“I was daunted from the get-go by the idea that the amnesia was a central plot device,” Dixon says now. “I thought that was hokey. But I was in no position to complain—someone was paying me to write a screenplay.” Thankfully, casting the leading roles of Dean Proffitt and Joanna Stayton/Annie Proffitt was easy: “I’ve never before or since had any actor say yes so quickly,” Dixon says. “Kurt and Goldie were newly in love, and it shows on screen. They’re so cute together that the audience just loves the film.”
Hawn stars in Overboard as a querulous heiress who hires Dean (Russell) to install shelves in her yacht. She refers to him as not being “housebroken”; she refuses to pay him $600 for his craftsmanship; and to taunt him further, she prances around in a one-piece thong bathing suit—a costume written into the script. Joanna is married to a lout named Grant (future Gilmore Girls patriarch Edward Herrmann)—who doesn’t seem to care when she falls off the yacht one night, gets amnesia, and ends up in a mental ward.
But Dean spies her photo on TV and, seeking payback, convinces her he’s her husband. Over the years, critics have assailed the film for the abuse Annie receives after moving to his ramshackle house; Birth. Movies. Death. has called the film “the most heartwarming rom-com about gaslighting ever made.” But Dixon doesn’t understand the fuss.
“The premise of this movie is utterly ridiculous,” she says. “I think because it’s Kurt and Goldie, no one gets mad at them. . . . People have never mentioned, at any point when the film came out or since, that they hate him for what he’s doing to her.”
Modern audiences may feel more comfortable with the gender-swapped remake of Overboard that’s coming to theaters next year, with Anna Faris playing the Russell part and Eugenio Derbez filling in for Hawn part. Or maybe not: “In this day and age, there’s something that feels peculiar at best and unsavory at worst about a woman bringing a man into her home when she has four daughters,” Dixon says of the remake, which she wasn’t involved in. (Enough of her original script was used for the W.G.A. to give her a writing credit on the film.) “A strange man? It’ll be interesting to see if the audience can get past that conceit. . . . I don’t want the film to fail—they’re very nice guys—but they have a bit of a challenge.”
