.

      ***** Love in a Goldfish Bowl (7/12/61) Jack Sher ~ Tommy Sands, Fabian, Toby Michaels, Jan Sterling
      5Uriah43

      Two Friends on an Easter Vacation Together

      This film begins with two college friends named "Gordon Slide" (Tommy Sands) and "Blythe Holloway" (Toby Michaels) deciding to spend the upcoming Easter weekend together at a beach house rather than going back to their respective homes. The problem is that, because Gordon is male and Blythe is female, the college dean "Dr. Frowley" (John McGiver) is concerned about them spending so much time together. Additionally, he also considers Gordon to be a bad influence on Blythe as she is so innocent and naïve. As far as Gordon and Blythe are concerned, neither of them has a romantic interest in the other and as far as they are concerned, their relationship is strictly platonic. They are best friends, but not lovers. In any case, having deceived Blythe's widowed father "Senator Clyde Holloway" (Edward Andrews) and Gordon's divorced mother "Sandra Slide" (Jan Sterling) concerning their secret plan, they then head off for a quite weekend on the beach. Unfortunately, things don't go nearly as planned, due to a boating accident at sea which results in a Coast Guard vessel having to rescue them before they drown. And it's during this time that Blythe meets a young sailor named "Giuseppe La Barba" (Fabian) which results in an immediate attraction between the two. Gordon, on the other hand, is suspicious of Giuseppe's intentions and begins to react in an overly protective manner. Likewise, a stray dog they adopted named "Gaugin" (Tiger) also reacts in a hostile manner to him as well. Be that as it may, as the romantic relationship between Giuseppe and Blythe increases, Gordon starts to develop feelings of jealousy--and that's when things really become complicated for all concerned. Now, rather than reveal any more, I will just say that this was a slightly dull comedy which never really seemed to kick into high gear at any point. It just wasn't as funny as it could have been. Likewise, the relationship between Gordon and Blythe--which was the entire point of the film--could have also used a bit more humor as well. That being said, while I don't consider this to be a bad movie by any means, it wasn't nearly as good as it could have been and I have rated it accordingly. Average.
      5planktonrules

      A film about a three-some....minus the sex.

      "Love in a Goldfish Bowl" was a sex comedy which is meant to appeal to young people of 1961. However, it came at a time when mores were changing...though the film manages to be very hip and sexy...as well as chaste and sexless...at the same time!

      Gordon (Tommy Sands) is a college student who drives the director of the school batty. However, his rule breaking and schemes all seem incredibly dull...even when they COULD be very sexy. His latest scheme is to sneak off during Spring Break with his girlfriend, Blythe (Toby Michaels). He has told his mother in Honolulu that he's staying on campus during the break and he has Blythe tell her father she's staying on campus to get tutored in order to bring up her Geometry grade. But both instead head to the beach in California, as Gordon's mother owns a beachfront house...and the pair can be there without a chaperone and get into all sorts of nonsense. Weirdly, however, they get into absolutely NONE...with them both sleeping in separate rooms and behaving more like friends than lovers.

      This very dull arrangement is thrown for a loop when the pair are sailing and their boat capsizes. The Coast Guard save them...and one of the sailors (Fabian) is smitten with Blythe and begins spending a lot of time with her at the beachhouse. And, the more time he spends there, the more prudish and fatherly Gordon behaves towards Blythe. At the same time, Gordon's plan is unraveling. The dean has discovered the ruse and both of the co-eds' parents are going in search of their errant children.

      The early 1960s was an odd time in Hollywood. Since the 50s, films began to be marketed more and more to young adults and teens. But by the 60s, the sexual revolution began sneaking into movies...but in very small increments compared to the late 60s, when all bets were off! This film shows this strange time where sexual topics weren't exactly taboo but were very tastefully and chastely done! It might come off as a bit naive when you see this today.

      Overall, this is a mildly amusing time-passer. It definitely starts off well enough but loses steam as the film progressed. You wonder how much different the film might have been had it been made just 5-6 years later!

      By the way, you might be surprised to see Sands in this film as he's a blond. Perhaps the filmmakers thought he and Fabian looked too similar to each other. Either way, it was jarring to see Sands' hair!

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      Storyline

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      Did you know

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      • Trivia
        Debut of actress Elizabeth MacRae.
      • Quotes

        Blythe Holloway: [to gas station attendant who yelled at her] Fly off, moron!

      • Soundtracks
        Love in a Goldfish Bowl
        Music by Burt Bacharach

        Lyrics by Hal David

        Performed by Tommy Sands

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      Details

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      • Release date
        • October 1, 1961 (Japan)
      • Country of origin
        • United States
      • Languages
        • English
        • Italian
      • Also known as
        • The Beach Pad
      • Filming locations
        • Paramount Studios - 5555 Melrose Avenue, Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, USA(Studio)
      • Production company
        • Paramount Pictures
      • See more company credits at IMDbPro

      Tech specs

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      • Runtime
        • 1h 28m(88 min)
      • Sound mix
        • Mono
      • Aspect ratio
        • 2.35 : 1

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