One Touch of Venus
One Touch of Venus is a 1948 American black-and-white romantic musical comedy film starring Robert Walker, Ava Gardner, Dick Haymes, and Eve Arden. Directed by William A. Seiter, the Universal-International release was based on the 1943 Broadway musical of the same name, book written by S. J. Perelman and Ogden Nash, with music composed by Kurt Weill (lyrics by Nash). However, the film omits most of Weill's music. The actors did their own singing, except for Ava Gardner (Venus) whose singing was dubbed by Eileen Wilson. The plot is from an original 1885 novella by Thomas Anstey Guthrie.
Plot
Wealthy department-store mogul Whitfield Savory II buys a statue of Venus for $200,000. He plans to exhibit it in the store. Eddie Hatch, a window dresser, kisses the statue on a whim. To his shock, Venus comes to life. She leaves the store and Eddie is accused of stealing the work of art. Nobody believes the truth, including Savory's right-hand woman, Molly Grant, and Kerrigan, a detective he hires. Venus turns up at Eddie's apartment, forcing him to hide her from girlfriend Gloria and roommate Joe.
More details
| author | Frank Tashlin Harry Kurnitz |
|---|---|
| director | William A. Seiter |
| editor | Otto Ludwig |
| genre | comedy fantasy |
| keywords | dead ringer jupiter mount olympus nobody believes steal venus window dresser |
| musicBy | Ann Ronell Kurt Weill |
| producer | John Beck |
| productionCompany | Artists Alliance |
| publisher | Universal Pictures |
| theme | musical comedy romantic comedy romantic fantasy romantic musical |