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Valley of the Dolls is a 1967 American drama film based on the 1966 novel of the same name by Jacqueline Susann. The "dolls" within the title is a slang term for downers, mood-altering drugs. The film, which was produced by David Weisbart and directed by Mark Robson, received a great deal of publicity during its production. Upon release it was a commercial success, though universally panned by critics. It was re-released in 1969 following the murder of star Sharon Tate, and once again proved commercially viable. In the years since its production, it has come to be regarded as a camp classic. Co-star Barbara Parkins, attending a July 1997 screening of the film at the Castro Theatre in San Francisco, told the sold-out crowd, "I know why you like it... because it's so bad!"[1] The movie was remade in 1981 for television as Jacqueline Susann's Valley of the Dolls. To date the film has earned $44,432,255 at the box office and $20,000,000 in rentals.[2]
[edit] PlotThe film tells the story of three young women who meet when all are embarking on the beginning of their careers. Neely O'Hara (played by Patty Duke) is a plucky kid with undeniable talent who is working in a Broadway play which stars the legendary actress Helen Lawson (played by Susan Hayward). Jennifer North (played by Sharon Tate), a beautiful blonde with limited talent, is appearing in the chorus. Anne Welles (played by Barbara Parkins)is a New England ingenue who's recently arrived in New York City and is working for a theatrical agency that represents Helen Lawson. The three women become fast friends, sharing the bonds of ambition and the tendency to fall in love with the wrong men. Patty Duke as Neely O'Hara O'Hara becomes a major success and moves to Hollywood to pursue a lucrative film career, but almost immediately falls victim to the eponymous "dolls" — prescription drugs, particularly the barbiturates Seconal and Nembutal and various stimulants. Her career is shattered by her erratic behavior and she is committed to a sanitarium. Meanwhile, Jennifer follows Neely to Hollywood, where she marries nightclub singer Tony Polar (played by Tony Scotti) and becomes pregnant. When she learns he has the hereditary Huntington's chorea — a fact his domineering half-sister and manager Miriam (played by Lee Grant) had been concealing — Jennifer has an abortion. Faced with Tony's mounting medical expenses, Jennifer finds herself working in French "art films" (extremely tame soft-core pornography) to pay the bills. Anne, having become a highly successful model, also falls under the allure of "dolls" to escape her doomed relationship with cad Lyon Burke (played by Paul Burke), who has an affair with Neely. After Jennifer is diagnosed with breast cancer and told she must have a mastectomy, she commits suicide with an overdose of "dolls" as she could not stand the idea of losing one of her breasts. (As they were what got her some fame.) Neely is released from the sanitarium and given a chance to resurrect her career, but the attraction of "dolls" and alcohol proves too strong and she spirals into a hellish decline. In the film, Anne abandons drugs and her unfaithful lover and returns to New England. Lyon Burke ends his affair with Neely and asks Anne to marry him, but she refuses. This "happy ending" was cobbled together by studio demands for an uplifting dénouement; it strays from the original plot of the book, in which Anne stays with Lyon after his affair with Neely and becomes increasingly dependent on drugs. Writer Harlan Ellison, who wrote the original screenplay, took his name off the project because of the ending and the watering-down of his realistic adaptation of the story. [edit] Soundtrack[edit] Cast
[edit] Award nominations
[edit] Differences between the book and film
[edit] Production background
[edit] References
[edit] External links
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