Rosemary Woodhouse (Mia Farrow, and at the time, briefly, Mrs. Frank Sinatra) is pregnant. Do her meddling next door neighbors have dark designs on her unborn child? Is her obstetrician ignoring her pain? Or are the warning signs, as her husband (John Cassavetes) insists, all in her mind? Rosemary stands alone against whatever threatens her child, and made all of us heed the film’s tagline, “Pray for Rosemary’s Baby.”
Rosemary Woodhouse (Mia Farrow, and at the time, briefly, Mrs. Frank Sinatra) is pregnant. Do her meddling next door neighbors have dark designs on her unborn child? Is her obstetrician ignoring her pain? Or are the warning signs, as her husband (John Cassavetes) insists, all in her mind? Rosemary stands alone against whatever threatens her child, and made all of us heed the film’s tagline, “Pray for Rosemary’s Baby.”
Rosemary Woodhouse (Mia Farrow, and at the time, briefly, Mrs. Frank Sinatra) is pregnant. Do her meddling next door neighbors have dark designs on her unborn child? Is her obstetrician ignoring her pain? Or are the warning signs, as her husband (John Cassavetes) insists, all in her mind? Rosemary stands alone against whatever threatens her child, and made all of us heed the film’s tagline, “Pray for Rosemary’s Baby.”