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The Opposite Sex
is MGM’s 1956 misguided musical remake of their ‘39 classic, The Women. The re-told comic tale of a catty
circle of women and their marital misadventures, though slightly tweaked, is
basically the same. The major differences are that MGM decided to add music and
men to the recipe—and the resulting concoction is one flat cinematic cake.
| Yes, these dolls like to get the dish! |
I
don’t have a problem with remakes per se. But they are often Hollywood’s way to
make a quick buck, and remakes rarely improve upon the original. MGM was on a
remake rampage during postwar Hollywood, when studios were devastated after
they were forced to divest themselves of their theaters and especially, by the
competition of television. The fact that studios were slow to change with
post-war audience tastes didn’t help, either. Especially, MGM, who seemed
intent on remaking their entire film library—they just added color, widescreen,
and zero creativity.
| The big confrontation in 'The Opposite Sex.' |
After
leaving MGM in ’53, June Allyson had a good run of playing noble wives to Jimmy
Stewart, William Holden, Alan Ladd, Cornell Wilde, etc. Then she came back to
MGM in ‘56 to film The Opposite Sex,
to play Norma Shearer’s role of the long-suffering wife. June should have
heeded fellow former MGM star Joan Crawford’s mistake, in returning to her alma
mater to film Torch Song!
| June Allyson as the good wife in a remake of 'The Women.' |
Speaking
of remakes, June Allyson herself appeared in three in a row. In 1956, Allyson
headlined The Opposite Sex, a musical
remake of MGM’s The Women. The same
year, June appeared opposite Jack Lemmon in You
Can’t Run Away From It, a musical remake of Frank Capra’s It Happened One Night. Finally, in ’57,
June took over Carole Lombard’s most famous role as the scatterbrained society
girl in My Man Godfrey, opposite
David Niven. Amazingly, this wasn’t a
musical remake! This tepid trio, plus a few ill-advised attempts at heavy drama
pretty much demolished Allyson’s film career. June, who was pushing 40 during
this time, had already outlasted many contemporaries, and soon got her audience
back on television.
Ann
Sheridan was already past 40 when she appeared in The Opposite Sex. As the writer who acerbically notes the society
women’s shenanigans, the role captures Sheridan’s no-nonsense side. However,
“Amanda” doesn’t possess Sheridan’s sassy good humor that made her renowned in
the ‘40s as the “Oomph Girl.” And since The
Opposite Sex doesn’t play to most of this great cast’s strengths, this
movie lacks oomph, as well.
| Joan Blondell is the always pregnant Edith & Dolores Gray is THE gossip Sylvia. |
Joan
Blondell plays Edith Potter, the always pregnant pal with a platoon of kids.
Blondell is a bright spot in any movie, but here, she’s 50 and looks it, and
not particularly believable as a 30-something society woman.
Ann
Miller, who plays the sassy Paulette Goddard role, doesn’t get to sing and
dance in this musical—okayyy… Annie’s
big scene is the catfight at the Reno divorce ranch, and then she’s on the
sidelines for the movie’s remainder. The
Opposite Sex and The Great American
Pastime, a minor league comedy about Little League baseball, ended Miller’s
contract at MGM.
Agnes
Moorehead, MGM’s great character actress, plays a surprisingly more
straightforward version of the Duchess role, played to the hilt by Mary Boland
in ‘39. Though Moorehead’s contract ended with Metro in ’51 after Showboat, she freelanced with the studio
for another 15 years. In the ‘60s, Agnes gained a whole new audience on
television as Endora, the witchy mother-in-law on Bewitched.
| Delores Gray as Sylvia Fowler. |
| RuPaul as the opposite sex! |
Dolores
Gray plays the showy role of Sylvia Fowler, the cattiest of the characters. One
of those “big” Broadway personalities who didn’t fare well in Hollywood, Gray gives
her all, but comes off preening like RuPaul. The fact that Dolores always
looked like she just sucked on a lemon didn’t help her screen image, either. Gray’s
short-term contract with MGM ended the next year with Designing Woman, yet another Metro remake, of the fabled
Tracy-Hepburn comedy, Woman of the Year.
In
a cast of mature actresses, there’s 23-year-old Joan Collins as Crystal Allen.
The husband-stealing vixen role had helped Joan Crawford regain her footing at
Metro back in ’39. Collins, once called “the poor man’s Elizabeth Taylor,”
certainly is dolled up at Taylor’s home studio to look as much like Elizabeth
as possible. Yet, as soon as Collins opens her mouth, the effect is ruined.
Joan’s attempt at an American accent, to hide her British accent, gives her slightly
nasal voice an artificial tone. Joan’s way with brittle bitchy humor is evident
even here, but there’s none of the conviction or empathy that is the mark of a
great star, like Joan Crawford or Elizabeth Taylor. Though she’s occasionally
amusing, there’s no reason to care about Collins’ Crystal. Joan comes off as
cartoonish and flat as she previously did in The Girl in the Red Velvet Swing, Fox’s greatest effort to make her
a star. Collins never looked better on film, but great movie careers aren’t built
on looking like another star, as many ‘50s Marilyn imitators can attest.
Don’t
get me wrong. While the cast of The
Opposite Sex doesn’t have the pedigree of Norma Shearer, Joan Crawford, and
Rosalind Russell, they are all stellar stars in their own right. But I can’t
help but feeling that this movie must have seemed dated even in 1956, when so
many stars in this cast were already considered past their sell by date.
| MGM was selling 'The Opposite Sex' as hot stuff when the cast was actually past their sell by date by 1956. |
| Collins' Alexis and Evans' Krystal faking it on 'Dynasty!' |
Side
note to Dynasty fans: Joan Collins
hated those Alexis/Krystal “catfight” scenes and stuntmen were routinely used. The Opposite Sex may just be why Joan
hates fight scenes. When June’s wife confronts Joan’s homewrecker, the scene
culminates in a slap. Apparently, director David Miller told June to not pull
her punches and really slap Joan. He then told Collins that Allyson would stop
just before connecting. Well, 5’1” June was a powerhouse, because she wallops
Joan so hard that Collins’ earring goes flying. Joan was not happy.
| Allyson slaps Joan's Crystal Allen for real in 'The Opposite Sex.' Note Collin's earring goes flying! |
For
a musical, The Opposite Sex’ songs
are utterly awful. Except for “The Young Man with a Horn,” a June Allyson hit
reprised from Two Girls and a Sailor a
dozen years before, the “original songs” feel anything but. They are mostly mock
show tunes are right up there with Valley
of the Dolls in the cringe-worthy department.
| June's jumpsuit musical number, color-coordinated! |
| Was Jack June's fashion inspiration? |
June
Allyson as a singer is an acquired taste. If you enjoy her raspy, flat singing,
you’re in for a treat. If not, you might puzzle over June Allyson singing about
needing sex “Now, Baby, Now,” dressed in a blue jumpsuit that makes her
resemble Mrs. Jack LaLanne. Most odd is a teary ballad, sandwiched between her
sandpapery-voiced, swingin’ numbers. June lip synchs badly to a Doris Day-type
singer named Jo Ann Greer, in a key dramatic moment—so obviously not her. At
least it wasn’t India Adams, Joan Crawford’s dramatic dubber from Torch Song!
| Dick Shawn and his dolls putting over the title musical number. |
Dick
Shawn, an insufferable Broadway comedian, sings the movie’s title number as a
psychiatrist’s patient—which seems especially apt for this film. Shawn’s hung
up on beautiful women, yowling about them, and makes like Jerry Lewis in
over-aged juvenile mode. The women he dreams about end up on the office’s fire
place mantel, gyrating along. And Jim Backus is the shrink, treating us to a
few Mr. Magoo mannerisms to emphasize
Dick’s horniness.
| Joan Collins' bananas musical number! |
“Yellow
Gold (The Banana Song)” features some calypso singing guy, along with Joan
Collins and Morticia Addams herself, Carolyn Jones, in dark makeup as tropical island
beauties. At least these gals makeup looks closer to the “Light Egyptian”
makeup MGM created for Lena Horne than the “Mocha Mommie” look that Joan
Crawford sported in her camp classic number “Two-Faced Woman.”
Aside
from the mind-numbing musical numbers, there’s other big difference in The Opposite Sex from The Women. The much-talked about men are
actually seen and not just talked about. However, when the only two male
characters that even register are Leslie Nielson as Allyson’s straying hubby and
Jeff Richards as singing cowboy Buck Winston, you wonder why the screenwriters
even bothered.
Aside
from the “improvements,” the big problem is that this movie feels 100 percent
artificial and from a past era. Except for establishing shots in NYC, everything
is shot on a sound stage and looks like it.
| Is Leslie Nielsen calling his agent? |
Another
pet peeve: Why are most of MGM’s sets in their ‘50s and early ‘60s comedies and
dramas seem to be visions of pale pink and blue? Their watercolor-like Metro
Color only emphasizes the baby nursery color palette.
The
Helen Rose costumes are so over the top that they range from drag
queen-friendly to flat out fug-llly. The
movie’s color schemes try hard to be “modern” but also suggest the influence of
director Vincente Minnelli’s renowned use of unusual color combos. Here, in
lesser hands, they just look nausea-inducing, especially in the musical
numbers: hot pink costumes surrounded by bananas; June’s powder blue jumpsuit
surrounded by purple bass instruments and aqua stage curtains; and the casts’
rainbow connection costumes whenever they come together in a group scene.
| A rainbow connection of MGM fashion...and Buck Winston, too! |
The Opposite Sex
is still watchable for star-gazing, but there’s also something sad here,
knowing that this cast was on their way out as top Hollywood movie stars. Even
young Joan Collins had to wait another 25 years before TV’s Dynasty finally made her a star. The only thing sadder was another remake of The Women in 2008. This version featured
the same mixed bag type of stars as The
Opposite Sex. Murphy Brown’s Diane
English’s attempt to update the original story was even more misguided than the
’56 version, with most of its wit and vitality stripped away.
| Joan Collins getting the Taylor treatment at home girl Liz' studio MGM. |
Here’s
a recap for all these women: 1939’s The
Women is a must-see; ‘56’s The
Opposite Sex is a musty maybe, and ‘08’s The Women is a must-avoid!
| 'The Opposite Sex' cast pose on their leaning boards to keep their Helen Rose gowns wrinkle-free! |