Tony Randall
10 titles
Filmography
10 results

The Alphabet Murders
(1965)Tony Randall stars as the famously fastidious detective Hercule Poirot. When a string of alliteratively named victims are murdered in alphabetical order, Poirot is called upon to catch the killer.

The Mating Game
(1959)Golden-Globe nominated and Emmy Award-winning Tony Randall ("Pillow Talk," TV's "The Odd Couple") plays Lorenzo Charlton, a stuffy tax investigator sent to the farm of Pop Larkin (Paul Douglas) and Ma Larkin (Una Merkel) to find out why they haven't been paying taxes. He discovers that the Larkins, instead of money, use a homegrown barter system. Overwhelmed by their complex economic network, Lorenzo drinks one home brew too many. Awakening from a hangover, he sees a vision of loveliness before him -- the Larkin's spunky daughter Mariette (Debbie Reynolds). Enraptured by Mariette, he decides to stick around and find a way to get the family out of their onerous tax burden. George Marshall ("How the West Was Won," "Destry Rides Again") directs this breezy romantic comedy.

Lover Come Back
(1961)Account executives Jerry uses unethical means of securing accounts while Carol lures clients with her charm and knowledge. But when he steals a client out from under her nose, revenge propels her to infiltrate his secret VIP campaign in order to persuade the mystery product’s scientist to switch to her advertising firm.

Send Me No Flowers
(1964)George Kimball mistakenly believes he only has a few months to live, and arouses the suspicions of his wife Judy when he tries to pair her off with Bert Power as a potential future husband.

Pillow Talk
(1959)In their first romantic comedy together, Doris Day and Rock Hudson are utterly charming as an uptight interior decorator and an amorous playboy who are forced to share a party line.

Let's Make Love
(1960)A millionaire is out to destroy a show that makes fun of him, until he meets cast member Monroe. To get closer to her he joins the cast and hires Bing Crosby, Gene Kelly and Milton Berle (as themselves) to teach him the performing arts.

Boys' Night Out
(1962)Bowling? Nope. Another round of beers? Yawn. Three married men and their divorced buddy want to try something more intriguing on their boys' night out: a boy's night in with a blonde tootsie in a secret love pad. Unknown to them, the tootsie is really a doctoral student researching the love life of the suburban male. And she proves her smarts by keeping all four relationships strictly platonic, despite the boys' boasting to the contrary. Kim Novak, James Garner, Tony Randall and a starry supporting cast push all the funny buttons in this stylish comedy that (eventually) celebrates the virtues of marriage. Director Michael Gordon displays the same sophisticated touch that made his Pillow Talk a model of the sex-farce genre.

The Littlest Angel
(1969)A shepherd boy enters the pearly gates on his eighth birthday and is assigned a guardian angel to help him adjust to his new heavenly existence.

Down with Love
(2003)A female advice columnist who has sworn off love falls for a journalist-ladies' man.

Fatal Instinct
(1993)Comic director Carl Reiner packs this off-the-wall spoof with gags that pay homage to erotic thriller classics.