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  1. Valley of the Dolls was released by 20th Century Fox on December 15, 1967. The film was panned by critics, but became a box office success and one of the studio's highest grossing films. In the decades since its release, it has attracted a passionate cult following.

    • Garin Pirnia
    • JACQUELINE SUSANN DIDN'T LIKE THE MOVIE. To promote the film, the studio hosted a month-long premiere party on a luxury liner. At a screening in Venice, Susann said the film “appalled” her, according to Parkins.
    • BARBARA PARKINS WAS “NERVOUS” TO WORK WITH JUDY GARLAND. Barbara Parkins had only been working with Judy Garland for two days when the legendary actress was fired for not coming out of her dressing room (and possibly being drunk).
    • WILLIAM TRAVILLA BASED THE FILM'S COSTUMES ON THE WOMEN’S LIKES. Costume designer William Travilla had to assemble 134 outfits for the four leading actresses.
    • SUSANN THOUGHT GARLAND “GOT RATTLED.” In an interview with Roger Ebert, Susann offered her thoughts on why Garland was let go. “Everybody keeps asking me why she was fired from the movie, as if it was my fault or something,” she said.
  2. Valley of the Dolls: Directed by Mark Robson. With Barbara Parkins, Patty Duke, Paul Burke, Sharon Tate. Film version of Jacqueline Susann's best-selling novel chronicling the rise and fall of three young women in show business.

    • (9.9K)
    • Drama, Music, Romance
    • Mark Robson
    • 1967-12-13
  3. Dec 13, 2017 · Valley of the Dolls —released December 15, 1967was based on Jacqueline Susann’s 1966 best-seller, which promised to tear the lid off of Hollywood and Broadway. (Accent on the “way,” as...

    • Donald Liebenson
  4. The women experience success and failure in love and work, leading to heartbreak, addiction and tragedy. In New York City, bright but naive New Englander Anne Welles becomes a secretary at a theatrical law firm, where she falls in love with attorney Lyon Burke.

  5. Film version of Jacqueline Susann 's best-selling novel chronicling the rise and fall of three young women in show business. Anne Welles, a bright, brash young New England college grad leaves her Peyton Place-ish small town and heads for Broadway, where she hopes to find an exciting job and sophisticated men.

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  7. A World Premiere Voyage and Jacqueline Susann and “Valley of the Dolls,” two promotional films from 1967. Episode of the television program Hollywood Backstories from 2001 on the film. Screen tests. Trailers.

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