Martin and Lewis films of Norman Taurog

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Also known as: Norman Rae Taurog

Taurog subsequently ended his long stay at MGM, and his first film after leaving the studio was the pleasant Warner Brothers comedy Room for One More (1952), with Cary Grant and Betsy Drake (who were married in real life) as the adoptive parents of several underprivileged orphans. Taurog then returned to Paramount for a second stint. First up was a pair of the studio’s enormously popular Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis vehicles. Jumping Jacks had the duo undergoing paratrooper training, and The Stooge (both 1952) was a period piece, with vaudeville star (Martin) waxing jealous as his antic partner (Lewis) increasingly becomes the focus of the act. The Stars Are Singing (1953) featured Anna Maria Alberghetti as a Polish illegal immigrant with operatic ambitions and Rosemary Clooney as her friend. Taurog then reunited with Martin and Lewis for three more films: the golfing comedy The Caddy (1953), which introduced the pop hit “That’s Amore”; Living It Up (1954), a remake of Wellman’s Nothing Sacred (1937); and You’re Never Too Young (1955), with Lewis as a barber’s apprentice who disguises himself as a 12-year-old to escape a violent thief and Martin as a music teacher who helps him.

Taurog continued recycling comedy classics. For Pardners (1956), he stole from himself, remaking his Rhythm on the Range, with Martin and Lewis in their penultimate appearance as a screen team. Bundle of Joy (1956) was still another remake, this time of Ginger Rogers’s 1939 hit Bachelor Mother; Debbie Reynolds and Eddie Fisher, who were married in real life, starred in the comedy-musical. The Fuzzy Pink Nightgown (1957) was a vehicle for Jane Russell, and Onionhead (1958), an unofficial sequel to Mervyn LeRoy’s hit No Time for Sergeants (1958), again featured Andy Griffith. Don’t Give Up the Ship (1959) reunited Taurog with Lewis, and it represented their best work in years. They fared less well with Visit to a Small Planet (1960), about an alien visitor (Lewis). It was based on a Gore Vidal play, but the film replaced much of the original satire with Lewis’s slapstick antics, and the resulting production was uneven.

Elvis movies

Taurog then began directing Elvis Presley in a series of popular musicals that gave rise to the genre known as “Elvis movies,” light comedic romances with musical interludes. Their first collaboration was G.I. Blues (1960), and it probably was the best of the genre. Presley played a U.S. soldier stationed in Germany, where he meets a cabaret dancer (Juliet Prowse). After the military musical All Hands on Deck (1961), Taurog helmed three more Elvis films: Blue Hawaii (1961), with the signature tune “Can’t Help Falling in Love”; Girls! Girls! Girls! (1962), which featured “Return to Sender”; and It Happened at the World’s Fair (1963), with Presley performing at the Seattle World’s Fair. Although they were box-office successes, critics derided the films as formulaic and musically uninspired.

The 1963 musical was made for MGM, and Taurog would work at his former studio for the remainder of his career. He took a break from Presley to make Palm Springs Weekend (1963), a comedy about college students on spring break; it starred Troy Donahue and Connie Stevens. Next was the low-budget Tickle Me (1965), which starred Presley as a rodeo rider. Taurog then made two poorly received Frankie Avalon comedies: Sergeant Deadhead (1965), a comedy about a U.S. soldier who is accidentally sent into space with a chimp and undergoes a personality change that threatens his upcoming wedding, and Dr. Goldfoot and the Bikini Machine (1966), a spy spoof about a secret agent’s attempts to thwart a mad scientist (Vincent Price) who wants to use female robots to take over the world. Four Presley musicals completed Taurog’s career: Spinout (1966), Double Trouble (1967), Speedway (1968), and Live a Little, Love a Little (1968).

After his retirement, Taurog taught film studies. He also served on the board of the Directors Guild of America. Taurog, who had various health issues and eventually went blind, was director of Braille Institute in Los Angeles.

Michael Barson