Some Like It Hot (1959)

Published: March 21, 2022, 10 a.m.

b'It\'s a milestone we never thought we\'d achieve when we started our podcast, but here it is: Our 300th episode! And to celebrate, we\'re focusing on a famous hollywood director and a listener suggestion both! Bennett Oberfeld gave us the suggestions back in December of 2022 that we look at the films of acclaimed director Billy Wilder, specifically the two we chose for our 300th and 301st episodes! We start with a film about two down-on-their-luck jazz musicians who witness a gangland massacre and hide out by pretending to be women in an all-female jazz band in 1959\'s "Some Like It Hot!" The film stars Tony Curtis and Jack Lemmon as Joe and Jerry, tenor sax and upright bass, who join Sweet Sue and her Society Syncopators, an women-only jazz band and head to Florida, just one step ahead of the mob! Along the way, they meet Sugar Kane Kowalczyk, the band\'s vocalist (Marilyn Monroe). Joe becomes enamored with Sugar, and moonlights (literally) as a young millionaire to try to win her heart (amongst other things). Jerry, as Daphne, becomes the object of an older millionaire, Osgood Fielding III\'s (Joe E. Brown) affections, and he pursues "her" with vigor and passion. As with most films of this era, there\'s a generally happy ending all around! The film was nominated for six academy awards, and won one for Best Costume Design, Black-and-White!'