Steve McQueen as Fergie. |
McQueen plays Lieutenant Fergie Howard, who hatches a scheme to take advantage of a state-of-the-art computer--the Magnetic Analyzer Computer Synchrotron--on board his ship. With the help of a scientific genius pal (Jim Hutton) and a gullible fellow officer (Jack Mullaney), Fergie plans to make a fortune playing the roulette wheel at a Venice casino.
Paula Prentiss as a wiener heiress. |
The screenplay for The Honeymoon Machine was written by Lorenzo Semple, Jr. and George Wells. It was based on Semple's 1959 Broadway play The Golden Fleecing, which starred Tom Poston as Fergie. Constance Ford and (Poston's future wife) Suzanne Pleshette played the female leads. The film version was Semple's first big screen credit. He would go on to write major films such as Papillon (1973) and Three Days of the Condor (1975)--though he is best known for creating the original Batman TV series.
Steve McQueen was not the first choice to play Lt. Fergie Howard. MGM wanted Cary Grant for the part (yes, for a role originated by Tom Poston!). When Grant passed, the studio cast McQueen, who had just been signed to a three-picture deal. According to several sources, McQueen didn't like The Honeymoon Machine and walked out of a screening of it. He certainly doesn't put forth much effort on the screen. It's not a bad performance, but clearly McQueen seems to be relying on little more than his natural charisma.
Jack Weston as Signalman Taylor. |
The always affable Hutton was paired with Paula Prentiss in five films. Their height had something to do with the casting--Hutton was 6'5" and Prentiss 5'11"--but they also displayed an effective on-screen chemistry. They make The Honeymoon Machine an entertaining endeavor--though it's one of those frothy 1960s comedies that once consumed is easily forgotten.
The irrelevant title is a reference to "Operation Honeymoon," a missile project involving the computer in the opening scene of the movie. It has nothing to do with the rest of the film!
Odds and Ends (some of them very odd indeed):
ReplyDelete- One of my old TV Guides from '59 or '60 carries a listing for an appearance by Tom Poston and Suzanne Pleshette on The Ed Sullivan Show, performing a scene from The Golden Fleecing.
I showed this one to a friend, who sagely observed " That's showbiz for you - they do a play, do the Sullivan show together, and sure enough, fifty years later ..."
Actually, Poston and Pleshette had a long-standing friendship, through marriages to -and widowhood from - other people. They were among the best-loved folks in their profession, with good reason.
- As a Chicagoan, I have to tell you about Brigid Bazlen, McQueen's leading lady here.
Brigid Bazlen was the 17-year-old daughter of Maggie Daly, who was a major gossip columnist in Chicago for years.
She'd been doing local TV in Chicago (at 16 she had her own kid show, The Blue Fairy), when the larger showbiz forces spotted her; they all had pipelines to Maggie Daly, who did what she could to shepherd her through to rough spots.
Bazlen's first movie was King Of Kings; then came Honeymoon Machine, and then How The West Was Won - and then she went back to Chicago and stayed (there were a few passes at a "comeback" but they didn't last long).
Not much more to say here - a couple of marriages (not successful), a daughter, and becoming her mother's caregiver in her later life.
Brigid Bazlen died at age 45 (smoking).
Draw whatever lesson you like from this ...
(I do sometimes wonder if Steve McQueen knew that his leading lady was underage when he agreed to do this picture ...)
Brigid was also teenager when she did Salome's dance in KING OF KINGS.
DeleteLOVE Paula Prentiss and I would see this movie for her alone.
ReplyDeleteI especially enjoyed Paula Prentiss in her performance in “The Honeymoon Machine.” The movie lit up when she was onscreen. It wasn’t surprising to read she was frequently paired with Jim Hutton because they did have nice chemistry together.
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