Funny Face

S'Wonderful! S'Marvelous! ...She's The Fairest Lady of All!

7.0
19571h 43m

A shy Greenwich Village book clerk is discovered by a fashion photographer and whisked off to Paris where she becomes a reluctant model.

Production

Logo for Paramount Pictures

Available For Free On

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Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: Movies! TV Network Trailer

Movies! TV Network Trailer

Thumbnail for video: Funny Face "Think Pink!" Song (1080p HD) - Audrey Hepburn & Fred Astaire (1 of 10)

Funny Face "Think Pink!" Song (1080p HD) - Audrey Hepburn & Fred Astaire (1 of 10)

Thumbnail for video: Trailer

Trailer

Cast

Photo of Audrey Hepburn

Audrey Hepburn

Jo Stockton

Photo of Fred Astaire

Fred Astaire

Dick Avery

Photo of Kay Thompson

Kay Thompson

Maggie Prescott

Photo of Michel Auclair

Michel Auclair

Prof. Emile Flostre

Photo of Robert Flemyng

Robert Flemyng

Paul Duval

Photo of Dovima

Dovima

Marion

Photo of Suzy Parker

Suzy Parker

Specialty Dancer (Think Pink Number)

Photo of Sunny Hartnett

Sunny Hartnett

Specialty Dancer (Think Pink Number)

Photo of Jean Del Val

Jean Del Val

Hairdresser

Photo of Ruta Lee

Ruta Lee

Lettie

Photo of Alex Gerry

Alex Gerry

Dovitch

Photo of Bess Flowers

Bess Flowers

Fashion Show Spectator

Photo of Bert Stevens

Bert Stevens

Guest at Aborted Fashion Show

Photo of Harold Miller

Harold Miller

Guest at Aborted Fashion Show (uncredited)

Photo of Franklyn Farnum

Franklyn Farnum

Guest at Duval's Fashion Show (uncredited)

Photo of Leoda Richards

Leoda Richards

Fashion Show Spectator

Photo of Caryl Lincoln

Caryl Lincoln

Fashion Show Guest (uncredited)

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Reviews

G

CinemaSerf

7/10

Despite the presence of Audrey Hepburn and Fred Astaire, I think this film actually belongs to Kay Thompson. She plays really well as the 1950s version of Dame Anna Wintour in this amiable, if a little thinly spread, musical comedy. Infuriated by the rather drab quality of her latest "Quality" magazine, she determines to revamp the whole thing. In pink! A bookshop being used for a photo shoot by "Avery" (Astaire) provides the unlikely source for her new model - "Jo" (Hepburn) who is to the fashion industry what Herod was to babies. "Avery" is clever, though, and he offers a trade off that sees her do a shoot in Paris in return for a meeting with "Prof. Flostre" (Michel Auclair). What now ensues is all fairly predictable, a love triangle with "Jo" in the middle vacillating. George & Ira Gerschwin provided the musical numbers, and though they are very well staged, the film lacks a killer song. That said, Thompson is on super form as the no-nonsense boss, the dance numbers are colourful and energetic and finally, Hepburn has a lovely vivacity and enthusiasm to her performance - she takes to the musical numbers very much like a duck to water. Astaire isn't at his best, and Robert Flemyng's accent isn't the best either - but at the end, the whole thing falls into place with an enjoyable certainty.

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