“Would you like to have a roll in the hay?” These are the first words spoken by Inga (Teri Garr) when she meets Dr. Frankenstein (Gene Wilder) in Young Frankenstein. Although Inga says this while lying in a wagon filled with hay, it isn’t an invitation to have sex. She is flirting with the doctor.
Some viewers may see Inga as nothing more than an object of the male gaze. It cannot be denied that she is attractive to men. Her clothing is revealing, and she has a nice figure, but her character has another dimension to it.
Inga is, in literary terms, the desiring female. She doesn’t wait passively for a man’s attention; instead, she takes action to get the man she wants. Inga wants Frankenstein to be her boyfriend, and she actively pursues him.
With her ample cleavage on display, Frankenstein isn’t blind to her beauty. When he helps her down from the wagon, he remarks, “What knockers” and Inga is flattered. Ostensibly, he is referring to the large knockers on the castle doors, but the double entendre is clear. He is attracted to her breasts.
As a young woman, Inga is oozing with sex appeal, which is maximized by her clothing. Before she enters a secret passageway with Frankenstein, he says, “Now close your robe.” Beneath it, Inga is wearing a low-cut nightgown, an unwanted distraction for the doctor as they face the unknown.
As Frankenstein’s laboratory assistant, Inga has no scientific expertise. Her only technical skill is to sedate the monster by poking him with a needle. Seeing Inga in a sexy outfit, Elizabeth asks her: “What exactly is it that you do?”
Despite her limited job skills, Inga is a valuable assistant. She provides emotional support for Frankenstein, holding him when the plot becomes tense. Most importantly, she is a stabilizing force for the doctor, a man who is often unhinged. In one scene, he tries to murder the monster in a fit of rage, and Inga and Igor restrain him.
Inga is in love with Frankenstein, and her job gives her the opportunity to seduce him. Seeing him stressed, she kisses his fingers and says, “If only there was some way I could relieve this torture you are going through.” Later, they come down from the platform — naked under a blanket — and we know what they have been doing. Inga knows how to make Frankenstein happy, and it isn’t by cooking him breakfast.
When Inga discovers that Frankenstein is engaged to Elizabeth, she isn’t angry or hurt. By having sex with him — something that Elizabeth won’t do — she has already won Frankenstein’s heart. Inga’s desire is fulfilled when Elizabeth runs away with the monster. Freed from his engagement, Frankenstein marries Inga, and they live happily ever after.
Bibliography
Young Frankenstein (1974) Directed by Mel Brooks [DVD]. Los Angeles: 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment.


One of my favorite films. Ever.
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