Unwed Mother (film) explained

Unwed Mother
Director:Walter Doniger
Producer:Joseph Justman
Screenplay:Anson Bond
Alden Nash
Music:Emil Newman
Cinematography:Lothrop B. Worth
Editing:Neil Brunnenkant
Distributor:Allied Artists
Runtime:74 min.
Country:United States
Language:English

Unwed Mother is a 1958 American drama film directed by Walter A. Doniger and starring Norma Moore, Robert Vaughn, Billie Bird, Diana Darrin and Jeanne Cooper.[1]

Plot

The plot concerns Betty Miller (Norma Moore), a shy country girl who moves from a farming community to Los Angeles. She falls in love with a smooth-talking grifter, Don Bigelow (Robert Vaughn), who involves her in a robbery, gets her pregnant, then abandons her. In jail on remand she is cruised by an elder cell mate and befriended by a strip club manageress (Billie Bird).

After visiting a drunken, backyard abortionist (Timothy Carey), Betty is confined in a home for unwed mothers and decides to give the baby up for adoption. But eventually she comes to regret that decision and pursues the foster parents who adopted her child.

Cast

Note: Although in keeping with the production code, while the word "pregnancy" is never uttered throughout the film, some actresses in the maternity home scenes are shown with pregnancy pads, which was uncommon on the screens of the 1950s and 60s where explicit displays of maternity tended to be hidden.[2]

References

Sources

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Unwed Mother. Turner Classic Movies. Turner Broadcasting System (Time Warner). Atlanta. November 14, 2016.
  2. Book: Berlant, Lauren . The Queen of America Goes to Washington City . 2002 . Duke University Press . 133 . 0822319241 . August 25, 2011.