At a mansion onSunset Boulevard, police officers and photographers discover the body of Joe Gillis floating face down in the swimming pool. In aflashback, Joe relates the events leading to his death.
Six months earlier, Joe, a down-on-his-luck screenwriter, tries to interestParamount Pictures in a story he submitted.Script reader Betty Schaefer harshly critiques it, unaware that Joe is listening. Later, while fleeing fromrepo men seeking his car, Joe turns into the driveway of a seemingly deserted mansion inhabited by forgottensilent film star Norma Desmond. Learning that Joe is a writer, Norma asks his opinion of a script she has written for a film aboutSalome. She plans to play the role herself in her return to the screen. Joe finds her script abysmal but flatters her into hiring him as ascript doctor.
Joe moves into Norma's mansion at her insistence and sees that Norma refuses to believe that her fame has evaporated. Her butler, Max, secretly writes all of thefan mail she receives to maintain the illusion. At her New Year's Eve party, Joe realizes that she has fallen in love with him. He tries to let her down gently, but Norma slaps him and retreats to her room, distraught. Joe visits his friend Artie Green and again meets Betty, who thinks a scene in one of Joe's scripts has potential. When he phones Max to have him pack his things, Max tells him Norma has cut her wrists with his razor. Joe then returns to Norma, and their relationship becomes sexual.
Norma has Max deliver the editedSalome script to her former directorCecil B. DeMille at Paramount. She starts getting calls from Paramount executive Gordon Cole but refuses to speak to anyone except DeMille. Eventually, she has Max drive her and Joe to Paramount in her 1929Isotta Fraschini. DeMille welcomes her affectionately and treats her with great respect but tactfully evades her questions about the script. Max then learns that Cole only called her because he wants to rent her Isotta Fraschini for use in a film.
Preparing for her imagined comeback, Norma undergoes rigorous beauty treatments. Joe secretly works nights in Betty's office, collaborating on an original screenplay, and she eventually confesses she has fallen for him. After learning of Joe's moonlighting, Max reveals he was once a respected film director who discovered Norma, made her a star, and became her first husband. Following their divorce, he abandoned his career to become her servant.
Norma discovers a manuscript with Joe and Betty's names on it and phones Betty, insinuating that Joe is not the man he seems. Overhearing the call, Joe invites Betty to the mansion to see for herself. When she arrives, he pretends that he is satisfied being agigolo so that she can be with Artie. However, after she tearfully leaves, he packs to return to his old newspaper job inDayton, Ohio. He bluntly informs Norma that there will be no comeback, that Max writes all of her fan mail, and that she has been forgotten, though Max refuses to break her delusions. Joe disregards Norma's threat to kill herself as she brandishes a gun; as he leaves the house, Norma shoots him three times, and he collapses into the pool.
The flashback ends, and the film returns to the present day, with Norma about to be arrested for murder. The mansion is overrun with police and reporters withnewsreel cameras, which she believes are film cameras. Max pretends to "direct" her, and the police play along. As the cameras roll, Norma descends the grand staircase. Upon reaching the bottom, she stops and makes an impromptu speech about how happy she is to be making a film again. She then says, "All right, Mr. DeMille, I'm ready for my close-up" and approaches the camera.
The street known asSunset Boulevard has been associated with Hollywood film production since 1911, when the town's first film studio,Nestor, opened there. The film workers lived modestly in the growing neighborhood, but during the 1920s, profits and salaries rose to unprecedented levels. With the advent of thestar system, luxurious homes noted for their often incongruous grandeur were built in the area.
As a young man living inBerlin in the 1920s,Billy Wilder was interested in American culture, with much of his interest fueled by the country's films. In the late 1940s, many of the grand Hollywood houses remained, and Wilder, then a Los Angeles resident, found them to be a part of his everyday world. Many former stars from the silent era still lived in them, although most were no longer involved in the film business. Wilder wondered how they spent their time now that "the parade had passed them by" and began imagining the story of a star who had lost her celebrity and box-office appeal.[5]
The character of Norma Desmond mirrors aspects of the twilight years of several real-life faded silent-film stars, such as the reclusive existences ofMary Pickford andPola Negri and the mental disorders ofMae Murray,Valeska Surratt,Audrey Munson andClara Bow.Dave Kehr has asserted thatNorma Talmadge is "the obvious if unacknowledged source of Norma Desmond, the grotesque, predatory silent movie queen" of the film.[6] The most common analysis of the character's name is that it is a combination of the names of silent film actressMabel Normand and directorWilliam Desmond Taylor, a close friend of Normand's who was murdered in 1922 in a never-solved case sensationalized by the press.[7]
CinematographerJohn Seitz stated that Wilder "had wanted to doEvelyn Waugh's 1948 novelThe Loved One, but couldn't obtain the rights." Waugh's story follows Dennis Barlow, a young British poet who is working at a Hollywood pet mortuary. His housemate is Sir Francis Hinsley, an aging screenwriter who hasn’t written anything in years. When Sir Francis is unceremoniously let go by the studio, he hangs himself and funeral arrangements are left to Barlow. Gossip columnistHedda Hopper, who plays herself in the movie, wrote that "Billy Wilder ... was crazy about Evelyn Waugh's bookThe Loved One, and the studio wanted to buy it." Regardless, the plans for this adaptation fell through. The original script that followed nevertheless contains similarities to the novel. At one point, Norma mistakes Joe for a funeral director and inquires about a coffin for herself and her deceased pet chimp.[8]
Wilder and Brackett began working on a script in 1948, but the result did not completely satisfy them. In August 1948,D. M. Marshman Jr., formerly a writer forLife, was hired to help develop the storyline after Wilder and Brackett were impressed by a critique he provided of their filmThe Emperor Waltz (1948). In an effort to keep the full details of the story fromParamount Pictures and avoid the restrictive censorship of theBreen Code, they submitted the script a few pages at a time. The Breen Office insisted certain lines be rewritten, such as Gillis's "I'm up that creek and I need a job," which became "I'm over a barrel. I need a job." Paramount executives thought Wilder was adapting a story calledA Can of Beans (which did not exist) and allowed him relative freedom to proceed as he saw fit. Only the first third of the script was written when filming began in early May 1949, and Wilder was unsure how the film would end.[7]
The fusion of writer-director Billy Wilder's biting humor and the classic elements of film noir make for a strange kind of comedy, as well as a strange kind of film noir. There are no belly laughs here, but there are certainly strangled giggles: at the pet chimp's midnight funeral, at Joe's discomfited acquiescence to the role of gigolo; at Norma'sMack Sennett-style "entertainments" for her uneasy lover; and at the ritualized solemnity of Norma's "waxworks" card parties, which feature such former luminaries asBuster Keaton as Norma's has-been cronies.[9]
Wilder preferred to leave analysis of his screenplays and films to others. When asked ifSunset Boulevard was ablack comedy, he replied: "No, just a picture".[10]
Wilder considered many actors for the lead roles, but chose Swanson and Holden.
According to Brackett, Wilder and he never considered anyone except Gloria Swanson for the role of Norma Desmond. Wilder, however, recalled first wantingMae West andMarlon Brando for the leads. West rejected the offer outright. West portrayed herself as a sex symbol through her senior years, and was offended that she should be asked to play a Hollywood has-been.[11]
The filmmakers approachedGreta Garbo, whom they had worked with previously onNinotchka (1939), but she was not interested. Wilder contactedPola Negri by telephone, but had a difficult time understanding her heavy Polish accent. He then reached out toClara Bow, the famed "It girl" of the 1920s, but she declined, having found the transition to sound films so difficult that she preferred to leave her film career behind her. They also offered the part of Norma Desmond toNorma Shearer, but she rejected the role due to both her retirement and distaste for the script. They were consideringFred MacMurray to play opposite her as Joe. Wilder and Brackett then visitedMary Pickford, but before even discussing the plot with her, Wilder realized she would consider a role involving an affair with a man half her age an insult, so they departed. They had considered pairingMontgomery Clift with her.[12]
According to Wilder, he askedGeorge Cukor for advice, and he suggested Swanson, one of the most fêted actresses of the silent-screen era, known for her beauty, talent, and extravagant lifestyle. In many ways, she resembled the Norma Desmond character, and like her, had been unable to make a smooth transition intotalking pictures. The similarities ended there; Swanson made a handful of talking pictures. She accepted the end of her film career and, in the early 1930s, moved to New York City, where she worked in radio. In the mid-1940s, she worked in television and on the New York stage and had last appeared in the 1941 filmFather Takes a Wife. Though Swanson was not seeking a movie comeback, she became intrigued when Wilder discussed the role with her.[5]
Swanson was glad for the opportunity to earn a greater salary than she had been making in television and on stage.[11] However, she was chagrined at the notion of submitting to ascreen test, saying she had "made 20 films for Paramount. Why do they want me to audition?" Her reaction was echoed in the screenplay when Norma Desmond declares, "Without me there wouldn't be any Paramount studios." In her memoir, Swanson recalled asking Cukor if it was unreasonable to refuse the screen test. He replied that since Norma Desmond was the role for which she would be remembered, "If they ask you to do ten screen tests, do ten screen tests, or I will personally shoot you." His enthusiasm convinced Swanson to participate,[13] and she signed a contract for $50,000 (equivalent to $650,000 in 2024).[14] In a 1975 interview, Wilder recalled Swanson's reaction with the observation, "Therewas a lot of Norma in her, you know."[15]
Wilder harks back to Swanson's silent film career when Norma shows Joe the filmQueen Kelly, an earlier Gloria Swanson film directed byErich von Stroheim, who himself portrays Norma's former director and husband Max von Mayerling, who now works as her butler.Queen Kelly was not released in the United States for over 50 years after Swanson walked off the set.[13][16]
Montgomery Clift was signed to play Joe Gillis for $5,000 per week for a guaranteed twelve weeks, but withdrew just before the start of filming, claiming his role of a young man involved with an older woman was too close to the one he had played inThe Heiress (1949), in which he felt he had been unconvincing. An infuriated Wilder responded, "If he's any kind of actor, he could be convincing making love toany woman."[17] Clift himself was having an affair with singerLibby Holman, 15 years his senior, which some have suggested was his real reason for withdrawing from the film.[18][19]
Forced to consider the available Paramount contract players, Wilder and Brackett focused on William Holden, who had made an impressive debut a decade earlier inGolden Boy (1939). Following an appearance inOur Town (1940), he served in the military inWorld War II, and his return to the screen afterward had been moderately successful. Holden was enthusiastic about the script and eager to accept the role. He did not know at the time that his salary of $39,000 (equivalent to $510,000 in 2024) was much less than had been offered to Clift.[20]
For the role of Betty Schaefer, Wilder wanted a newcomer who could project a wholesome and ordinary image to contrast with Swanson's flamboyant and obsessive Desmond. He choseNancy Olson, who had recently been considered for the role ofDelilah in Cecil B. DeMille'sSamson and Delilah.[7]
DeMille, often credited as the person most responsible for making Swanson a star, plays himself, with his scenes filmed on the set ofSamson and Delilah at Paramount Studios. He calls Norma "young fella", which had been his nickname for Swanson.
Norma's friends who come to playbridge with her, referred to by Joe as "the waxworks", were Swanson's silent-era contemporariesBuster Keaton,Anna Q. Nilsson, andH. B. Warner, portraying themselves.Hedda Hopper also played herself, reporting on Norma Desmond's downfall in the film's final scenes.[7]
The film's dark, shadowyblack-and-white cinematography was the work ofJohn F. Seitz. Wilder had worked with Seitz on several projects before, and trusted his judgment, allowing him to make his own decisions. Seitz recalled asking Wilder what he required for the pet chimpanzee's funeral scene, to which Wilder replied, "you know, just your standard monkey funeral shot." For some interior shots, Seitz sprinkled dust in front of the camera before filming to suggest "mustiness," a technique he had also used for Wilder'sDouble Indemnity (1944).[21] The film had the option to be shot in color, but it was instead shot in black and white to be more reflective of the noir genre.[22]
Trailer for the film
Wilder was adamant that the corpse of Joe Gillis be seen from the bottom of the pool, but creating the effect was difficult. The camera was placed inside a specially constructed box and lowered under water, but the result disappointed Wilder, who insisted on further experiments. The shot was finally achieved by placing a mirror on the bottom of the pool and filming Holden's reflection from above, with the distorted image of the police officers standing around the pool forming a backdrop.[7]
Film historian Tom Stempel writes: "In bothDouble Indemnity andSunset Boulevard, Seitz does something that has always impressed me. Both are films noir, and he finesses the fact that both are set in the sunniest of locales, Los Angeles... he brings together the light and the dark in the same film without any seams showing... he brings together the realistic lighting of Joe Gillis out in the real world with the gothic look of Norma Desmond's mansion."[7]
Edith Head designed the costumes. Wilder, Head, and Swanson agreed that Norma Desmond would have kept somewhat up-to-date with fashion trends, so Head designed costumes closely resembling theDior look of the mid-1940s. Embellishments were added to personalize them and reflect Norma Desmond's taste.[23]
Swanson recalled in her biography that the costumes were only "a trifle outdated, a trifle exotic."[13] Head later described her assignment as "the most challenging of my career," and explained her approach with the comment, "Because Norma Desmond was an actress who had become lost in her own imagination, I tried to make her look like she was always impersonating someone." Head later said she relied on Swanson's expertise because "she was creating a past that she knew and I didn't."[7] Head also designed the costumes for William Holden and the minor characters, but Wilder instructed von Stroheim and Nancy Olson to wear their own clothing.[24]
The overstated decadence of Norma Desmond's home was created by set designerHans Dreier, whose career extended back to the silent era. He had also been commissioned to complete the interior design for the homes of movie stars, including the house of Mae West.William Haines, an interior designer and former actor, later rebutted criticism of Dreier's set design with the observation, "Bebe Daniels,Norma Shearer, and Pola Negri all had homes with ugly interiors like that."[7]
The bed in the shape of a boat in which Norma Desmond slept had been owned by the dancerGaby Deslys, who died in 1920. It had originally been bought by the Universal prop department at auction after Deslys's death. The bed appeared inThe Phantom of the Opera (1925) starringLon Chaney.
Wilder also made use of authentic locales. Joe's apartment is in the Alto Nido, a real apartment block in central Hollywood that was often home to struggling writers. It is located at 1851 Ivar Ave. and Franklin Ave. west of theHollywood Freeway. The scenes of Gillis and Betty Schaefer on Paramount's back lot were filmed on the actual studio back lot, and the interior ofSchwab's Drug Store was carefully recreated for several scenes. The exterior scenes of the Desmond house were filmed ata house onWilshire Boulevard built during the 1920s by the millionaireWilliam O. Jenkins. Jenkins and his family lived in it for only one year before then leaving it abandoned for more than a decade, which earned it the nickname "Phantom House".[25] By 1949, it was owned by the former wife ofJ. Paul Getty. The house was later featured inNicholas Ray'sRebel Without a Cause (1955). It was demolished by the Gettys in 1957 to make way for the construction of an office building.[26][27]
During filming, considerable publicity was given to the health-conscious Gloria Swanson's youthful appearance, which made her look the same age as Holden. Wilder insisted that the age difference between the characters be delineated, and instructed makeup supervisorWally Westmore to make Swanson look older. Swanson argued that a woman of Norma Desmond's age, with her considerable wealth and devotion to self, would not necessarily look old, and suggested Holden be made up to appear younger. Wilder agreed, and Westmore was assigned this task, which allowed Swanson to portray Norma Desmond as more glamorous a figure than Wilder had originally imagined.[7]
Franz Waxman's musical score was the final element added toSunset Boulevard.[28] His theme for Norma was based ontango music, inspired by her having danced the tango withRudolph Valentino. This style was contrasted with Joe'sbebop theme. Waxman also used distorted arrangements of popular film-music styles from the 1920s and 1930s to suggest Norma Desmond's state of mind. The film's score was recorded for compact disc by theRoyal Scottish National Orchestra, conducted byJoel McNeely, and released in 2002.[29] The surviving parts of the original score were released in 2010.[30]
Wilder and Brackett, nervous about a major screening in Hollywood, held a preview inEvanston, Illinois, in late 1949. The original edit opened with a scene inside amorgue, with the assembled corpses discussing how they came to be there. The story began with the corpse of Joe Gillis recounting his murder to the others. The audience reacted with laughter and seemed unsure whether to view the rest of the film as drama or comedy. After a similar reaction during its second screening inPoughkeepsie, New York, and a third inGreat Neck, the morgue opening was replaced by a shorter poolside opening,[33] using footage filmed on January 5, 1950.[34]
In Hollywood, Paramount arranged a private screening for the various studio heads and specially invited guests. After viewing the film,Barbara Stanwyck knelt to kiss the hem of Gloria Swanson's skirt. Swanson later remembered looking forMary Pickford, only to be told, "She can't show herself, Gloria. She's too overcome. We all are."Louis B. Mayer berated Wilder before the crowd of celebrities, saying, "You have disgraced the industry that made and fed you! You should be tarred and feathered and run out of Hollywood!" Upon hearing of Mayer's slight, Wilder strode up to the mogul and retorted with a vulgarity that one biographer said was allegedly because Mayer, who was Jewish, suggested that Wilder, who was also Jewish, would be better off being sent back to Germany, an extraordinary sentiment so soon after the war and the Holocaust, in which Wilder's family perished.[35][36] In 2020 Olson recounted that friends who had attended the screening told her that Wilder had simply told Mayer, "Go fuck yourself."[24]
The few other criticisms were not so venomous. According to one often-told but later discredited anecdote,[37] actressMae Murray, a contemporary of Swanson, was offended by the film and commented, "None of us floozies wasthat nuts."[38]
Sunset Boulevard had its official world premiere atRadio City Music Hall on August 10, 1950.[39] After a seven-week run,Variety magazine reported the film had grossed "around $1,020,000", ($13,330,539 in 2024 dollars[40]) making it one of that theater's most successful pictures.Variety also noted that, while it was "breaking records in major cities, it is doing below average in ... the sticks." To promote the film, Gloria Swanson traveled by train throughout the United States, visiting 33 cities in a few months. The publicity helped attract people to the cinemas, but in many areas away from major cities it was considered less than a hit.[7]
The film earned an estimated $2,350,000 at the U.S. box office in 1950 ($30,712,517 in 2024 dollars[40]).[41]
Review aggregatorRotten Tomatoes reports that 98% of critics gave the film a positive review based on 112 reviews, with an average rating of 9.5/10. The critical consensus states: "Arguably the greatest movie about Hollywood, Billy Wilder's masterpieceSunset Boulevard is a tremendously entertaining combination of noir, black comedy, and character study."[42] OnMetacritic, the film has a weighted average score of 94 out of 100, based on 32 critics, indicating "universal acclaim".[43]
Sunset Boulevard attracted a range of positive reviews from critics.Time described it as a story of "Hollywood at its worst told by Hollywood at its best",[44] whileBoxoffice Review wrote "the picture will keep spectators spellbound."[45]James Agee, writing forSight & Sound, praised the film and said Wilder and Brackett were "beautifully equipped to do the cold, exact, adroit, sardonic job they have done." He further stated: "There is no use pretending to discuss all the virtues, or even all the limitations, of this picture: it is one of those rare movies which are so full of exactness, cleverness, mastery, pleasure, and arguable and unarguable choice and judgment, that they can be talked about...for hours on end. The people of the present and their world are handled with a grimly controlled, mock-easy exactness which seems about as good as a certain kind of modified movie naturalism can get; this exactness is also imposed on the obsoletes and their world, but with that exactness they are treated always, with fine imaginativeness and eloquence, as heroic grotesques."[46]Good Housekeeping described Swanson as a "great lady [who] spans another decade with her magic,"[7] whileLook praised her "brilliant and haunting performance."[44]
Some critics accurately foresaw the film's lasting appeal.The Hollywood Reporter wrote that future generations would "set themselves the task of analyzing the durability and greatness" of the film, whileCommonweal said that in the future "the Library of Congress will be glad to have in its archives a print ofSunset Boulevard."[7]
In a rare negative review of the film,The New Yorker deemed it "a pretentious slice ofRoquefort" containing only "the germ of a good idea".[7] Despite praising it as a "great motion picture" with "memorable" acting, Thomas M. Pryor wrote inThe New York Times that the use of the dead Joe Gillis as narrator was a plot device "completely unworthy of Brackett and Wilder".[47]
In 1999,Roger Ebert described Swanson as giving "one of the all time greatest [acting] performances", but singled out von Stroheim's performance as "hold[ing] the film together".[48] He included it in hisGreat Movies list, calling it "the best drama ever made about the movies because it sees through the illusions."[48]Pauline Kael described the film as "almost too clever, but at its best in its cleverness",[49] and also wrote that it was common to "hear Billy Wilder called the world's greatest director."[50] When Wilder died in 2002,obituaries singled outSunset Boulevard for comment, describing it as one of his most significant works, along withDouble Indemnity andSome Like It Hot.[51]Leslie Halliwell gave it three of four stars, stating: "Incisive melodrama with marvelous moments but a tendency to overstay its welcome... though the last scene is worth waiting for and the malicious observation throughout is a treat."[52]
Film writerRichard Corliss describesSunset Boulevard as "the definitive Hollywood horror movie", noting that almost everything in the script is "ghoulish". He remarks that the story is narrated by a dead man whom Norma Desmond first mistakes for an undertaker, while most of the film takes place "in an old, dark house that only opens its doors to the living dead". He compares von Stroheim's character Max with the concealedErik, the central character inThe Phantom of the Opera, and Norma Desmond withDracula, noting that, as she seduces Joe Gillis, the camera tactfully withdraws with "the traditional directorial attitude taken towards Dracula's jugular seductions". He writes that the narrative contains an excess of "cheap sarcasm", but ultimately considers it a valuable part of Joe's characterization as ahack writer.[53]David Thomson notes the irony of having Gillis tell the story: "The man who can't dream up a viable story line becomes the best pitch he'll ever hear. He is the story and it is Billy Wilder's sour valedictory to let the ghost of Gillis tell the story, facedown in the gelid swimming pool exactly the Hollywood reward that Joe gets only in his dreams. And so this breathtaking portrait of Hollywood failure is wrapped up in rueful, ruined success."[54]
Of the various films that have attractedAcademy Award nominations in all four acting categories,Sunset Boulevard is one of only three not to win in any category, the others beingMy Man Godfrey (1936) andAmerican Hustle (2013). At the time its eleven Oscar nominations were exceeded only by the fourteen received byAll About Eve, which won six awards, including Best Picture and Best Director. Many critics predicted that the Best Actress award would be given to Gloria Swanson orBette Davis forAll About Eve and were surprised that the recipient was newcomerJudy Holliday forBorn Yesterday.[13] Bette Davis believed that her and Swanson's comparable characters effectively "cancelled each other out", allowing Holliday to win.[64] Swanson recalled the press's reaction following Holliday's win: "It slowly dawned on me that they were asking for a larger-than-life scene, or better still, a mad scene. More accurately, they were trying to flush out Norma Desmond."[44]
Sunset Boulevard was dramatized as an hour-long radio play on the September 17, 1951, broadcast ofLux Radio Theater with Gloria Swanson and William Holden in their original film roles.[65]
In 1989, the film was among the first group of 25 deemed "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant" by theLibrary of Congress and selected for preservation in theNational Film Registry.[66]The Village Voice ranked the film at No. 43 in its Top 250 "Best Films of the Century" list in 1999, based on a poll of critics.[67] The film was included in "The New York Times Guide to the Best 1,000 Movies Ever Made" in 2002.[68] In January 2002, the film was included on the list of the "Top 100 Essential Films of All Time" by theNational Society of Film Critics.[69][70]Sunset Boulevard received 33 votes in theBritish Film Institute's2012Sight & Sound polls, making it the 63rd greatest film of all time in the critics' poll and 67th in the directors' poll.[71] In the earlier 2002Sight & Sound polls the film ranked 12th among directors.[72] In 2022 edition of Sight & Sound'sGreatest films of all time list the film ranked 62nd in the director's poll.[73] TheWriters Guild of America ranked the film's screenplay (written by Charles Brackett & Billy Wilder and D.M. Marshman Jr.) the 7th greatest ever.[74] In a 2015 poll byBBC Culture, film critics rankedSunset Boulevard the 54th greatest American film of all time.[75] The February 2020 issue ofNew York Magazine listsSunset Boulevard as among "The Best Movies That Lost Best Picture at the Oscars."[76]
Sunset Boulevard was the last collaboration between Wilder and Brackett. They parted amicably and did not publicly air any grievances for the rest of their lives. However, in later years, Brackett confided in screenwriter/directorGarson Kanin that he had not anticipated the split, or had ever understood exactly what happened or why. He described it as "an unexpected blow" from which he never recovered fully; when asked to respond to Brackett's comments, Wilder remained silent.[77]
The two men briefly reunited in October 1951 to face charges that they hadplagiarizedSunset Boulevard. Former Paramount accountant Stephanie Joan Carlson alleged that in 1947 she had submitted to Wilder and Brackett, at their request, manuscripts of stories, both fictional and based on fact, she had written about studio life. She claimed that one in particular,Past Performance, served as the basis for theSunset script, and sued the screenwriters and Paramount for $100,000 ingeneral damages, $250,000 inpunitive damages, $700,000 based on the box office returns, and an additional $350,000 for good measure, for a total of $1,400,000. Carlson's suit was dismissed after two and a half years. In 1954, a similar suit was filed by playwright Edra Buckler, who claimed material she had written had been the screenplay's source. Her suit was dismissed the following year.[78]
Brackett's Hollywood career continued after his split with Wilder. He won an Academy Award for his screenplay forTitanic (1953), and wroteNiagara (1953), the breakthrough film forMarilyn Monroe as a dramatic actress. It was Wilder, however, who realized Monroe's comedic abilities inThe Seven Year Itch andSome Like It Hot. Brackett's career waned by the end of the decade, though he did produce the Oscar-nominated filmThe King and I (1956). He received an Honorary Oscar for Lifetime Achievement in 1958.
William Holden began receiving more important parts and his career rose. He won the Best Actor Oscar forStalag 17 (1953), also directed by Wilder, and by 1956 he was the top box-office attraction in the United States. Holden and Wilder also rejoined forces forFedora (1978), another film critical of Hollywood.
Before the film was released, Nancy Olson had grown disenchanted with film as a career partly because the themes ofSunset Boulevard resonated with her, and also because she had become engaged to songwriterAlan Jay Lerner and decided to move to New York with him. Nevertheless, Olson's pairing with William Holden was considered a success, and she appeared opposite him in several films during the 1950s, although none of them repeated their earlier success; she returned to Hollywood to make several other films, includingThe Absent-Minded Professor (1961) andSon of Flubber (1963), in which she was paired withFred MacMurray.[24]
Similarly, Gloria Swanson was not able to leverage her own success inSunset Boulevard. Although offered scripts, she felt that they all were poor imitations of Norma Desmond. Imagining a career that would eventually reduce her to playing "a parody of a parody," she virtually retired from films.[5]
Sunset Boulevard was shown again in New York City in 1960, and drew such a positive response that Paramount arranged for a limited re-release in theaters throughout the United States.
By the late 1990s, mostSunset Boulevard prints were in poor condition, and as the film was shot usingcellulose nitratefilmstock, much of the original negative had perished. Paramount Studios, believing the film merited the effort of a complete restoration, mounted an expensive project to have itdigitally restored. This restored version was released on DVD in 2002.[79][80] In 2012, the film wasdigitally restored byParamount Pictures forBlu-ray Disc debut. Frame-by-frame digital restoration byPrasad Corporation removed dirt, tears, scratches and other defects.[81][82]
From around 1952 to 1956, Gloria Swanson herself worked with actorRichard Stapley (aka Richard Wyler) and cabaret singer/pianist Dickson Hughes on an adaptation titledBoulevard! (at firstStarring Norma Desmond). Stapley and Hughes first approached Swanson about appearing in a musical revue they had written,About Time (based onTime). Swanson stated that she would return to the stage only in a musical version of her comeback film. Within a week, Stapley and Dickson had written three songs which Swanson approved.[84]
In this version, the romance between Gillis and Schaefer was allowed to blossom, and rather than shoot Gillis at the end, Norma gave the couple her blessing, sending them on their way to live "happily ever after."
Although Paramount gave verbal permission to proceed with the musical, there was no formal legal option. In the late 1950s, Paramount withdrew its consent, leading to the demise of the project.
In 1994, Dickson Hughes incorporated material fromBoulevard! into a musicalSwanson on Sunset, based on his and Stapley's experiences in writingBoulevard!.
Stephen Sondheim briefly considered turningSunset Boulevard into a musical until meeting Billy Wilder at a cocktail party, who told him that the film would be better adapted as an opera rather than a musical.[85]Hal Prince later approached Sondheim to adapt the film as a musical withAngela Lansbury playing Norma Desmond.[86]
John Kander andFred Ebb were also approached by Hal Prince to write a musical ofSunset Boulevard.[87]
A musical adaptation with book and lyrics written byDon Black andChristopher Hampton, and music byAndrew Lloyd Webber was staged in 1993 in London, withPatti LuPone playing Norma Desmond. It closely followed the film story, retained much of the dialogue and attempted to present similar set designs. It reached Broadway in 1994, withGlenn Close playing Norma Desmond. The production staged 17 previews beginning November 1, 1994, and played 977 performances at theMinskoff Theatre from November 17, 1994, through March 22, 1997.[88] It was named Best Musical at the1995 Tony Awards.
In 2016, Close reprised the role in London'sWest End, followed by a 12-week run at thePalace Theater in New York City from February 2 to June 25, 2017.
Sunset Boulevard played one night at theRoyal Albert Hall on December 3, 2021. The production was directed by Jordan Murphy and conducted by Alex Parker, and it starredMazz Murray.
In 2023,Nicole Scherzinger revived the role of Norma Desmond in a 16-week run from September at London'sSavoy Theatre, in a production directed byJamie Lloyd. The production transferred to Broadway'sSt. James Theatre with an opening night on October 20, 2024, and closing on July 20, 2025.
A film adaptation of the musical, with Close and Lloyd Webber producing, and Close playing Norma, is in development at Paramount Pictures, withRob Ashford directing andTom MacRae writing. Filming was originally set to begin in late 2019, but was delayed three times due to theCOVID-19 pandemic and Paramount putting the project on hold in October 2021.[89][90][91] In May 2024, Close revealed that the film is still moving forward, but with Ashford no longer attached as director.[92] In 2025, Scherzinger revealed that there were talks to have her play Norma in the film.[93]
In 1971, the film was parodied in the fourteenth episode of season five ofThe Carol Burnett Show in a sketch called "Sunnyset Boulevard" in whichCarol Burnett played the insane "Nora Desmond" andHarvey Korman her servant Max. It then later continued as its own series of recurring sketches.[94]
The film has clearly influencedThe Sixteen-Millimeter Shrine, which is the 1959 fourth episode of the first season of the originalTwilight Zone. In it,Ida Lupino stars as Barbara Jean Trenton, an aging Hollywood film star who lives a secluded life in her mansion, reminiscing constantly about her past by watching her old films from the 1930s and planning an unrealistic comeback.
TheTiny Toon Adventures episode "Sepulveda Boulevard" is a parody of the film, with various characters trying to steal screenplay ideas from each other, when characters try to justify the theft with, "Hey, this is Hollywood," someone replies, "This is the VALLEY, bub!"
In the episode ofAmerican Dad! entitled "Star Trek," the plot revolves around the downfall of stardom and pays tribute by replicating the opening scene of the movie. The plot of the episode "A Star is Reborn" is also based on the film.
TheArcher season 7 finale and segue to the film noirArcher: Dreamland season 8 recreate the pool scene from the opening of the film.
The Season 11 premiere ofCurb Your Enthusiasm, entitled "The Five-Foot Fence", begins withLarry David finding a home invader's corpse floating face-down in his pool.
TheTwin Peaks characterGordon Cole is named after theSunset Boulevard character. A scene from the film itself appears in Part 15 ofTwin Peaks: The Return. In the scene, being viewed by Dale Cooper, the name "Gordon Cole" is spoken, which stirs Cooper's buried memory of his time in the FBI.
The3rd Rock from the Sun episode "Fifteen Minutes of Dick" (season 2, ep. 23) features a spoof on the film, wherein Sally, suddenly famous, spirals into Norma-esque despair as her celebrity wanes.
The early episodes ofDesperate Housewives (2004) have numerous allusions toSunset Boulevard, including the use of a dead person as a narrator, and another character's fondness for Billy Wilder movies.
In the movieHick, Luli (Chloë Grace Moretz) can be found in her room reciting the movie in the mirror. Moretz stated that she was the one who suggested the quote be implemented.
In the scene where Robin Williams first tries on his drag outfit inMrs. Doubtfire, he misquotes Swanson's famous line "I'm ready for my close-up, Mr. DeMille."
Sunset Boulevard is frequently referenced in the bookThe Disaster Artist: My Life Inside The Room, the Greatest Bad Movie Ever Made byGreg Sestero andTom Bissell, which documents Sestero's relationship with director and actorTommy Wiseau and the making of Wiseau's filmThe Room. Quotes fromSunset Boulevard are used asepigraphs for several of the book's chapters.[95] In a 2017 interview, Sestero stated that "I saw a lot of similarities with my story, especially when Tommy lived in a place that had a pool and wanted to make his own vanity project."[96]
Donald Trump has cited the film as one of his personal favorites, and screened it multiple times at theWhite House Family Theater during his presidency. The press subsequently brought up an analogy between Trump'sMar-a-Lago and Norma Desmond's Sunset Boulevard mansion.[97]
The song "Antarctica Starts Here" byJohn Cale, from his 1973 albumParis 1919, describes a "paranoid great movie queen" that Cale said was inspired by the character of Norma Desmond.[98]
The song "Floating" on the albumOutskirts by Canadian country-rock bandBlue Rodeo references the movie in its chorus line 'I feel like William Holden floating in a pool.' The album's liner notes explain the connection to the film.
The 1996 songSunset Boulevard by the Spanish songwriterJavier Álvarez includes the versesLos años de papel te vuelven a cegar / Como a Norma Desmond en Sunset Boulevard ("The paper years blind you again / as [they blinded] Norma Desmond in 'Sunset Boulevard'".)[99]
The "Timeless"gimmick, as portrayed by Australian wrestlerToni Storm inAll Elite Wrestling since 2023, is primarily based upon the character of Norma Desmond, with her "butler" – Canadian wrestlerDr. Luther – being based upon the character of Max von Mayerling. The storyline involving Storm also draws inspiration from the filmAll About Eve, with Storm's character also sharing traits with the character of Margo Channing, and English wrestlerMariah May portraying an Eve Harrington-esque foil to Storm.[100]
^Petersen, Anne Helen (September 23, 2014)."Scandals of Classic Hollywood: The Long Suicide of Montgomery Clift".Vanity Fair. RetrievedDecember 3, 2016.He was also close with stage actress Libby Holman, 16 years his senior, who had become a notorious feature in the gossip columns following the suspicious death of her wealthy husband, rumors of lesbianism, and her general practice of dating younger men. Clift was so protective of Holman that when offered the plum role of the male lead in Sunset Boulevard, he turned it down—reportedly to avoid any suggestion that Libby Holman was his own delusional Norma Desmond, using a handsome young man to pursue her lost stardom.
^Gritten, David (February 3, 2013)."Montgomery Clift: better than Brando, more tragic than Dean".The Telegraph Limited. RetrievedDecember 3, 2016.His agent Herman Citron later suggested to Clift's biographer Patricia Bosworth that the Gillis role might have been too close for comfort; at the time, the 30-year-old actor was conducting a secret liaison with singer-actress Libby Holman, 16 years his senior, a state of affairs that would have been considered scandalous.
^Ankerich, Michael G. (2013).Mae Murray: the girl with the bee-stung lips (lack of capitalizationsic per colophon), The University Press of Kentucky. According toKevin Brownlow's foreword (page ix), the "rigorous work" of Ankerich "indicates that Murray never made this remark."
^Based on liner notes toBoulevard! demo recording CD release, by Richard Stapley, Tim J Hutton and Steven M Warner
^Stephen., Sondheim (2011).Look, I made a hat : collected lyrics (1981-2011) with attendant comments, amplifications, dogmas, harangues, wafflings, anecdotes and miscellany. London: Virgin.ISBN978-0753522608.OCLC751797401.
^Staggs, Sam (February 2003).Close-up on Sunset Boulevard : Billy Wilder, Norma Desmond, and the dark Hollywood dream (1st St. Martin's Griffin ed.). New York: St. Martin's Griffin. p. 320.ISBN0312302541.OCLC51815402.
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