Development The film's script was turned down and bought back by
RKO a few times in the late 1940s and early 1950s until Martin Melcher (the husband of Doris Day at the time) and his
Arwin Productions label bought the script and took it to
Universal. According to Day in
A.E. Hotchner's biography
Doris Day: Her Own Story, the film was titled
Pillow Talk, but the title displeased the
Production Code Administration (PCA). Melcher tried to get co-producer Ross Hunter to change the name to
Any Way the Wind Blows, the name of a song he was about to publish, but Hunter stuck with the original name. Director Michael Gordon had been blacklisted and was working on Broadway. He said producer Ross Hunter saw
The Tender Trap on Broadway which Gordon had directed and "he felt that the play exhibited the general temper and spirit that he wanted" for
Pillow Talk. Gordon recalled he was known "as that intellectual, intense Jew out of the Group Theater, and I wasn't associated with comedies. But I've always like comedy and relished working in comedy." Gordon said "I was very happy to be gainfully employed in Hollywood again, although I must honestly say that deep in my heart I had some misgivings about the rampant chauvinism of
Pillow Talk. But it was fun to do, and I enjoyed working with Doris Day very much."
Casting The film is noted for reinventing the screen images of Rock Hudson and, particularly, Doris Day. Hunter identified Day's potential to be sexy, and recruited legendary costume designer
Jean Louis, who designed 18 or 24 costumes for Day to wear. Day acknowledged that the film transformed her image from "the girl next door" to classy sex symbol, describing that the plot, for the time, was very sexy, involving a climactic scene in which the leading man carries her out of bed in her pajamas and out into the streets. In addition, Laykin et Cie lent $500,000 worth of jewels for Day to wear. Gordon said he had "problems" with producer Marty Melcher, who was Day's husband and manager, "because he could not understand why I said that Doris was not going to have a number to sing. She sang in the picture, but informally. I said, 'She's an interior decorator in this film, not a singer. Doris herself was willing to go along with that."
Filming According to Hudson, the final scene, in which Brad storms into Jan's apartment and yanks her out of bed, and carries her through the streets of Manhattan, back to his re-decorated apartment, was actually shot first. Due to back problems, Hudson carried Day on a shelf with her sheets and blankets over her to get through the many takes. According to Hudson, "I could have managed if only one take had been involved, but we went on endlessly, primarily because there was a bit actor who played a cop on the street, and as we passed him Doris' line was 'Officer, arrest this man,' and the cop was supposed to say to me, 'How you doing, Brad?' but that stupid actor kept calling me Rock (01:39:36). So back to our marks we went for another take and another and another. I'll bet we did that scene twenty times. That's why the shelf for Doris to sit on." Also, Hudson related that when he pulled Doris Day out of bed, he forgot to let go of her ankles "…with the result that my leading lady crashed to the floor." Day and Hudson developed chemistry during filming and the cast and crew acted as if they were family. Hudson recalled that, as per a
Modern Screen article, "they had to add a week on to the shooting schedule because we could not stop laughing". Day clarified this during interviews she had with
Merv Griffin on
The Merv Griffin Show and
Johnny Carson on
The Tonight Show (1976), during her 1976 press tour to promote her biography
Doris Day: Her Own Story by A.E. Hotchner. "Every day on the set was a picnic—sometimes too much of a picnic, in that we took turns at breaking each other up." According to an article in the October 1959 issue of
Saturday Review,
Jean Louis designed 24 costumes for Doris Day and Laykin et Cie loaned the production $500,000 worth of jewels. The film is notable for its usage of split-screens during which Jan and Brad/Rex have telephone conversations. Triple split-screens are featured at the beginning of the film when Brad is using the party line to flirt with Eileen and Yvette. ==Songs==