Naked_as_Nature_Intended

<i>Naked as Nature Intended</i>

Naked as Nature Intended

1961 British naturist film by Harrison Marks


Naked as Nature Intended (U.S. title: As Nature Intended) is a 1961 British nudist film produced and directed by George Harrison Marks and starring Pamela Green.[1] It was the first film from producers Tony Tenser and Michael Klinger.[2][3]

Quick Facts Naked as Nature Intended, Directed by ...

Plot

Three young women, Pamela, Petrina and Jacky, hire a car and embark on a motoring holiday of the English countryside. They meet up with two garage attendants Bridget and Angela who decide to take a hiking holiday. Much of the film is travelogue through Somerset, Devon and Cornwall, visiting locations such as Stonehenge, Tintagel, Clovelly, the Minack Open Air Theatre, Bedruthan Steps and Land's End. The women end up at a nudist camp at Land's End and, once there, Angela and Bridget, who are nudists, persuade the others to remove their clothes and lose their inhibitions.

Cast

  • Pamela Green as Pamela
  • Jackie Salt as Jackie
  • Petrina Forsyth as Petrina
  • Bridget Leonard as Bridget
  • Angela Jones as Angela
  • Guy Kingsley Poynter as commentator
  • Stuart Samuels as various roles
  • George Harrison Marks as open air theatre producer

Production

Tony Tenser and Michael Klinger were distributors of imported films and owners of the Compton Cinema Club in Soho, London's first sex cinema. They wanted to produce a nudist feature film and approached Marks about making one. The only way that the British Board of Film Censors (BBFC) would allow nudity in film at that time was for the film to focus on the naturist movement. Films about nudist camps were considered to be discreet enough to pass the censorship requirements but would still attract audiences.[4][5] Marks met John Trevelyan, secretary of the BBFC, before shooting commenced. No script had been written at the time of the meeting, but the film was sanctioned by the founder of the British Naturism Movement, who owned the Spielplatz Sun Camp in Hertfordshire where some scenes were to be filmed. Trevelyan raised no objections to the film.[6]

It was known during production as Cornish Holiday.[4]

Once the film had been produced, the shower scene from the opening sequence was cut from the British release by the BBFC,[6] and the film received an A certificate.[7] The cut was made due to the assumption that viewers would infer that Pamela and her flat mate were lesbians.[8]

Release

Tenser's marketing campaign for the film billed it as "the greatest nudist film ever". The campaign made use of the fame that Marks and Green had acquired by this time, billing Green as the "Queen of the Pin-Ups" and Marks as the "King of the Camera".[citation needed]

The film opened in November 1961 at the Cameo Moulin cinema in Windmill Street to poor reviews; it was, however, popular with audiences, creating queues for entry when it opened.[9] The film ran in cinemas in the West End of London for two years.[6] It was released in the United States as As Nature Intended because the word Naked was considered too risqué for the American public; nevertheless, the cut scene remained in the American release of the film.[8]

The film was released on video in 1999.[6][10]

In 2013 Pamela Green published the illustrated book Naked as Nature Intended: The Epic Tale of a Nudist Picture (Suffolk & Watt, ISBN 978-0954598594) with photographs by the film's stills photographer "Dam Buster" Douglas Webb.


References

  1. "Naked as Nature Intended". British Film Institute Collections Search. Retrieved 31 December 2023.
  2. John Hamilton, Beasts in the Cellar: The Exploitation Film Career of Tony Tenser, FAB Press (2005) ISBN 978-1903254271. p 15-20
  3. Simon Sheridan, Keeping the British End Up: Four Decades of Saucy Cinema, Titan Books 2011 p 41-43
  4. Green, Pamela. "Naked as…". Pamela Green. Retrieved 16 January 2017.
  5. Tom Vallance (20 December 2007). "Tony Tenser: Film producer and distributor who dubbed Bardot a 'sex kitten'". The Independent. Archived from the original on 2022-06-18. Retrieved 16 January 2018.
  6. Tony Sloman (9 July 1997). "Obituary: Harrison Marks". The Independent. Archived from the original on 2022-06-18. Retrieved 4 January 2018.
  7. "Naked as Nature Intended". British Board of Film Classification. Retrieved 25 January 2017.
  8. "Cut scene from Naked as Nature Intended". pamela-green.com. 3 May 2012. Retrieved 25 January 2018.
  9. Whitaker, Gavin (2008). "The Naked World of Harrison Marks". pamela-green.com. Retrieved 18 January 2018.
  10. "Naked - As Nature Intended [VHS]". Amazon. Retrieved 25 January 2017.

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