The Jayne Mansfield Story

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The Jayne Mansfield Story
DVD cover of the movie The Jayne Mansfield Story.jpg
Official DVD cover
GenreBiography
Drama
Written by Charles Dennis
Nancy Gayle
Directed by Dick Lowry
Starring Loni Anderson
Arnold Schwarzenegger
Theme music composer Jimmie Haskell
Country of originUnited States
Original languageEnglish
Production
ProducersJoan Barnett (producer)
Gary Credle (associate producer)
Tom Kuhn (executive producer)
Alan Landsburg (producer)
Linda Otto (producer)
Cinematography Paul Lohmann
Editor Corky Ehlers
Running time100 Minutes
Production company Alan Landsburg Productions
Original release
Network CBS
ReleaseOctober 29, 1980 (1980-10-29)

The Jayne Mansfield Story is a 1980 American made-for-television biographical drama film directed by Dick Lowry starring Loni Anderson as the actress, and Arnold Schwarzenegger as her bodybuilder husband, based on the life of Jayne Mansfield. The film was originally titled Jayne Mansfield: A Symbol of the '50s. The script is based on the book Jayne Mansfield and the American Fifties by Martha Saxton.

Contents

It originally aired on CBS on October 29, 1980. [1]

The film is listed in Golden Raspberry Award founder John Wilson's book The Official Razzie Movie Guide as one of The 100 Most Enjoyably Bad Movies Ever Made. [2]

Plot

The film tells the fictionalized rise and fall of Hollywood bombshell and sex symbol Jayne Mansfield.

The Jayne Mansfield Story opens in 1967 in Mississippi with Jayne Mansfield closing a show and then talking on a payphone with Mickey Hargitay about going on a new tour together. Intercut with scenes of Mansfield getting into a car and then crashing when the driver tries to overtake a spray truck is film of a teleprinter typing out the news of Mansfield's death. An announcer reads the text over both scenes. The film then goes to credits, intercut with still images of Mansfield as a child and young woman.

The next scene is of an unnamed woman interviewing Hargitay about Mansfield (Hargitay's graying hair indicates that this is some time after her death). Hargitay shows her photos including one where a dark-haired Mansfield poses with a chimpanzee as a publicity stunt to promote a film premiere at the theater where she worked as a popcorn salesperson. (Hargitay narrates throughout the rest of the film). At a scene from the theater and at home Mansfield expresses her desire to act in films and she is shown as a single mother, taking care of her only daughter Jayne Marie after the father left because he disagreed with her acting ambition.

In the next scene Mansfield approaches talent agent Bob Garrett on the street (whom she met, off-screen, at the premiere). She manages to convince Garrett to give her an audition for a one line part in a film after pushing her chest out and declaring that she has something more than Marilyn Monroe. At the audition, Mansfield declines to read the line given to her, opting instead to read a line from Come Back, Little Sheba . She doesn't get the part.

Meeting later with Garrett, Mansfield makes a high pitched cooing sound and strikes a pose, asking rhetorically if this is what they want. Garrett tells her she might be on to something and tells her to lose weight and change her hair. Mansfield states that she will project an airheaded bimbo image until her career gets going and then she will switch to more serious roles. A month later Mansfield meets with Garrett at a car dealership, with blonde hair and wearing a pink polka-dot dress, she is received a pink Cadillac for free as promotion.

Next, Mansfield appears at the Southern California press club (courtesy of Garrett to raise her profile), handing out Christmas presents while wearing a white fur trimmed bikini top and bottom. At a Florida poolside photoshoot, Mansfield pretends to fall in the pool (losing her bikini top in the process), shouting that she can't swim to get the attention of the photographers who eagerly take pictures of her.

Cast

Reception

Accolades

Nominated for Primetime Emmy for

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References

  1. Tom Shales (October 29, 1980). "Limp Cheesecake". The Washington Post . pp. B2.
  2. Wilson, John (2005). The Official Razzie Movie Guide: Enjoying the Best of Hollywood's Worst. Grand Central Publishing. ISBN   0-446-69334-0.