Kiss and Make-Up is a 1934 romantic comedy film starring Cary Grant as a doctor who specializes in making women beautiful.
Dr. Maurice Lamar runs a highly successful business in Paris providing cosmetic surgery and other beauty treatments to women.
When Maurice sees Eve ready for bed, with cleansing cream on her face and wearing a hairnet and gloves, he takes another hotel room and later seeks a divorce.
Listed in the opening credits are the "WAMPAS Baby Stars of 1934": In a contemporary review for The New York Times, critic Andre Sennwald called the film "a first-class lingerie bazaar and a third-class entertainment" and wrote: "It represents a triumphant attempt to achieve pictorial allure without disturbing its pious editorial point of view on the impersonal worship of feminine beauty.
It crowds the screen so thickly with silk, satin and nymphs that it is with some difficulty that such agreeable players as Edward Everett Horton, Cary Grant and Genevieve Tobin succeed in projecting themselves at all.
"[2] Pauline Kael later praised Grant's performance and thought that he had used his skills developed in vaudeville well in the film, displaying a "sense of fun" with "confident, full-hearted exhibitionism.