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IMDbPro

Nuit et jour

Original title: Night and Day
  • 1946
  • Tous publics
  • 2h 8m
IMDb RATING
6.1/10
3.4K
YOUR RATING
Cary Grant, Eve Arden, Mary Martin, Ginny Simms, Alexis Smith, and Jane Wyman in Nuit et jour (1946)
A fictionalized biopic of composer Cole Porter from his days at Yale in the 1910s through the height of his success to the 1940s.
Play trailer2:18
1 Video
59 Photos
Classic MusicalPeriod DramaBiographyDramaMusical

A fictionalized biopic of composer Cole Porter from his days at Yale in the 1910s through the height of his success to the 1940s.A fictionalized biopic of composer Cole Porter from his days at Yale in the 1910s through the height of his success to the 1940s.A fictionalized biopic of composer Cole Porter from his days at Yale in the 1910s through the height of his success to the 1940s.

  • Director
    • Michael Curtiz
  • Writers
    • Charles Hoffman
    • Leo Townsend
    • William Bowers
  • Stars
    • Cary Grant
    • Alexis Smith
    • Monty Woolley
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.1/10
    3.4K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Michael Curtiz
    • Writers
      • Charles Hoffman
      • Leo Townsend
      • William Bowers
    • Stars
      • Cary Grant
      • Alexis Smith
      • Monty Woolley
    • 67User reviews
    • 13Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 Oscar
      • 2 nominations total

    Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:18
    Official Trailer

    Photos59

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    Top cast99+

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    Cary Grant
    Cary Grant
    • Cole Porter
    Alexis Smith
    Alexis Smith
    • Linda Lee Porter
    Monty Woolley
    Monty Woolley
    • Monty
    Ginny Simms
    Ginny Simms
    • Carole Hill
    Jane Wyman
    Jane Wyman
    • Gracie Harris
    Eve Arden
    Eve Arden
    • Gabrielle
    Victor Francen
    Victor Francen
    • Anatole Giron
    Alan Hale
    Alan Hale
    • Leon Dowling
    Dorothy Malone
    Dorothy Malone
    • Nancy
    Tom D'Andrea
    Tom D'Andrea
    • Tommy
    Selena Royle
    Selena Royle
    • Kate Porter
    Donald Woods
    Donald Woods
    • Ward Blackburn
    Henry Stephenson
    Henry Stephenson
    • Omar Cole
    Paul Cavanagh
    Paul Cavanagh
    • Bart McClelland
    Sig Ruman
    Sig Ruman
    • Wilowski
    Carlos Ramírez
    Carlos Ramírez
    • Specialty Singer of Song 'Begin the Beguine' Number
    Milada Mladova
    Milada Mladova
    • Specialty Dancer in 'Begin the Beguine' Number
    George Zoritch
    George Zoritch
    • Specialty Dancer in 'Begin the Beguine' Number
    • Director
      • Michael Curtiz
    • Writers
      • Charles Hoffman
      • Leo Townsend
      • William Bowers
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews67

    6.13.3K
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    Featured reviews

    Doylenf

    Short on fact and long on great music...

    If you want a biography of Cole Porter you better go to the library, you won't find it here. This is a highly entertaining but strictly fictional version of his life--played by no less than Cary Grant, in his usual debonair style, perhaps just a shade understated so as to appear more like Porter. Whatever, he's still Cary Grant (playing himself in a minor key) and since the music is what makes this film tick, you'll forgive whatever liberties the scriptwriters have taken. It all looks wonderful in glowing technicolor.

    Alexis Smith never was able to make a warm presence on the screen despite her talent and striking good looks. She seems even more remote here as the woman Porter woos and marries. Monty Woolley has a fine time playing himself. The musical moments are handled nicely by some talented people: Ginny Simms, Eve Arden, Jane Wyman and Mary Martin doing her "My Heart Belongs to Daddy" routine. All of the Porter standards are nicely done.

    Interesting tidbit: Was Oscar nominated for "Best Scoring of a Musical" but lost to "The Jolson Story".

    Relaxing entertainment. Just don't expect a truthful bio.
    8bobilene

    Skip Delovely and Catch this One again

    After suffering through "Delovely", I had to feel good again about Cole Porter's music. Where Delovely focuses on Porters Homosexuality, a subject that Night and day ignores, Night and day performs his music in brilliant fashion. Forget the corny fictionalized screenplay and just sit back and enjoy:

    Mary Martins version of My Heart Belongs to Daddy.

    Cary Grant singing "Your The Tops".

    Cole Porter's stirring "Night and Day", "Begin the Beguine". A song that Delovely totally butchers.

    "It was Just One of Those Things" The Haunting "In the Still of the Night"

    And so many more.

    This is strictly for Cole Porter's music. If your interested in how he enjoyed his spare time, Delovey is for you. For me, I just enjoy his music.
    TxMike

    Cary Grant in the life story of Cole Porter.

    Thanks to the TCM channel, we can easily view old classics like this. Although nicely shot in Technicolor, the print is just a shade pastel, and looks better with the TV's color cranked up just a little bit. The movie starts in 1914, with Porter at Yale and already writing songs, even though he was a law student. However, at Christmas break, after he told his mother that he wasn't going back, he was going to focus on writing music instead, 'Oh, I could be a lawyer, but not a very good one. When I look at a lawbook I think of a song. When I read a legal case, I hear a melody.' Like almost any biographical movie, certain parts are fictionalized, and many things have to be left out. But this movie gives us the pleasure of many Cole Porter classics and a glimpse into the man behind the songs. A good movie for anyone who is a fan of Porter's, or American musical history in general.

    Cary Grant was 41/42 when this was filmed, so it is a bit of a stretch imagining him, in the beginning, as a college student. This movie came out the same year (1946) as 'Notorious', and one year before one of my favorite Cary Grant movies, where he plays an angel in 'The Bishop's Wife (1947).'
    7harry-76

    Cole Porter Bio

    Have you ever liked a film you knew wasn't all that great, yet one you simply enjoyed watching? That's the way I feel about "Night and Day," a musical bio with a large dose of fantasy mixed in on that great American songwriter Cole Porter. Perhaps it's the pleasure of watching Cary Grant having a ball playing the composer, and even singing a few tunes to boot. Or maybe it's the youthful Alexis Smith as a perfect "Mrs. Porter," coping with challenges as a famous songwriter's spouse. Certainly Monty Woolley is amusing as himself, playing a role he reportedly lived with the real-life composer. Then there's that honey-coated contralto Ginny Simms looking gorgeous in Technicolor and beautifully singing some of Porter's most expressive music and lyrics. In the supporting cast is a sprighty Jane Wyman (before she became laden with heavy dramatic roles) doing several comic-singing turns, and even a surprise bit from Eve Arden as a French cabaret star, "Gabrielle," performing an early, lesser-known show number. The screen has only one bio of this outstanding American songwriter, one who is respected by both popular and "serious" composer-peers, as well as by the critics and general public alike. Surely the scripters "did a job" on Porter's factual life, yet at least we have this elaborate effort, with a gung-ho cast that's ready & willing to give it their all. They all look like they're having a great time, and I for one have fun with them. Until a better Porter bio comes along, this one will have to do.
    6bkoganbing

    My Heart Belongs To Cole

    Unlike film biographies of George Gershwin, Jerome Kern, and Sigmund Romberg or for that matter Rodgers&Hart, those artists were gone by the time the silver screen told their stories. But Cole Porter was very much still with us when Night and Day was released in 1946 and some of his best work was yet to come.

    If Cole Porter had his druthers Cary Grant would never have played the part of himself. Porter fancied himself as more the Fred Astaire type. But given the nature of what happened to Porter in his life, a dancing Cole Porter was out of the question.

    There's not too much that's accurate in this film. Cole Porter was born and raised in Indiana in affluent surroundings. Yes he went to Yale and his best and lifelong friend that he acquired from Yale was Monty Woolley. Yes he did marry the older and glamorous Linda Lee Thomas. And yes he composed some of the most beautiful and sophisticated songs ever done.

    Of course his marriage to Linda Lee was a sham. In the vernacular of the time Linda served as his beard, his cover as it were because Cole Porter was gay. As was his lifelong friend Monty Woolley.

    Were they ever involved with each other. Maybe as youths, but from what I've heard their tastes were different. Porter liked his male partners as sophisticated as he was and as beautiful as his songs were. Monty on the other hand was known for picking up street kids from Maine to California until he died.

    One thing that was true although glamorized for the film, Porter did serve in the French army during World War I. No wounds however, no hearing of African rhythms from Senegalese troops were he got the idea for Night and Day.

    Night and Day sure jumbles up even the order of his shows. Porter was writing songs from before Yale, but he did not score a commercial musical comedy hit until the show Paris in 1928 where the song Let's Do It was featured. I sure didn't know that In the Still of the Night was originally done as a Christmas Carol way back in his youth for instance.

    In fact Where the Still of the Night, along with I've Got You Under My Skin, Rosalie, and Easy to Love were all written for MGM musicals. You can take it to the bank that Louis B. Mayer soaked Jack Warner for plenty to get those songs heard in a Warner Brothers film. Similarly the title song Night and Day, heard in The Gay Divorce on Broadway first, made its screen debut in RKO's The Gay Divorcée. Jack Warner must have paid RKO plenty for that one also.

    The other true thing is the fall from a horse that Porter suffered in the late thirties, the constant pain he was in all of his life. It took 28 operations to save his legs back in the thirties. In 1958 long after the story in the film ended, Porter did eventually lose a leg and from then on lived as a recluse in his suite at the Waldorf Towers. Linda Lee Thomas Porter had passed away about a decade before.

    Alexis Smith plays Linda Lee here and the cast of Night and Day also includes Jane Wyman, Dorothy Malone, Selena Royle, Tom D'Andrea, Henry Stephenson, Donald Woods. Playing themselves are Mary Martin and Monty Woolley. Singer Ginny Simms of the Kay Kyser band sang many of the Porter tunes for the film.

    Night and Day certainly captures Porter's sophistication. Of course the gay lifestyle and a pretty hedonistic one at that which Porter led would not be shown at all back in the days of the Code. Some might complain about that pleasure driven pursuit that Porter had his whole life. If he sought beauty and pleasure in the world, Cole Porter certainly gave enough of it back to the world to justify it.

    After Night and Day, Cole Porter had still yet to write such film scores as The Pirate, High Society, and Les Girls and such Broadway shows as Kiss Me Kate, Out of this Wolrd, Can-Can, and Silk Stockings. You could score a film with just the material he had yet to write.

    It's not a great biographical film, but Night and Day provides as good an excuse as any to listen and appreciate the art that was Cole Porter.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      After attending the premiere of the film, Cole Porter supposedly remarked to his wife, Linda, "if I could survive that, I can survive anything."
    • Goofs
      When in England, there are street performers singing "Rosalie". The accordion player's hands never press the keys; in fact, his right hand is static throughout the whole scene.
    • Quotes

      Monty Woolley: Haven't you ever wanted to be alone?

      Gracie Harris: Yes, but with somebody.

    • Connections
      Edited from Don't Fence Me In (1945)
    • Soundtracks
      Night and Day
      (1932) (uncredited)

      Written by Cole Porter

      Played during the opening credits and often in the score

      Sung by Bill Days

      Reprised by passengers on a train

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • October 6, 1948 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Night and Day
    • Filming locations
      • George Lewis Mansion - Benedict Canyon Drive, Bel Air, Los Angeles, California, USA
    • Production company
      • Warner Bros.
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $4,445,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      2 hours 8 minutes
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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    Cary Grant, Eve Arden, Mary Martin, Ginny Simms, Alexis Smith, and Jane Wyman in Nuit et jour (1946)
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