Bedtime for Bonzo
Bedtime for Bonzo | |
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Original 1951 film poster
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Directed by | Fred de Cordova |
Produced by | Michael Kraike |
Written by | screenplay by Lou Breslow & Val Burton story by Ted Berkman & Raphael Blau |
Starring | Ronald Reagan Diana Lynn Walter Slezak Jesse White Ann Tyrrell Brad Johnson Peggy as "Bonzo" Lucille Barkley |
Music by | Frank Skinner |
Cinematography | Carl E. Guthrie |
Edited by | Ted Kent |
Distributed by | Universal-International |
Release dates
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April 5, 1951 |
Running time
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83 min |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Box office | $1,225,000 (US rentals)[1] |
Bedtime for Bonzo is a 1951 comedy film directed by Fred de Cordova, starring future U.S. President Ronald Reagan, Diana Lynn, and Peggy as Bonzo.[2] It revolves around the attempts of the central character, psychology professor Peter Boyd (Ronald Reagan), to teach human morals to a chimpanzee, hoping to solve the "nature versus nurture" question. He hires a woman, Jane Linden (Diana Lynn), to pose as the chimp's mother while he plays father to it, and uses 1950s-era child rearing techniques.[3]
This movie is one of the most remembered of Reagan's acting career and renewed his popularity as a movie star for a while. Reagan, however, never even saw the film until 1984.[4]
A sequel was released entitled Bonzo Goes to College (1952), but featured none of the three lead performers from the original. Peggy died in a zoo fire two weeks after the premier of Bedtime for Bonzo;[2] another chimp was hired for the second film whose name really was "Bonzo". Reagan did not want to work on the second film; he thought the premise was silly.[citation needed]
In popular culture
The film was later referenced in connection with Reagan in the 1986 Ramones song "My Brain Is Hanging Upside Down (Bonzo Goes to Bitburg)", in the Dead Kennedys' 1986 song "Rambozo the Clown", and in a track on a 1984 Jerry Harrison record, sampling Reagan and credited to "Bonzo Goes to Washington". A song unflattering to Reagan entitled "Bad Time for Bonzo" is featured on The Damned's fourth studio album, Strawberries. It was also referenced in a Calvin and Hobbes comic strip,[5] "Bloom County" comic strip (October 11, 1981), as well as in the Strontium Dog comic story "Bitch", published in 2000 AD, which featured President Ronald Reagan being kidnapped out of his own era and taken into the far flung future setting of the comic. Other notable references include the 1966 Stan Freberg comedy album Freberg Underground, and the 1986 video of the British band Genesis's song "Land of Confusion". In the 1980s satirical British TV show Spitting Image, Reagan was shown as having appointed a dead taxidermied Bonzo as vice president.
The movie is referenced in the MMORPG video game DC Universe Online. Following the two-player duo "Gorilla Grodd's Lab", the Flash quips at Gorilla Grodd "It's bedtime for Bonzo".
A rap song released by Nickelodeon for the 2004 presidential elections had a line mention that Reagan "acted with a chimp when he was a movie star".[6]
References
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External links
- Lua error in Module:WikidataCheck at line 28: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value). Bedtime for Bonzo at IMDb
- Bedtime for Bonzo at the TCM Movie Database
- Bedtime for Bonzo at AllMovie
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- ↑ 'The Top Box Office Hits of 1951', Variety, January 2, 1952
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Rickey, Carrie. "Reagan's film persona: Cheerful, humble, kind." The Philadelphia Inquirer. June 6, 2004. National A22.
- ↑ The Unlikely Life of Ronald Reagan. 1994 ABC TV special.
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dh6-3IehOZ4
- Pages with reference errors
- English-language films
- Film articles using image size parameter
- Articles with unsourced statements from June 2015
- 1951 films
- 1950s comedy films
- American films
- American comedy films
- American black-and-white films
- Films about apes
- Universal Pictures films
- Individual chimpanzees
- 1950s comedy film stubs