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  1. Divorce American Style is a 1967 American satirical comedy film directed by Bud Yorkin and starring Dick Van Dyke, Debbie Reynolds, Jason Robards, Jean Simmons, and Van Johnson. Norman Lear produced the film and wrote the screenplay, based on a story by Robert Kaufman.

  2. Divorce American Style: Directed by Bud Yorkin. With Dick Van Dyke, Debbie Reynolds, Jason Robards, Jean Simmons. Dick Van Dyke and Debbie Reynolds star as a suburban couple who learn that not even divorce can solve all their problems.

    • (1.9K)
    • Comedy
    • Bud Yorkin
    • 1967-06-21
  3. Nov 18, 2022 · Classic Comedy Drama I Divorce American Style (1967) I Retrospective. After seventeen years of marriage, Richard and Barbara discover that they no longer can communicate even to argue, and ...

  4. Page 1 of 2, 6 total items. Page 1 of 6, 11 total items. Suburban couple Richard Harmon (Dick Van Dyke) and his wife, Barbara (Debbie Reynolds), have exhausted their patience in their marriage.

    • (8)
    • Dick Van Dyke
    • Bud Yorkin
    • Comedy
    • Divorce American Style1
    • Divorce American Style2
    • Divorce American Style3
    • Divorce American Style4
    • Divorce American Style5
  5. Here is a sly, sympathetic examination of divorce in the subculture of upper-middle class suburbanites -- why it is funny and why, in the end, it is not funny at all. Bud Yorkin has directed with wit and style, and the cast, which seems unlikely on paper, comes across splendidly on the screen. Advertisement.

  6. Divorce American Style (1967) -- (Movie Clip) Stop At The Bank Barbara (Debbie Reynolds) is advised (by lawyer Shelley Berman) to grab the money as she and Richard (Dick Van Dyke) near divorce, leading to a musical-financial interlude in Bud Yorkin and Norman Lear's Divorce American Style, 1967.

    • Bud Yorkin, Rusty Meek
    • Dick Van Dyke
  7. Dick Van Dyke and Debbie Reynolds star as a suburban couple who learn that not even divorce can solve all their problems. After 17 years, things have become too predictable and stale. They argue, they visit a marriage counselor, Richard (drunk) visits a prostitute.