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Kisses for My President

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Kisses for My President
1964 Theatrical Poster
Directed byCurtis Bernhardt
Screenplay byClaude Binyon
Robert G. Kane
Story byRobert G. Kane
Produced byCurtis Bernhardt
StarringFred MacMurray
Polly Bergen
Eli Wallach
CinematographyRobert Surtees
Edited bySam O'Steen
Music byBronislau Kaper
Production
company
Pearlayne
Distributed byWarner Bros
Release date
December 4, 1964 (1964-12-04)
Running time
113 min.
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

Kisses for My President is a 1964 comedy film directed by Curtis Bernhardt and starring Fred MacMurray and Polly Bergen. Leslie McCloud (Bergen) makes history when she is elected the first female president of the United States. However, her husband Thad McCloud (MacMurray) is less enthusiastic.[1] The picture's supporting cast features Eli Wallach, Arlene Dahl, Edward Andrews, and Donald May.

Kisses for My President was the last theatrical film directed by Bernhardt, whose career stretched back to the silent era.

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Transcription

Plot

The United States elects its first female president, Leslie Harrison McCloud. She and her husband Thad (he is never called "first gentleman"; he is called "first lady" a few times, but typically "president's husband") Thad move into the White House with their daughter Gloria and son Peter.

Immediately, the new president is too busy for her husband and family as she deals with powerful opposition from Senator Walsh and a Central American dictator, Raphael Valdez Jr..

Thad attempts to find something meaningful to do as the president's husband. He is upset with his feminine bedroom and office within the White House.

Doris Reid Weaver, Thad's former flame and Leslie's classmate at Radcliffe, and now an international businesswoman, wants Thad back. During a seductive visit, she offers to make him vice president of her cosmetics company as bait. Leslie smells Doris's perfume on her husband that night and confronts him.

Leslie asks Thad to show visiting dictator Valdez around Washington, with disastrous results, as Thad brawls with a male diner at a burlesque show, and accidentally hits Valdez. To further complicate things, the First Daughter is running around town with a very unsuitable boyfriend and using her position to get out of scrapes with the police. First son Peter has become a bully, using his Secret Service men for protection as he terrorizes everyone in his school, including the principal.

The president's husband finds an important role in a Cold War subplot that resembles the rise and fall of Senator McCarthy, when Thad proves that Senator Walsh blindly supports the Latin American dictator for reasons that are not patriotic; the dictator is paying Walsh's old law firm in a lawsuit against Thad. Walsh aggressively portrays the lady president as weak in resisting communism because she refuses to give Valdez more foreign aid for his personal enrichment while he does nothing to alleviate poverty in his country. The Soviets are also co-funding Valdez to prevent him from being influenced exclusively by the United States. As soon as the president drops her support for the dictator, the Soviets do so as well.

Leslie then discovers that she is pregnant, and resigns the presidency to devote herself full-time to her family. Thad jokes about male superiority, that 40 million women voters put her into office, but only one man, himself, could remove her.

Cast

Reception

Bosley Crowther of The New York Times panned the movie, commenting, "...All that one can say is that we hope the first woman to become President brings along a more amusing husband than Mr. MacMurray and a more imaginative team of writers than Mr. Binyon and Mr. Kane." He also criticized Bernhardt for taking "a dim view of the prospect of a woman as President. It wouldn't be funny! That's what his picture says."[2]

See also

References

  1. ^ Synopsis by Mark Deming (1964-12-04). "Kisses for My President (1964) - Curtis Bernhardt | Synopsis, Characteristics, Moods, Themes and Related". AllMovie. Retrieved 2016-11-18.
  2. ^ Crowther, Bosley. "The Screen: 'Kisses for My President':Fred MacMurray and Polly Bergen Star," The New York Times, Saturday, August 22, 1964.

External links

This page was last edited on 3 February 2024, at 01:11
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