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The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas (film)

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Wikipedia article




'The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas' is a 1982 American musical comedy film co-written, produced and directed by Colin Higgins (in his final film as director). It is an adaptation of the 1978 Broadway musical of the same name, and stars Burt Reynolds, Dolly Parton, Jim Nabors, Charles Durning, Dom DeLuise, Noah Beery Jr., Robert Mandan, Lois Nettleton, Theresa Merritt, Barry Corbin, Mary Jo Catlett and Mary Louise Wilson.

Durning was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor for his role as the Texas governor. Golden Globe Award nominations went to the film for Best Motion Picture (Comedy or Musical) and Parton for Best Actress in a Motion Picture (Comedy or Musical). It was the fourth highest-grossing live-action musical film of the 1980s, and the top grossing of 1982.

Plot



Ed Earl Dodd, the Sheriff of Gilbert, Texas, has a longstanding relationship with Miss Mona Stangley, who runs a brothel called the "Chicken Ranch" outside of town. Illegal or not, Ed Earl does not interfere with her business, which has been a fixture of the town going back to before World War I.

Occasionally interrupted by Deputy Fred Wilkins, the narrator, Ed Earl and Miss Mona have a pleasant arrangement as secret lovers. Almost everyone in town approves of Miss Mona, a public-minded citizen who regularly donates to charity and is decent and law-abiding except in her line of work.

Mayor Rufus P. Poindexter and insurance salesman/local townsman C.J. Vernon inform Ed Earl that altruistic consumer advocate and television personality Melvin P. Thorpe, originally from New Jersey, announces his intention to do an expos about the Chicken Ranch. Visiting Thorpe in his Houston studio, Ed Earl is shocked by Thorpe's live telecast, in which Thorpe sensationalizingly reveals to a huge audience, "Texas has a whorehouse in it." He later compounds the problem by insulting and threatening Thorpe in the town square after Thorpe comes to town and accuses him of taking payoffs and bribes for not cracking down on Miss Mona's business, all caught on TV.

The Chicken Ranch is an institution, one where the winning team of the football game between state rivals the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M Aggies traditionally comes to "celebrate" its victory. Thorpe's negative publicity puts a spotlight on the place, so Ed Earl asks Miss Mona to shutter the property until the TV attention subsides in two months. She closes the bordello to her regular customers, but elects to allow the football players have their victory party. Thorpe and his TV cameras infiltrate the property, break into the house, and catch the Aggies and a State Senator on tape in mid-debauch. Ed Earl and Miss Mona quarrel, punctuated by him calling her "a whore", and then bitterly break up.

The Governor of Texas, who cannot decide on any issue until he first sees what voters say in opinion polls, listens to Ed Earl's eloquent appeal to keep the Chicken Ranch open. However, when the polls say a bare majority of Texans disapprove of the place, he orders Ed Earl to close it down. The working girls sadly leave the Chicken Ranch immediately and permanently. Miss Mona is disconsolate, at least until learning what Ed Earl did for her to attempt to keep it open.

As Miss Mona is departing the whorehouse for the last time, Ed Earl stops her and proposes. She turns him down, knowing that having a wife who had once run a whorehouse would hurt his chances of running for the state legislature. He insists that he wants to marry her, regardless of what people will think or say. To drive his point home, he picks up Miss Mona like a bridegroom, installs her in the passenger seat of the pickup, and drives away.

In an epilogue, Deputy Fred, who succeeded Ed Earl as the Sheriff, states that Ed Earl and Miss Mona married and that Ed Earl successfully ran for the legislature, becoming a State Senator.

Cast



* Burt Reynolds as Sheriff Ed Earl Dodd

* Dolly Parton as Mona Stangley

* Dom DeLuise as Melvin P. Thorpe

* Charles Durning as The Governor

* Theresa Merritt as Jewel

* Jim Nabors as Deputy Fred Wilkins

* Lois Nettleton as Dulcie Mae

* Noah Beery Jr. as Edsel Mackey

* Robert Mandan as Senator Charles Wingwood

* Raleigh Bond as Mayor Rufus P. Poindexter

* Barry Corbin as C.J. Vernon

* Ken Magee as Mansel

* Mary Jo Catlett as Rita Crowell

* Mary Louise Wilson as Miss Modene Ennis

* Howard K. Smith as himself

* Donald F. Colson as Jeff Gerald

* Helen Kleeb as Dora

* Mickey Jones as Henry

* Bobby Fite as Dulcie Mae's son

* Paula Shaw as Wulla Jean

* Kenneth White as Sheriff Jack Roy Wallace

* Ted Gehring as Sheriff Chapman

* Verne Lundquist as Football Announcer

* Lee Grosscup as Football Color Man

* Alice Drummond as Governor's secretary

* Terri Treas as Chicken Ranch Girl: Taddy-Jo

* Randy Bennett as Privates Boy

* Andrea Pike as Chicken Ranch Girl: Shy (Speaking scenes cut)

* Valerie Leigh Bixler as Chicken Ranch Girl: Angel (Speaking scenes cut)

Production



Development

Originally, Larry L. King and Peter Masterson were going to write the screenplay and Masterson and Tommy Tune, who had directed the stage production, were to direct the film together. King recommended Shirley MacLaine, Dyan Cannon, Cari Glynn and Jill Clayburgh as the possibles to star but was told they were not a sufficient box office draw.

When Dolly Parton was cast King suggested Willie Nelson as a co-star and Universal executives met with him but at the end Burt Reynolds was cast. Reynolds was paid $3.5 million and Parton $1.5 million.

Reynolds wanted script changes and wanted to sing. Universal became nervous about giving the film to first-time directors and ended up replacing Masterson and Tune with Colin Higgins.

Reynolds later said Parton "had two directors fired before we started they were gone. Because I'd made so many movies and she hadn't, everyone thought it was me. Whether she was right or wrong in those decisions, it was amazing to me that she could do it."

Higgins prepared for directing it by watching old George Cukor films and Dr. Pepper commercials ("They have a lot of wonderful movement", said Higgins.)

Reynolds said he suggested to Higgins that Charles Durning be cast. "Colin is very smart, very commercial. They wanted Mickey Rooney, so I manipulated him a little. I told Colin, 'Mickey Rooney is a wonderful actor, but everyone knows that. You won't get any credit. Charles Durning can sing and dance and no one knows it, so you'll get all the credit.' "

Adaptation

The book of the play was restructured to make it a vehicle for Parton and Reynolds.

The plot is basically the same as that of the stage production, with one significant difference. In the original, Ed Earl and Miss Mona had a one-night stand 15 years earlier, but in the film, they maintain an ongoing affair.

The relationship in the film brings about not only the accusatory scene, when the sheriff—disappointed that Mona has broken her promise to close the Chicken Ranch down long enough for things to cool off—calls her a whore, but also the happy ending, when he proposes marriage to Mona, even though that might endanger his chances to be elected as a state legislator; the epilogue comments state that he is elected anyway.

Filming

Parton described her experience as "a nightmare."'Dolly on Dolly: Interviews and Encounters with Dolly Parton'. ed. Randy L. Schmidt For his part, Reynolds described Parton as "very self-deprecating, at least in public."

Music



Much of Carol Hall's original Broadway score was performed in the adaptation. Eight songs, "Girl, You're a Woman", "Twenty-Four Hours of Lovin'", "Doatsy Mae", "The Anglette March", "The Bus from Amarillo", "No Lies", "Good Old Girl" and "Finale", were omitted. Two additional Parton compositions appear in the film: "Sneakin' Around", performed as a duet with Parton and Reynolds, and a two-stanza rendition of Parton's 1973 composition "I Will Always Love You". The film version of "I Will Always Love You" the original recording had been a U.S. country chart-topper for Parton in the spring of 1974 was released as a single in July 1982, and again reached number one on the U.S. country singles chart. It was also a mid-level hit on Billboard pop and adult contemporary charts. An altered version of Hall's "Hard Candy Christmas", in which Parton sings both the chorus and the verses of the song (as opposed to the film, which is partially sung by the brothel ladies), was also released as a single, reaching the top ten on the country singles chart in late 1982.

Parton wrote several new songs that were filmed but ultimately unused, including "A Gamble Either Way" and "Where Stallions Run". The former was restored for the ABC network television broadcast, as the film was too short for its time slot after the censors finished their edits and additional material was needed. "A Gamble Either Way" replaced "Girl, You're a Woman" and was sung by Parton after Mona interviewed "Shy" (Andrea Pike) for a job at the Chicken Ranch. The characters of Shy and Angel from the Broadway show were significantly reduced in the film; their footage was eventually edited out. "Down at the Chicken Ranch" was written for the trailer. Parton recorded two of the deleted songs, "A Gamble Either Way" and "A Cowboy's Ways" (a reworking of "Where Stallions Run"), and included them on her 1983 album 'Burlap & Satin.'

;Musical numbers

# "20 Fans"

# "A Lil' Ole Bitty Pissant Country Place"

# "Sneakin' Around"

# "Watchdog Report"

# "Texas Has a Whorehouse in It"

# "Texas Has a Whorehouse in It" (reprise)

# "The Aggie Song"

# "Courtyard Shag" (instrumental)

# "The Sidestep"

# "The Sidestep/Texas Has a Whorehouse in It" (reprise)

# "Hard Candy Christmas"

# "I Will Always Love You"

Release



Marketing

The film presented some difficulties for Universal, particularly with advertising. In 1982, the word "whorehouse" was considered obscene in parts of the United States, resulting in the film being renamed 'The Best Little Cathouse in Texas' in some print ads, while television ads were either banned outright in some areas, or the offending word was censored; on WXYZ-TV in Detroit, the announcer on the station's "Now Showing" segment merely clicked his tongue to eliminate the offending word: "The Best Little [click, click] in Texas!" In Canada, the title was generally left alone in print, but televised trailers used a bleep censor over the word. During interviews, Parton sometimes referred to the film as 'The Best Little Chicken House in Texas'.

Box office

'The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas' opened in 1,400 theaters on July 23, 1982 and earned $11,874,268 in its opening weekend, ranking number one in the United States box office, dethroning 'E.T. The Extra Terrestrial's six-week run at the top of the box office. It was the biggest weekend for a musical film ever. The film grossed $69,701,637 domestically.

Critical reception

The film received mixed reviews from critics. On review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds a 42% rating based on 12 reviews. Roger Ebert of the 'Chicago Sun-Times' gave the film two out of four stars, stating, "If they ever give Dolly her freedom and stop packaging her so antiseptically, she could be terrific. But Dolly and Burt and 'Whorehouse' never get beyond the concept stage in this movie."

Cultural influence



The film and the original Broadway musical it was based on were spoofed in the 1982 pornographic film 'Memphis Cathouse Blues', which starred Annette Haven in the Dolly Parton role of the madam and Mike Horner in the Burt Reynolds role as the sheriff. Porn star Kay Parker, who played one of the prostitutes in the film, had an uncredited bit role in 'The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas'.

Legacy



The house used in the film is located at Universal Studios in Hollywood and can be viewed as part of the backlot tram tour. The inspiration for the set came from a real ranch house located outside Austin, Texas, which is featured in scenes from the movie.

The house was shown in the 'Ghost Whisperer' television series episode "The Lost Boys".

The house was also featured in Rob Zombie's 2003 horror film 'House of 1000 Corpses'.

The film was mentioned in an episode of 'The Venture Bros.', where Dr. Venture mistakes it for a pornographic film, given its "racy" history.

References



;Further reading

* Hall, Carol. Vocal Selections from 'The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas'. Melville, N.Y.: MCA Music, 1979.

* King, Larry L. and Masterson, Peter. 'The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas'. Music and lyrics by Carol Hall. 'French's Musical Library.' New York, N.Y.: S. French, 1978.

* King, Larry L. 'The Whorehouse Papers'. New York: Viking Press, 1982.


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