Advertisement
Join Spout
Sign in
you
You
Take a tour of spout.com
Join Spout!
Sign in
Learn more about us
Downloads
movies
Browse movies
Now in theaters
Coming soon to theaters
New on DVD
Coming soon to DVD
Trailers
Genres
Newsletters
Recent Spoutblog posts
FilmCouch
Film festival coverage
Community movie buzz
Community activity just now
Recent community reviews
Community tags
Recent lists
Get recommendation with SpoutMind
Browse store
mavens
Browse Movie Mavens
Recent maven reviews
View all mavens
Top bloggers
Top listers
Busy people
Search people
What's a maven?
communities
Browse Communities
Recent discussions
Recent list activity
Popular groups
Most movies
Most talkative
The Facts of Life (1960)
Want to see it?
Seen it?
0
1
2
3
4
5
Rate this movie.
Want to buy it?
Write a review
Discuss it
Add to lists
Recommend it
Get recommendations
Rent it, watch it, find it
Advertisement
Synopsis & reviews
Related movies
Cast & crew
Synopsis
Unlike the typical
Bob Hope
and
Lucille Ball
vehicles, The Facts of Life is essentially a domestic drama with comic undertones. Hope is married to
Ruth Hussey
, while Ball is the wife of
Don DeFore
. All four are old friends, who for many years have taken each other for granted. A series of unforeseen circumstances requires Hope and Ball to spend a great deal of time together without their spouses, and as a result they fall in love. Though the affair is never consummated, Hope and Ball are prepared to run off together, but in the end they decide that adultery at their age just isn't worth the trouble. Long unavailable for viewing due to legal tangles, The Facts of Life has gained legendary status as one of the few Bob Hope films of the 1960s to concentrate on character development rather than silly one-liners. Recent viewings have revealed that, though a far more mature work than one might expect from Hope or Ball,
Facts of Life
still relies to a great extent on the sort of TV sitcom material that the fans of the two stars had come to expect by 1960. Still, the film was considered offbeat enough to warrant an Oscar nomination for best screenplay (by longtime Hope associates
Norman Panama
and
Melvin Frank
). ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
Cast
Lucille Ball
Kitty Weaver
Louise Beavers
Gussie
Don DeFore
Jack Weaver
Bob Hope
Larry Gilbert
Ruth Hussey
Mary Gilbert
Hollis Irving
Myrtle Busbee
William Lanteau
Airline Clerk
Peter Leeds
Thompson
Mike Mazurki
Man in Motel Room
Louis Nye
Charles Busbee
Philip Ober
Doc Mason
Robert Simon
Motel Clerk
Marianne Stewart
Connie Mason
Production Crew
J. McMillan Johnson
Art Director
Kenneth A. Reid
Art Director
Charles B. Lang
Cinematographer
Johnny Mercer
Composer (Music Score)
Leigh Harline
Composer (Music Score)
Edith Head
Costume Designer
Edward Stevenson
Costume Designer
Melvin Frank
Director
Frank Bracht
Editor
Melvin Frank
Producer
Norman Panama
Producer
J. McMillan Johnson
Production Designer
Melvin Frank
Screenwriter
Norman Panama
Screenwriter
Year: 1960
Runtime: 103
Country: USA
MPAA Rating:
Category: Feature
Genre
Comedy Drama
Romance
Produced by
United Artists
Release
by United Artists
Awards
1960 - Best Picture - Comedy - Golden Globe
Privacy
Safety
Legal
Report bad behavior
© 2008 Spout LLC. Portions of content provided by All Movie Guide.