Notes

The Projection Booth: Some Like It Hot (USA, 1959)

Our friends at The Projection Booth Podcast watch Billy Wilder’s Some Like It Hot! “Comedy Month continues as Mike talks with co-hosts Keith Gordon and Heidi Honeycutt about Billy Wilder’s Billy Wilder’s Some Like it Hot (1959).

Chicago, 1929. Musicians Joe (Tony Curtis) and Jerry (Jack Lemmon) are barely scraping by when they stumble onto the St. Valentine’s Day Massacre, witnessing Spats Colombo (George Raft) and his mob gun down a rival gang. With the killers on their tail, the two desperate musicians disguise themselves as women and join Sweet Sue’s Society Syncopators, an all-girl band heading to Miami. Aboard the train they meet Sugar Kane Kowalczyk (Marilyn Monroe), a ukulele-playing singer with a weakness for saxophonists and a dream of marrying a millionaire.

Mike also talks with scholar Noah Isenberg—author of the Los Angeles Times bestseller We’ll Always Have Casablanca and currently completing a cultural history of Some Like It Hot for Norton—about the film’s origins, its enduring legacy, and what it still has to say.”

Listen here.

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