Keep It Up Downstairs | |
---|---|
![]() | |
Directed by | Robert Young |
Written by | Hazel Adair |
Produced by | Hazel Adair Mark Forstater |
Starring | Diana Dors Jack Wild William Rushton |
Cinematography | Alan Pudney |
Edited by | Mike Campbell |
Music by | Michael Nyman |
Production company | Pyramid Films |
Distributed by | Thorn EMI |
Release date | 29 July 1976 |
Running time | 94 minutes |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Keep It Up Downstairs is a 1976 British period sex comedy film, directed by Robert Young and starring Diana Dors, Jack Wild and William Rushton.[1] It is also known as Can You Keep It Up Downstairs? and My Favorite Butler.
Plot
The film follows the adventures of the sex-crazed inhabitants of the bankrupt Cockshute Castle in 1904, and the attempts of Lord and Lady Cockshute to find a rich wife for their uninterested inventor son Peregrine.
Cast
- Diana Dors as Daisy Dureneck
- Jack Wild as Peregrine Cockshute
- William Rushton as Snotty Shuttleworth
- Aimi MacDonald as Christabelle St. Clair
- Françoise Pascal as Mimi
- Neil Hallett as Percy Hampton
- Mark Singleton as Lord Cockshute
- Julian Orchard as Bishop
- Simon Brent as Rogers
- Sue Longhurst as Lady Cockshute
- John Blythe as Francis Dureneck
- Carmen Silvera as Lady Bottomley
- Seretta Wilson as Betsy-Ann Dureneck
- Anthony Kenyon as Mellons
- Olivia Munday as Lady Kitty Cockshute
- April Olrich as Duchess
- Sally Harrison as Maud
- Mary Millington as Polly
Production
It was shot at Elstree Studios and on location at Knebworth House in Hertfordshire. A version exists with hardcore inserts; these were shot with body doubles for the main stars.[2]
Music
The score was by Michael Nyman, his first for a commercially released film.
Critical response
Monthly Film Bulletin said "A joyless 'romp' that is soporifically heavy-handed with its phallic imagery and double meanings (endless references to "big ones" and "getting it off"), Keep It Up Downstairs bungles the tempting possibility of a ribald melange of Upstairs Downstairs and The Go-Between school of sensitive historical drama. The cast, required to bare breasts and buttocks at regular intervals, is able to make no headway against the inane script and consistently mistimed direction."[3]
References
- ↑ "Keep It Up Downstairs". British Film Institute Collections Search. Retrieved 29 November 2023.
- ↑ Sheridan, Simon (2011). Keeping the British End Up: Four Decades of Saucy Cinema. Titan Books Ltd
- ↑ "Keep It Up Downstairs". Monthly Film Bulletin. 43 (504): 102. 1976 – via ProQuest.
External links
- Keep It Up Downstairs at IMDb
- Keep It Up Downstairs at ReelStreets
- Keep It Up Downstairs at BFI
- Keep It Up Downstairs at Letterbox DVD
- Keep It Up Downstairs at TCMDB