White Witch Doctor Explained

White Witch Doctor
Director:Henry Hathaway
Producer:Otto Lang
Starring:Susan Hayward
Robert Mitchum
Walter Slezak
Music:Bernard Herrmann
Cinematography:Leon Shamroy
Editing:James B. Clark
Distributor:20th Century Fox
Runtime:96 min
Country:United States
Language:English
Budget:$2,020,000[1]
Gross:$2,500,000 (US rentals)[2]

White Witch Doctor is a 1953 Technicolor adventure film directed by Henry Hathaway and starring Susan Hayward, Robert Mitchum, and Walter Slezak. Made by 20th Century Fox, it was produced by Otto Lang from a screenplay by Ivan Goff and Ben Roberts, based on the 1950 novel by Louise Allender Stinetorf (1900–1992). The music score (notable for its use of the serpent, an obsolete instrument) was by Bernard Herrmann, and the cinematography by Leon Shamroy.

The film was set in the Belgian Congo in 1907.

Plot

The arrival of nurse Ellen Burton to the Belgian Congo is unwelcome to hunter John "Lonni" Douglas, who captures animals for zoos. He warns her against traveling upriver to join a female doctor who is working with native tribesmen.

Short of money, Lonni is intrigued when partner Huysman tells him there is gold to be found in the region where Ellen will be traveling. Lonni volunteers to accompany her, along with gun bearer Jacques.

Ellen is a widow who once discouraged her physician husband from his dream of coming to Africa to give medical aid. She talks a witch doctor out of killing a woman with an abscessed tooth. Upset with her, the witch doctor places a deadly tarantula in Ellen's tent.

The doctor she is there to assist has died of fever. The king is pleased when his son is saved from a lion by Lonni, his wounds treated by Ellen, but then the king takes her hostage when Huysman, heavily armed, arrives to search for gold. Huysman's men knock Lonni unconscious and tie him up, but Jacques sacrifices his own life to save that of Lonni, who returns to Ellen's side for good.

Cast

Production

The film's original director was Roy Ward Baker. In his memoir The Director's Cut,[3] Baker writes that at the start of production he spent four months shooting location footage in the Belgian Congo under arduous conditions. He returned to Hollywood exhausted, having lost much weight, and increasingly unhappy about the script, to find that Susan Hayward did not want him as director. A diplomatic solution was found by Lew Schreiber, described by Baker as the "hatchet man" for Darryl F. Zanuck, head of 20th Century Fox. Baker was designated "too ill" to continue directing the picture. He was replaced by Henry Hathaway.

Zanuck demanded that the original story of [Emily] Louise Allender Stinetorf (who had been a Quaker missionary in Palestine[4]) be jettisoned for action and a love story.[5]

Notes and References

  1. Solomon, Aubrey. Twentieth Century Fox: A Corporate and Financial History (The Scarecrow Filmmakers Series). Lanham, Maryland: Scarecrow Press, 1989. . p248
  2. 'The Top Box Office Hits of 1953', Variety, January 13, 1954
  3. Book: Baker, Roy Ward . The Director's Cut: A Memoir of 60 Years in Film and Television . Reynolds & Hearn Ltd. . 2000 . 1-903111-02-1 . London . 78–80.
  4. Web site: Louise Allender Stinetorf Collection, 1940-1966 - Friends Collection and Earlham College Archives.
  5. p. 208 Behlmer, Rudy Memo from Darryl F. Zanuck: The Golden Years at Twentieth Century-Fox Grove Press, 1995