|
|||||||||||||
| Melanie Griffith | Billie Dawn | |
| John Goodman | Harry Brock | |
| Don Johnson | Paul Verrall | |
| Edward Herrmann | Ed Devery | |
| Max Perlich | JJ | |
| Michael Ensign | Phillipe | |
| Benjamin C. Bradlee | Alex Duffee | |
| Sally Quinn | Beatrice Duffee | |
| William Frankfather | Sen. Kelley | |
| Fred Dalton Thompson | Sen. Hedges | |
| Celeste Yarnall | Mrs. Hedges | |
| Nora Dunn | Cynthia Schreiber | |
| Meg Wittner | Mrs. Kelley | |
| William Forward | Sen. Duker | |
| Mary Gordon Murray | Bindy Duker |
| Director |
|
||||
| Producer | D. Constantine Conte
Stratton Leopold |
||||
| Writer | Douglas McGrath
Garson Kanin |
||||
| Musician | George Fenton
|
|
|
A businessman shows up in Washington to lobby agendas that are friendly to his construction plans. His ditsy ex-showgirl bimbo proves to be an embarrassment in social situations, so he hires a reporter to teach her how to appear more intelligent. Soon it becomes apparent to the reporter that she isn't so stupid after all, and things become more complicated as she begins questioning the papers her sugar daddy keeps getting her to sign, and the reporter begins falling in love with her. |
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||