Adam and Evelyne explained

Adam and Evelyne
Director:Harold French
Producer:Harold French
Starring:Stewart Granger
Jean Simmons
Distributor:Rank Films
Studio:Two Cities Films
Runtime:70 minutes
Country:United Kingdom
Language:English
Gross:189,023 admissions (France)[1]

Adam and Evelyne, released in the U.S. as Adam and Evalyn, is a 1949 romance film starring Stewart Granger and Jean Simmons. Based on a storyline written by Granger and Noel Langley, it was both directed and produced by Harold French. According to Robert Osborne, host of Turner Classic Movies, the leads suited the stars, as they were romantically involved at the time, despite their age difference. They married the next year.[2] [3]

Plot

When jockey Chris Kirby is fatally injured in a horse race, he gets his best friend, gambler Adam Black, to promise to take care of his teenage daughter, Evelyne, who has been raised apart from her father. Unbeknownst to Adam, Evelyne had been led to believe that Adam is her father in correspondence between parent and child. Adam is unable to tell her the truth; his butler and friend Bill Murray tries and fails as well. Finally, Adam's sometime girlfriend Moira breaks the news to the girl.

Adam sends Evelyne to an exclusive boarding school. When she has grown up, she reappears unexpectedly in his life. Because of the hatred she has for gambling, Adam does not reveal that he stages illegal gambling sessions; instead he tells her that he makes his money on the stock exchange. She begins casually dating Adam's no-good brother Roddy.

When Adam tells Moira that he is getting out of the business, she accuses him of being in love with his "ward". Roddy has his own grudge against his brother – Adam refuses to finance a shady deal – and the two of them tip off the police about Adam's last operation. Roddy also brings Evelyne to see what Adam really does for a living.

Shocked, she quarrels with Adam and leaves. A kindly gambler, Colonel Bradley, gives her some sage advice and persuades her to reconcile with Adam.

Cast

Production

Stewart Granger says the storyline of the film was his, based on the old silent film Daddy Long Legs, He contacted the writer Noel Langley and they wrote it as a vehicle for Jean Simmons. "It was a very good vehicle for her", he said. "It was a sweet film, a charming light comedy."[4]

Director Harold French also said he "really liked" the film.

At that stage I could pick and choose and I really liked that one. I became producer because Paul Soskin, who was to have produced it, didn’t like the fact that I had employed an actor called Edwin Styles for the part of the valet; I thought he was quite good and he got on well with Jimmy [Stewart] Granger in his first comedy role. Paul said he wanted to go back to America, and would I take over as producer? I didn’t mind... I did enjoy that film and I adored working with Jean Simmons, a lovely actress.[5]
This was the first adult role of Jean Simmons, who had become a star in Great Expectations.[6]

Simmons and Granger were rumoured to be romantically involved during filming although they denied it to the press.[7]

Production of the film was interrupted by a strike from crew members at Denham Studios in protest over recent sackings of film workers. (Others which ceased production were The Cardboard Cavalier and Tottie True.)[8]

Reception

The film was voted best comedy of the year at the International Film Festival in Locarno Switzerland.[9]

Box office

It was successful at the box office in Britain.[10] [11]

Critical

Rank and File wrote in 2013, "The audience isn't certain whether they are watching a drama or a not particularly funny screwball comedy...Despite these shortcoming the film has a certain charm and remains watchable."[12] Some time, likely in the 2000s, critic Leonard Maltin called it a "Pleasant but ordinary tale".[13]

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://translate.google.com.au/translate?hl=en&sl=fr&u=http://www.boxofficestory.com/&prev=search Box office information for Stewart Granger films in France
  2. News: Wedding bells mean journeys for Jean Simmons. . . 30 December 1950 . 20 June 2015 . 31 . National Library of Australia.
  3. News: Romance started for Jean Simmons when 14. . . Brisbane . 14 January 1951 . 20 June 2015 . 15 . National Library of Australia.
  4. Brian MacFarlane, An Autobiography of British Cinema, Methuen 1997 p 231
  5. Brian MacFarlane, An Autobiography of British Cinema, Methuen 1997 p 213
  6. News: JEAN SIMMONDS TO FACE F/LIGHTS. . . Qld. . 16 November 1948 . 20 June 2015 . 4 . National Library of Australia.
  7. News: Famous stars are real-life friends. . . 8 January 1949 . 20 June 2015 . 32 . National Library of Australia.
  8. News: FILM STRIKE. . . Perth . 31 October 1948 . 4 March 2013 . 12 Section: The Sunday Times Sporting Section . National Library of Australia.
  9. http://search.proquest.com/docview/482729392 DEVELOPMENT CHARGES.
  10. News: FILM NEWS. . . Perth . 16 June 1949 . 20 June 2015 . 15 . National Library of Australia.
  11. The popular cash and culture in the postwar British cinema industry. Screen. 258. 32. 3. Janet. Thumim.
  12. Web site: Rank and File – A British Cinema Blog. rankandfile1.blogspot.co.uk.
  13. Web site: Adam And Evelyne (1949) - Overview - TCM.com. Turner Classic Movies.