Lobby card for Promise Her Anything, starring Warren Beatty and Leslie Caron, 1966. |
Wardrobe test for Leslie Caron and Warren Beatty in Promise Her Anything. They make a cute couple. |
Warren Beatty’s first attempt at film comedy was the
dreadful Promise Her Anything, which
was released in England in late 1965 and in the United States in early 1966. Promise Her Anything co-starred Beatty’s
then-girlfriend Leslie Caron. Beatty’s attempts to star in What’s New, Pussycat? had failed, and Peter O’Toole ended up
playing the part that Beatty had wanted. (What’s
New, Pussycat? would have been a much better first comedy for Beatty than Promise Her Anything.) Perhaps the sting
of not getting What’s New, Pussycat?
inspired Beatty to seek out another comedy project. Unfortunately, the only
thing the two movies have in common is that Tom Jones sings the theme songs for
both movies.
Promise Her Anything
may have been doomed from the start. Right before the film was shot, Caron’s
husband, British theater director Peter Hall, filed for divorce from her,
naming Caron’s affair with Beatty as one of the reasons the marriage failed. The
case brought a lot of negative publicity to Caron’s romance with Beatty, and it
turned into an ugly custody battle over Caron’s children with Hall. Because
Caron’s divorce was happening in the British courts, Promise Her Anything was filmed in England, even though it was
entirely set in New York City’s Greenwich Village. Like most movies not filmed
where they’re set, you can tell it’s not New York City.
The plot of the movie is rather ridiculous, as Caron plays a
young widow with a small toddler who moves into the apartment building that
Beatty lives in. Beatty plays a filmmaker who makes “girlie movies,” schlocky
films of girls stripping or dancing in very little clothing. But he has more
serious aspirations as a moviemaker. Like all of Beatty’s characters, he is a
dreamer. In an interesting reference to the real world of 1965, it’s obliquely
referenced that Caron’s late husband died in Vietnam. There’s a picture of him
in a military uniform, and Caron says something about him “just being an
advisor,” which was the term used for military personnel in Vietnam before
Lyndon Johnson expanded the war in 1964-65. Beatty’s character is very
interested in Caron, and he offers his services as a babysitter to her. Of
course, Caron doesn’t know what kind of movies Beatty makes-which will make
things awkward later on in the movie. Caron works for Bob Cummings, a famous
child psychologist who doesn’t have any children of his own. Cummings is the
best thing in the movie by far, as he was a great comedic actor, and this
material is right in his wheelhouse. Because Cummings doesn’t actually like
children, Caron has kept her own son a secret from Cummings, as she wants to
date him, but fears that he will be put off by the fact that she has a child.
This is just one of the many ways in which Caron’s character behaves like a
typical annoying character in a romantic comedy. You have a son; he’s going to
find out that you have a son sooner or later. If he finds out later, he will
probably be very upset that you lied to him about a pretty basic fact. The lies
keep increasing as Beatty brings Caron’s son to Cummings for observation-and
still Caron doesn’t tell Cummings that it’s her son! It occurred to me while
watching the movie that Cummings’s character might be gay. He’s never been
married, he still lives with his mother-albeit in a very fancy New York high-rise,
and he doesn’t make out with Caron when he visits her apartment and she greets
him wearing sleepwear that is basically just a bikini. After all the
predictable outrage when it’s discovered that Beatty makes girlie movies, and
that the toddler is actually Caron’s son, Caron eventually chooses Beatty over
Cummings because of Beatty’s bravery in saving the toddler when he climbs onto
a crane-which leads to some very obvious fake shots of Beatty and the kid on
the crane. Oh, and by the end of the film Beatty’s producer (the great Keenan
Wynn) has set him up with a deal to make an artsy movie in Italy. So Beatty and
Caron get married and go off, cue reprise of Tom Jones theme song.
And that’s pretty much the movie. Beatty does as good a job
as he can with the material, and he is his usual charming self, but there’s
only so much he can do. It’s obvious even from such a crummy movie that Beatty
has a gift for comedy. It was wise of him to try and branch out into comedy, as
at this point in his career he had only been in dramas. And while Beatty and
Caron make a very photogenic couple, it’s Cummings who gets all the laughs. If
you see Promise Her Anything, look
for a very young Donald Sutherland as a father who gets his books signed by
Cummings after a lecture. Behind the scenes there’s not too much interesting to
report. Beatty said in an interview on the set that “I’ve not had a quiet
romantic life and I feel embarrassed about it.” (Warren Beatty: A Private Man, by Suzanne Finstad, p. 340.) Whatever
embarrassment Beatty felt about his private life being too public in 1965 certainly
didn’t stop him from continuing to lead a very public romantic life for the
next 25 years! By 1965, he had already had very public romances with Joan
Collins, Natalie Wood, and now Leslie Caron. Beatty was getting a reputation as
a male home wrecker, as he was widely seen as having broken up Wood’s first
marriage to Robert Wagner and Caron’s marriage to Peter Hall. (Most sources now
say that Beatty had nothing to do with the breakup of Wood and Wagner’s first
marriage.) Caron and Beatty broke up shortly after they made Promise Her Anything, and Caron
eventually said that Beatty had asked her to marry him, “but he was a difficult
customer. I couldn’t have survived.” (Finstad, p. 340.) Like most other early
Warren Beatty movies, Promise Her
Anything failed to set the box office on fire, and the film’s failure
further instilled a need in Beatty to come up with a hit movie, as his career
seemed to be in a downward spiral.
No comments:
Post a Comment