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    Gentlemen Prefer Blondes is a 1953 musical based on the novel by Anita Loos. The 20th Century Fox movie is a comedy/romance starring Jane Russell and Marilyn Monroe, with Charles Coburn, Elliott Reid, Tommy Noonan, Taylor Holmes, and Norma Varden. Directed by Howard Hawks, the story was adapted by Charles Lederer. It has songs by Harold Adamson, Hoagy Carmichael, Leo Robin and Jule Styne.

    The movie is packed with comedic gags and musical numbers. Jane Russell's down-to-earth, sharp wit has been generally noted, but overall it is Monroe's powerful screen presence and self-ironic turn as the gold-digging Lorelei Lee that the film is remembered for. Monroe's rendition of the song "Diamonds Are a Girl's Best Friend" is considered an iconic performance that has been copied by blonde bombshells ranging from Madonna to Anna Nicole Smith.


        Gentlemen Prefer Blondes
            Plot Summary
            Earlier Versions
            Gentlemen Prefer Blondes as a Feminist Text
                Windows Media Player Required
    NameGentlemen Prefer Blondes (1953)
    image
    CaptionGentlemen Prefer Blondes screen shot
    DirectorHoward Hawks
    ProducerSol C. Siegel
    WriterAnita Loos (novel and play)
    Joseph Field...
    StarringJane Russell
    Marilyn Monroe
    Distributor20th Century Fox
    ReleasedJuly 18, 1953 (USA)
    Runtime91 min.
    LanguageEnglish language

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    Plot Summary



    Dorothy Shaw (Russell) and Lorelei Lee (Monroe) are showgirls and best friends, "just two little girls from Little Rock." Superficially, Lorelei appears to be the more vacuous of the two -- her life's dream is to marry someone rich and she will use almost any means to achieve her goal. She is engaged to Gus Esmond (Noonan), who is willing to do anything for her and has the means to buy anything for her. His father, Mr. Esmond, Senior (Holmes), however, does not approve of Lorelei and thinks she's just a scheming gold digger.

    Lorelei (and Dorothy) to sail to Paris, France], where she and Gus plan to get married. Mr. Esmond sends private detective Ernie Malone (played by Reid) along to spy on her. Onboard the ship, Lorelei gets herself entangled in a series of screwball mishaps.

    Malone falls in love with Dorothy and tries to warn her about her friend, but she remains faithful to her. In the meantime, Lorelei meets Sir Francis "Piggy" Beekman (character actor Coburn) who gives her a diamond tiara. Malone sends a bad report to Esmond, who stops the wedding and cuts Lorelei off financially. Dorothy and Malone have a falling out when she discovers his real identity and the trouble he caused.

    Stuck in Paris without any money or a place to live, Lorelei and Dorothy get jobs as nightclub singers. Beekman cannot tell his wife, Lady Beekman (Varden), the truth about the tiara, so he reports it as stolen, convincing Malone that Lorelei is a thief. Beekman steals back the tiara. When Lorelei is questioned by the police, she no longer has it. Malone tracks it down to Beekman, regaining Dorothy's affections. Finally, Lorelei proves she's smarter than she acts, charms Esmond Senior and gets his permission to marry his son.
    She tells the elder Esmond, "She does not want to marry his son for his money; she wants to marry his son for HIS (the elder's) money !

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    Earlier Versions
    This first incarnation of this musical was as a novel written by Anita Loos that was published in 1925. It then became a Broadway play produced in 1926, a Broadway musical produced in 1949, which Loos also wrote the book for, and two motion pictures. The silent movie was released in 1928, starring Ruth Taylor, Alice White, Ford Sterling, Holmes Herbert and Mack Swain, and Loos also wrote the subtitles. This version of the film is now considered to be lost. Anita Loos also wrote a sequel to Gentlemen Prefer Blondes entitled But Gentlemen Marry Brunettes. This was also made into the 1957 film Gentlemen Marry Brunettes starring Jane Russell and Jeanne Crain.

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    Gentlemen Prefer Blondes as a Feminist Text

    Many film scholars now regard Gentlemen Prefer Blondes as a feminist text and well ahead of its time. The film explores women's power and powerlessness in relationships and in society in general. The best-known song from the film, "Diamonds are a Girl's Best Friend," is a pointed commentary on a society that values women only for youth and sex appeal, and the need for women to take care of themselves (for when they are old and "can't straighten up when they bend.")
    The positive depiction of the friendship between Lorelei and Dorothy, which ultimately overrides the romantic sub-plots, and the somewhat cynical messages about love and romance in the film's narrative gives this argument some persuasion.



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