Dance with a Stranger explained

Dance with a Stranger
Director:Mike Newell
Producer:Roger Randall-Cutler
Starring:Miranda Richardson
Rupert Everett
Music:Richard Hartley
theme song by Mari Wilson
Cinematography:Peter Hannan
Studio:Goldcrest Films International
Distributor:20th Century Fox
Runtime:102 min.
Country:United Kingdom
Language:English
Budget:£1,360,000[1] or £1.5 million[2]
Gross:£850,000 (UK)
$3 million (US)
$1 million (other territories)

Dance with a Stranger is a 1985 British film[3] directed by Mike Newell. Telling the story of Ruth Ellis, the last woman to be hanged in Britain (1955), the film won critical acclaim, and aided the careers of two of its leading actors, Miranda Richardson and Rupert Everett. The screenplay was by Shelagh Delaney, author of A Taste of Honey, and was her third major screenplay. The story of Ellis has resonance in Britain because it provided part of the background to the extended national debates that led to the progressive abolition of capital punishment from 1965.

The theme song, a cover version of Peggy Lee's 1951 track "Would You Dance with a Stranger?", was performed by Mari Wilson and released as a single.

Plot

A former nude model and prostitute, Ruth is manageress of a drinking club in London that has racing drivers as its main clients. Ruth lives in a flat above the bar with her illegitimate son Andy. Another child is in the custody of her estranged husband's family.

In the club, she meets David, an immature, young man from a well-off family who wants to succeed in motor racing but suffers from lack of money and overuse of alcohol. Ruth falls for his looks and charm, but it is a doomed relationship. Without a job, he cannot afford to marry her, and his family would never accept her. When he makes a drunken scene in the club, she is discharged from her job, which means that she is made homeless.

Desmond, a wealthy admirer, secures a flat for her and her son, but she still sees David. When she tells him she is pregnant, he does nothing about it, and she miscarries. Distraught, she goes to a house in Hampstead where she believes David is at a party. He comes out and goes with a girl to a pub. Ruth waits outside the pub, and when he emerges, she shoots him dead with four shots. She is arrested, tried and hanged.

Cast

Reception

The film made a comfortable profit.[1] Goldcrest Films invested £253,000 in the film and received £361,000, making them a profit of £108,000.[4]

Critical response

On Rotten Tomatoes, the film has an approval rating of 91%, based on reviews from 11 critics.[5]

Accolades

Mike Newell won Award of the Youth at the 1985 Cannes Film Festival for Dance with a Stranger. Miranda Richardson won Best Actress at the Evening Standard British Film Awards, and Ian Holm won Boston Society of Film Critics Awards 1985 for this and other performances.

Notes and References

  1. Borne, Nigel. "Little film little profit." Sunday Times [London, England] 26 January 1986: 31. The Sunday Times Digital Archive. Web. 29 March 2014.
  2. Web site: Back to the Future: The Fall and Rise of the British Film Industry in the 1980s - An Information Briefing. 21. British Film Institute. 2005.
  3. Book: Dobson, Michael. Performing Shakespeare's Tragedies Today: The Actor's Perspective. 30 November 2006. Cambridge University Press. 9780521671224.
  4. Book: My indecision is final. Jake. Eberts . Terry. Illott. 1990 . Faber and Faber. 656.
  5. Web site: Dance with a Stranger . 1985-01-01 . . 2020-06-11.