 Rosie Dixon - Night Nurse (1978)
Every opportunity for smutty innuendo is seized in this
hospital comedy as Debbie Ash suffers countless indignities in the
title role. When production of Confessions of a Plumber's Mate
was cancelled, Rosie Dixon unknowingly marked Columbia
Pictures' last foray into British sex comedy.
Filmed in the autumn of 1977, the movie was based on a novel by
Christopher Wood - Confessions of a Night Nurse, published
in 1974. Wood followed the character of naive suburban teenager
Rosie over nine books between 1974 and 1977, casting her as an
escort, a baby-sitter, riding mistress, barmaid and so on.
Adopting the title Rosie Dixon - Night Nurse, the film
was produced by experienced filmmakers Davina Belling and Clive
Parsons, who spent over a year auditioning young hopefuls to take
the leading role.
In August 1977 Belling told Screen International; "I've
seen a lot of 18-year-old scrubbers in the last 18 months, but
when we found Debbie Ash we knew she was right!".
For pretty blonde-haired Ash the role was gold dust, and the
trade papers spoke of her becoming 'the next big thing'. Sadly t
wasn't to be. Her fame was eventually eclipsed by her sister
Leslie, who incidentally took a small supporting role, with
uncharacteristic brown hair, in Rosie Dixon.
Inspired by primetime medical soap Doctor Kildare,
starry-eyed 18-year-old virgin Rosie Dixon (Ash) decides to become
a nurse and enrols at nearby St Adelaide's Hospital. The harsh
reality of life on the wards is somewhat different from
television, however, since the nurses are dominated by a tough,
unfeeling Scottish Matron (Beryl Reid - wonderful as usual).
Sharing a room in the nurses' home with an upper class nympho
called Penny Green (Carolyne Argyle), Rosie becomes the focus of
sexual attention for a gaggle of lecherous student doctors whose
main priority is shagging rather than treating patients.
The guest stars (both in and out of bed) are of the usual
Columbia calibre. Many faces are re-used from previous Confessions
episodes, notably Liz Fraser as a dizzy housewife obsessed with
winning newspaper competitions, and John Le Mesurier as head
surgeon Sir Archibald (more interested in the 3.30 at Newmarket
than whipping out an appendix).
The biggest shock is seeing veteran comic Arthur Askey as a
dirty old man whizzing about in his motorised wheelchair pinching
nurses' arses.
Nobody can deny the film looks great. It's certainly as glossy
as director (and former commercials director) Justin Cartwright
intended, but with none of the cheerful effervescence of the Confessions
series.
Soft focus prettiness sits awkwardly alongside comedy capers
with a skeleton, humping in hospital laundry baskets and patients
mistakenly drinking urine samples. Even some of the corny jokes
are well below the quality threshold we expected from the finest
British sex comedies. "Are you intimidated?" asks the
ferocious Matron. "I don't think so, but I've had a flu
jab!" Rosie replies.
In the title role, Debbie Ash tries very hard but lacks the
clumsy physicality of Robin Askwith. Playing Rosie virtually
straight, she just doesn't have the personality to pull it
off.
Rosie Dixon's funniest moment probably happened
off-screen. When the movie was nearing completion, Belling and
Parsons innocently invited the parents of cast members Peter
Mantle and Carolyne Argyle onto the set. What the Reverend W E
Mantle and Judge Major Michael Argyle though of their offspring
appearing in a soft-core porn film was never reported.
Major Argyle was a circuit judge for 18 years who vigorously
spoke out against permissiveness and pornography. He famously
presided over the Oz magazine obscenity trial, handing out
severe prison sentences and pronounced publicly, "I will not
tolerate filth!".
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