Añade un argumento en tu idiomaDaphne Du Maurier, author of "Rebecca" and "Jamaica Inn," becomes attracted to the wife of a publisher and to an actress.Daphne Du Maurier, author of "Rebecca" and "Jamaica Inn," becomes attracted to the wife of a publisher and to an actress.Daphne Du Maurier, author of "Rebecca" and "Jamaica Inn," becomes attracted to the wife of a publisher and to an actress.
- Premios
- 1 nominación en total
Elliott Naylor
- Kits
- (as Elliot Naylor)
Tessa Hall
- Air Hostess
- (sin acreditar)
Shane Nolan
- Waiter
- (sin acreditar)
Aaron Sweeney
- Photographer
- (sin acreditar)
- …
Argumento
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- CuriosidadesThe plagiarism suit against Daphne Du Maurier, publishers Doubleday and Selznick International Pictures Inc. was filed on 15 September 1941, a summary judgement took place on 3 September 1946, and the complaint was dismissed on 14 January 1948. It was brought by Jackson Clifford MacDonald on behalf of the estate of his mother, the late Edwina Levin MacDonald.
- Banda sonoraI Wonder Who's Kissing Her Now
(uncredited)
Music by Joseph E. Howard and Harold Orlob
Lyrics by William M. Hough and Frank R. Adams
Performed by Perry Como
[heard when Daphne first meets Ellen aboard ship]
Reseña destacada
Daphne Du Maurier has always been on the periphery of my consciousness, as the author of Rebecca and My Cousin Rachel, both of which I've not read but have seen the film adaptations. So the revelation that she was bisexual comes as a mildly interesting fact. She is having a hard time defining herself sexually. Gertrude Lawrence says Daphne is really a boy--her play about a young man in love with an older woman is really about her as a man-- and Daphne spends most of the film trying to establish whether or not this is true.
I said Somerville is terrific, and she proves how inward she is with the character. The trip to Florence with Ellen Doubleday that is so fraught with tension between the two women produces some funny lines: "I'm like the river Arno with its falls all pent up, that can't get out to sea... I want to flee to a monastery or a madhouse".
I said Somerville is terrific, and she proves how inward she is with the character. The trip to Florence with Ellen Doubleday that is so fraught with tension between the two women produces some funny lines: "I'm like the river Arno with its falls all pent up, that can't get out to sea... I want to flee to a monastery or a madhouse".
- bob998
- 8 ene 2018
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