Plucking the Daisy
Plucking the Daisy (French: En effeuillant la marguerite) is a 1956 French comedy film directed by Marc Allégret and starring Brigitte Bardot.
Plucking the Daisy | |
---|---|
Directed by | Marc Allégret |
Written by | Marc Allégret Roger Vadim |
Produced by | Raymond Eger |
Starring | Brigitte Bardot Daniel Gélin |
Cinematography | Louis Page |
Music by | Paul Misraki |
Release date |
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Language | French |
Box office | 3,296,793 admissions (France)[1] |
It was also known as Mam'selle Striptease and Please Mr Balzac. (Also known as "Mademoiselle Striptease" and often confused with 1957 French film "Mademoiselle Strip-tease"[2])
Turner Classic Movies called it "a typical French romantic comedy... complete with a meet-cute on a train, and plenty of loving shots of Bardot's pert behind.... typical of the suggestive but innocuous films that Bardot made early in her career."[3]
Plot
General Dumont discovers that his daughter Agnes is "A.D.", author of a scandalous under-the-counter novel.
He tries to send her to a convent but she escapes to Paris to live with her brother. On the train she meets Daniel, a journalist. Agnes thinks her brother is a rich artist but he's actually a poor guide in the Balzac Museum.
Agnes needs money and enters an amateur striptease contest. Daniel is covering the contest for his magazine.
Cast
- Brigitte Bardot as Agnès Dumont
- Daniel Gélin as Daniel Roy
- Robert Hirsch as Roger Vital
- Darry Cowl as Hubert Dumont
- Luciana Paluzzi as Sofia
- Nadine Tallier as Magali
- Jacques Dumesnil as General Dumont
- Madeleine Barbulée as Mme Dumont
- Georges Chamarat as Bacchus
- Mischa Auer as Alexis
- Mauricet as Mr. Valentin
- Yves-Marie Maurin as Toto
- Patrick Maurin as Agnès' younger brother
- Jacques Jouanneau as Edouard
- Henri Garcin as one of Daniel's friends
- Jean-Loup Philippe as one of Daniel's friends
- Michel Constantin as Un spectateur du strip-tease
- Marc Eyraud as a photographer
- Françoise Arnoul as herself
Production
Roger Vadim had just written a movie which launched Bardot as a leading lady, Naughty Girl. He called this movie "a hack job based on an 'original idea' by the producer which was anything but original... I changed the plot and wrote an amusing, romantic and sexy story."[4]
Reception
In 1956, the film was the 20th most popular of the year, at the French box office.[5] It was released before Bardot's film And God Created Woman, which was the 13th most popular and Naughty Girl which was 12th.[6]
It was released in the US as Mademoiselle Striptease. The Washington Post called it "one of the nicest comedies of the summer."[7] The Los Angeles Times called it "a most delightful, naughty and very funny comedy... Bardot strikes pure gold... it's strictly a fun show that doesn't try to prove a thing."[8]
It was also released in the US as Please Mr Balzac. The New York Times said the "sole excuse for this singularly unfrothy and unfunny romantic comedy is Brigitte Bardot....[a] thin, old-fashioned, slightly smutty and extremely dull charade... The picture is pretty awful. It needn't have been."[9]
References
- Box office information of film at Box Office Story
- https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0158736/?ref_=nm_flmg_t_15_wr
- Plucking the Daisy at Turner Classic Monthly
- Vadim, Roger (1986). Bardot, Deneuve, Fonda. Simon and Schuster. p. 78.
- "FRANCE 1956 - (page 2)". BOX OFFICE STORY (in French). Retrieved 6 December 2021.
- "French box office films of 1956". Box Office Story.
- Coe, Richard L. (24 July 1957). "Plaza Lands Little Charmer". The Washington Post and Times-Herald. p. B8.
- "Spicy Fun Film From France Hit". Los Angeles Times. 12 Oct 1957. p. B3.
- "Screen: French Import; 'Please! Mr. Balzac' Stars Mlle. Bardot". New York Times. 18 November 1957.
External links
- Plucking the Daisy at IMDb
- Plucking the Daisy at TCMDB
- Plucking the Daisy at BFI
- Review of film at DVD Journal