Der Sommer der siebzehnten Puppe

1959

Summer of the Seventeenth Doll is a 1959 Australian-British film directed by Leslie Norman and is based on the Ray Lawler play Summer of the Seventeenth Doll. In the United States the film was released under the title Season of Passion.

Queensland sugarcane cutters Roo and Barney spend the off season in Sydney each year, seeing their girlfriends. For sixteen years Roo has spent the summer with barmaid Olive, bringing her a kewpie doll, while Barney romances Nancy. In the seventeenth year, Barney arrives to find that Nancy has married; however Olive has arranged a replacement, manicurist Pearl. Roo has had a bad season, losing his place as head of the cane cutting team to a younger man, Dowd.

Barney tries to smooth things over between Roo and Dowd, who falls for Bubba, a girl who has grown up with the cane cutters. Barney leaves to work with Dowd. We learn that Dowd has proposed to Bubba, and she now intends to go with him to Queensland. Roo proposes to Olive, who is devastated by this, refusing his proposal and demanding that Roo return their lives to the way they were. Roo leaves, and we see him next saying farewell to Barney and the other cane cutters, along with Bubba, as they board the train for Queensland. Roo then returns to the bar where Olive is working, and the pair are shown laughing together as Roo drinks his beer.

Summer of the Seventeenth Doll is a pioneering Australian play written by Ray Lawler and first performed at the Union Theatre in Melbourne, Australia on 28 November 1955. The play is almost unanimously considered by scholars of literature to be the most historically significant in Australian theatre history, openly and authentically portraying distinctly Australian life and characters. It was one of the first truly naturalistic "Australian" theatre productions.

The play premiered in London in 1957 and was a big hit. Film rights were purchased by Hecht Hill Lancaster (HHL) in July 1957 for a reported US$300,000 (or £134,000[1]). The play had reportedly been recommended to Harold Hecht of HHL by Laurence Olivier, who directed the London production.[2]

HHL announced the film would be part of a 12-picture slate to be released through United Artists; other films included Take a Giant Step, The Unforgiven, The Rabbit Trap and Cry Tough. In its announced planning Doll would star Burt Lancaster and Rita Hayworth who had just successfully paired in HHL's Separate Tables,[3] a film which coincidentally featured Australian Rod Taylor, a perfect fit were initial considerations to proceed for the young buck Dowd. James Cagney had appeared in the notifications of interest.[4]

The play debuted on Broadway on 22 January 1958 but only ran 29 performances.

According to John Mills, Carol Reed was going to direct with Burt Lancaster to play Roo and Mills as Barney.[5] However, after the play flopped on Broadway, Mills said that HHL lost enthusiasm, cut the budget, including removing large scale cane cutting sequences. Eventually Leslie Norman (who had previously produced Eureka Stockade and Bitter Springs and directed The Shiralee in Australia) directed and Ernest Borgnine played the lead.[6] Mills wanted to drop out but was persuaded to stay on by Carol Reed who pointed out it was a good part.[7] In addition to Lancaster, Hayworth, who was married to producer James Hill, was also dropped in September 1958, and replaced by Anne Baxter.[8] The reason given for the dropping of Lancaster and Hayworth was that the filming dates had been brought forward and interfered with their other commitments.[9] Borgnine later said "as far as the accent is concerned, I will be giving the essence of an Australian accent, but the performance will be for the entire world, not just Australia."[10]

Vincent Ball says his involvement with the film began when John Mills asked Ball to help his daughter Juliet Mills, who was testing for the part of Bubba, with her Australian accent. John Mills then asked Ball to help him with Mills' Australian accent. The producers enquired about Ball's availability; he sent on some footage from A Town Like Alice and Ball was cast in the role. "When Burt Lancaster dropped out the budget went right down," said Ball. [11]

The one member of the original stage production to repeat her performance for the film was Ethel Gabriel. Her fee was $750 a week for two weeks.[12][13]

The part of Bubba was given to local actor Janette Craig, who worked regularly on television and radio. She was cast on the first day of filming.[14] Dana Wilson, who was in The Shiralee had a part especially written for her as the daughter of an amusement park wrestler.[15]

HHL assigned the adaptation to John Dighton, who had just written The Devil's Disciple for the company. Dighton travelled to Australia to research the script. He told the press in April 1958 that:

Leslie Norman later claimed "I want to keep it Australian, but unfortunately the Americans said they couldn't understand the Australian accent and I had to cut out all the Australianisms. That picture broke my heart. ... What buggered him [John Dighton] - and me - was cutting out the Australianness and giving it a more upbeat ending. It is one of the best plays I have ever seen, but I can't say I'm happy with the film."[16]

The film was criticised by some fans of the play, whose complaints were rooted in several criticisms:

Norman felt the play flopped in the US due to unfamiliarity with Australian slang.[10] He said two versions of certain scenes were made, one for American audiences the other for Australian audiences. For instance, American scenes would refer to "dames" while Australian ones who refer to "sheilas". "In this way we hope to make the film a success in both countries," said Norman, who arrived in Australia on 9 December 1958.[17]

Shooting began on 29 December 1958, in Sydney at Pagewood Studios.[14] There were some location scenes filmed at Luna Park Melbourne and Bondi Beach. For one scene, Sydney residents on the shore were asked to leave their lights burning to provide a romantic backdrop to the action. Leslie Norman put an advertisement in the local newspaper thanking people for doing this.[18]

The canecutting scenes were shot along the Tweed River.[19] Filming wound up in February 1959.[20]

Borgnine said he found Australians very friendly.[21] "The Australian accent is putting us in the nuthouse," Baxter told Hedda Hopper. "Put Boston Irish, midwest American, cockney British and tropical ginger in the mixmaster and you've got Australian."[22]

Mills says he spent hours using tapes to get the Australian accent right. Notes came back from HHL during filming that they found his accent unintelligible but Mills refused to change it.[7]

On 16 January, a fire swept through a film vault at Pagewood Studios doing more than £500,000 worth of damage but no film stock from the movie was in the vault.[23]

During filming Anne Baxter met Australian farmer Randolph Galt and they fell in love and later married.[24]

The film was blacklisted by a British film union because not enough British people worked on it.[25]

The film's world premiere was held on 2 December 1959 at Hoyt's Century, Sydney, in front of the Governor of New South Wales, Sir Edward Woodward. The film went into general release the following day.[19]

The film was retitled Season of Passion for the American market.[26][27] Although this was announced in November 1960 the film was not released in New York until 1962 on a double bill with The Happy Thieves, which was produced by James Hill, one of the three partners in Hecht-Hill-Lancaster Productions.

The Sydney Morning Herald said "tenderness has gone... in the screen version... the film runs efficiently and eventfully according to its own approach and somehow rather emptily too."[28] The Age said it "disappoints" and "lacks a heart... How much better an Australian company and Australian actors could have handled the whole thing, if they had a chance."[29] This critic wrote a longer piece on this issue the following week.[30]

According to Sight and Sound "the first third" of the film was "a near disaster - slow, incoherent, dead" but then it improved.[31] Other English reviews were poor, a fact reported in Australian newspapers.[32]

The New York Times called it "an interesting, off beat movie... that is decidedly worth seeing."[33]

According to Filmink magazine, "No one likes this film version, most blaming the happy ending, miscasting and change of locale. But Dighton's screenplay stuffs a superb source material... his script was so bad. He had some good credits up to then (always in collaboration), but none after. I think he was one of those writers who got away with it for a bit then get found out." [34]

According to a history of United Artists, the film was one of four movies by Hecht Hill Lancaster - the others were Rabbit Trap, Cry Tough and Take a Giant Step - that all went over budget as a group by $500,000 and all the films lost money. This, along with the poor box office performance of other HHL films like The Devil's Disciple, resulted in HHL being ultimately wound up.[35]

Quelle: Wikipedia(englisch)
Kinostart:1959
weitere Titel:
Summer of the Seventeenth Doll ast
L'estate della diciassettesima bambola
Der Sommer der siebzehnten Puppe
Sjuttonde dockans sommar
Summer of The Seventeenth Dollcy
Brindis por un recuerdo
Genre:Filmkomödie, Filmdrama
Herstellungsland:Australien, Vereinigte Staaten, Vereinigtes Königreich
Originalsprache:Englisch
Farbe:Schwarzweiß
IMDB: 324
Verleih:United Artists, Netflix
Regie:Leslie Norman
Drehbuch:John Dighton
Musik:Benjamin Frankel
Produzent:Leslie Norman
Darsteller:Ernest Borgnine
Anne Baxter
Angela Lansbury
John Mills
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Datenstand: 08.11.2023 10:51:15Uhr