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You're a Big Boy Now

You're a Big Boy Now is a 1966 American comedy film written and directed by Francis Ford Coppola. Based on David Benedictus' 1963 novel of the same name, it stars Elizabeth Hartman, Peter Kastner, Geraldine Page, Rip Torn, Karen Black, and Julie Harris.

You're a Big Boy Now
Directed byFrancis Ford Coppola
Screenplay byFrancis Ford Coppola
Based onYou're a Big Boy Now
by David Benedictus
Produced byPhil Feldman
StarringPeter Kastner
Elizabeth Hartman
Geraldine Page
Rip Torn
Michael Dunn
Tony Bill
Karen Black
Julie Harris
Dolph Sweet
Michael O'Sullivan
CinematographyAndrew Laszlo
Edited byAram Avakian
Music byRobert Prince
Production
company
Distributed byWarner Bros. Pictures American International Pictures
Release date
  • December 9, 1966 (1966-12-09)
Running time
97 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$1,000,000[1]

Geraldine Page was nominated for an Oscar and Golden Globe Award for her performance.

Plot Edit

Nineteen year old Bernard Chanticleer, called "Big Boy" by his parents, lives in Great Neck, New York with his overbearing, clinging mother and his commanding, disapproving father, who is curator of incunabula at the New York Public Library. Bernard works at the library as a low-level assistant. His father, who constantly monitors and admonishes him, decides Bernard is old enough to move out and into his own Manhattan apartment. His unhappy mother acquiesces to her husband's decision and arranges for Bernard to live in a rooming house run by nosy, prudish Miss Nora Thing. Miss Thing inherited the building on the condition that her late brother's aggressive pet rooster be allowed to occupy the fifth floor, which Bernard must pass to get to his room. Miss Thing reassures Bernard's mother that the rooster only attacks young, attractive women. Mrs. Chanticleer says her son is still uninterested in girls, but arranges with Miss Thing to report any "female" activity. Bernard's mother constantly mails locks of her hair to Bernard at his new residence.

Actually, Bernard is very interested in girls, but he is a naive, immature virgin. He is smitten from afar with the coldly beautiful actress Barbara Darling. Meanwhile, Amy Partlett, Bernard's grade-school classmate who now works in his father's office, confesses to Bernard that she has a crush on him. Bernard's worldly co-worker Raef Del Grado encourages him to date Amy because she's a "sure thing" (a girl that will sleep with him) and discourages him from trying to pursue Barbara. Bernard and Amy go on a date to a discotheque, but when Bernard sees Barbara performing as the featured go-go dancer, he is mesmerized by her and loses all interest in Amy. Amy tries to win him back by offering to spend the night with him and Bernard accepts, though he's thinking of Barbara the entire time. When they try to go to Bernard's room, the rooster attacks Amy, causing a commotion during which Miss Thing falls down the stairs and breaks her arm. Bernard's mother blames Amy, calling her a tramp and forbidding Bernard from seeing her again.

Bernard and his parents attend a play in which Barbara is acting. Bernard later writes her a gushing fan letter. She responds with an invitation to visit her in her dressing room after a future performance. Unaware that Barbara is a man-hating narcissist after being sexually assaulted as a young girl, Bernard rushes to the theater. He then bumbles his way through an evening at her apartment. Barbara, knowing she has control over Bernard, tries to seduce him, but he is unable to perform sexually. Bernard is upset, even though Barbara acts understanding.

Miss Thing tells Bernard's father that Bernard was out all night and that Amy called looking for him every 15 minutes while he was gone. Miss Thing and Bernard's father accidentally get trapped in a timelocked vault full of rare erotica, which horrifies her and causes her to rush out in disarray when the vault opens, giving the impression that Bernard's father made a pass at her. While this is going on, Amy tells Bernard that his father has, in fact, made a pass at her.

Barbara invites Bernard to move in with her, which is convenient for him, since he finds out when he goes to pack his things that Miss Thing has just evicted him. Barbara kicks him out when he gets to her apartment, only to call him back again, and, with nowhere else to go, Bernard returns to her. He still finds himself unable to perform with her, and by this point he's so confused that he even asks her to marry him, an offer that neither of the two seems to take very seriously. When Bernard returns to Barbara's apartment after walking his dog and discovers Raef there, in a bathrobe (Bernard's father has sent Raef to find Bernard), he gathers up his things and moves out.

Bernard returns to the library, where Amy and his parents have been discussing the situation and debating how to go about searching for Bernard. He tells his parents he's leaving right away to get away from them. Barbara and Raef arrive with Bernard's dog and reveal they have become engaged. Miss Thing and her new boyfriend, police officer Francis Graf, who lives in her boarding house, also arrive to confront Bernard's father about what happened in the vault. After some shouting, Bernard grabs his father's most prized library item, a Gutenberg Bible, and runs away with it. A slapstick chase through a street parade and a department store follows, ending when Barbara knocks Bernard out with a mannequin's leg. Barbara is featured in the newspaper for stopping a rare book thief and saving the Gutenberg Bible for the City of New York. Elated with her newfound fame, she dumps Raef. Bernard is jailed for his attempted "theft", but Amy bails him out. He realizes she's the girl for him, and they leave together.

Cast Edit

Production Edit

The idea for the film came from Tony Bill, who was a fan of David Benedictus' novel and hoped to play Bernard, but was cast instead as the duplicitous co-worker Raef Del Grado. Coppola made the film for a fee of $8,000 and on a budget of $800,000 as his thesis project for UCLA. The film ended up going over budget and costing close to $1 million, which it did not recoup until sold to television.[2][3]

Coppola wrote the screenplay while on location in Europe for Seven Arts Productions working on Is Paris Burning? The screenplay changed some aspects of the novel: the setting was moved from London to New York City, Bernard's job was changed from a shoe store clerk to a library assistant, and an upbeat ending was added. Later, when You're a Big Boy Now was called a copy of Richard Lester's 1965 comedy The Knack ...and How to Get It, Coppola noted that it had been written before that film was released, although he said his film was "definitely influenced" by Lester's A Hard Day's Night.[2][4]

The film was shot at Chelsea Studios in New York City,[5] and at various Manhattan locations, including Times Square, Central Park, and the New York Public Library.[3] The Library initially refused to permit filming on its premises due to concern that its daily operations would be disrupted and because it objected to the script's suggestion that the library maintained a vault full of erotica that its curator enjoyed visiting. However, with the help of then-Mayor John Lindsay, Coppola secured a permit to film in the library.[2]

The chase through the department store was done at 11 a.m. during the store's normal operating hours, with no one outside the film's cast and crew having advance knowledge of the filming. Coppola and his crew concealed three cameras in carts and shopping bags and filmed the ensuing mayhem with natural light.[3] Although multiple sources including Gene D. Phillips (in his biography of Coppola) have stated that this scene was filmed in Macy's department store,[3][6] the signage shown in the film on both the exterior of the store building and the interior racks of clothing bears the name "Mays", a different department store chain then operating in New York City,[7] and film critic Lou Lumenick has identified the store as Mays' former Herald Square location.[8]

In the scene where Bernard roller skates through Manhattan streets after receiving Barbara's letter, the facade of the landmark original Pennsylvania Station (then in the process of being demolished) is briefly visible, with Madison Square Garden being constructed behind it.[4]

The film scenes projected on the walls of the discotheque where Bernard and Amy go on a date are from Coppola's first directorial effort Dementia 13 (1963).[3]

You're a Big Boy Now was released a year before Mike Nichols' The Graduate, which deals with similar themes of a young man getting involved with a predatory female and attempting to escape the societal conventions of his parents' generation. According to Mark Harris, when Nichols saw Coppola's film, he worried that it had "pre-empted" The Graduate.[9]

Rip Torn and Geraldine Page, who played Bernard's parents I.H. and Margery Chanticleer, were husband and wife in real life at the time the film was made.[10]

Awards and honors Edit

The film was presented at the 1967 Cannes Film Festival as the only American entry.[11][12]

Geraldine Page was nominated for an Academy Award in the Best Supporting Actress category for her performance as Bernard's mother Margery Chanticleer, but did not win. It was the fourth of her eight Oscar nominations during her career.[10][13]

At the Golden Globe Awards, Page also received a nomination for Best Supporting Actress. On top of that, Hartman was nominated for Best Actress - Comedy or Musical and the film itself was nominated for Best Picture - Comedy or Musical.[14][15]

Music Edit

Original music for the film was composed by Lovin' Spoonful members John Sebastian and Steve Boone, and the band performed several songs heard in the film. A soundtrack album credited to The Lovin' Spoonful was released in 1967 on Kama Sutra Records in connection with the film release. Two songs from the soundtrack, "Darling Be Home Soon" and "You're a Big Boy Now", were also released as singles, with "Darling Be Home Soon" reaching #15 on the U.S. charts and spawning many covers by other artists.[4]

The jazz bagpiper Rufus Harley plays a small role in the film as a "Scottish pied piper" playing the Irish song "The Kerry Dance."[16]

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ Gelmis, Joseph (1970). The Film Director as Superstar. Garden City, New York: Doubleday. p. 177.
  2. ^ a b c Stafford, Jeff. TCM.com, archived at archive.org, May 31, 2015, accessed May 31, 2015.
  3. ^ a b c d e Phillips, Gene D. Godfather: The Intimate Francis Ford Coppola. Univ. Press of Kentucky, 2004, pp. 40-44. ISBN 0-8131-2304-6.
  4. ^ a b c Monush, Barry. Everybody's Talkin': The Top Films of 1965-1969. Applause Theater & Cinema Books, 2009, pp. 133-135. ISBN 978-1-55783-618-2.
  5. ^ Alleman, Richard. New York: The Movie Lover's Guide: The Ultimate Insider Tour of Movie New York. Broadway Books, 2005, pp. 231-232. ISBN 0-7679-1634-4.
  6. ^ Johnson, Robert K. (1977). Francis Ford Coppola. Farmington Hills, Michigan: Twayne Publishers. p. 56. ISBN 978-0805792522. He grabs the Gutenberg Bible and races out of the library, through the streets, and through Macy's store...
  7. ^ Berkun, Todd (2010-09-28). "LI & NY Places That Are No More: A Fun Look Back at History by Todd Berkun: Mays". placesnomore.wordpress.com. Todd Berkun. from the original on 2011-01-02. Retrieved 2016-02-06.
  8. ^ Lumenick, Lou (2010-11-09). "DVD Extra: Groovy Coppola". New York Post. New York City. from the original on 2016-02-06. Retrieved 2016-02-06. En route to a showdown at the long-gone Mays' department store in Herald Square (approximately where Whole Foods is now)...
  9. ^ Harris, Mark. Pictures at a Revolution: Five Movies and the Birth of the New Hollywood. Penguin Press, 2008, pp. 301-302. ISBN 978-1-1012-0285-2.
  10. ^ a b Hill, Rodney. Geraldine (Sue) (1924-1987)" in The Francis Ford Coppola Encyclopedia (James M. Welsh, Gene D. Phillips and Rodney F. Hill). Scarecrow Press, 2010, p. 202. ISBN 978-0-8108-7650-7.
  11. ^ Lebo, Harlan. The Godfather Legacy: The Untold Story Behind the Making of the Classic 'Godfather' Trilogy. Fireside, 2005, pp. 38-39.
  12. ^ Festival de Cannes (official website), The Official Selection 1967, "You're a Big Boy Now" February 13, 2016, at the Wayback Machine, accessed May 31, 2015.
  13. ^ Kolbert, Elizabeth. "Geraldine Page, 62, Dies; A Star of Stage and Film", The New York Times, June 15, 1987, accessed May 31, 2015.
  14. ^ Golden Globe Awards (official website), You're a Big Boy Now[permanent dead link], Goldenglobes.com, accessed May 31, 2015.
  15. ^ Golden Globe Awards (official website), Elizabeth Hartman January 15, 2015, at the Wayback Machine, Goldenglobes.com, accessed May 31, 2015.
  16. ^ Library of Congress. Film, Video: You're a Big Boy Now (catalog listing description), item no. jots.200020750, loc.gov, accessed May 30, 2015.

External links Edit

this, article, about, 1966, film, soundtrack, album, album, 1963, novel, novel, 1966, american, comedy, film, written, directed, francis, ford, coppola, based, david, benedictus, 1963, novel, same, name, stars, elizabeth, hartman, peter, kastner, geraldine, pa. This article is about the 1966 film For the soundtrack album see You re a Big Boy Now album For the 1963 novel see You re a Big Boy Now novel You re a Big Boy Now is a 1966 American comedy film written and directed by Francis Ford Coppola Based on David Benedictus 1963 novel of the same name it stars Elizabeth Hartman Peter Kastner Geraldine Page Rip Torn Karen Black and Julie Harris You re a Big Boy NowDirected byFrancis Ford CoppolaScreenplay byFrancis Ford CoppolaBased onYou re a Big Boy Nowby David BenedictusProduced byPhil FeldmanStarringPeter KastnerElizabeth HartmanGeraldine PageRip TornMichael DunnTony BillKaren BlackJulie HarrisDolph SweetMichael O SullivanCinematographyAndrew LaszloEdited byAram AvakianMusic byRobert PrinceProductioncompanySeven Arts ProductionsDistributed byWarner Bros Pictures American International PicturesRelease dateDecember 9 1966 1966 12 09 Running time97 minutesCountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishBudget 1 000 000 1 Geraldine Page was nominated for an Oscar and Golden Globe Award for her performance Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Production 4 Awards and honors 5 Music 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksPlot EditNineteen year old Bernard Chanticleer called Big Boy by his parents lives in Great Neck New York with his overbearing clinging mother and his commanding disapproving father who is curator of incunabula at the New York Public Library Bernard works at the library as a low level assistant His father who constantly monitors and admonishes him decides Bernard is old enough to move out and into his own Manhattan apartment His unhappy mother acquiesces to her husband s decision and arranges for Bernard to live in a rooming house run by nosy prudish Miss Nora Thing Miss Thing inherited the building on the condition that her late brother s aggressive pet rooster be allowed to occupy the fifth floor which Bernard must pass to get to his room Miss Thing reassures Bernard s mother that the rooster only attacks young attractive women Mrs Chanticleer says her son is still uninterested in girls but arranges with Miss Thing to report any female activity Bernard s mother constantly mails locks of her hair to Bernard at his new residence Actually Bernard is very interested in girls but he is a naive immature virgin He is smitten from afar with the coldly beautiful actress Barbara Darling Meanwhile Amy Partlett Bernard s grade school classmate who now works in his father s office confesses to Bernard that she has a crush on him Bernard s worldly co worker Raef Del Grado encourages him to date Amy because she s a sure thing a girl that will sleep with him and discourages him from trying to pursue Barbara Bernard and Amy go on a date to a discotheque but when Bernard sees Barbara performing as the featured go go dancer he is mesmerized by her and loses all interest in Amy Amy tries to win him back by offering to spend the night with him and Bernard accepts though he s thinking of Barbara the entire time When they try to go to Bernard s room the rooster attacks Amy causing a commotion during which Miss Thing falls down the stairs and breaks her arm Bernard s mother blames Amy calling her a tramp and forbidding Bernard from seeing her again Bernard and his parents attend a play in which Barbara is acting Bernard later writes her a gushing fan letter She responds with an invitation to visit her in her dressing room after a future performance Unaware that Barbara is a man hating narcissist after being sexually assaulted as a young girl Bernard rushes to the theater He then bumbles his way through an evening at her apartment Barbara knowing she has control over Bernard tries to seduce him but he is unable to perform sexually Bernard is upset even though Barbara acts understanding Miss Thing tells Bernard s father that Bernard was out all night and that Amy called looking for him every 15 minutes while he was gone Miss Thing and Bernard s father accidentally get trapped in a timelocked vault full of rare erotica which horrifies her and causes her to rush out in disarray when the vault opens giving the impression that Bernard s father made a pass at her While this is going on Amy tells Bernard that his father has in fact made a pass at her Barbara invites Bernard to move in with her which is convenient for him since he finds out when he goes to pack his things that Miss Thing has just evicted him Barbara kicks him out when he gets to her apartment only to call him back again and with nowhere else to go Bernard returns to her He still finds himself unable to perform with her and by this point he s so confused that he even asks her to marry him an offer that neither of the two seems to take very seriously When Bernard returns to Barbara s apartment after walking his dog and discovers Raef there in a bathrobe Bernard s father has sent Raef to find Bernard he gathers up his things and moves out Bernard returns to the library where Amy and his parents have been discussing the situation and debating how to go about searching for Bernard He tells his parents he s leaving right away to get away from them Barbara and Raef arrive with Bernard s dog and reveal they have become engaged Miss Thing and her new boyfriend police officer Francis Graf who lives in her boarding house also arrive to confront Bernard s father about what happened in the vault After some shouting Bernard grabs his father s most prized library item a Gutenberg Bible and runs away with it A slapstick chase through a street parade and a department store follows ending when Barbara knocks Bernard out with a mannequin s leg Barbara is featured in the newspaper for stopping a rare book thief and saving the Gutenberg Bible for the City of New York Elated with her newfound fame she dumps Raef Bernard is jailed for his attempted theft but Amy bails him out He realizes she s the girl for him and they leave together Cast EditElizabeth Hartman as Barbara Darling Peter Kastner as Bernard Chanticleer Geraldine Page as Margery Chanticleer Rip Torn as I H Chanticleer Tony Bill as Raef del Grado Julie Harris as Miss Nora Thing Karen Black as Amy Partlett Dolph Sweet as Patrolman Francis Graf Michael Dunn as Richard Mudd Michael O Sullivan as Kurt Doughty Ron Colby as stage play crew member Rufus Harley as stage play crew member Frank Simpson as stage play crew member Nina Varella as stage play crew member Len De Carl as stage play crew memberProduction EditThe idea for the film came from Tony Bill who was a fan of David Benedictus novel and hoped to play Bernard but was cast instead as the duplicitous co worker Raef Del Grado Coppola made the film for a fee of 8 000 and on a budget of 800 000 as his thesis project for UCLA The film ended up going over budget and costing close to 1 million which it did not recoup until sold to television 2 3 Coppola wrote the screenplay while on location in Europe for Seven Arts Productions working on Is Paris Burning The screenplay changed some aspects of the novel the setting was moved from London to New York City Bernard s job was changed from a shoe store clerk to a library assistant and an upbeat ending was added Later when You re a Big Boy Now was called a copy of Richard Lester s 1965 comedy The Knack and How to Get It Coppola noted that it had been written before that film was released although he said his film was definitely influenced by Lester s A Hard Day s Night 2 4 The film was shot at Chelsea Studios in New York City 5 and at various Manhattan locations including Times Square Central Park and the New York Public Library 3 The Library initially refused to permit filming on its premises due to concern that its daily operations would be disrupted and because it objected to the script s suggestion that the library maintained a vault full of erotica that its curator enjoyed visiting However with the help of then Mayor John Lindsay Coppola secured a permit to film in the library 2 The chase through the department store was done at 11 a m during the store s normal operating hours with no one outside the film s cast and crew having advance knowledge of the filming Coppola and his crew concealed three cameras in carts and shopping bags and filmed the ensuing mayhem with natural light 3 Although multiple sources including Gene D Phillips in his biography of Coppola have stated that this scene was filmed in Macy s department store 3 6 the signage shown in the film on both the exterior of the store building and the interior racks of clothing bears the name Mays a different department store chain then operating in New York City 7 and film critic Lou Lumenick has identified the store as Mays former Herald Square location 8 In the scene where Bernard roller skates through Manhattan streets after receiving Barbara s letter the facade of the landmark original Pennsylvania Station then in the process of being demolished is briefly visible with Madison Square Garden being constructed behind it 4 The film scenes projected on the walls of the discotheque where Bernard and Amy go on a date are from Coppola s first directorial effort Dementia 13 1963 3 You re a Big Boy Now was released a year before Mike Nichols The Graduate which deals with similar themes of a young man getting involved with a predatory female and attempting to escape the societal conventions of his parents generation According to Mark Harris when Nichols saw Coppola s film he worried that it had pre empted The Graduate 9 Rip Torn and Geraldine Page who played Bernard s parents I H and Margery Chanticleer were husband and wife in real life at the time the film was made 10 Awards and honors EditThe film was presented at the 1967 Cannes Film Festival as the only American entry 11 12 Geraldine Page was nominated for an Academy Award in the Best Supporting Actress category for her performance as Bernard s mother Margery Chanticleer but did not win It was the fourth of her eight Oscar nominations during her career 10 13 At the Golden Globe Awards Page also received a nomination for Best Supporting Actress On top of that Hartman was nominated for Best Actress Comedy or Musical and the film itself was nominated for Best Picture Comedy or Musical 14 15 Music EditMain article You re a Big Boy Now album Original music for the film was composed by Lovin Spoonful members John Sebastian and Steve Boone and the band performed several songs heard in the film A soundtrack album credited to The Lovin Spoonful was released in 1967 on Kama Sutra Records in connection with the film release Two songs from the soundtrack Darling Be Home Soon and You re a Big Boy Now were also released as singles with Darling Be Home Soon reaching 15 on the U S charts and spawning many covers by other artists 4 The jazz bagpiper Rufus Harley plays a small role in the film as a Scottish pied piper playing the Irish song The Kerry Dance 16 See also EditList of American films of 1966References Edit Gelmis Joseph 1970 The Film Director as Superstar Garden City New York Doubleday p 177 a b c Stafford Jeff Early Coppola You re a Big Boy Now TCM com archived at archive org May 31 2015 accessed May 31 2015 a b c d e Phillips Gene D Godfather The Intimate Francis Ford Coppola Univ Press of Kentucky 2004 pp 40 44 ISBN 0 8131 2304 6 a b c Monush Barry Everybody s Talkin The Top Films of 1965 1969 Applause Theater amp Cinema Books 2009 pp 133 135 ISBN 978 1 55783 618 2 Alleman Richard New York The Movie Lover s Guide The Ultimate Insider Tour of Movie New York Broadway Books 2005 pp 231 232 ISBN 0 7679 1634 4 Johnson Robert K 1977 Francis Ford Coppola Farmington Hills Michigan Twayne Publishers p 56 ISBN 978 0805792522 He grabs the Gutenberg Bible and races out of the library through the streets and through Macy s store Berkun Todd 2010 09 28 LI amp NY Places That Are No More A Fun Look Back at History by Todd Berkun Mays placesnomore wordpress com Todd Berkun Archived from the original on 2011 01 02 Retrieved 2016 02 06 Lumenick Lou 2010 11 09 DVD Extra Groovy Coppola New York Post New York City Archived from the original on 2016 02 06 Retrieved 2016 02 06 En route to a showdown at the long gone Mays department store in Herald Square approximately where Whole Foods is now Harris Mark Pictures at a Revolution Five Movies and the Birth of the New Hollywood Penguin Press 2008 pp 301 302 ISBN 978 1 1012 0285 2 a b Hill Rodney Geraldine Sue 1924 1987 in The Francis Ford Coppola Encyclopedia James M Welsh Gene D Phillips and Rodney F Hill Scarecrow Press 2010 p 202 ISBN 978 0 8108 7650 7 Lebo Harlan The Godfather Legacy The Untold Story Behind the Making of the Classic Godfather Trilogy Fireside 2005 pp 38 39 Festival de Cannes official website The Official Selection 1967 You re a Big Boy Now Archived February 13 2016 at the Wayback Machine accessed May 31 2015 Kolbert Elizabeth Geraldine Page 62 Dies A Star of Stage and Film The New York Times June 15 1987 accessed May 31 2015 Golden Globe Awards official website You re a Big Boy Now permanent dead link Goldenglobes com accessed May 31 2015 Golden Globe Awards official website Elizabeth Hartman Archived January 15 2015 at the Wayback Machine Goldenglobes com accessed May 31 2015 Library of Congress Film Video You re a Big Boy Now catalog listing description item no jots 200020750 loc gov accessed May 30 2015 External links EditYou re a Big Boy Now at IMDb You re a Big Boy Now at Rotten Tomatoes You re a Big Boy Now at TCM Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title You 27re a Big Boy Now amp oldid 1179068743, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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