Harper Valley PTA (film)

Harper Valley PTA

Theatrical release poster
Directed by Richard Bennett
Produced by George Edwards
Written by George Edwards
Barry Schneider
Starring Barbara Eden
Nanette Fabray
Ronny Cox
Louis Nye
Susan Swift
Pat Paulsen
Cinematography Willy Kurant
Edited by Michael Economou
Distributed by April Fools Productions
Release dates
  • June 2, 1978
Running time
93 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Budget $1 million
Box office $25 million (USA)

Harper Valley PTA is a 1978 comedy film starring Barbara Eden inspired by the 1968 hit country song "Harper Valley PTA" performed by Jeannie C. Riley and written by Tom T. Hall. In 1981, it was adapted into a television series, with Barbara Eden reprising her role.

The film's tagline was: The song was scandalous. The movie is hilarious!

Plot

Stella Johnson (Barbara Eden) is a beautiful widowed single mother who lives in the town of Harper Valley, Ohio. She sells cosmetics door-to-door for the fictitious AngelGlo Cosmetics (akin to the real-life Avon). Her fourteen-year-old daughter is named Dee (Susan Swift), a student at Harper Valley Junior High School. Dee brings her mother a letter from the school's Parent Teacher Association board, which is led by the pompous and snobbish Flora Simpson Reilly (Audrey Christie). The letter denounces her for her not following the societal mores of the day and community and further stating that if she didn't change her ways more to the board's liking, Dee would be punished for her mother's sins by being expelled from school.

Infuriated by the board's supposed superiority and glaring hypocrisy, Stella storms to the PTA meeting and proceeds to tell most of the PTA members off by exposing their hidden skeletons for the town to see.

After her house is TP'ed, and a rock is thrown through her window in retaliation for what she did, Stella prepares to get even with those who would want her driven out of town. She teams up with her friends, beautician Alice Finley (Nanette Fabray) and bartender Herbie Maddox (Ron Masak) who, along with Dee's help, wreak hilarious and justified revenge on those PTA members who hated Stella. (Of Flora's allies, only two, Holly Taylor and Shirley Thompson, are spared any retribution.)

During the course of the movie, she finds out that one of the male PTA members, wealthy Willis Newton (Ronny Cox), has fallen in love with her.

Will, and another male on the PTA board, Skeeter Duggan (Bob Hastings), the town's Notary public, do not agree with Flora and her friends and are sympathetic to Stella. With Will's help, Stella goes ahead and makes a run for President of the PTA, which infuriates Flora and her allies.

After one of their own, real estate agent Kirby Baker (Louis Nye), is arrested for assaulting Myrna Wong (Irene Yah-Ling Sun), an Asian-American friend of Stella's, after he attempts to run Stella out of town by means of a foreclosure, things become more and more desperate. They finally decide to resort to criminal means to maintain the power they hold in town. The board members then decide to go and hire a couple of kidnappers named Dutch and Tex (Royce D. Applegate; J. J. Barry) to have Skeeter abducted so they can commit election fraud. The kidnappers snatch Skeeter as he is taking the trash out, and lock him in a monastery, where he is locked up and made drunk on wine. Eventually, Stella and Alice, disguised as nuns, find him, and free him.

After a makeover, which sees her braces removed and her hair styled, Dee also finds a boyfriend in handsome Carlyle (Brian Cook) a popular school track star, which incurs the jealousy of Bettina Reilly (Laura Tiege), the equally snobbish granddaughter of Flora. Also shown are Edwina, Bettina's twin sister (played by Jan Tiege, Laura's real life twin) and Dee's best friend, Mavis (Louise Foley), who, herself, becomes a target of the PTA's cruelty by being falsely accused of stealing money by Olive Glover (Molly Dodd), the PTA's corrupt recording secretary. Olive, who has a hardcore gambling addiction, has actually stolen money from the Milk Fund Rally, one of the PTA's numerous fund raisers, and intends to having Mavis framed for the crime and arrested.

Ultimately, Flora's scheme to discredit Stella fails. Olive is arrested for embezzlement. Dutch and Tex, already in custody for the Skeeter Duggan kidnapping, tell the police that Flora is behind it all to keep Stella off the PTA board.

Stella wins the election and becomes the new PTA president, with the whole town voting to get rid of Flora and her snobbish friends. Will and Stella fly off in his helicopter and marry while she announces her plans to run for mayor.

Cast and characters

Filming

Harper Valley PTA was filmed from October 3, 1977 to December 1977. It was filmed partly on location in the town of Lebanon, Ohio and Los Angeles, California.[1]

On October 31, 1977, while shooting a scene involving pink elephants in the Hancock Park neighborhood of Los Angeles, California, Nanette Fabray was knocked to the ground by a spooked elephant from which she suffered a severe concussion, bruises and back sprains.[2]After the accident, Fabray was taken to Cedars-Sinai Medical Center where her condition was reported as serious but stable. Following her recovery, she resumed filming on November 30.[3]

Soundtrack

Harper Valley PTA
(Original Soundtrack Recording)
Soundtrack album by various artists
Released 1978
Genre Soundtrack
Length 29:50
Label Plantation Records
Producer Shelby Singleton

Harper Valley PTA soundtrack album was released on vinyl LP by Plantation Records in 1978.

Side A:

  1. "Harper Valley PTA" – Jeannie C. Riley (3:12)
  2. "Dee's Visit" (instrumental) – Nelson Riddle (2:10)
  3. "Mr. Harper" – Barbara Eden (2:22)
  4. "Alice's Place" (instrumental) – Nelson Riddle (2:29)
  5. "High School Confidential" – Jerry Lee Lewis (3:07)
  6. "Willie Mae" (instrumental) – Nelson Riddle (2:01)

Side B:

  1. "Harper Valley PTA" (instrumental) – Nelson Riddle (1:55)
  2. "Widow Jones" – Barbara Eden (2:38)
  3. "Twin Tune" (instrumental) – Nelson Riddle (1:30)
  4. "Ballad of a Teenage Queen" – Johnny Cash (2:51)
  5. "Ice Cream Disco" (instrumental) – Nelson Riddle (1:48)
  6. "Whatever Happened to Charlie Brown" – Rita Remington & Carol Channing (2:40)
  7. "Ending (Reprise: Harper Valley PTA)" (instrumental) (1:06)

References

External links