Michelle Pfeiffer and Al Pacino appeared together in the 1991 romantic comedy-drama Frankie & Johnny, directed by Garry Marshall. It was their second film together after Scarface (1983). The movie is an adaptation of Terrence McNally’s play Frankie and Johnny in the Clair de Lune, with Pacino as Johnny (a recently released ex-con working as a cook) and Pfeiffer as Frankie (a cautious waitress). They share strong on-screen chemistry in this story about two lonely people finding connection.
The production history of the film is famous for its casting controversy. The original stage play featured Kathy Bates and Kenneth Welsh as ordinary, weathered, “everyday” people looking for a late-stage shot at love. When Hollywood cast two of the most famously attractive movie stars on the planet, critics were initially skeptical.
To counteract their innate star power, Michelle Pfeiffer took on a deliberately muted appearance to play Frankie, a deeply guarded, emotionally scarred waitress. Al Pacino traded his usual explosive intensity for a softer, more persistent, and worn-around-the-edges charm as Johnny, a middle-aged ex-con trying to make a fresh start as a short-order cook.
While the original stage production was a claustrophobic, two-character play set entirely inside a one-room apartment, Marshall utilized the screenplay to expand the narrative world. On-set photography captured massive location shoots across New York City, incorporating 94 speaking parts and a bustling Manhattan café environment.
The title is a reference to the traditional American popular song “Frankie and Johnny,” first published in 1904, which tells the story of a woman who finds her man making love to another woman and shoots him dead. The film received generally favorable reviews and grossed $67 million with a $29 million budget.
































