Wednesday, June 23, 2010

I'll Cry Tomorrow

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I'll Cry Tomorrow Sale


Buy I'll Cry Tomorrow. Susan Hayward gives a stunning, Oscar-nominated portrayal as Broadway's Lillian Roth in this true story of an alcoholic's wretched decline and her eventual, courageous recovery. Year: 1956

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Susan Hayward has a signature role in I'll Cry Tomorrow, a pedal-to-the-metal look at the troubled times of singer Lillian Roth. Hayward snagged her fourth Oscar nomination for the part, which takes Roth from humble beginnings through great stardom and finally into a hell of alcoholism and recovery. The movie delivers on a couple of tendencies of its era (1956): a fresh frankness about addiction (The Man with the Golden Arm had come out the year before), plus some handy psychoanalyzing of the heroine--in this case, Roth's problems are laid at the feet of her pushy stage mother (Jo Van Fleet). With all the sturm und drang, there's not a lot of room for songs, but we do get to hear vintage tunes such as "Sing You Sinners" and "When the Red, Red, Robin Comes Bob, Bob, Bobbin' Along." Hayward does her own singing, and she can best be described as a belter rather than a singer ("belter" describes her acting style, too). Also in the cast, portraying the men at various stages of Roth's life, are Ray Danton, Eddie Albert, and Richard Conte (trailing the aura of violent noir behind him); Daniel Mann directed, just after his duties on The Rose Tattoo. It's a slice of Fifties melodrama, the kind that hasn't aged particularly well, but if you appreciate Hayward's customary pull-it-from-the-guts style, you'll be engrossed. --Robert Horton


I'll Cry Tomorrow Review


In I'LL CRY TOMORROW (1955), Susan Hayward pulls out all the stops as Lillian Roth, one of the most talented songbirds of the 1930s. Lillian had the entire showbusiness world at her feet, until the early death of childhood sweetheart David (Ray Danton) triggers her spiral into depression and eventually alcoholism. The 1950's was well and truly a banner decade for Susan Hayward. In addition to her Academy Award-nominated turn in I'LL CRY TOMORROW, Hayward was also applauded for her performance as another real-life singing sensation, Jane Froman in "With a Song in My Heart" (1952) and later played jailed death-row victim Barbara Graham in "I Want to Live!" (1959).

I'LL CRY TOMORROW was crafted from the first volume of Lillian Roth's autobiography. Roth subsequently got her act together, became one of the first celebrity members of Alcoholics Anonymous and starred on Broadway in such shows as "I Can Get It for You Wholesale" and "70, Girls, 70".

Watching Susan Hayward going through her paces as Roth is like witnessing an Olympic athlete at the peak of their prowess. It's quite simply an electric performance. For the first and only time in her screen career, Hayward sang using her real singing voice, delivering the goods with such Roth standards as "Sing, You Sinners", "When the Red-Red Robin..." and "Happiness is Just a Thing Called Joe". So successful was Hayward's foray into the musical world that MGM wanted her to sign a long-term recording contract, but Hayward didn't want to interrupt her film career, which was on a personal high after her appearance in I'LL CRY TOMORROW.

Jo Van Fleet is astonishingly good as Lillian's pushy stage mother Katie (she never received an Academy Award nomination; instead winning the 'Best Supporting Actress' award for her role as James Dean's mother in "East of Eden" which was released in the same year). Richard Conte ("The Blue Gardenia") is Lillian's abusive third husband Tony Bardeman, and Eddie Albert is her A/A saviour Burt McGuire--playing opposite real-life wife Margo for the first and only time in his career.

The DVD includes footage from the premiere (with both Hayward and Roth in attendance), portions from the "MGM Parade" TV show, the theatrical trailer; and the 1934 VitaPhone musical short "Story Conference" starring Lillian Roth. You can buy Cheap I'll Cry Tomorrow online fast and easy, Shop Today!.




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