Love Letters (1999 film) explained

Based On:Love Letters play by A. R. Gurney
Director:Stanley Donen
Starring:Steven Weber
Laura Linney
Kirsten Storms
Tim Redwine
Music:Lee Holdridge
Country:United States
Language:English
Executive Producer:Leonard Goldberg
Martin Starger
Editor:Robert Reitano
Philip Weisman
Cinematography:Michael Fash
Runtime:100 minutes
Company:Marstar/Mandy Films
Network:ABC

Love Letters is a 1999 American made-for-television drama film directed by Stanley Donen and based on the 1988 play by A. R. Gurney. Gurney adapted his own original play, dramatizing scenes and portraying characters that were merely described in the play. Donen had envisioned it to be a feature film, but a limited budget restricted him to make a TV movie and he shot the film in only 17 days.[1] It was his last film before his death in 2019. Love Letters originally premiered on ABC on April 12, 1999.

Plot

An ambitious U.S. Senator reflects back on his life after the death of a woman whom he loved and kept in contact with only through correspondence. The movie is told in flashbacks as the two first meet as children and begin their lifelong correspondence. He grows into his political aspirations and leaves her behind, as she becomes a struggling artist facing a rocky life: the two encounter different experiences on the paths they take.

Cast

References

  1. News: New York Daily News review . December 28, 2011.