Miss Pettigrew Lives for a Day

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Miss Pettigrew Lives for a Day

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Plot

A late-'30s-era London governess hired to work in the home of a high-profile nightclub chanteuse gets a taste of the good life when she is assigned the task of sorting out the singer's many unseemly affairs in a period comedy starring Frances McDormand and adapted from the novel by Winifred Watson. Unfairly and unceremoniously dismissed from her latest position without so much as a penny of severance pay, Miss Guinevere Pettigrew (McDormand) realizes that in order to stay financially afloat she'll need to find a new job fast. Though she has worn out her welcome at the unemployment office due to her propensity to loose jobs, she's determined to seize the day and keep an open mind. Before she's booted from the office, she takes note of a job opening that is a little outside of her experience, but decides to pursue it, pretending she is the prospective employee the office was planning to recommend. Becoming a "social secretary" may not be exactly what Miss Pettigrew had in mind when the time came to seek out a new job, yet she hopes that her enthusiasm will offset her inexperience and throws caution to the wind.

Upon arriving at the penthouse of up-and-coming American entertainer Delysia Lafosse (Amy Adams), the unassuming Miss Pettigrew becomes instantly swept up in the high-society milieu. But serving as social secretary to one of the busiest women in the city is no easy task, and before the day is over, Miss Pettigrew and her new charge will both learn a thing or two about life and love. Now, as Miss Pettigrew helps Delysia make informed career decisions and choose between one of three potential suitors, her own attraction to a handsome clothing designer named Joe (Ciarán Hands) could prove her undoing. Joe's current fiancée, Edythe (Shirley Henderson), is an insolent fashion maven with little patience for those she deems incompetent or unworthy of the spotlight, and she currently has her targets locked onto a certain social secretary who doesn't yet grasp the complex social mechanisms of the high-society lifestyle. Simon Beaufoy and David Magee co-author a screenplay directed by Bharat Nalluri. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi

Cast

Tom Payne - Phil; Mark Strong - Nick; Clare Clifford - Margery; Sarah Kants - Annabel Darlington; Christina Cole - Charlotte Warren; Stephanie Cole - Miss Holt; Beatie Edney - Mrs. Brummegan; Matthew Ryan - Gerry; Mo Zainal - Lenny; Katy Murphy - Miss Holt's Assistant; Sally Leonard - Woman at Train Station; Tim Potter - Nightclub Patron; David Alexander - Chestnut Seller

Credit

Niall Moroney - Art Director, Nick Gottschalk - Art Director, Maggi Townley - Associate Producer, Steve Finn - Boom Operator, Leo Davis - Casting, Jack Murphy - Choreography, Paul Englishby - Conductor, Jane Frazer - Co-producer, Michael O'Connor - Costume Designer, Guy Heley - First Assistant Director, Bharat Nalluri - Director, Barney Pilling - Editor, Frances McDormand - Executive Producer, Paul Webster - Executive Producer, Frank Frattaroli - Executive Producer, Fae Hammond - Hair Styles, Anita Burger - Hair Styles, Su Westwood - Hair Styles, Emma Pill - Location Manager, Paul Englishby - Composer (Music Score), Karen Elliott - Musical Direction/Supervision, Fae Hammond - Makeup, Anita Burger - Makeup, Su Westwood - Makeup, Sarah Greenwood - Production Designer, John DeBorman - Cinematographer, Simon Fraser - Production Manager, Stephen Garrett - Producer, Nellie Bellflower - Producer, Katie Spencer - Set Designer, Chris Munro - Sound/Sound Designer, Curtis Rivers - Stunts, Tim Halloran - Stunts, Paul Weston - Stunts Coordinator, Mark Holt - Special Effects Supervisor, John Crampton - Unit Production Manager, Simon Beaufoy - Screenwriter, David Magee - Screenwriter, Malcolm McLean - Additional Cinematography, John Moffatt - Visual Effects Supervisor, Michael Fentum - Sound Effects Editor, Gillian Raddings - Animal Trainer/Wrangler, Debbie Kaye - Animal Trainer/Wrangler, Lloyd Bucks - Animal Trainer/Wrangler, Carol Jones - Animal Trainer/Wrangler, John Rose - Animal Trainer/Wrangler, Stacy Mann - Unit Publicist, Merrit Gold - First Assistant Camera, Leigh Gold - First Assistant Camera, Chuck Finch - Gaffer, Steven Finch - Gaffer, Ron Nichols - Grip, Robin Stone - Grip, James Bellamy - Music Editor, Paul Englishby - Music Producer, Nicky Moss - Musical Performer, Lucie Graves - Post Production Supervisor, Rebecca Carrigan - Production Coordinator, Dennis Wiseman - Properties Master, Nigel Heath - Re-Recording Mixer, Sue Hills - Script Supervisor, Anthony Wilcox - Second Assistant Director, Alastair Rae - Steadicam Operator, Kerry Brown - Still Photographer, Julian Slater - Supervising Sound Editor, Kate Phillips - Visual Effects Producer, Dorrie Young - Art Department Assistant, Daryn McLaughlan - Assistant Art Director, Tim Aslam - Assistant Costume Designer, Aliza James - Assistant Location Manager, Synnove Godeseth - Assistant Location Manager, Andrew Gwyn Davies - Assistant Production Coordinator, Faith Thomas - Costumes Assistant, Georgina Gunner - Costumes Supervisor, Dan Morgan - Dialogue Editor, Jamie Knight - Electrician, Dave Brennan - Electrician, Steve Wood - Electrician, Lesley Gogarty - Extra Casting, The Casting Network Limited - Extra Casting, Frances Richardson - First Assistant Accountant, Emma Brazier - First Assistant Accountant, Rebecca Wolf - First Assistant Accountant, Ruth Sullivan - Foley Artist, Arthur Graley - Foley Artist, Harry Barnes - Foley Editor, Sharon Martin - Key Hairstylist, Sharon Martin - Key Make-up, Maggie Phelan - Production Accountant, Max Glickman - Second Assistant Camera, Thomas Taylor - Second Assistant Camera, Double Negative Ltd. - Visual Effects, Winifred Watson - Book Author, Paul Conway - ADR Supervisor, Voice Activated - ADR Voice Casting, Zahara Mansouri - Assistant Choreographer, Alec Gibson - Color Timing, Sandra Jones - Craft Service/Catering, Natural Addictions - Craft Service/Catering, Reel Meals (Take 2) Limited - Craft Service/Catering, Chris Scannell - Craft Service/Catering, Maria Zubiuk - Craft Service/Catering, Roy Clarke - Driver, Mike Beaven - Driver, Enyo Mortty - Driver, Peter Mercer - Driver, Colin Simmons - Driver, Dave Ballard - Driver, Mark Bellett - Driver, Allan Bradshaw - Driver, Debbie Bryant - Driver, Gary Cook - Driver, George Green - Driver, Dave Hopkin - Driver, Dave Jones - Driver, Paul Jones - Driver, Eddie Rodmel - Driver, Colin Sheffield - Driver, Barry Stephenson - Driver, Colin Townsend - Driver, Professional Negative Cutting Limited - Negative Cutter, Lee McComish - Negative Cutter, Tom Edmondson - Runner, Gayle Dickie - Runner, Sam Haviland - Runner, Joy Maxwell Davis - Set Medic/First Aid, Dave Morley - Set Medic/First Aid, Hugh Goodbody - Special Effects Technician, James M. Davis - Special Effects Technician, Jamie Weguelin - Special Effects Technician, Charlie Reed - Third Assistant Director, Dylan Jones - Video Assist, Momoco/Maguffin - Title Design, Sandra McCallig - Assistant Editor, Kenny Burnett - Properties Storeman, Josh Barraud - Standby Properties, Kristin Theyers - Standby Properties, Jules Baker-Smith - Assistant to the Director, Joan Washington - Dialect Coach, Jessica Cole - Producer's Assistant, Beth Hearn Keech - Producer's Assistant, Alexandra Kosevic - Producer's Assistant, Lee Hosken - Standby Carpenter, Jaume Arteman - Compositor, Alex Ireland - Compositor, Jan Maroske - Compositor, Dan Snape - Compositor, Ian Copeland - Rotoscope Artist, Azzard Gordon - Matchmove Artist, Sophie Tyler - Assistant Set Decorator

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Miss Pettigrew Lives for a Day

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Miss Pettigrew Lives for a Day

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Miss Pettigrew Lives for a Day

Theatrical release poster
Directed by Bharat Nalluri
Produced by Nellie Bellflower
Stephen Garrett
Written by David Magee
Simon Beaufoy
Based on the novel by Winifred Watson
Starring Frances McDormand
Amy Adams
Ciarán Hinds
Lee Pace
Music by Paul Englishby
Cinematography John de Borman
Editing by Barney Pilling
Distributed by Focus Features
Release date(s) 7 March 2008 (US)
15 August 2008 (UK)
Running time 91 minutes
Country United Kingdom
United States
Language English
Box office $16,724,933

Miss Pettigrew Lives for a Day is a 2008 British/American romantic comedy film directed by Bharat Nalluri. The screenplay by David Magee and Simon Beaufoy is based on the 1938 novel of the same name by Winifred Watson.

Contents

Plot

Set in London just prior to World War II, the film is about a middle-aged, straight-laced vicar's daughter and governess Guinevere Pettigrew, who has been fired from her fourth job. When employment agency head Miss Holt insists that she won't help her, the destitute Miss Pettigrew leaves the office with an assignment intended for a colleague, unaware that flamboyant American singer/actress Delysia Lafosse (Amy Adams) wants a social secretary rather than a nanny.

Arriving at the luxurious penthouse apartment where Delysia is staying, Miss Pettigrew quickly discovers the younger woman is involved with three men — penniless and devoted pianist Michael Pardue, who has just been released from prison; wealthy and controlling Nick Calderelli, who owns the nightclub where she is performing; and young theatre impresario Phil Goldman, who is in a position to cast her in the lead role in a West End play. As she tries to help Delysia sort through her various affairs, Miss Pettigrew is swept up into the world of high society. She is given a makeover by her new employer, and at a fashion show hosted by fashion maven Edythe Dubarry, she meets and feels attracted to lingerie designer Joe Blomfield, who's involved in a tempestuous relationship with Edythe.

In the course of twenty-four hours, Guinevere and Delysia become fast friends and help each other achieve their romantic destinies. After a series of complications like those in screwball comedies of the 1930s and '40s, Delysia and Michael sail for New York City aboard the Queen Mary and Miss Pettigrew is found in Victoria Station by Joe, who is convinced that she is the woman for him, and has been looking for her all night. They leave the station together, arm in arm.

Cast

Production

Frances McDormand on location in May 2007.

In Miss Pettigrew's Long Trip to Hollywood, a bonus feature on the film's DVD release, Keith Pickering, the son of the author of the original book, Winifred Watson, reveals his mother first sold the film rights to Universal Pictures in 1939. Within the next few years, the studio developed it as a musical to star Billie Burke in the title role, but just before filming was scheduled to begin, Japan bombed Pearl Harbor and the project was shelved.

In 1954, Universal renewed the rights, but the property remained undeveloped. When producer Stephen Garrett discovered the book and proposed an adaptation to executives at Focus Features, he learned the rights still belonged to Universal which, as the parent company of Focus, allowed him to proceed with the project.

Filming locations included the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane in Covent Garden, Whitehall Court in Westminster, and Pimlico. Interiors were shot in the Ealing Studios.

Critical reception

The review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes reports 78% of critics gave the film positive reviews, based on 117 reviews[1], and Metacritic reported the film had an average score of 63 out of 100, based on 26 reviews[2]

Stephen Holden of the New York Times called the film "an example of how a little nothing of a story can be inflated into a little something of a movie with perfect casting, dexterous tonal manipulation and an astute eye and ear for detail." He praised Amy Adams, saying the "screen magic" she displays "hasn’t been this intense since the heyday of Jean Arthur," and he noted Frances McDormand achieved her "metamorphosis from glum stoicism to demure radiance with impressive comic understatement."[3]

In the San Francisco Chronicle, Ruthe Stein called the film "a swell adaptation" and added, "Frothy and exuberantly entertaining — in part because of the sexual innuendoes — it's the best romantic comedy so far this year . . . Director Bharat Nalluri gives Miss Pettigrew Lives for a Day the patina of a film actually made in the 1930s."[4]

Todd McCarthy of Variety said of the actors, "McDormand's performance slowly builds a solid integrity, and contrasts well with Adams' more flamboyant turn, which initially accentuates Delysia's constant role playing but eventually flowers into a gratifyingly full-fledged portrayal of a woman with a past she wishes to escape. Hinds puts real feeling into his work."[5]

Box office performance

In its opening weekend in the United States and Canada, the film earned $2,490,942 on 535 screens, ranking #11 at the box office. It eventually grossed $12,313,694 in the US and Canada and $4,411,239 in other markets for a total worldwide box office of $16,724,933.[6]

References

External links


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David Alexander (Actor, Comedy/Children's/Family)
Simon Beaufoy (Writer, Director, Drama/Comedy)