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  1. Critic's Choice

    Critic's Choice

    1963 · Comedy · 1h 40m

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  1. Critic's Choice. (film) Critic's Choice is a 1963 American comedy film directed by Don Weis. Based on the 1960 Broadway play of the same name by Ira Levin, the movie stars Bob Hope and Lucille Ball and includes Rip Torn, Marilyn Maxwell, Jim Backus, Marie Windsor and Jerome Cowan in the cast. This is the last of four films that Hope and Ball ...

  2. Critic's Choice: Directed by Don Weis. With Bob Hope, Lucille Ball, Marilyn Maxwell, Rip Torn. Parker Ballantine is a New York theater critic and his wife writes a play that may or may not be very good.

    • (1.1K)
    • Comedy
    • Don Weis
    • 1963-04-13
  3. Critic's Choice (1963) -- (Movie Clip) He's Murdering The Play Opening from director Don Weis, Marilyn Maxwell on the Broadway stage, then we meet principals, Bob Hope (as critic Parker) and wife Lucille Ball, encountering John Dehner and Evan McCord, then at the newsroom Jerome Cowan and Richard Deacon, in Critic’s Choice, 1963, from the play loosely based on the real-life couple Walter and ...

    • Don Weis, Russell Llewellyn
    • Bob Hope
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  5. Critic's Choice (1963) cast and crew credits, including actors, actresses, directors, writers and more. Menu. Movies. ... Bikes on Film! a list of 280 titles

  6. Ira Levin's play Critic's Choice which ran 189 performances on Broadway in the 1960-1961 season was expanded exponentially for the screen version. It's Broadway origins are hardly noticeable. Stepping into the roles played on stage by Henry Fonda and Georgeann Johnson are Bob Hope and Lucille Ball in their fourth and last film together.

  7. Jun 19, 2007 · Add it all up and Critic's Choice is an easygoing comedy that occasionally falls flat (veteran TV director Don Weis can't decide if he's directing an all-out comedy or a marital melodrama), but Bob & Lucy make it surprisingly enjoyable, and Levin's source material has a lot to say about marriage, divorce, and the foibles of playwrights and ...

    • DVD
  8. Ira Levin wrote the stage comedy Critic's Choice as a good-natured retort to a comment made by critic Walter Kerr. In his essay How Not to Write a Play, Kerr noted that the worst possible scenario would involve a drama critic forced to review a play written by his wife (we should mention that Kerr's own wife was noted playwright Jean Kerr).

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