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Damn Yankees (1958 film)

Damn Yankees (retitled What Lola Wants in the United Kingdom) is a 1958 American widescreen musical sports romantic comedy film. It was directed by George Abbott and Stanley Donen from a screenplay by Abbott, adapted from his and Douglass Wallop's book of the 1955 musical of the same name, itself based on the 1954 novel The Year the Yankees Lost the Pennant by Wallop. The story line is a take on the Faust legend[3] and centers on the New York Yankees and Washington Senators baseball teams. With the exception of Tab Hunter in the role of Joe Hardy (replacing Stephen Douglass), the Broadway principals reprise their stage roles, including Gwen Verdon as Lola.

Damn Yankees
Theatrical release poster
Directed byGeorge Abbott
Stanley Donen
Written byGeorge Abbott (play)
Douglass Wallop (play & novel)
Screenplay byGeorge Abbott
Based on
Damn Yankees
by George Abbot
Douglass Wallop
Richard Adler
Jerry Ross
Produced byGeorge Abbott
Stanley Donen
Frederick Brisson (associate producer)
Robert E. Griffith (associate producer)
Harold Prince (associate producer)
StarringTab Hunter
Gwen Verdon
Ray Walston
CinematographyHarold Lipstein
Edited byFrank Bracht
Music byRichard Adler
Jerry Ross
Distributed byWarner Bros.
Release date
  • September 19, 1958 (1958-09-19)[1]
Running time
111 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Box office$2.6 million[2]

A notable difference between the film and stage versions was Gwen Verdon's performance of the song "A Little Brains". Verdon's suggestive hip movements (as choreographed by Bob Fosse and performed on stage) were considered too risqué for a mainstream 1958 American audience, and so she simply pauses at these points in the film. The title was changed in the United Kingdom to avoid use of the word "Damn" on film posters, hoardings, and cinema marquees.

Plot

Joe Boyd (Robert Shafer) is a middle-aged fan of the unsuccessful Washington Senators baseball team. His obsession with baseball is driving a wedge between him and his wife, Meg—a problem shared by many other wives of Senators supporters. Meg leads them in lamenting their husbands' fixation with the sport ("Six Months Out of Every Year").

After seeing his team lose yet again, Joe rashly declares that he would sell his soul to the devil to see his team beat the Yankees. No sooner has he spoken than the devil appears before him in the guise of a suave conman, Applegate. Applegate claims he can go one better—he can restore Joe's youth, making him the player who wins them the pennant. Joe agrees, but persuades Applegate to give him an escape clause. Applegate declares that Joe can back out, but only the day before the last game of the season—afterwards, his soul belongs to the devil.

Joe bids an emotional farewell to a sleeping Meg ("Goodbye Old Girl"), after which Applegate transforms him into a dashing young man, now called Joe Hardy.

The next day, the Senators' practice is a fiasco. Their manager, Ben Van Buren, gives the team a rousing pep talk ("Heart"). Applegate arrives and, introducing himself as a scout, presents his new discovery—Joe Hardy from Hannibal, Missouri. Joe promptly hits baseball after baseball out of the park in an impromptu batting practice. As he is signed to a Senators contract, female sportswriter Gloria Thorpe plans to quickly get Joe into the public eye ("Shoeless Joe from Hannibal, Mo.").

With tremendous home runs and game-saving catches, Joe leads the Senators on a long winning streak into pennant contention and becomes a national hero. Joe misses Meg dreadfully, however, and keeps sneaking back to his old neighborhood for a glimpse of her. Realising this could ruin his plans, Applegate summons his demonic right-hand girl, Lola, a seductress who was once known as the ugliest woman in her territory, but sold her soul to Applegate in exchange for eternal youth and beauty. She is ordered to make Joe forget his wife, a task Lola is confident she can carry out ("A Little Brains, A Little Talent").

Joe succeeds in getting close to Meg by renting a room in his old house; Meg is unaware of his baseball stardom. Applegate and Lola corner Joe in the baseball team's locker room, where Lola confidently tries to seduce Joe ("Whatever Lola Wants"). But she has her first failure—Joe dearly loves Meg, and does not fall for Lola's tempting ways. Applegate angrily banishes Lola.

By the end of the season, the Senators are on the verge of overtaking the Yankees, so the Washington fans hold a lavish tribute ("Who's Got the Pain?"). Gloria, having returned from Hannibal, Missouri, where no residents remember a Joe Hardy, confronts Applegate about the player's true identity. Applegate implies that Joe is actually Shifty McCoy, a corrupt minor leaguer playing under a pseudonym. By the end of the tribute, newspapers arrive accusing Joe of being Shifty. He must meet with the baseball commissioner for a hearing or else be thrown out of baseball—on the day he plans to switch back to being Joe Boyd.

At the hearing, Meg and her female neighbors arrive as material witnesses, attesting to Joe's honesty and falsely claiming he grew up with them in Hannibal. The commissioner acquits Joe, but as everyone celebrates, midnight strikes and Joe realizes he is doomed.

Applegate has planned for the Senators to lose the pennant on the last day of the season, resulting in thousands of heart attacks, nervous breakdowns and suicides of Yankee-haters across the country. He is reminded of his other evil misdeeds throughout history ("Those Were the Good Old Days").

Following the hearing, Lola lets Joe know she's drugged Applegate so that he will sleep through the last game. They commiserate over their condemned situation at a nightclub ("Two Lost Souls").

Late the next afternoon, Applegate awakens to find the Senators/Yankees game well underway. Realizing Lola has tricked him—and worse, that Lola has actually fallen in love with Joe—he turns her back into an ugly hag.

They arrive at the ballpark by the ninth inning, the Senators up by a run. With two outs, one of the Yankee sluggers hits a long drive to the outfield. As he backs up to make the catch, Applegate impulsively switches Joe Hardy back into Joe Boyd in full view of the stadium. Now paunchy and middle-aged, Joe makes a final lunge at the ball and catches it, winning the pennant for Washington. As his teammates celebrate and fans storm the field, an unrecognized Joe escapes from the ballpark.

Late that night, as the public wonders why Joe Hardy has disappeared, Joe Boyd meekly returns to his house. A tearful Meg hugs him and they sing to each other ("There's Something about an Empty Chair"). Applegate materializes once again and offers Joe the chance to resume being Joe Hardy in time for the World Series; he also makes Lola young and beautiful again to tempt Joe. Joe ignores him, and a tantrum-throwing Applegate vanishes for good.

Cast

 
Hunter as Joe Hardy

Uncredited in archive footage are Yogi Berra, Mickey Mantle, Bill Skowron, and other New York Yankees baseball players, plus Art Passarella (umpire)

Song list

[4]

  • "Overture" — Orchestra
  • "Six Months Out of Every Year" — Joe Boyd, Meg Boyd and chorus
  • "Goodbye Old Girl" — Joe Boyd/Joe Hardy
  • "Heart" — Van Buren, Smokey, Rocky
  • "Shoeless Joe from Hannibal, Mo" — Gloria
  • "There's Something About an Empty Chair" — Meg Boyd
  • "Whatever Lola Wants" — Orchestra
  • "A Little Brains, a Little Talent" — Lola
  • "Whatever Lola Wants" — Lola
  • "Those Were the Good Old Days" — Mr. Applegate
  • "Who's Got the Pain" — Lola and Mambo dancer (Bob Fosse)
  • "Two Lost Souls" — Lola and Joe Hardy
  • "There's Something About an Empty Chair (reprise)" — Joe Boyd and Meg Boyd

The "Overture" and "Two Lost Souls" are noticeably different from Broadway production in orchestration, and many of the lines in "Six Months Out of Every Year" were cut from the film. "A Little Brains, a Little Talent" has a few lyrical differences.

Some songs appear in different order than the original Broadway and subsequent versions, and some songs ("Near to You", "The Game", "A Man Doesn't Know", and "Heart (Reprise)") were cut entirely, which left Tab Hunter with very few songs. "There's Something About an Empty Chair" was not in the original stage version or in any stage versions since. While Bob Fosse is not credited for the Mambo number, Tab Hunter thanks him by name as they come off the stage.

Reception

Reviews from critics were generally positive. Bosley Crowther of The New York Times wrote that Verdon's performance was "one of the hottest and heartiest we've seen years ... Miss Verdon has the sort of fine, fresh talent that the screen badly needs these days. But lest she seem to be the whole show, let us hasten to proclaim that there's a great deal more to 'Damn Yankees' than this wonderful red-headed dame. Like the George Abbott stage show before it, it has class, imagination, verve and a good many of the same performers who did so charmingly by it on Broadway".[5]

Variety wrote: "That 10 of the top 11 players, plus creators from writer to costume designer, have been transferred en masse from Broadway just about insures a film that is as least as good as its stage counterpart. What stands out like an inside-the-park home run is the skill and inventiveness with which the film is coated, thus making 'Damn Yankees' a funny picture",[6]

Harrison's Reports called the film "a generally entertaining show even though it does not rate a rave notice. In treatment and presentation it is, for the most part, very much like a photographed stage play, in spite of the fact that the camera allowed for a wider range of activity".[7]

Richard L. Coe of The Washington Post wrote of the play's transition to the screen, "It could be argued that perhaps it follows too closely, that this is too clearly a photographed stage musical. That I didn't mind in the least, because 'Damn Yankees' is a swell musical comedy and I'm a sucker for musical comedy".[8]

John McCarten of The New Yorker found Walston and Verdon "just as delightful" on the screen as they were in the stage version, adding, "Although expository dialogue occasionally hobbles the proceedings, 'Damn Yankees' is for the most part commendably brisk, and the music and lyrics, by Richard Adler and Jerry Ross, are uniformly lively".[9]

A somewhat mixed review in The Monthly Film Bulletin praised Verdon as bringing "great presence and a neatly sardonic humour" to the film while describing the score as "pleasant but unmemorable", and summarized the picture as "a musical made with a great deal of verve and some wit, but without much natural gaiety".[10]

The film opened in Denver at the Centre Theatre and grossed $17,000 in its opening week.[11] After expanding it became number two at the U.S. box office in the last week of September[12] before moving to number one a week later during the World Series between the New York Yankees and the Milwaukee Braves, displacing Cat on a Hot Tin Roof.[13]

Accolades

Other honors

The film is recognized by American Film Institute in these lists:

Locations

Most of the baseball action was filmed at Los Angeles' Wrigley Field, a site often used in the 1950s for Hollywood films about baseball. The film contains footage of the famous left field wall of Griffith Stadium in Washington (home of the Senators)—and the house that protruded into the center field area—which gave author Douglas Wallop the plot device that allowed Joe Hardy to escape from the ballpark.

Remake

In 2009, Craig Zadan and Neil Meron attempted to produce a remake for New Line Cinema, with Jim Carrey as the Devil and Jake Gyllenhaal as Joe Boyd. Lola was never cast, and the project has been postponed indefinitely.[22]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Damn Yankees - Details". AFI Catalog of Feature Films. Retrieved June 24, 2018.
  2. ^ "Top Grossers of 1958". Variety. 7 January 1959. p. 48. Please note figures are for US and Canada only and are domestic rentals accruing to distributors as opposed to theatre gross
  3. ^ Fitzsimmons, Lorna, ed. (2008). Lives of Faust: The Faust Theme in Literature and Music. A Reader. New York: Walter De Gruyter. p. 12. ISBN 9783110973976. Retrieved 11 July 2017.
  4. ^ "'Damn Yankees!' (1958) - Soundtracks" InternetMovieDatabase.com, accessed August 21, 2011
  5. ^ Crowther, Bosley (September 27, 1958). "Screen: 'Damn Yankees'". The New York Times: 12.
  6. ^ "Damn Yankees". Variety. September 17, 1958. p. 6.
  7. ^ "'Damn Yankees' with Tab Hunter, Gwen Verdon and Ray Walston". Harrison's Reports: 148. September 13, 1958.
  8. ^ Coe, Richard L. (September 26, 1958). "'Damn Yanks' Is Still Swell". The Washington Post. p. C8.
  9. ^ McCarten, John (October 4, 1958). "The Current Cinema". The New Yorker. p. 158.
  10. ^ "What Lola Wants". The Monthly Film Bulletin. 25 (299): 152. December 1958.
  11. ^ "Yanks' Wow 17G, Denver, 'Gigi' 12G". Variety. September 24, 1958. p. 9. Retrieved May 8, 2023 – via Archive.org.
  12. ^ Wear, Mike (October 8, 1958). "Metro's Hot & Fat 'Cat' Dominates September Boxoffice; 2-3-4 Spots To 'Pacific,' 'Gigi,' 'Big Country'". Variety. p. 4. Retrieved May 26, 2019 – via Archive.org.
  13. ^ "National Box Office Survey". Variety. October 8, 1958. p. 4. Retrieved March 10, 2019 – via Archive.org.
  14. ^ "The 31st Academy Awards (1959) Nominees and Winners". Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. Retrieved 2 July 2017.
  15. ^ "BAFTA Awards: Film in 1959". BAFTA. 1959. Retrieved June 3, 2021.
  16. ^ "11th DGA Awards". Directors Guild of America Awards. Retrieved July 5, 2021.
  17. ^ "Damn Yankees – Golden Globes". HFPA. Retrieved July 5, 2021.
  18. ^ "Awards Winners". wga.org. Writers Guild of America. Archived from the original on 2012-12-05. Retrieved 2010-06-06.
  19. ^ "AFI's 100 Years...100 Songs Nominees" (PDF). Retrieved 2016-08-13.
  20. ^ "AFI's Greatest Movie Musicals Nominees" (PDF). Retrieved 2016-08-13.
  21. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original on 2011-07-16. Retrieved 2016-08-19.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  22. ^ Gans, Andrew (27 February 2009). "Carrey and Gyllenhaal to Star in Contemporary Film Version of Damn Yankees". Playbill.com. Retrieved 19 January 2017.

External links

damn, yankees, 1958, film, damn, yankees, retitled, what, lola, wants, united, kingdom, 1958, american, widescreen, musical, sports, romantic, comedy, film, directed, george, abbott, stanley, donen, from, screenplay, abbott, adapted, from, douglass, wallop, bo. Damn Yankees retitled What Lola Wants in the United Kingdom is a 1958 American widescreen musical sports romantic comedy film It was directed by George Abbott and Stanley Donen from a screenplay by Abbott adapted from his and Douglass Wallop s book of the 1955 musical of the same name itself based on the 1954 novel The Year the Yankees Lost the Pennant by Wallop The story line is a take on the Faust legend 3 and centers on the New York Yankees and Washington Senators baseball teams With the exception of Tab Hunter in the role of Joe Hardy replacing Stephen Douglass the Broadway principals reprise their stage roles including Gwen Verdon as Lola Damn YankeesTheatrical release posterDirected byGeorge AbbottStanley DonenWritten byGeorge Abbott play Douglass Wallop play amp novel Screenplay byGeorge AbbottBased onDamn Yankeesby George AbbotDouglass WallopRichard AdlerJerry Ross The Year the Yankees Lost the Pennantby Douglass WallopProduced byGeorge AbbottStanley DonenFrederick Brisson associate producer Robert E Griffith associate producer Harold Prince associate producer StarringTab HunterGwen VerdonRay WalstonCinematographyHarold LipsteinEdited byFrank BrachtMusic byRichard AdlerJerry RossDistributed byWarner Bros Release dateSeptember 19 1958 1958 09 19 1 Running time111 minutesCountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishBox office 2 6 million 2 A notable difference between the film and stage versions was Gwen Verdon s performance of the song A Little Brains Verdon s suggestive hip movements as choreographed by Bob Fosse and performed on stage were considered too risque for a mainstream 1958 American audience and so she simply pauses at these points in the film The title was changed in the United Kingdom to avoid use of the word Damn on film posters hoardings and cinema marquees Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Song list 4 Reception 5 Accolades 5 1 Other honors 6 Locations 7 Remake 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksPlot EditJoe Boyd Robert Shafer is a middle aged fan of the unsuccessful Washington Senators baseball team His obsession with baseball is driving a wedge between him and his wife Meg a problem shared by many other wives of Senators supporters Meg leads them in lamenting their husbands fixation with the sport Six Months Out of Every Year After seeing his team lose yet again Joe rashly declares that he would sell his soul to the devil to see his team beat the Yankees No sooner has he spoken than the devil appears before him in the guise of a suave conman Applegate Applegate claims he can go one better he can restore Joe s youth making him the player who wins them the pennant Joe agrees but persuades Applegate to give him an escape clause Applegate declares that Joe can back out but only the day before the last game of the season afterwards his soul belongs to the devil Joe bids an emotional farewell to a sleeping Meg Goodbye Old Girl after which Applegate transforms him into a dashing young man now called Joe Hardy The next day the Senators practice is a fiasco Their manager Ben Van Buren gives the team a rousing pep talk Heart Applegate arrives and introducing himself as a scout presents his new discovery Joe Hardy from Hannibal Missouri Joe promptly hits baseball after baseball out of the park in an impromptu batting practice As he is signed to a Senators contract female sportswriter Gloria Thorpe plans to quickly get Joe into the public eye Shoeless Joe from Hannibal Mo With tremendous home runs and game saving catches Joe leads the Senators on a long winning streak into pennant contention and becomes a national hero Joe misses Meg dreadfully however and keeps sneaking back to his old neighborhood for a glimpse of her Realising this could ruin his plans Applegate summons his demonic right hand girl Lola a seductress who was once known as the ugliest woman in her territory but sold her soul to Applegate in exchange for eternal youth and beauty She is ordered to make Joe forget his wife a task Lola is confident she can carry out A Little Brains A Little Talent Joe succeeds in getting close to Meg by renting a room in his old house Meg is unaware of his baseball stardom Applegate and Lola corner Joe in the baseball team s locker room where Lola confidently tries to seduce Joe Whatever Lola Wants But she has her first failure Joe dearly loves Meg and does not fall for Lola s tempting ways Applegate angrily banishes Lola By the end of the season the Senators are on the verge of overtaking the Yankees so the Washington fans hold a lavish tribute Who s Got the Pain Gloria having returned from Hannibal Missouri where no residents remember a Joe Hardy confronts Applegate about the player s true identity Applegate implies that Joe is actually Shifty McCoy a corrupt minor leaguer playing under a pseudonym By the end of the tribute newspapers arrive accusing Joe of being Shifty He must meet with the baseball commissioner for a hearing or else be thrown out of baseball on the day he plans to switch back to being Joe Boyd At the hearing Meg and her female neighbors arrive as material witnesses attesting to Joe s honesty and falsely claiming he grew up with them in Hannibal The commissioner acquits Joe but as everyone celebrates midnight strikes and Joe realizes he is doomed Applegate has planned for the Senators to lose the pennant on the last day of the season resulting in thousands of heart attacks nervous breakdowns and suicides of Yankee haters across the country He is reminded of his other evil misdeeds throughout history Those Were the Good Old Days Following the hearing Lola lets Joe know she s drugged Applegate so that he will sleep through the last game They commiserate over their condemned situation at a nightclub Two Lost Souls Late the next afternoon Applegate awakens to find the Senators Yankees game well underway Realizing Lola has tricked him and worse that Lola has actually fallen in love with Joe he turns her back into an ugly hag They arrive at the ballpark by the ninth inning the Senators up by a run With two outs one of the Yankee sluggers hits a long drive to the outfield As he backs up to make the catch Applegate impulsively switches Joe Hardy back into Joe Boyd in full view of the stadium Now paunchy and middle aged Joe makes a final lunge at the ball and catches it winning the pennant for Washington As his teammates celebrate and fans storm the field an unrecognized Joe escapes from the ballpark Late that night as the public wonders why Joe Hardy has disappeared Joe Boyd meekly returns to his house A tearful Meg hugs him and they sing to each other There s Something about an Empty Chair Applegate materializes once again and offers Joe the chance to resume being Joe Hardy in time for the World Series he also makes Lola young and beautiful again to tempt Joe Joe ignores him and a tantrum throwing Applegate vanishes for good Cast Edit Hunter as Joe HardyTab Hunter as Joe Hardy a younger version of Joe Boyd Gwen Verdon as Lola Applegate s demonic servant Ray Walston as Applegate the Devil in disguise Russ Brown as Benny Van Buren the Washington Senators manager Shannon Bolin as Mrs Meg Boyd Joe Boyd s wife Robert Shafer as Mr Joe Boyd a fan of the Washington Senators Rae Allen as Gloria Thorpe reporter Nathaniel Frey as Smokey player James Komack as Rocky player Albert Linville as Vernon player Jean Stapleton as Sister Miller Meg s friend Elizabeth Howell as Doris Miller Meg s friend Bob Fosse as Mambo Dancer uncredited Harry Wilson as Spectator uncredited Uncredited in archive footage are Yogi Berra Mickey Mantle Bill Skowron and other New York Yankees baseball players plus Art Passarella umpire Song list Edit 4 Overture Orchestra Six Months Out of Every Year Joe Boyd Meg Boyd and chorus Goodbye Old Girl Joe Boyd Joe Hardy Heart Van Buren Smokey Rocky Shoeless Joe from Hannibal Mo Gloria There s Something About an Empty Chair Meg Boyd Whatever Lola Wants Orchestra A Little Brains a Little Talent Lola Whatever Lola Wants Lola Those Were the Good Old Days Mr Applegate Who s Got the Pain Lola and Mambo dancer Bob Fosse Two Lost Souls Lola and Joe Hardy There s Something About an Empty Chair reprise Joe Boyd and Meg BoydThe Overture and Two Lost Souls are noticeably different from Broadway production in orchestration and many of the lines in Six Months Out of Every Year were cut from the film A Little Brains a Little Talent has a few lyrical differences Some songs appear in different order than the original Broadway and subsequent versions and some songs Near to You The Game A Man Doesn t Know and Heart Reprise were cut entirely which left Tab Hunter with very few songs There s Something About an Empty Chair was not in the original stage version or in any stage versions since While Bob Fosse is not credited for the Mambo number Tab Hunter thanks him by name as they come off the stage Reception EditReviews from critics were generally positive Bosley Crowther of The New York Times wrote that Verdon s performance was one of the hottest and heartiest we ve seen years Miss Verdon has the sort of fine fresh talent that the screen badly needs these days But lest she seem to be the whole show let us hasten to proclaim that there s a great deal more to Damn Yankees than this wonderful red headed dame Like the George Abbott stage show before it it has class imagination verve and a good many of the same performers who did so charmingly by it on Broadway 5 Variety wrote That 10 of the top 11 players plus creators from writer to costume designer have been transferred en masse from Broadway just about insures a film that is as least as good as its stage counterpart What stands out like an inside the park home run is the skill and inventiveness with which the film is coated thus making Damn Yankees a funny picture 6 Harrison s Reports called the film a generally entertaining show even though it does not rate a rave notice In treatment and presentation it is for the most part very much like a photographed stage play in spite of the fact that the camera allowed for a wider range of activity 7 Richard L Coe of The Washington Post wrote of the play s transition to the screen It could be argued that perhaps it follows too closely that this is too clearly a photographed stage musical That I didn t mind in the least because Damn Yankees is a swell musical comedy and I m a sucker for musical comedy 8 John McCarten of The New Yorker found Walston and Verdon just as delightful on the screen as they were in the stage version adding Although expository dialogue occasionally hobbles the proceedings Damn Yankees is for the most part commendably brisk and the music and lyrics by Richard Adler and Jerry Ross are uniformly lively 9 A somewhat mixed review in The Monthly Film Bulletin praised Verdon as bringing great presence and a neatly sardonic humour to the film while describing the score as pleasant but unmemorable and summarized the picture as a musical made with a great deal of verve and some wit but without much natural gaiety 10 The film opened in Denver at the Centre Theatre and grossed 17 000 in its opening week 11 After expanding it became number two at the U S box office in the last week of September 12 before moving to number one a week later during the World Series between the New York Yankees and the Milwaukee Braves displacing Cat on a Hot Tin Roof 13 Accolades EditAward Category Nominee s Result Ref Academy Awards Best Scoring of a Musical Picture Ray Heindorf Nominated 14 British Academy Film Awards Most Promising Newcomer to Film Gwen Verdon Nominated 15 Directors Guild of America Awards Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Motion Pictures George Abbott and Stanley Donen Nominated 16 Golden Globe Awards Best Motion Picture Musical Nominated 17 Laurel Awards Top Musical NominatedTop Male Musical Performance Tab Hunter 4th PlaceTop Female Musical Performance Gwen Verdon NominatedWriters Guild of America Awards Best Written American Musical George Abbott Nominated 18 Other honors Edit The film is recognized by American Film Institute in these lists 2004 AFI s 100 Years 100 Songs Whatever Lola Wants Nominated 19 2006 AFI s Greatest Movie Musicals Nominated 20 2008 AFI s 10 Top 10 Nominated Sports Film 21 Locations EditMost of the baseball action was filmed at Los Angeles Wrigley Field a site often used in the 1950s for Hollywood films about baseball The film contains footage of the famous left field wall of Griffith Stadium in Washington home of the Senators and the house that protruded into the center field area which gave author Douglas Wallop the plot device that allowed Joe Hardy to escape from the ballpark Remake EditIn 2009 Craig Zadan and Neil Meron attempted to produce a remake for New Line Cinema with Jim Carrey as the Devil and Jake Gyllenhaal as Joe Boyd Lola was never cast and the project has been postponed indefinitely 22 See also EditList of American films of 1958 List of baseball filmsReferences Edit Damn Yankees Details AFI Catalog of Feature Films Retrieved June 24 2018 Top Grossers of 1958 Variety 7 January 1959 p 48 Please note figures are for US and Canada only and are domestic rentals accruing to distributors as opposed to theatre gross Fitzsimmons Lorna ed 2008 Lives of Faust The Faust Theme in Literature and Music A Reader New York Walter De Gruyter p 12 ISBN 9783110973976 Retrieved 11 July 2017 Damn Yankees 1958 Soundtracks InternetMovieDatabase com accessed August 21 2011 Crowther Bosley September 27 1958 Screen Damn Yankees The New York Times 12 Damn Yankees Variety September 17 1958 p 6 Damn Yankees with Tab Hunter Gwen Verdon and Ray Walston Harrison s Reports 148 September 13 1958 Coe Richard L September 26 1958 Damn Yanks Is Still Swell The Washington Post p C8 McCarten John October 4 1958 The Current Cinema The New Yorker p 158 What Lola Wants The Monthly Film Bulletin 25 299 152 December 1958 Yanks Wow 17G Denver Gigi 12G Variety September 24 1958 p 9 Retrieved May 8 2023 via Archive org Wear Mike October 8 1958 Metro s Hot amp Fat Cat Dominates September Boxoffice 2 3 4 Spots To Pacific Gigi Big Country Variety p 4 Retrieved May 26 2019 via Archive org National Box Office Survey Variety October 8 1958 p 4 Retrieved March 10 2019 via Archive org The 31st Academy Awards 1959 Nominees and Winners Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Retrieved 2 July 2017 BAFTA Awards Film in 1959 BAFTA 1959 Retrieved June 3 2021 11th DGA Awards Directors Guild of America Awards Retrieved July 5 2021 Damn Yankees Golden Globes HFPA Retrieved July 5 2021 Awards Winners wga org Writers Guild of America Archived from the original on 2012 12 05 Retrieved 2010 06 06 AFI s 100 Years 100 Songs Nominees PDF Retrieved 2016 08 13 AFI s Greatest Movie Musicals Nominees PDF Retrieved 2016 08 13 AFI s 10 Top 10 Nominees PDF Archived from the original on 2011 07 16 Retrieved 2016 08 19 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Gans Andrew 27 February 2009 Carrey and Gyllenhaal to Star in Contemporary Film Version of Damn Yankees Playbill com Retrieved 19 January 2017 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Damn Yankees film Damn Yankees at IMDb Damn Yankees at Rotten Tomatoes Damn Yankees at AllMovie Damn Yankees lyrics at completealbumlyrics com Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Damn Yankees 1958 film amp oldid 1167708661, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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