My Bare Lady (film)

My Bare Lady is a 1963 exploitation film directed by Arthur Knight about a young American woman visiting Great Britain who meets and falls in love with a U.S. Korean War veteran who is involved with a local nudist camp. The young woman is initially distressed at the man’s clothing-free lifestyle, but later changes her mind and sheds her garments when a kindly housekeeper relates a romantic story of a young couple who fell in love in Paris and later married at a British nudist colony.

My Bare Lady was also released with the titles Bare Lady, Bare World, It's a Bare World and My Seven Little Bares.

Famous quotes containing the words bare and/or lady:

    Where have I seen before, against the wind,
    These bright virgins, robed and bare of bonnet,

    Flowing with music of their strange quick tongue
    And adventuring with delicate paces by the stream,—
    Myself a child, old suddenly at the scream
    From one of the white throats which it hid among?
    John Crowe Ransom (1888–1974)

    There is nothing can pay one for that invaluable ignorance which is the companion of youth, those sanguine groundless hopes, and that lively vanity which makes all the happiness of life.
    Mary Wortley, Lady Montagu (1689–1762)