The Courtship of Eddie's Father is a 1963 American MGM romantic comedy film directed by Vincente Minnelli, and stars Glenn Ford as a widowed father and Ron Howard as his caring son. The film was based on a 1961 novel by Mark Toby, as was the ABC-TV series of the same name with Bill Bixby and Brandon Cruz, which ran from 1969 to 1972.
Video The Courtship of Eddie's Father (film)
Plot summary
Young Eddie Corbett (Ron Howard) tries his best to be a matchmaker for his widowed father, Tom (Glenn Ford). At first, sexy Dollye Daly (Stella Stevens) seems promising, but she ends up falling in love with and marrying Tom's friend and radio colleague, Norman Jones (Jerry Van Dyke).
Tom becomes attracted to a sophisticated socialite, Rita Behrens (Dina Merrill). They begin considering marriage, but Eddie takes an immediate dislike to Rita and she does not know how to deal with Eddie (nor does she particularly want to learn). In the end, Tom chooses his son over her.
Through all this, the Corbetts are supported by their new housekeeper, Mrs. Livingston (Roberta Sherwood), and by their divorced next-door neighbor, Elizabeth Marten (Shirley Jones). It takes a crisis for Tom to realize what has been under his nose all the time.
Maps The Courtship of Eddie's Father (film)
Cast
- Glenn Ford as Tom Corbett
- Ron Howard as Eddie
- Shirley Jones as Elizabeth
- Dina Merrill as Rita
- Stella Stevens as Dollye
- Jerry Van Dyke as Norman
- Roberta Sherwood as Mrs. Livingston
Production
Film rights to the novel were bought by MGM prior to publication for $100,000 in 1961. The Chicago Tribune called the novel "deeply moving, and at the same time, very funny."
Producer Joe Pasternak assigned John Gay to write the script and hired Glenn Ford to star. Shirley Jones accepted her role in part because she did not have to sing.
Roberta Sherwood, a nightclub singer and TV entertainer, made her film debut.
Pasternak says he interviewed hundreds of children to play Eddie but as soon as he talked to Ron Howard "I knew he was right."
The bowling alley sequence was filmed at the now-defunct Paradise Bowl, located at 9116 South Sepulveda Boulevard in Los Angeles (two miles north of LAX).
See also
- List of American films of 1963
References
External links
- The Courtship of Eddie's Father on IMDb
- The Courtship of Eddie's Father at AllMovie
- The Courtship of Eddie's Father at the TCM Movie Database
- The Courtship of Eddie's Father at the American Film Institute Catalog
Source of article : Wikipedia