Memphis Cathouse Blues

Memphis Cathouse Blues is a 1982 pornographic film that is a spoof of the Broadway musical The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas,[1] which was made into a film starring Burt Reynolds and Dolly Parton in 1982. Annette Haven takes over the Parton role of the madam and Mike Horner the Reynolds role as the sheriff. Porn star Kay Parker, who played the prostitute Rose in the movie, had an uncredited bit role in The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas film.

The Hollywood film version of the musical ran into censorship difficulties in some movie territories, which necessitated the word "whorehouse" being struck from the title and the movie being renamed The Best Little Cathouse in Texas in some print ads. This likely influenced the title of the porn film.

Plot

Mavis (Annette Haven) is the madame of a whorehouse in Memphis, Tennessee. Her exclusive client is Sheriff T.J. Thomson (Mike Horner), but he can't help her against Reverend Pritchit (R.J. Reynolds) who sends Deacon Davis (Herschel Savage) and Brother Pyle (Jon Martin) to demonstrate outside. Alas, the demonstrators are soon lured inside to be with Angel (K.C. Valentine), Cherry (Dorothy LeMay), and Rose (Parker). Meanwhile, a woman called Tammy Sue (Danielle) knocks on the door saying someone just tried to rape her. Mavis calms her down and eventually offers her a job. She coaches her with the Sheriff. Rose reminisces about a college guy called Tommy Lee, whose brother Johnny Lee was with Dixie( Lisa De Leeuw). Per tradition, the captain of the winning football team Billy Ray then arrives and gets to be Tammy Sue's first sole client. The Sheriff offers to save the whorehouse by proposing to Mavis. Reverend Pritchit arrives personally to stop the ceremony, but his true face is exposed when Tammy Sue reveals he's the man who tried to rape her.[2]

See also

References

  1. "Memphis Cathouse Blues (1982) Connections". Internet Movie Database. Retrieved 3 February 2014.
  2. "Memphis Cathouse Blues (1982) Plot Summary". Internet Movie Database. Retrieved 3 February 2014.

External links