MonsterGirl’s 150 Days of Classic Horror #132 The Stepford Wives 1975

THE STEPFORD WIVES 1975

Joanna Eberhart: I won’t be here when you get back, don’t you see? It’s going to happen before then. Don’t ask me to explain it, I just know. There’ll be somebody with my name, and she’ll cook and clean like crazy, but she won’t take pictures, and she won’t be me! She’ll – she’ll, she’ll be like one of those the robots in Disneyland.

The Stepford Wives undoubtedly left a profound impact on popular culture. Its influence and the lasting use of the term Stepford Wife within the American lexicon symbolize the notion of unquestioning conformity.

From the very first sun-splashed frames, Bryan Forbes’s The Stepford Wives (1975) dares you to believe in the dream of suburbia, a vision deliberately polished to an unnerving sheen. Adapted from Ira Levin’s razor-sharp 1972 novel and the screenwriter William Goldman, the film blends satire, science fiction, and horror into a story that remains as psychologically and sociologically disturbing today as it was fifty years ago. With Forbes at the helm, and an ensemble led by Katharine Ross as Joanna Eberhart, Paula Prentiss as the irrepressible Bobbie, and Patrick O’Neal’s chilling Dale Coba, the cast enacts a sinister ballet of control, conformity, and loss of self.

Katharine Ross delivers a powerful portrayal of an independent and individualistic wife who has recently moved to a suburb where the other wives appeared to be excessively perfect and submissive. Bryan Forbes and Ross talked about the look of her humanoid Joanna at the end of the picture, deciding that what would leave the film with the most lasting impact would be to emphasize the part of her that is most human: her eyes. Ross was fitted with custom black contact lenses that made her eyes water but gave her that dark, spiritless look.

“What they really wanted was for them to not look shiny, to look like these black holes,”  reflects Ross. “With my eyes tearing, I don’t think it was possible for them to not look shiny. But it was still kind of spooky, wasn’t it?”

Bryan Forbes is renowned for his diverse and distinguished career as a director, writer, and producer, but one of his most notable achievements is the haunting psychological thriller Seance on a Wet Afternoon (1964). This atmospheric film, adapted by Forbes from Mark McShane’s novel, tells the story of Myra Savage (Kim Stanley), an unstable medium who convinces her husband (Richard Attenborough) to kidnap a child so she can “solve” the crime and achieve fame. Forbes’s understated, moody direction and focus on character interplay garnered widespread critical acclaim, earning Kim Stanley an Oscar nomination for Best Actress and cementing the film’s reputation as one of the darkest and finest works of his career. He also directed The L-Shaped Room (1962), with its superb acting, about a Pregnant woman, loneliness, and new beginnings. King Rat (1965): a WWII POW camp survival drama, The Whisperers (1967): about an elderly woman, poverty, and bleak isolation, and Deadfall (1968): about a Jewel heist and double-crosses.

Notable and a key signifier are the fashions designed by Anna Hill Johnstone, meant to evoke satin, silk, and submission, as Bryan Forbes opted for a deliberately modern take on the glamorous, corseted look of Southern belles.

While some descriptions, called the style “modest, prairie, or Victorian-inspired,” the reality on screen is more nuanced: there’s a modern, suburban take on the classic Gainsborough or “picture hat” style, and the Stepford wives’ dresses seem to embrace a form of contemporary old-fashioned femininity.

Post transformation, the wives’ attire at times, features long hems frilly aprons, high necklines, puffed sleeves, and plenty of ruffles, and floral patterns; styles meant to evoke an idealized, submissive domestic femininity, 70s style, rooted in mid-20th-century nostalgia —but a time they are also tailored to expertly display the actresses’ figures, often highlighting their volutptious breasts and bearing their midriffs, and waistline in ways that are markedly meant to please the male gaze.

I referred to their harmonized collective as a ballet, thinking of the end scene in the supermarket, a synchronized ensemble of Stepfordian doppelgängers who swirl together in their new fashions and physical movements reminiscent of a Busby Berkeley musical number. In a bizarre extravaganza of suburban wifery and vacuous bliss, each enhanced beauty performs her part in this choreographed spectacle of empty, newly wired perfection, moving in a fully automated manner up and down the aisles.

You follow Joanna Eberhart, a New York City photographer and modern independent woman, whose husband, Walter (Peter Masterson), persuades her to move from bustling city to the disturbingly perfect suburban town of Stepford, Connecticut.

Early scenes play off the uneasy beauty of sunlit streets, immaculately kept lawns, and the endlessly yet eerily cheerful housewives who greet the new arrival in domestic femininity, homemaker chic, and vacant smiles.

When Joanna moves to town, the Stepford wives greet her with an unsettling demeanor that is uniform and artificial. The women she meets early on, including the “Welcome Wagon” encounter, appear overly focused on domestic chores, with vacant, repetitive behavior that unnerves Joanna and immediately grabs her attention.

Five-time Academy Award nominee cinematographer Owen Roizman’s (known for his gritty style, The French Connection 1971, The Exorcist 1973, The Taking of Pelham One Two Three 1974, Three Days of the Condor 1975, Network 1976) lens suffuses the film with a pastel brightness, the kind that sterilizes rather than comforts. From the get-go, no matter how many times I rewatch this film, it’s easy to become as uneasy as Joanna by the suffocating atmosphere of this suburban paradise. Something is absolutely off-kilter in this white-picket Eden, this cookie-cutter nirvana.

Joanna and the wise-cracking Bobbie Markowe (Paul Prentiss), sporting halter tops and short shorts, are lost amid a flock of Stepford wives adorned in pastel-colored long skirts and wavy ruffles, quickly become best friends, bonding over their shared status as the only wives in Stepford without a perfectly spotless kitchen. Their friendship starts not with a choreographed greeting but over shared skepticism. Bobbie is the only other woman bold enough to question the absurd perfection around them, making their bond the perfect rebellion against Stepford’s polished façade. After witnessing their neighbors’ bizarre behavior and obsession with cleaning, the two women begin to investigate.

The underlying tension is immediate: Bobbie whispers to Joanna poolside, “This place is just a little too perfect.”

Bobbie Markowe: I’m also an ex-Gothamite, who’s been living here in Ajax country for just over a month now, and I’m going crazy. You see doctor, my problem is that given complete freedom of choice, I don’t WANT to squeeze the goddamn Charmin!

When Bobbie Markowe blurts out, “I don’t want to squeeze the goddamn Charmin!” she’s tapping into a cultural zeitgeist that only the 1970s could have spawned. Back then, commercials weren’t just background noise—they were bona fide pop culture events. The Charmin ad, featuring the iconic Mr. Whipple sternly warning shoppers not to squeeze the soft toilet paper (only to sneak a squeeze himself), was a comedic masterpiece and a catchphrase factory. Growing up alongside those quirky, memorable spots, many of us experienced a time when ads entertained as much as they sold, embedding themselves in everyday conversations and collective nostalgia. Revisiting those retro commercials today isn’t just a trip down memory lane—it’s a reminder of an era when advertising had charm, wit, and the power to turn toilet paper into a household punchline!

All the women in Stepford appear eerily ideal and obedient to their husbands. Joanna’s husband quickly joins The Men’s Association, and at some point, she sits for a famous artist, Mazzard (William Prince), who makes very detailed drawings of her, capturing every angle. After that, Claude Axhelm (George Coe) asks her to record a list of vocabulary words.

Joanna –“I don’t know what they do, exactly. They draw our pictures and they tape our voices.”

As Joanna struggles against the town’s “Men’s Association”, on the surface, a friendly club for husbands, but clearly Stepford’s true seat of power, Goldman and Forbes use the mundane to creep up on horror. The camera lingers on scenes that should be cozy, even comedic: the Women’s Club engages in a trivial, overly scripted debate about laundry starch brands, underscoring the Stepford wives’ eerie uniformity and superficial concerns.

The scene devolves into a heated debate about the merits of spray starch—“All I said was, I prefer Easy-On,” one wife chirps, never straying off-script. Joanna and Bobbie, sensing something unnatural, investigate, uncovering that many Stepford wives were once vibrant feminists, their vitality now traded for a robot-like, domesticated, mind-numbing bliss, whose only purpose is to satisfy the men in their lives.

Patrick O’Neal, who plays the arrogant Diz, one of the founding members of the Men’s Association, comes over to Joanna and Walter’s house and quickly follows Joanna into the kitchen. Diz: “I like watching women doing little domestic chores.” Joanna: “You came to the right town.”

Joanna Eberhardt: Why do they call you Diz?
Dale Coba: Because I used to work at Disneyland.
Joanna: No, really.
Dale: That’s really. Don’t you believe me?
Joanna: No.
Dale: Why not?
Joanna: You don’t look like someone who enjoys making other people happy.

You see the transformation character by character: Charmaine (Tina Louise, Gilligan’s Island’s Ginger), tennis-loving and witty, returns from a weekend away as a docile servant.

Joanna Eberhart –If I am wrong, I’m insane… but if I’m right, it’s even worse than if I was wrong.

There is a chilling scene that shows that Charmaine’s husband, Ed (Franklin Cover), is having her beloved tennis court destroyed to make way for a heated swimming pool he wants, symbolizing the erasure of her independence and pleasures as she is transformed into a submissive Stepford wife.

Soon enough, Bobbie falls under the spell of the Stepford wives, transforming into a cheerfully anesthetized housewife who spends hours applying makeup and meticulously cleaning her kitchen.

Bobbie: If you’re going to tell me you don’t like this dress, I’m sticking my head right in the oven.

Now, Joanna’s only ally, Bobbie, is replaced overnight. Joanna is caught in a harrowing scene when she stabs Bobbie with a kitchen knife and discovers, in one of the film’s signature moments, that Bobbie is a robot. In this disturbing climactic sequence, Joanna thrusts a kitchen knife into Bobbie’s stomach to find out if she’ll bleed. Apparently, Katharine Ross found it hard to stab Prentiss, so Forbes did it for her.

Bobbie continues the repetitive gesture of retrieving coffee cups, offering more coffee with an eerie insistence, and even dropping or shattering the cups on the floor. Her actions are unnervingly ritualistic, highlighting the loss of her former personality and humanity. Bobbie does not bleed; she “malfunctions,” as she coldly offers Joanna the coffee with mechanical cheerfulness and uncanny conformity. The dread is all the more profound when it happens in daylight, in pastel kitchens.

Bobbie: after being stabbed] Joanna! How could you do a thing like that? How could you do a thing like that? How could you do a thing like that? When I was just going to give you coffee. When I was just going to give you coffee! When I was just going to give you coffee! I thought we were friends! I thought we were friends! I was just going to give you coffee! I was just going to give you coffee! I thought we were friends… I thought we were friends… I thought we were friends. How could you *do* a thing like that? I thought we were friends.”

“I remember that it was very hard for me, even though they had made this sort of Styrofoam midsection [for Prentiss], It was very hard for me to stab, even something that wasn’t real. So that’s his hand on the knife that you see going in.” – Paula Prentiss comments on the scene.

Shocked by the drastic transformation of her friend, Joanna becomes determined to escape Stepford and leave Walter. However, just as she’s about to make her move, she discovers that her children have vanished.

Isolated from the world and desperate to find them, she runs to Bobbie’s house, and the terrifying truth is revealed. The Men’s Association has been killing the wives and replacing them with subservient humanoids.

Joanna realizes she will be next, so she goes to The Men’s Association to find her missing children. When it’s Joanna’s time to transform into the Stepfordian ideal woman, she gets lost inside a labyrinthine building, and she stumbles onto her humanoid doppelgänger, except her breasts are fuller and her eyes are a cold black void; they are soulless, emotionless, and lacking humanity. In her final moments, Joanna asks Diz the simple reason Why? Diz’s response is equally uncomplicated:

Dialogue from the film is seared into the genre’s lexicon for a reason. In the final act, Joanna pleads:

Dale Coba (talking to Joanna): It’s nothing like you imagine, just a, another stage. Think about it like that, and there’s nothing to it.
Joanna Eberhart: Why?
Dale Coba: Why? Because we can.

These blank spoken lines echo through the film’s finale, where Joanna fights to recover her children from the Men’s Association mansion. The climax is a spiral of suspense as she stumbles upon her own lifeless, marble black-eyed double—her fate sealed as the perfect smile symbolizes the end of her.

Ultimately, the doppelgänger of Joanna approaches with a smile, swiftly overpowering the real Joanna and strangling her with a stocking. Joanna’s murder takes place off-screen, leaving no room for uncertainty.

The final image of the Stepford-ized Joanna pushing her cart mutely through the supermarket silently encapsulates the horror of total erasure.

Forbes’s direction—his “thriller in sunlight,” as he described it—contrasts so sharply with the subject matter that even his casting decisions became points of controversy. William Goldman’s original script envisioned younger, sexy, model-like wives; Forbes, casting his wife Nanette Newman in a key role, chose instead a stylized Victorian housewife aesthetic for every woman in the film, suggesting that conformity is enforced not just in body, but in spirit and style.

The original draft of the screenplay called for the women to wear miniskirts. Supposedly, once director Forbes cast his wife, Nanette Newman as one of the wives, this changed and the women were dressed instead in feminine but modest wardrobe. The remake, of The Stepford Wives in 2004 attempted to correct this design problem.

Before Katharine Ross was cast in the leading role of Joanna Eberhart, Tuesday Weld had originally been set to play the part but passed on it. Other actresses considered include Anne Archer, Jean Seberg, Jane Fonda, Natalie Wood, Karen Black, Janet Margolin, Blythe Danner, Geneviève Bujold, Jacqueline Bisset, Elizabeth Montgomery, Olivia Hussey, and Diane Keaton, who nearly took the role. Joanna Cassidy was originally cast in the role of Bobbie by producer Edgar J. Scherick, and actually shot a few scenes, but was abruptly fired and replaced by Paula Prentiss.

Actress Dee Wallace, who was later known for starring in several science-fiction and horror films (E.T. 1982, The Howling 1981, Cujo 1983, and Critters 1986), has one of her earliest roles playing Tina Louise’s character’s maid Nettie.

Casting directors used actresses Mary Tyler Moore and Valerie Harper (Mary Richards and Rhoda Morganstern) as prototypes for the Joanna and Bobbie characters.

The psychological and sociological resonance of The Stepford Wives is unmistakable. It’s a parable, and a warning, about patriarchy’s terror of female agency. Scholars emphasize that the Men’s Association doesn’t just dream of control; its members industrialize it, reducing their wives to customizable objects in an evil inversion of the feminist consciousness-raising process. This is echoed across several scholarly commentaries. For example, Lilly Ann Boruzkowski in Jump Cut discusses how the consciousness-raising meeting in The Stepford Wives is sabotaged, turning what should be a liberating process hollowing it out, replacing genuine collective empowerment with trivial domesticity and enforced conformity, and into a means of reinforcing patriarchal norms.

Contemporary reviews of the film were mixed, and its feminist themes sparked heated debate—feminist icon Betty Friedan called it “a rip-off of the women’s movement” and urged women to boycott, while others, like Gael Greene and Eleanor Perry, defended its sharp critique.

After the movie was released, there was a feminist demonstration against it, decrying it as being sexist. One of the protesters hit director Bryan Forbes over the head with her umbrella. Katharine Ross commented on the incident in the documentary The Stepford Life 2001 about the making of the movie, stating that this was a powerful testimony to how the movie affected the protesters. Friedan didn’t see The Stepford Wives, but she didn’t like it, saying it was anti-woman and anti-human.

Any criticism that The Stepford Wives faced about how the film “hates women” or is fundamentally anti-feminist represents a significant misreading of both the novel’s and film’s intentions. Ira Levin’s story exposes, rather than endorses, the grotesque consequences of viewing women as mere objects to be perfected, controlled, or replaced. Far from celebrating the oppression it depicts, Levin paints a chilling satire that dramatizes the dehumanization and erasure of women under patriarchal pressures, making us all witness just how quietly horrifying it is to have agency, identity, and even your body subsumed by male fantasy.

It’s a modern twist on Invasion of the Body Snatchers—but this time, instead of alien spores creating pod people, it’s a society of men systematically manufacturing a network of enslavement, and a world where women are quietly stripped of autonomy and remade for their own ends. The horror isn’t extraterrestrial; it’s homegrown, and all the more chilling for it.

Invasion of the Body Snatchers was originally written by Jack Finney, whose 1954 novel inspired the classic 1956 film adaptation. Finney’s story of identity erasure by alien invasion finds its eerie, homebound counterpart in the patriarchal machinations at the heart of The Stepford Wives: in place of pods, we have a meticulously engineered system designed by men to replace individuality with obedience, marking a shift from sci-fi paranoia to a keen social commentary on gender and control.

Ira Levin, whose earlier Rosemary’s Baby explored spiritual violations of female autonomy, here pivots to technology: the terror in Stepford is all too rational, a conspiracy so banal, so American, that it unfolds in daylight, behind white picket fences and at garden parties. Sunshine in Stepford isn’t warm; it sterilizes.

Feminist scholars and critics have noted that the true “villains” of Stepford are the men, whose desire for “ideal” wives is presented as both ridiculous and monstrous. It is the men of Stepford who are cold-blooded misogynists and murderers, and the story empathizes fully with Joanna and the women, not their oppressors. Producer/director Bryan Forbes himself insisted, “If anything, it’s anti-men! If the men are really stupid enough to want wives like that, then it’s sad for them.”

The film meticulously critiques, rather than condones, the hunger to dehumanize women into compliant, decorative objects; its horror is a warning about the dangers of perfectionism and conformity, not an invitation to embrace them. In fact, the grotesque exaggeration of female domestic perfection in Stepford serves as a biting reflection of the predicament of women in society.

The film’s horror comes not from monsters or mad scientists, but from the mundane twisted into something terrifying, the idea that perfect and human might be irrevocably at odds. Its misogyny isn’t hidden; it’s the entire plot mechanism, the dread that as women become more independent, society’s reaction can be to revoke their agency entirely, replacing it with an idealized, mute, and subservient substitute. The ending bears a melancholic tone, as nearly every female character meets a grim fate, replaced by mechanical replicas. It’s a very nihilistic and controversial ending, leaving all the replicants masquerading as the dead women of Stepford. The ending elicited strong and deeply divisive reactions from audiences.

Ross expresses her own regrets – “If I had a chance to do it again, I would do the ending differently on my part,” Ross says. “I sort of end up giving up. I don’t fight at the very end, and I think I would fight harder.

By showing the slow, nightmarish transformation of women into mindless automatons, Levin and the film urge us to interrogate rather than accept these images, standing on the right side of feminism by holding a mirror up to society’s most quietly sinister abuses. The most powerful proof is the audience’s horror and empathy for Joanna and Bobbie, making clear that Stepford is a dystopia, not a dream. In this light, Levin’s dark satire affirms the core feminist insight: the most pervasive forms of misogyny are often cloaked in “perfection” and art can empower by making that horror impossible to ignore.

[last lines]
Joanna: Hello, Bobbie.
Bobbie: Oh, hello, Joanna.
Joanna: How are you?
Bobbie: I’m fine. How are you?
Joanna: I’m fine. How are the children?
Bobbie: Fine…

But as the decades have rolled by, The Stepford Wives has only grown in esteem, now considered a canonical horror-sci-fi hybrid. The ‘Stepford wife’ archetype has slipped right into everyday language, shorthand for anyone made decorative and docile by patriarchal demand

Jordan Peele’s social thriller, Get Out 2017, which became one of the most successful debut movies by a director, was directly influenced by The Stepford Wives. Peele has openly acknowledged as much in interviews, citing The Stepford Wives and Roman Polanski’s Rosemary’s Baby 1968 (both based on books by Ira Levin) as two of his favorite movies.

The Stepford Wives endures not only for its suspense and its now-iconic scenes but also for the existential anxiety it implants in our minds about identity, agency, and the cost of appearances. In the closing moments, the film leaves you not with a scream but a quiet shudder of sadness, with the echo of silence: a parade of flawless mannequins gliding through the supermarket aisles, their humanity erased beneath a veneer of “perfection.”

The film is included among the American Film Institute’s 2001 list of 400 movies nominated for the top 100 Most Heart-Pounding American Movies.

#132 down, 18 to go! Your EverLovin’ Joey, formally & affectionately known as MonsterGirl!

 

Backstory: What ever happened to William Castle’s baby?

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bill from Spine Tingler
Photo of the great William Castle -courtesy of Spine Tingler.

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Castle in NYC street with Polanski

“The film is frightening because it forces us to examine the kinds and bases of belief. We confront the idea that the Christian myth is certainly no more believable that its mirror image, and possibly less so. And beyond this, we are also forced to realize that our mode of believing in Christianity is quite different from the one with which we perceive ‘real’ things In other words, while Polanski’s film is determinedly realistic, it is at the same time a challenge to realism, locating the ordinary world of plausible social interaction within a wider and more primitive universe of magic, sorcery, and supernatural forces.”Hollywood Hex, -Makita Brottman

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Rosemary’s Baby is my favorite film. I plan on doing one of my long-winded major features on this masterpiece in its entirety but for the sake of celebrating William Castle this week, I’d like to strictly focus on his contribution to an iconic tour de force that would not have been filmed if not for him. Rosemary’s Baby premiered in June 1968.

billboard for the film

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Roman Polanski on William Castle: “He was an excellent technician who understands filmmakers’ problems and doesn’t have the usual worries other producers have. He made a constant effort to make me happy in my work. I can’t think of a better producer.”

polanski, castle and Farrow happy

After many years of William Castle slaving over B movies and programmers like The Whistler and The Crime Doctor, he found his niche in horror. He saw Henri-Georges Clouzot le Diabolique in 1955 and it lit a fire in his belly to create his own Gothic creepy storytelling that would lure the audience under its spell. Thus sung Macabre in 1958. While certainly not Diabolique, Macabre put Castle on the path toward creating engaging & frightening landscapes that would entertain millions!

That same year, thanks to his very successful House on Haunted Hill and his 12-foot plastic glow-in-the-dark skeleton deemed ‘Emergo’ that flew over theatre audiences, he was now dubbed the ‘King of Gimmicks.’ Castle went on to chill us with The TIngler in ’59, 13 Ghosts in ’60, Homicidal and Mr Sardonicus in ’61, Strait-Jacket in ’64, and I Saw What You Did in ’65 both landing Joan Crawford at the helm.

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William Castle’s Homicidal ’61starring Jean Arless (Joan Marshall)

With all the ballyhoo and commercial success, Bill was craving respect. He thought he’d find that admiration in Rosemary’s Baby, a novel by Ira Levin (A Kiss Before Dying, The Stepford Wives, Boys From Brazil) about an unassuming pretty little housewife chosen by a coven of New York City witches to be the mother of Lucifer’s only begotten son and heir.

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What is remarkable about the film is the realism. It is so careful to remain dedicated to the naturalistic tone of Levin’s novel showing us a set of ordinary characters in an apparently common world. Then they gradually become introduced to extraordinary elements of dark forces, both magic and fantasy that begin to overwhelm the narrative. We as spectators are now caught up in Rosemary’s plight and her utter sense of powerlessness. This story is less about witches and more about paranoia and the lack of control over our own bodies and destiny. However explained in supernatural terms, it’s still about losing trust with those closest to us, the people we depend on to protect us from harm. We watch as Rosemary’s world turns upside down.

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I saw Rosemary’s Baby during its theatrical release in New York in June 1968. It was billed as a double feature with The Mephisto Waltz. We won’t get into how either really enlightened or truly nutty, depending on your perspective, my mom was for taking her 6-year-old little girl to see two very intense horror pictures dealing with adult and subversive themes.

I was an extremely mature child and the film not only didn’t traumatize me, but it also opened up a world of desire for me to see as many intellectual horror stories without fear of nightmares. Although I must admit when I used to watch Robert Wise’s The Haunting in broad daylight on a Saturday afternoon, I did manage to lock the basement door and shove the large gold (the color of Archie Bunker’s favorite chair) loveseat in front of it to keep any boogeyman from coming up the basement stairs into the den when I was alone in the house.

I also just saw Rosemary’s Baby remastered on the big screen at the Film Forum a few weeks ago. I have to admit, that as soon as Christopher Komeda’s music starts playing and the bird’s eye view of the Dakota emerges on screen the electricity started flowing up my legs, this time not my usual RLS, I began weeping. Not only is Rosemary’s Baby my favorite film, but I also recognize the confluence of perfectionism in each and every scene that makes it a flawless masterpiece, from the vibrant performances to the exquisite storytelling. Every detail is magical and I don’t mean devilish, I mean artfully.

Castavets at Terry's fall

Something else wonderful happened during the screening that day. Amidst all the other film geeks like myself, and aside from the audible pleasure the audience let out when the magnificent Ruth Gordon and Sidney Blackmer walk on the screen where we all laughed and silently cheered for their strolling entrance as the iconic quirky and eccentric devil-worshiping senior citizens. When Bill Castle did his Hitchcock walk on by the phone booth, I realized that it wasn’t only me smacking my partner Wendy’s knee with childhood excitement, “There’s Bill, there he is!!! We both chuckled with glee to see his wide warming grin. Suddenly we heard others in the crowd stirring and murmuring “there he is, that’s Bill Castle!!!” Amidst all the appurtenances Rosemary’s Baby has to offer, so many of us fans were thrilled to catch sight of Mr.Castle with his fat cigar standing by the phone booth. We were collectively excited to see the man who had entertained us all these years. It was heartwarming. I did tear up.

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Mia back of Bill's head phone booth

rosemary in booth sees Bill

I recognize Roman Polanski as the auteur that he is, but that is not what I want to dwell on here. I want to stress that Rosemary’s Baby would not have been made if it weren’t for William Castle and his perseverance, passion, and eye for intellectual property. William Castle acknowledged that The Lady From Shanghai was a work of art because of Orson Welles‘ direction, however, it was Castle who first discovered and purchased the rights to If I Should Die Before I Wake, only to have Orson Welles turn around and pitch it to Harry Cohn as his own idea.

It was Rosemary’s Baby that Bill chose to elevate his status from B movie maker to respected filmmaker in a very fickle industry. Let’s pay tribute to one certain fact: Rosemary’s Baby would not be the film it is after 45 years without William Castle’s imprint on it.

B&W Bill at Booth

Bill’s memoirs Step Right Up, I’m Gonna Scare the Pants Off America (which is a fantastic read for any enthusiast about the golden age of Hollywood and just a darn good bit of storytelling) describes how William Castle’s literary agent Marvin Birdt, the person who found the script and insisted Bill read the galleys immediately. Castle looked at the title and dismissed it saying “It’s probably some story about an unwed mother… cheap exploitation. Who the hell wants to make a picture like that?” 

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Bill Castle thought the film just wasn’t for him at that point. It was 1968 and the film industry wasn’t really embracing horror films anymore. He was so overwhelmed with the lousy books and manuscripts that were piling up that he just couldn’t fathom wasting any time with yet another piece of junk. But, it took him all of three hours to finish the story, as he said, ‘bathed in sweat and shaking.’ Castle saw the magnitude of Ira Levin’s story when it was still in unpublished manuscript form: “I made up my mind when I read the novel Rosemary’s Baby that it was the greatest novel that would translate into a screenplay that I had ever read. That just lent itself to a brilliant movie. And I loved the property and I brought the property because I wanted to prove to the industry and my fellow peers that I could do something really brilliant.” (Step Right Up, 2010) He told Ellen, his wife, that it was one of the most powerful books he’d ever read, and that it would be an incredible picture to make. When Ellen finished reading it, she told him “It’s disturbing… frightening and brilliant.”(SRU, 2010) But Ellen also warned that he’d have trouble with the Church.

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William Castle and the love of his life, his beautiful wife Ellen courtesy of Spine Tingler.

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Castle’s agent Birdt tormented him about other studios and directors interested in the story and making offers. Later, Castle found out that the book had actually been offered to Alfred Hitchcock first. One wonders what it might have looked like if Hitch had been behind the camera, storyboarding Levin’s work.

Bill Castle was worried that he was going to lose the picture, but where was he going to get the quarter of a million Birdt demanded to finance the rights to the film? He asked Birdt to offer one hundred thousand dollars upfront and then fifty thousand if the book became a bestseller with five percent of one hundred percent of the net profits. His agent wasn’t very encouraged that they’d accept the offer. The waiting to hear back was excruciating, but Castle did get the rights to Rosemary’s Baby. Now he had to come up with the money!

In Step Right Up, Bill describes how Robert Evans, in charge of Paramount Pictures, called to check in, not sure William Castle could handle such a serious motion picture. But, Charles Bluhdorn, owner of Paramount, wanted to meet with Castle personally to discuss the picture, saying “I have big plans for Paramount, and they include you.” Castle found Bluhdorn’s persona magnetic. He told him that Bob Evens had informed him about Castle’ obtaining Rosemary’s Baby.“Would you like to make the picture for us?” Of course, Castle told him, yes.

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head of Paramount Robert Evans

“Your services as producer, how much would you want?” Bill Castle corrected Bluhdorn by adding the word ‘director’… trying to avoid negotiating with this man without his lawyer. Bluhdorn wasn’t having any of that. He told Castle that he would not negotiate with lawyers on the making of Rosemary’s Baby. It’s either between Castle and him, or Donnenfeld and Castle’s attorney. Castle decided he had the ego to take on this financial genius and told him he’d negotiate with him directly. But first, Bill asked him if he had read the story. Bluhdorn had not. Bill thought that worked to his advantage as the story was intensely disturbing so the less Bluhdorn knew about the story the better.

Evans and Polanski colo
Robert Evans and Roman Polanski

When Bill Castle finally blurted out that he’d want to produce and direct, Bluhdorn laughed at him and called him a ‘big ridiculous clown.’ He tried to offer Bill only one hundred fifty thousand for the film plus thirty percent of the profits. Bill told him no way. It was a hard bargaining session. Bluhdorn didn’t know what he was dealing for and Bill did, Bluhdorn was also dropping the phony niceties and getting close to bowing out of any deal. “If I walk through that door, Rosemary’s Baby is finished at Paramount. No one -and I mean no one- will renegotiate!” Castle finally composed his inner panic and came back at the austere blowhard with an offer of two hundred fifty thousand and fifty percent of the profits. It was a deal. (Step Right Up, 2010) 

bill lookin in mirror with cigar
Bill Castle courtesy of Spine Tingler.

Producer Evans In Conference

Bill’s daughter, Terry Castle remembers, “He had to do whatever he could and it was his time. Mom and Dad mortgaged the house and they bought the rights for a substantial amount of money.” (Spine Tingler: The William Castle Story)

Terry Castle 8
Bill’s wonderful daughter Terry Castle founder of Dark Castle Entertainment

With that he asked Castle’s age and if he’d heard of director Roman Polanski, or seen any of his pictures. Castle had seen Repulsion and Knife in the Water. Bluhdorn sang Polanski’s praises calling him a genius. He impressed upon Castle that with the director’s youth and Castle’s experience as a producer, they could both learn from each other. Bill Castle started to find his fire, “Look Mr. Bluhdorn, the reason I bought Rosemary’s Baby with my own money was to direct the film… It’s going to be an important motion picture and I’m not going to miss the opportunity of directing.” (Step Right Up, 2010)

Bluhdorn told him that Polanski directs Rosemary’s Baby or no deal, and asked Bill to at least meet the young director. Castle says “I had made up my mind to hate him on sight"¦ and that he wasn’t going to direct the picture I said absolutely no way. I bought the picture, I bought the book. I own it, I’m going to direct it..{…} I worked all my life to get something worthwhile on the screen and so at first sight I hated him.” He’d sent Polanski the galleys to read and if after meeting him he decides he doesn’t want him directing the movie then fine. Bill Castle says in his memoirs that while Bluhdorn was a tough negotiator he was at least an honorable and fair man whose handshake was better than a written contract.

Castle and Polanski Spine Tingler
Castle and Polanski courtesy of Spine Tingler

In Step Right Up, 2010 Castle describes his first impression of Roman Polanski was that he was a little cocky vain narcissist who liked to look at himself in the mirror a lot. Bill asked if he liked the story, “I like it very much… It will make a great picture.” Polanski spoke in his Polish accent. “You would like to direct Rosemary?” Bill asked. “That’s why I’m here. Nobody will be able to direct it as well as Roman Polanski.” And Bill Castle’ felt that Ira Levin’s book was perfect for the screen, needing absolutely no changes whatsoever in adapting it. This was something he felt passionately about. He posed the question to Polanski. “The book is perfect… no changes must be made,” Bill says that Polanski was so intense about this that it was quite jarring. “It’s one of the few books I have read that must be translated faithfully to the cinema.” (Step Right Up, 2010)

And having read Levin’s book, I can tell you that reading each line of every page is exactly like watching the story unfold on screen. It is the most faithful adaptation I’ve ever read, more like reading the script after the fact.

on set Castle, Gordon, Farrow and Polanski b&W

rosemary-s-baby-1968-20-g

Then Castle posed a trick question to Polanski to see what his vision was for filming the narrative, suggesting to him that the camera should not only move around a lot but use strange shots to tell the story. Polanski was empowered by his convictions and told Bill, “No, I don’t Mr. Castle. Actors tell a story… like peeping through the keyhole of life. I do not like crazy tricks with the camera… must be honest.” That was exactly how Bill Castle saw the film being made. When Polanski told Bill to start calling him Roman, Bill couldn’t help but start to like this man who truly did share a special vision for a very special story. Polanski went on to tell him, “Bill, we can make a wonderful picture together. I have been looking for a long time for a Rosemary’s Baby. To work with you would be my privilege.” (Step Right Up, 2010)

bill in crowd green jacket

Terry Castle, Bill’s daughter, remembers: “Polanski came over to the house and he was this young wild guy, just this incredibly wily dynamic man with this very thick accent talking about cameras and light he was just incredibly dynamic himself and my dad totally got him. He wanted to get Rosemary’s Baby made and he wanted to produce it"¦ and yet he wanted to direct it. But I think once he met Roman Polanski I think he understood he could bring something incredibly special to the project. And I think it was okay for Dad to give that up to him because I think he saw the brilliance in this man. […] Even though he wasn’t going to be directing it at least his name was going to be on it as a William Castle production and he was making for the first time in his life an important studio film.” (Spine Tingler: The William Castle Story)

Polanski on the set with Mia

Left tor right, William Castle, Mia Farrow, and Robert Evans during the production of ROSEMARY'S BABY, 1968.

Bill with Mia and John on the set of Rosemary's Baby

The last thing Bill Castle needed to know was who he’d pick to write the screenplay and why. Polanski told Bill he would do it himself because he would stick strictly to the book. They spent the rest of the time discussing the film, Bill finding Polanski brilliant and extremely open. He immediately called Bluhdorn and told him that he was right Polanski was the only one who could direct Rosemary’s Baby. Bill Castle had the wisdom and grace to understand that Polanski would make a great film, but to be fair to Bill Castle. it’s also only after his careful facilitation and thoughtful know-how that helped bring Ira Levin’s story to life.

polanski in hall shot with Mia and John color

Polanski and Farrow and Cassavetes in hall color

Polanski kept his word, he wrote the screenplay and adhered strictly to the book as promised. Polanski asked Bill to help him find a house by the beach to work and that he’d send his fiance over to help him look for one. On a Sunday morning, Sharon Tate was standing at Bill Castle’s door. They found the perfect beach house for the couple, owned by Brian Aherne who was in Europe.

Polanski wanted to use Richard Sylbert to do the set design for the film. Sylbert had just finished working on Mike Nichols’ The Graduate. Roman Polanski thought his work was brilliant. Polanski suggested Tuesday Weld in the lead as Rosemary. Bill agreed that she was a fine actress but said, “I think the role was written for Mia Farrow” Polanski watched her in several episodes of Peyton Place and didn’t agree. He thought Tuesday Weld would be better. Jane Fonda, Julie Christie, Elizabeth Hartman, and Joanna Pettet were also considered for the part. Evans asked about the casting of Rosemary, and they both gave their choices. Evans told them that he didn’t think Mia Farrow was available because she was working with George Cukor, he’d check with Zanuck at Fox and in the meantime try and get a reading with Weld.

Tuesday Weld
Tuesday Weld

Now the buzz was all over Hollywood and every actress in town felt they would be just perfect for the lead role, but Polanski was still stubborn about Tuesday Weld. When Zanuck called Bill and told him the Cukor picture fell through, and Mia was available. Bill set up a meeting with Mia and Polanski over lunch and Polanski wound up being completely mesmerized by her. He finally agreed she would play Rosemary. The rest is history.

Roman Polanski actually developed a wonderful working relationship with Mia Farrow on the set. She didn’t bring any preconceived motivations to her role as Rosemary Woodhouse. Supposedly he had some difficulties with Catherine Deneuve on the set of Repulsion, but he found Mia very amenable to work with. Mia followed Polanski’s directions very well, which might explain some of her childlike and innocent air in her performance of the blithe and charming Rosemary.

Continue reading “Backstory: What ever happened to William Castle’s baby?”

MonsterGirl’s Quote of The Day! Rosemary’s Baby

”Pain be gone, I shall have no more of thee!”Rosemary Woodhouse, Rosemary’s Baby