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  1. An Unmarried Woman

    An Unmarried Woman

    R1978 · Drama · 2h 5m

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  1. An attractive and well-to-do New Yorker, Erica Benton (Jill Clayburgh), finds her comfortable existence upended when her husband, Martin (Michael Murphy), ends their marriage and takes up with a ...

    • (28)
    • Drama
    • R
  2. One womans journey of self-discovery brings about a warmly human cultural conversation about female liberation, in this wonderfully frank, funny chronicle of changing 1970s sexual politics by Paul Mazursky. When her husband of sixteen years abruptly leaves her for a younger woman, Manhattan gallery worker Erica (a fantastic, Oscar-nominated ...

  3. Roger Ebert March 05, 1978. Tweet. Hollywood, California – “It all comes down to one very simple fact,” Paul Mazursky was explaining. “Betsy and I have been married for 24 years, and during that time almost all of our friends have been divorced.

  4. Aug 14, 2010 · 917 subscribers. Subscribed. Like. 210K views 13 years ago. In the most acclaimed performance of her career, Jill Clayburgh stars as Erica, a woman who has it all - until her husband walks out...

  5. An Unmarried Woman - Metacritic. 1978. R. Twentieth Century Fox. 2 h 4 m. Summary A wealthy woman from Manhattan's Upper East Side struggles to deal with her new identity and her sexuality after her husband of sixteen years leaves her for a younger woman. Comedy. Drama. Romance. Directed By: Paul Mazursky. Written By: Paul Mazursky.

  6. Edward Stewart. Cast: Michael Murphy, Alan Bates, Patricia Quinn, Cliff Gorman, Jill Clayburgh. Costume Design: Albert Wolsky. Original Music Composer: Bill Conti. Technical specifications. Rating: R. Country: United States. Language: English. Release: May 26, 1978. Duration: 124 min. Genres: Comedy, Drama, Romance.

  7. Oct 14, 2020 · October 14 2020. BUY AT: See more details, packaging, or compare. Synopsis. One womans journey of self-discovery brings about a warmly human cultural conversation about female liberation, in this wonderfully frank, funny chronicle of changing 1970s sexual politics by Paul Mazursky.

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