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  1. Mar 8, 1996 · The movie stars Robin Williams as Armand Goldman, the owner-operator of a drag revue on South Beach. He lives upstairs over his nightclub with Albert (Nathan Lane), the star of the show, who has been his lover for some 20 years. Albert is a basket case, threatened by encroaching age and insecurity.

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    • The Time Was Right
    • "The Birdcage" Was The 7th Incarnation of The French Farce "La Cage Aux Folles"
    • It Was The First Elaine May/Mike Nichols Movie Collaboration
    • Most of The Improvising Happened in Rehearsal
    • Only Parts of The Movie Were Filmed in Miami
    • Armand Was Almost Steve Martin, with Robin Williams Playing Albert
    • Robin Williams Didn't Want to Play Albert Anyway
    • This Was Nathan Lane's First Big break. and He Turned It Down
    • "The Birdcage" Was A Big Break For Other Actors, Too
    • David Allen Grier Was The Original Butler

    America was just about ready for this. At the time Ellen DeGeneres had not yet come out. Two recent movies featuring drag queens — "Priscilla, Queen of the Desert" and "To Wong Foo, Thanks for Everything! Julie Newmar" had been released to mixed reviews and decent-if-not-great box office. Did Robin Williams' name help bring more people into the the...

    "La Cage aux Folles" ("The Cage of Madwomen") is a 1973 French play by Jean Poiret and Francis Veber with more or less the same plot as above, just substitute Saint-Tropez for South Beach. It was made into a French-Italian movie in 1978, had two sequels, spawned an American TV pilot called "Adam and Yves" that failed, and was adapted as a hugely su...

    Younger audiences may not grasp the significance, but Elaine May and Mike Nichols were a massively influential comedy duo in the 50s and 60s who redefined both improv and standup comedy with multiple appearances on stage and TV before launching a year-long, sold-out Broadway show together. They separated afterwards at the height of their fame to be...

    It can be difficult to corral brilliant comic improvisors such as Robin Williams and Nathan Lane, but Nichols insisted on weeks of rehearsal — not a common thing for movies — and let them improvise all they wanted then. The best ideas went into the script because Nichols wanted to shoot the movie as much like a play as possible, without much editin...

    The incredible opening tracking shot starts with the camerasailing over the Atlantic Ocean to cross Lummus Parkto enter Armand's nightclub The Birdcage, or, as it's known in real life, the Carlyle Hotel at 1250 Ocean Drive. While most of the movie was shot in Hollywood, several exterior scenes were shot at various locations at the beach and in the ...

    Nichols had directed Martin and Williams in "Waiting for Godot"a few years earlier and they were set for this movie, but schedule conflicts prevented Martin from staying in.

    That turned out to be a good thing because Williams had just done a movie wearing women's clothing in "Mrs. Doubtfire" and he wanted the acting challenge of playing against his usual type to be the calm one for a change. "I wanted to play Armand because it gave me an opportunity to portray a very dry type of comedy versus being outrageous," William...

    In movies, anyway. Lane was already becoming a name on Broadway but to this point his movie appearances were limited to bit parts in "Jeffrey," "The Addams Family" and others, and as the voice of Timmon in the animated "Lion King." Nichols offered him the part while he as starring in "Laughter on the 23rd Floor" by longtime Nichols collaborator Nei...

    Calista Flockhart didn't have much of a Hollywood resume at this point, but Nichols saw her in an off-Broadway production of "The Loop" and signed her up. She may be able to thank "The Birdcage" for "Ally McBeal" the next year. And while Hank Azaria was known for his voices in "The Simpsons" and a few movie roles, it was his scene-stealing portraya...

    In the first drafts the butler was a Black man, as he was in the original French version. After the first read through they decided to make a change, as Azaria explained to The A.V. Club. "And they thought David was brilliant, but they thought that in an American context, the idea of a Black houseman would be somewhat distasteful and have racist ov...

  3. Campy, comedic romp with lots of profanity. Read Common Sense Media's The Birdcage review, age rating, and parents guide.

    • Mike Nichols
    • Andrea Beach
    • Robin Williams, Gene Hackman, Nathan Lane
  4. Mar 11, 2021 · The Birdcage at 25: a gay comedy that broke boundaries. 10 March 2021. By Emily Maskell, Features correspondent. Alamy. Starring Robin Williams, this 1996 US remake of a 1970s French farce...

  5. Both hilarious and politically incisive, The Birdcage, a remake of the 1978 French farce La Cage aux Folles, stands up surprisingly well through a modern lens. Full Review | Sep 26, 2022

  6. Mar 8, 1996 · The Birdcage: Directed by Mike Nichols. With Robin Williams, Gene Hackman, Nathan Lane, Dianne Wiest. A gay cabaret owner and his drag queen companion agree to put up a false straight front so that their son can introduce them to his fiancée's right-wing, conservative parents.

  7. In this remake of the classic French farce "La Cage aux Folles," engaged couple Val Goldman (Dan Futterman) and Barbara Keeley (Calista Flockhart) shakily introduce their future in-laws.

    • (62)
    • Comedy, LGBTQ+
    • R
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