
“Lucy’s Italian Movie” Has One of the Show’s Best Stories
Airing as the 23rd installment of Season 5, “Lucy’s Italian Movie” is one of the show’s most well-written episodes. While traveling on a train, Lucy is discovered by an Italian filmmaker, Vittorio Filippi (Franco Corsaro). He’s working on a film called Bitter Grapes, and he thinks Lucy would be perfect for a role. Sure this will be her big break, Lucy sets out to learn all she can about the grape industry. To accomplish this, she wanders into a vineyard and is put to work stomping grapes. But things go awry when she gets into a fight with her vat partner (Teresa Tirelli D’Amico).
Shooting the Grape Scene Became Dangerous
Lucy’s battle in the grape vat is undoubtedly one of the greatest physical comedy performances of all time. But it was also one of the most dangerous. According to the book Laughs, Luck… and Lucy, the fight wasn’t at all scripted as it would later appear. Ball got into further detail during an appearance on The Dick Cavett Show. Ball explained that they needed an authentic Italian actress for the part. They searched California’s Wine country to do this, and that’s how they found D’Amico. Ball said that, although she and the other Italian extras cast didn’t speak very much English, they were perfect for their roles. A translator came with them and explained what they were going to do, and the women agreed, but after their initial instructions, it was up to Ball and the production team to keep the shoot going.
I slipped,” Ball told Cavett. “And when I slipped, I hit her accidentally. And she took offense. So, she hauled off and let me have it…it took all the wind out of me. She had been told that we were to stay down for a while, give me a chance to get my legs way up so that they’d show in the camera. Then, up would come an arm…My head was supposed to pop [up]. Well, my head never popped up. She kept me down by the throat.” Ball continued the story, saying she had grapes up her nose and ears. She really had to fight D’Amico to try to get her off. “I was drowning in these grapes!”
Ball gave D’Amico one last blow to get her off. Ball said she hollered the director’s name, calling for help. But he and the audience thought it was part of Ball’s comedic performance, and D’Amico pulled Ball back into the vat. Ball said the two spent so much time fighting that they had to cut half of it. “To drown in a vat of grapes is not the way I had planned to go, you know,” Ball joked with Cavett. While it may have been harrowing to film, Ball and D’Amico created a sequence of elevated comedy that has yet to be matched. Almost eerily, though, it would not be the last time Ball was almost engulfed on set.
Lucille Ball Nearly Drowned While Making ‘The Lucy Show’
Following the conclusion of I Love Lucy and the subsequent Lucy and Desi Comedy Hour, Ball returned to television with The Lucy Show. This time, Ball portrayed Lucy Carmichael and shared a home with Viv (Vivian Vance). Like its predecessor, the series saw the duo get into a whole new set of situations. One of the more famous episodes is “Lucy and Viv Put in a Shower.” As the title suggests, the show sees the two attempt to install a shower, only to become trapped inside as water fills it. In a case of history repeating itself, Ball nearly drowned while filming in front of a live studio audience. According to MeTV, part of the scene required Ball to dive to the bottom of the shower. However, Vance noticed Ball was struggling to come back under the weight of the water. Vance saved Ball by pulling her partner up by the hair! Because of the parameters of filming The Lucy Show’s production, it was all done in one take. Thus, this is the version that was broadcast. Once again, Lucy had made comedy history while flirting with her own mortality.