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Ladies Who Do

  • 1963
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 25m
IMDb RATING
6.9/10
627
YOUR RATING
Ladies Who Do (1963)
Comedy

They 'do' clean offices. After finding an important piece of paper in the trash, the women are soon in business and make good use of it to save their old neighbourhood from the wreckers' bal... Read allThey 'do' clean offices. After finding an important piece of paper in the trash, the women are soon in business and make good use of it to save their old neighbourhood from the wreckers' ball.They 'do' clean offices. After finding an important piece of paper in the trash, the women are soon in business and make good use of it to save their old neighbourhood from the wreckers' ball.

  • Director
    • C.M. Pennington-Richards
  • Writers
    • Michael Pertwee
    • John Bignall
  • Stars
    • Peggy Mount
    • Robert Morley
    • Harry H. Corbett
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.9/10
    627
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • C.M. Pennington-Richards
    • Writers
      • Michael Pertwee
      • John Bignall
    • Stars
      • Peggy Mount
      • Robert Morley
      • Harry H. Corbett
    • 23User reviews
    • 4Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos13

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    Top cast36

    Edit
    Peggy Mount
    Peggy Mount
    • Mrs. Cragg
    Robert Morley
    Robert Morley
    • The Colonel
    Harry H. Corbett
    Harry H. Corbett
    • James Ryder
    Miriam Karlin
    Miriam Karlin
    • Mrs. Higgins
    Avril Elgar
    • Emily Parish
    Dandy Nichols
    Dandy Nichols
    • Mrs. Merryweather
    Jon Pertwee
    Jon Pertwee
    • Sydney Tait
    Joan Benham
    Joan Benham
    • Miss Pinsent
    Ron Moody
    Ron Moody
    • Police Inspector
    Cardew Robinson
    • Police Driver
    Nigel Davenport
    Nigel Davenport
    • Mr. Strang
    Arthur Howard
    • Chauffeur
    Ernest Clark
    Ernest Clark
    • Stockbroker
    Tristram Jellinek
    • Second Stockbroker
    John Laurie
    John Laurie
    • Doctor MacGregor
    Graham Stark
    Graham Stark
    • Foreman
    Brian Rawlinson
    Brian Rawlinson
    • Shop Steward
    Harry Fowler
    Harry Fowler
    • Drill Operator
    • Director
      • C.M. Pennington-Richards
    • Writers
      • Michael Pertwee
      • John Bignall
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews23

    6.9627
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    Featured reviews

    10robert-temple-1

    One of the greatest of British comedies, and it has a message

    The first thing that needs to be explained to people who are not British, or who are British but under the age of 30, is the title. 'Ladies who do' was the polite way of referring to cleaning ladies, or char women, up until fairly recent times in Britain. A woman who cleaned for Mrs. So-and-so would proudly say to her friends: 'I do for Mrs. So-and-so.' It was all a way of being polite in a class-based society so that a cleaning lady did not have to be called a cleaning lady. That is all gone now, and people today merely speak in a derogatory way of 'cleaners', who are all Polish or Estonian or Latvian and many do not even speak English. But at the time this film was made, 'ladies who do' were everywhere, and in London, where this film is set, they were all wisecracking Cockney women who made pithy irreverent comments in their charming East End accents, and made everybody laugh (or cry). This utterly hilarious film is based upon the premise that 'ladies who do' could get together as a group and systematically raid the dustbins of the offices they cleaned, and get hot tips for the stock market. This is indeed what happens. The story was written by Jon Pertwee, a comic actor who also appears in the film. He certainly knew more than a few char ladies, and his characters and dialogue are hysterically funny because they are so accurate. Apart from anything else, this is a first rate social history document! The leading presence on screen is the overwhelmingly dominant Peggy Mount. There was never anyone like her, she was a Force Ten Gale for laughter. She and her three chums and the old mother of one of them make up a quintet of breathtakingly brilliant character acting, who are so effective that they nearly eclipse the talents of the two male actors with the biggest parts, Robert Morley and Harry Corbett. I had the rare privilege long ago of seeing Peggy Mount in a lead role onstage in a serious play. It was Gerhard Hauptmann's THE BEAVER COAT, directed by Bernard Miles at the Mermaid in London. She was like a hurricane onstage. I have rarely seen such a powerful dramatic performance. If she had not been so busy being a comedienne for most of her career, she would have been recognised as a great dramatic actress. Apart from the hilarity and biting satire of this wonderful film, it has a very serious underlying message. The motivation of the char ladies is not to get rich, but to save their street, Pitt Street, from a rapacious developer who wants to knock down all their houses (they all live in the same street) and build a new development. They use the money they make by stealing inside information about stocks (including some from his own waste baskets!) to fight him and save their neighbourhood. It is a true 'peoples' uprising'. They even stage obstructions in their street to stop the bulldozers and prevent the police arresting them (one char lady snips the aerial off the police car to stop the police calling for backup). The performances of Dandy Nichols, Miriam Karlin, Avril Elgar, and Joan Benham are all marvellous, as ladies who terrify. This is a truly wonderful film, and a tribute to that British sense of humour which existed until recently but is now tending to be drowned out by the suffocatingly dreary 'political correctness' and poe-faced formalism of those mediocre political nonentities who have constituted themselves the regulators of public behaviour. To such people, laughter poses an intolerable threat to their ersatz 'dignity'.
    5henry8-3

    Ladies Who Do

    After accidentally acquiring details of a corporate purchase, cleaner Mount and her friends, including finance whizz Morley, decide to set up a company to use this and other information to make stocks and shares trade killings.

    Sweet, simple and very British, this is fun enough with Mount wonderful as the world's grumpiest bag with a heart of gold supported by an impressive array of British character actors.
    6boblipton

    The Limits of Curtilage

    Peggy Mount is the charwoman for developer Harry H. Corbett's office. She finds a perfectly good cigar in the trash and takes it for Robert Morley, whom she also does for. He discovers the scrap of paper Miss Mount wrapped the cigar in contains a market scheme. He takes advantage and clears five thousand pounds, then proposes to go into business with four chars from the City: they will bring the scraps of paper thrown out by the Masters of The Universe, and he will speculate accordingly in the market. There's also a subplot about Corbett tossing all the people in Miss Mount's neighborhood out -- with new housing provided -- so he can develop the area.

    Although the details of how the market and development work are correct in substance, the script by Michael Pertwee and John Bignall has a lot of moving parts, and underdeveloped characters. There's social satire, business satire, making fun of unionized labor...all the bugaboos you could find in a Boulting Brothers movie, but there's a soft, gooey center to the whole thing: Corbett was born in the next street over from Miss Mount's, his mother charred for ninepence a night when she could get it, and wound up in the work house. The movie hangs together well enough while you watch it, but any subtext is lost in the clamor.
    10betc-3

    Outstanding English comedy.

    I saw this delightful movie in the late 60's. I do wish that the film industry in other countries, including the United States, could follow the English guidelines in creating a truly funny film. One of the many things that made this movie so funny and outstanding was the lack of four letter words and bedroom scenes. The producer and director of "Women Who Do" proved that four char ladies and their co-hart who play the stock market can create a delightful plot. Even though it has been so many years ago, when they took over the board room I had tears rolling down my face from laughing so hard. What do fans of English comedy,like this, do to get to see more movies like this? Or, what do we do to get to see this movie again? I truly loved every minute of this movie. Bettye Coleman
    8kris-gray

    Please Lady Mount

    My mother took me to see this at the cinema and I enjoyed it then and I enjoyed today when it was on the Talking Pictures channel. The premise was pinched recently for the Sheridan Smith series 'Cleaning Up' although not a comedy like this one. It's a typical 60's B&W comedy that could sit alongside the Carry On films with a wealth of British comedy talent of the day led by Robert Morley and Peggy Mount with Harry H Corbett as the villain of the piece.

    I really disliked Peggy Mount when she was Ada Larkin in 'The Larkins' she was so horrible to David Kossoff, as a 6 year old at the time I didn't understand she was acting. So one day on holiday on the Norfolk broads she was having lunch with Pat Combs in the hotel we were staying in. My father said go in and ask her for an autograph so I went up and said 'Please Lady Mount, can I have your autograph?' she was so sweet and obliged, I then went back and gave her mine, she laughed saying it was the first time anyone had given on back.

    Lovely lady, lovely film.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Jon Pertwee (Sydney Tait) was the younger brother of the screenwriter Michael Pertwee.
    • Goofs
      Mr Ryder's car has a telephone. While a car telephone service was launched in the UK in 1961, it wasn't available in London until 1965 when base station transmitters were installed at the new Post Office Tower.
    • Quotes

      Mr. Merryweather: You're lucky I'm in a good mood today so I'm going to explain something to you. We ain't going to move. Not for nobody, and if you come here again annoying me an' my little missus, I'll splatter you all over the wall. Do you understand?

      Sidney Tait: You make yourself abundantly clear, sir.

    • Connections
      Referenced in The Curse of Steptoe (2008)

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    FAQ

    • How long is Ladies Who Do?
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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • June 22, 1964 (Sweden)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Dame koje rade
    • Filming locations
      • Culvert Road, Battersea, London, England, UK(establishing aerial shot of area where the "Ladies Who Do" live)
    • Production company
      • George H. Brown Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 25 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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