NEVER ON SUNDAY (1960) B/W widescreen 91m dir: Jules Dassin

w/Melina Mercouri, Jules Dassin, Giorgos Foundas, Titos Vandis, Mitsos Ligizos, Despo Diamantidou, Dimos Starenois, Dimitris Papamichael, Alexis Solomos, Aleka Katselli, Faidon Georgitsis, Giorgos Foras, Nikos Fermas, Giannis Fermis, Hristoforos Zikas, Thanasis Vengos, Koula Agagiotou, Artemis Matsas, Kostas Doukas, Panos Karavousanos, Soula Kyriakidou, Stefanos Skopelitis, Popi Gika, Kostas Nikoloudis

Ms. Mercouri delighted the movie audiences of the world with her inimitable performance of a carefree fille de joie in this film. A tourist named Homer tries to "reform" her, but his attempt to play Pygmalion has its setbacks. Wonderful Greek musical score.

From the Turner Classic Movies website (www.tcm.com), this 2005 article about the film by Frank Miller:

"The Greek film industry took center stage in 1960 with the release of the off-beat romantic comedy Never on Sunday. The film led to increases in tourism and location shooting there. But not only was it the product of an American writer-director's imagination, but it was even resented by many in its country of origin.

"Never on Sunday was the brainchild of American expatriate Jules Dassin. After a promising start in Hollywood as director of such acclaimed film noirs as Brute Force (1947) and The Naked City (1948), Dassin had been subpoenaed by the House Committee on Un-American Activities because of his liberal politics. Because he was busy directing a play, he received a postponement, only to discover that he had been blacklisted without ever having testified. Unable to work in the U.S., he fled to Europe, where he scored an international hit in 1955 with the caper film Rififi.

"Eventually, he settled in Greece, where he fell in love with actress Melina Mercouri after casting her in his religious allegory He Who Must Die (1957). Wanting to boost both his own career and hers, he set out to create a vehicle for her that would capture the international market. The result was Never on Sunday, the comic romance of an American tourist (Dassin) who sets out to reform a small-town prostitute (Mercouri) only to make her miserable. In an effort to assure the film's U.S. success, he even wrote most of the scenes in English, using the tourist's ignorance of the Greek language as an excuse.

"With no major producers interested in the project initially, Dassin kept his budget low, a mere $125,000, which adjusted for inflation still comes out to less than a million in current dollars. One clever move on his part was assigning the music score to Manos Hadjidakis, a Greek composer noted for his work in developing new forms for the traditional instrument, the bazouki.

"The result was a huge hit. With Hadjidakis' score and hit title song selling records, the film went on to gross almost $4 million in the U.S. alone, despite --- or maybe because of --- the fact that it was condemned by the Catholic Church's Legion of Decency. When Atlanta's local censor tried to ban the film, the distributor, United Artists, had the decision reversed in the courts, marking one of the first successful challenges of the city's censorship law.

"Moreover, the film scored well with critics. Mercouri won Best Actress honors at the Cannes Film Festival, and the picture picked up five Oscar nominations: Best Actress, Best Director, Best Screenplay, Best Costumes and Best Song. That was when the real controversy started. Many Hollywood old-timers were appalled that any foreign film, much less one showing a positive view of prostitution, should knock more wholesome American fare out of the running. In a year marked by some embarrassingly blatant campaigns for the Oscar, Mercouri made headlines when she refused to heed United Artists executives who urged her to fight for the award. She complained to newspaper columnist Art Buchwald, 'I'm not a Kennedy. I'm an actress, not a politician. What do they want me to do --- ring doorbells in Beverly Hills?' With Elizabeth Taylor a shoo-in for Butterfield 8 (1960) after her near death from pneumonia, Mercouri and Dassin decided to wait out the awards in Paris.

"There also were complaints about Hadjidakis's nomination for the title song. Some pointed out that the song had achieved its greatest popularity with an English lyric by Billy Towne, who was not eligible for the award since his version was not the one heard in the film. Others complained that Hadjidakis had stolen his melody from a Greek folk song. Nonetheless, on Oscar night, he came out the film's only winner. Even then there were problems. Through a communications snafu, Hadjidakis was not there, nor had French producer Raoul J. Levy been notified that he had been asked to accept any of the film's Academy Awards. When Steve Allen and Jayne Meadows announced the Best Song winner, nobody came to the podium. After a few quips from Allen ('I guess he won't be here until Sunday.'), host Bob Hope came on and tried to claim the award, joking 'This is the moment I've been waiting for.' But Meadows simply took it herself and made sure it got to the composer.

"Ironically, in all the furor about the film's foreign production and permissive subject matter, nobody had noticed Dassin's sly criticism of the U.S. that underlay the plot. He had intended the film as a political allegory about America's penchant for forcing its values on other countries with no regard for their native cultures, but people were too busy laughing to notice. Audiences continue to enjoy Never on Sunday, through television showings (when the film aired on network television, they had to cut one scene in which Mercouri's character helps a young sailor lose his virginity) and a Broadway musical adaptation called Ilya, Darling. Mercouri re-created her film role, with music once again by Hadjidakis and script and direction by Dassin. Shortly after her Broadway triumph, however, the film began drawing fire from a new generation of Greek artists who complained that as a result of its success, the only movies people wanted to see about Greece were those perpetuating the stereotype of the happy, earthy Greek peasant."

NEVER ON SUNDAY was awarded an Oscar for Best Song ("Never on Sunday" by Manos Hadjidakis). It was also nominated for Best Director, Actress (Mercouri), Story and Screenplay (Dassin), and B & W Costume Design (Theoni V. Aldredge).