Vivian Blond Foot Gagging

Vivian Blond Foot Gagging




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Vivian Blond Foot Gagging

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'Pretty Woman' is an undeniable modern classic. It launched the then-unknown Julia Roberts into superstardom and became a genuine phenomenon, grossing nearly half a billion dollars worldwide.
But the film faced a difficult road fraught with casting trouble, studio changes, and total rewrites before it finally got made. Despite its iconic status, we’re willing to bet there’s a lot you don’t know about 'Pretty Woman.'
Pretty Woman is the quintessential feel-good romantic comedy, but the original ending of the film was pretty intense.
In the original script, Vivian’s friend, Kit, dies of an overdose; and Edward and Vivian don’t end up together. He throws Vivian out of his car, along with the money he paid her for the weekend.
The movie likely wouldn’t have been nearly as successful as it was had that been the film’s. But when Disney stepped in as producers, dramatic changes were made to the script to turn it into a crowd-pleasing modern-day fairy tale.
Several actresses auditioned for the role of Vivian before Julia Roberts was cast. However, when the film changed hands and wound up at Disney, the higher-ups were pretty dead-set against having Roberts in the film. She was a fairly new face, with barely any credits to her name.
Roberts suddenly didn’t have the part anymore, and was forced to audition for a second time. The role was offered to several other actresses, with each one either being unavailable to shoot the movie or flat-out turning the role down. In the end, Roberts was ultimately cast (again).
When it first entered production, Pretty Woman was a very different movie. It was called $3,000 , and Vivian was a drug addict. Her relationship with Edward is purely transactional, and the title refers to the amount of money that Edward pays her.
When the project got picked up by Disney, Roberts had to audition for the new director, Garry Marshall , who wasn’t interested in casting her at first. When the movie changed from a dark drama to a lighter romantic comedy, Roberts became the obvious choice.
America fell in love with Roberts’ laugh in Pretty Woman , but not many people know how difficult it was getting the actress to genuinely giggle. Sure, Gere got her to bark in surprise during the jewelry box scene, but an earlier incident proved even more taxing.
During the scene where Vivian watches I Love Lucy reruns, Roberts had trouble laughing convincingly. So, Garry Marshall positioned himself just off screen and tickled Roberts’ feet to get the desired results. It’s a memorable scene, but it’s as disconcerting as it is charming: Vivian is so delighted, you’d think she’d never been allowed near a TV before, let alone one that shows moving pictures of a lady eating chocolate off a conveyor belt.
The decision to cast Richard Gere wasn’t arrived at easily. But even when Marshall realized Gere was the right person to play Edward, the actor didn’t feel the same way. Gere turned down the offer to star in Pretty Woman not once but several times.
As a last resort, Marshall flew Julia Roberts out to New York to talk to Gere person and try to convince him. She wrote “please say yes” on a post-it note and showed it to Gere while he was on the phone with Marshall, and Gere finally agreed.
One of the more memorable parts of Pretty Woman are all of the costumes worn by the various characters, particularly Vivian. It’s a good mix of late-80s cool and fairy tale tuxedos and dresses. One of the film’s most iconic garments was bought right off the street.
The red jacket worn by Vivian when Edward first spots her on Hollywood Boulevard was similarly spotted by costume designers as they were driving around looking for inspiration. The coat was being worn by some random person, and they bought the jacket right there for a handful of cash.
Julia Roberts was 21 at the time of filming, and hadn’t yet gotten her driver’s license. This didn’t stop her character Vivian from hopping behind the wheel of Edward’s Lotus Esprit and tearing around Los Angeles. Her character’s excitement was absolutely genuine.
In fact, Roberts’ enthusiasm was so genuine during these scenes that she frequently drove so fast the camera crews had trouble keeping up with her. Unsurprisingly, Roberts has said these were some of her favorite scenes to film.
There’s a fair amount of improv and ad-libbing in Pretty Woman , including the bit wherein Vivian loudly blows her nose into a handkerchief. In the scene, the prickly hotel manager is at first hounding her to discover what her business is at his hotel, but when she starts to get upset, he relents, and hands her his handkerchief, which she promptly soils to a comedic degree.
This gag wasn’t actually in the script – it was just something Roberts did in the moment. She was worried about the gag making it into the finished film, because she didn’t think it was particularly funny, but it wound up bringing some much-needed levity to a tense scene.
In the film, Vivian has short-cropped blonde hair when Edward initially meets her, but it is later revealed that she was wearing a wig, and her actual hair is long and vibrantly red. In reality, Roberts' hair is dark, so it was dyed red for the movie. This became a problem during the famous bubble bath scene.
In order to have the bathtub overflowing with bubbles, it needed to be filled with a huge amount of detergent. The detergent wound up being so strong that it actually stripped the color out of Roberts’ hair. The crew had to do a late-night emergency dying session to get it back to the red color her character has in the film.
While filming the memorable scene wherein Vivian is soaking in a bubble bath and loudly singing along to her Walkman, the crew decided to spring an elaborate prank on Julia Roberts. In the film, Vivian dunks herself completely underwater and comes back up to accept Edward’s offer to stay with him for a week.
During one take of the scene, after Roberts completely submerged herself, Richard Gere and the entire crew all ran out of the room while she was underwater. When she poked her head back up, the set was completely empty. You can actually find footage of both the prank and Roberts’ reaction on YouTube.
Pretty Woman was a runaway box office success and genuine cultural phenomenon, so you would assume that a sequel would’ve been greenlit almost immediately. Obviously that wasn’t the case, because here we are 30 years later with no Pretty Woman 2 in sight.
Well, as it turns out, Richard Gere, Julia Roberts, and director Garry Marshall vowed to never do a sequel unless all three of them were involved. Considering Marshall recently passed away, this makes a sequel seem pretty unlikely to ever happen. However, the team did reunite for the 1999 film Runaway Bride .
The classic moment when Edward presents Vivian with a gorgeous necklace, only to playfully snap the jewelry box closed as she reaches for it, is one of the most memorable moments in Pretty Woman. It was heavily featured in the film’s marketing, and was endlessly parodied on shows like Family Guy.
However, Edward snapping shut the jewelry box wasn’t in the script. They’d done a few takes of Gere simply presenting Roberts with the necklace, but Marshall felt it was boring. So he took Gere aside and told him to snap the box shut when Roberts reached for the necklace. Her reaction in the film is 100% genuine.
There are a number of memorable songs in the movie, including the Elvis Costello hit “O, Pretty Woman” that inspired the film’s title. But star Richard Gere actually contributed to the soundtrack as well, with a piece of music he’d composed himself.
The scene in which we see Edward playing the piano was performed by Gere. That song he’s playing is a tune he’d written personally. It’s possible he didn’t even think about it, and just started playing the song out of muscle memory when he sat down behind the piano.
The amazing necklace Edward gifts to Vivian to wear to the opera is actually extremely valuable in real life. It’s worth a quarter of a million dollars, and the producers had to agree to some very strict and specific demands in order to use it in the film.
The budget for the entire film was only $14 million, so they weren’t about to buy such an expensive piece. Luckily, a jewelry store was willing to loan the necklace to them for filming, with the caveat that an armed guard be present at all times. That’s right – in every scene you see Vivian wearing the necklace, there’s an armed guard standing just off camera.
Pretty Woman is an R-rated romantic comedy starring two attractive movie stars, so obviously there’s going to be a love scene. However, when it came time to film the intimate sequence between Vivian and Edward, Julia Roberts was incredibly nervous.
In fact, she was so anxious about the love scene between her and her costar Richard Gere that she broke out in hives. Garry Marshall climbed into bed with the two stars to try and help her feel more comfortable, and she was given calamine lotion to relieve her irritated skin.
Julia Roberts was Garry Marshall’s last choice for the lead role of Vivian. Initially, the part was offered to Molly Ringwald . Ringwald had enjoyed a series of hits in the 1980s, such as Pretty in Pink and Sixteen Candles , and was seen as a bankable star to headline Pretty Woman.
However, Ringwald turned the role down cold. She didn’t like the film’s content and was uncomfortable playing a prostitute. She’s later expressed regret several times. In her defense, she probably turned down the much darker role in the original film $3,000 , because it wasn’t changed to Pretty Woman until after Roberts was cast.
The poster for Pretty Woman is almost as iconic as the movie itself. But the story behind it is surprisingly bizarre, beginning with the fact that the film’s star, Julia Roberts, doesn’t actually appear in it at all. Crazy, right? Read on.
In what could almost be considered a Photoshop fail had it not been created years before the Photoshop program even existed, the woman posing in the poster is actually Roberts’ stand-in, with Roberts’ head superimposed onto her body. Furthermore, Richard Gere’s hair is almost jet black, despite his hair being almost entirely silver/gray in the film.
The search for the right actor to play wealthy playboy Edward was just as much of a challenge than finding the right Vivian. Roberts actually test-screened with 10 different actors to see which one shared the right amount of chemistry with the lead actress.
It’s clear the producers and director Garry Marshall didn’t have a super clear idea of what they wanted in Edward – the list of actors invited to film screen tests included Charles Grodin, known for playing sarcastic intellectuals, and the famously intense Al Pacino. The role eventually went to the kindly-yet-sophisticated Richard Gere .
In the film, Edward is a playboy living an expensive but emotionally unfulfilling life, so of course he had to have a flashy sports car. Originally, the filmmakers planned for Edward to cruise around Los Angeles in a Porsche or a Ferrari, but they ran into some unexpected trouble.
Both Porsche and Ferrari declined to have their cars featured in Pretty Woman, because they didn’t want them to be associated with prostitution, which suggests they don’t know how their cars are used in real life. However, Lotus was more than happy to have their Esprit featured in the film as Edward’s preferred chariot, and sales of that model tripled after the film became a hit.
There are a few deleted scenes that reflect the darker tone of the original script, including a scene wherein Vivian is confronted by drug dealers and has to be saved by Edward. Vivian also had a much more colorful vocabulary in the original version.
For example, Vivian originally thanks Edward for saving her with the following quote: “I f**king beat the s**t out of a pimp who tried to force me into his stable. I could beat the s**t out of you! I almost started screaming in the restaurant I was so mad.” Hard to imagine America’s sweetheart making those lines works.
The hotel in the film is supposed to be The Beverly Wilshire, but it was actually filmed at The Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles. While the Ambassador was torn down, the Beverly Wilshire offers a “Pretty Woman” experience – if you have a spare $1,000 to drop. What does that experience entail?
According to the hotel’s website, you’ll be treated to retail therapy with a personal stylist and wardrobe consultant, where you’ll be shuttled around Rodeo in a Mercedes-Benz. Your VIP suite awaits, but don’t forget the couples’ massage, off-menu items prepared the executive chef and a hand-drawn bath with aromatherapy bubbles. So basically, $1,000 to pretend to be a lucky prostitute for a day, and you don’t even get the pleasure of dressing down boutique employees who work on commission. As Vivian would say: “Big mistake! Huge!”
There was a long line of actors ahead of Richard Gere for Pretty Woman . Albert Brooks and Sylvester Stallone were offered the role of Edward, but both stars turned it down. Marshall also considered Daniel Day-Lewis , Kevin Kline , and Denzel Washington . Even John Travolta auditioned, and Christopher Reeve went as far as doing a table read.
Allegedly, Roberts wasn’t available to do the read with Reeve, and a casting director read her part instead. The director apparently did so badly that Reeve got upset, tore up his script, and stormed out. A fun game to play sometime: try to imagine what scene Reeve auditioned, and just how bad the casting director could have possibly been to get him that upset.
In the scene where Edward catches Stuckey trying to assault Vivian, fires him, and throws him out, Gere actually broke a crown on one of his molars during the scene. If you watch, you can see him moving his tongue around in his mouth to inspect the damage.
This wouldn’t be the last time Gere refused to let an injury stop production. In 2006, while playing a reporter in the film The Hunting Party , Gere broke a rib on set and had to be rushed to a Croatian hospital. Despite the pain, he quickly rejoined the cast to shoot the rest of the movi
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