The Woman with No Name | |
Director: | Ladislao Vajda |
Producer: | John Stafford |
Based On: | novel Happy Now I Go by Theresa Charles |
Music: | Allan Gray |
Cinematography: | Otto Heller |
Editing: | Richard Best |
Studio: | Independent Film Producers |
Distributor: | Associated British-Pathé (UK) |
Runtime: | 84 minutes |
Country: | United Kingdom |
Language: | English |
Budget: | £116,500[1] |
Gross: | £113,268 (UK)[2] |
The Woman with No Name is a 1950 British drama film directed by Ladislao Vajda and starring Phyllis Calvert, Edward Underdown, Helen Cherry, Richard Burton and James Hayter.[3] In the United States it was released as Her Panelled Door.[4]
Yvonne Winter is an amnesiac, a victim of the wartime bombing of the London hotel where she is staying. At a country hospital she meets the pilot, Nick Chamerd, who saved her life. They fall in love and plan to marry, but he is killed on active duty. Yvonne's real husband hires detectives to find her. She is brought home and starts to piece together her past, but not everything she finds there brings her happiness.
Calvert invested her own savings in the film, estimated between £12,000-£15,000.[5]
The film earned £105,000 to the producers.[1]