How to Marry a Millionaire: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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{{quote|'''Pola Debevoise:''' I want to marry Rockefeller.
{{quote|'''Pola Debevoise:''' I want to marry Rockefeller.
'''Schatze Page:''' Which one?
'''Schatze Page:''' Which one?
'''Pola Debevoise:''' I don't care. }}
'''Pola Debevoise:''' I don't care.}}


Movie from 1953 with three of the most famous leading ladies of the era as the main characters: [[Lauren Bacall]], [[Marilyn Monroe]] and [[Betty Grable]].
Movie from 1953 with three of the most famous leading ladies of the era as the main characters: [[Lauren Bacall]], [[Marilyn Monroe]] and [[Betty Grable]].


Three women rent an expensive apartment to appear rich. Their plan is to each marry a millionaire. To be able to afford the rent, they keep selling the furniture.
Three women rent an expensive apartment to appear rich. Their plan is to each marry a millionaire. To be able to afford the rent, they keep selling the furniture.


Things become complicated when love starts to interfere with their plans.
Things become complicated when love starts to interfere with their plans.


Partially inspired by the much earlier ''[[The Greeks Had a Word for Them]]''.
Partially inspired by the much earlier ''[[The Greeks Had a Word for Them]]''.
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{{tropelist}}
=== This work features examples of: ===
* [[Actor Allusion]]: Schatze says: "Look at [[Franklin D Roosevelt|Roosevelt]], look at [[Winston Churchill|Churchill]], look at old fella what's his name in ''[[The African Queen]]''". The 'old guy in ''[[The African Queen]]'' was [[Humphrey Bogart]], Bacall's husband in real life.
* [[All-Star Cast]]
* [[Blind Without'Em]]: Pola. Unfortunately for her, she believes very strongly that "[[The Glasses Gotta Go|Men aren't attentive to girls who wear glasses]]," which for {{spoiler|Freddie Denmark}} isn't true.
* [[Blind Without'Em]]: Pola. Unfortunately for her, she believes very strongly that "[[The Glasses Gotta Go|Men aren't attentive to girls who wear glasses]]," which for {{spoiler|Freddie Denmark}} isn't true.
* [[Defrosting Ice Queen]]: Schatze, though she doesn't defrost completely.
* [[Defrosting Ice Queen]]: Schatze, though she doesn't defrost completely.
* [[Dumb Blonde]]: Pola. Loco to a lesser degree.
* [[Dumb Blonde]]: Pola. Loco to a lesser degree.
** Loco thinks skiing on the water is the normal way, skiing on snow is weird.
** Loco thinks skiing on the water is the normal way, skiing on snow is weird.
* [[Fainting]]: The big reveal at the ending has all the women faint.
* [[Fainting]]: The big reveal at the ending has all the women faint.
* [[Freudian Trio]]: Schatze is Superego, Loco is Ego and Pola is Id.
* [[Gold Digger]]: The entire premise
* [[Gold Digger]]: The entire premise.
* [[Hoist by His Own Petard]]: Driving back to [[New York City]] from his would-be tryst with Loco in Maine, drives a circuitous route to the west side of the Hudson River where nobody knows him. All the while he tells Loco how his intellect will keep his wife from knowing that he wasn't really on a business trip. {{spoiler|1=As they cross the George Washington Bridge, they are stopped so that a swarm of press photographers can take their picture for being the [[Umpteenth Customer|five-millionth car]] to cross the bridge.}}
* [[Hoist by His Own Petard]]: Driving back to [[New York City]] from his would-be tryst with Loco in Maine, drives a circuitous route to the west side of the Hudson River where nobody knows him. All the while he tells Loco how his intellect will keep his wife from knowing that he wasn't really on a business trip. {{spoiler|1=As they cross the George Washington Bridge, they are stopped so that a swarm of press photographers can take their picture for being the [[Umpteenth Customer|five-millionth car]] to cross the bridge.}}
* [[In Joke]]: Two of the three stars refer to their [[Real Life]] husbands:
* [[In-Joke]]: Two of the three stars refer to their [[Real Life]] husbands:
** At the hunting lodge, Loco (Betty Grable) hears a [[Big Band]] on the radio and identifies it as Harry James's (her then-husband). Waldo asks her how she knows its Harry James's band. She replies that she knows Harry James, and that that's Harry James. {{spoiler|In what could count as a [[Crossover Punchline]], the announcer identifies the band as belonging to another bandleader.}}
** At the hunting lodge, Loco (Betty Grable) hears a [[Big Band]] on the radio and identifies it as Harry James's (her then-husband). Waldo asks her how she knows its Harry James's band. She replies that she knows Harry James, and that that's Harry James. {{spoiler|In what could count as a [[Crossover Punchline]], the announcer identifies the band as belonging to another bandleader.}}
** Schatze ([[Lauren Bacall]]) tells J.D. that she's always liked older men, like [[Humphrey Bogart|what's-his-name]] in ''[[The African Queen]]''.
** Schatze ([[Lauren Bacall]]) tells J.D. that she's always liked older men, like [[Humphrey Bogart|what's-his-name]] in ''[[The African Queen]]''.
* [[Power Trio]]: Schatze is Superego, Loco is Ego and Pola is Id.
* [[Pretty in Mink]]: Several furs worn, and even the gold digging tips mention the mink department at Bergdorf's as a good place to find rich men.
* [[Pretty in Mink]]: Several furs worn, and even the gold digging tips mention the mink department at Bergdorf's as a good place to find rich men.

{{Needs More Tropes}}


{{reflist}}
{{reflist}}
[[Category:Films of the 1950s]]
[[Category:Films of the 1950s]]
[[Category:How to Marry a Millionaire]]
[[Category:How to Marry a Millionaire]]
[[Category:Film]]

Latest revision as of 17:08, 28 October 2020

All my life ever since I was a little girl I've always had the same dream. To marry a zillionaire.

Pola Debevoise: I want to marry Rockefeller.
Schatze Page: Which one?
Pola Debevoise: I don't care.

Movie from 1953 with three of the most famous leading ladies of the era as the main characters: Lauren Bacall, Marilyn Monroe and Betty Grable.

Three women rent an expensive apartment to appear rich. Their plan is to each marry a millionaire. To be able to afford the rent, they keep selling the furniture.

Things become complicated when love starts to interfere with their plans.

Partially inspired by the much earlier The Greeks Had a Word for Them.


Tropes used in How to Marry a Millionaire include:
  • Blind Without'Em: Pola. Unfortunately for her, she believes very strongly that "Men aren't attentive to girls who wear glasses," which for Freddie Denmark isn't true.
  • Defrosting Ice Queen: Schatze, though she doesn't defrost completely.
  • Dumb Blonde: Pola. Loco to a lesser degree.
    • Loco thinks skiing on the water is the normal way, skiing on snow is weird.
  • Fainting: The big reveal at the ending has all the women faint.
  • Freudian Trio: Schatze is Superego, Loco is Ego and Pola is Id.
  • Gold Digger: The entire premise.
  • Hoist by His Own Petard: Driving back to New York City from his would-be tryst with Loco in Maine, drives a circuitous route to the west side of the Hudson River where nobody knows him. All the while he tells Loco how his intellect will keep his wife from knowing that he wasn't really on a business trip. As they cross the George Washington Bridge, they are stopped so that a swarm of press photographers can take their picture for being the five-millionth car to cross the bridge.
  • In-Joke: Two of the three stars refer to their Real Life husbands:
    • At the hunting lodge, Loco (Betty Grable) hears a Big Band on the radio and identifies it as Harry James's (her then-husband). Waldo asks her how she knows its Harry James's band. She replies that she knows Harry James, and that that's Harry James. In what could count as a Crossover Punchline, the announcer identifies the band as belonging to another bandleader.
    • Schatze (Lauren Bacall) tells J.D. that she's always liked older men, like what's-his-name in The African Queen.
  • Pretty in Mink: Several furs worn, and even the gold digging tips mention the mink department at Bergdorf's as a good place to find rich men.