Trouble in the Glen is a comedy set in the Scottish Highlands and featuring Orson Welles as the new laird who seems to stir up some of the locals. He is from South America and has purchased of inherited the Highland Estate.
This film did ok at the British Box Office – it is packed with Film Stars of the time including none other than Orson Welles – plus Forrest Tucker, Margaret Lockwood, Victor McLaglen and John McCallum.
I have to say that I like this film
The film was shot in TruColor and it certainly looked good. Scottish Highland scenes are just made for Colour.
It was made at Elstree Film Studios for Republic Pictures – with location filming in Perthshire
I remember seeing this at The Gaumont Cinema in St.Albans when very young – and remember bits of it.
My Brother and I went with My Uncle andAunt who lived in the City – as we had gone on holiday to their home at the time which we often did in the Summertime. I loved it there.
In the Film Forrest Tucker’s Daughter who was crippled following Polio, is played by Margaret McCourt who had quite a busy career through the Fifties as a child actress – She was in The Invisible Man
ABOVE – Margaret McCourt in Trouble in the Glen
ABOVE – Margaret McCourt in The Invisible Man
Margaret McCourt, Margaret Lockwood and Forrest Tucker
Orson Welles
‘Trouble in the Glen’ was planned to attempt to replicate the success a few years earlier of Republic’s biggest hit “The Quiet Man” – same writer and same formula.It didn’t quite do that though
I don’t think that Orson Welles helped this film – he seemed well ‘over the top’ in his acting and stifled some of the actors around him – Victor McLaglen who had a prominent part in ‘The Quiet Man’ however could hold his own against him – but I am not sure that Forrest Tucker could.
Forrest Tucker came to England quite often to make films.
In the film heand Margaret Lockwood play the romantic leads.
A set of Stills from the film – I used to love these and gaze at them when passing the cinema on my way to School for whichever film was showing that week – sometimes two programmes per week though -in the town I have seen better than these but nevertheless these are good examples of what we would see.
Forrest Tucker
Margaret Lockwood with Forrest Tucker
Trouble In the Glen
BELOW – Orson Wells
I did notice that Ann Goodrun was in this who later became Goodrun Ure. She appeared in a lot of films through the fifties when she was billed as Ann Goodrun – including this one
Eileen Bennett who starred with George Formby in one of my favourites ‘Much Too Shy’ has died at her home in the USA a few days ago – at the age of almost 106
I hadn’t realised that she had a son– in fact two sons – but her son Nicholas Hammond was also an actor and he achieved lasting fame playing Friedrich Von Trapp in ‘The Sound of Music’
Eileen Bennett
Eileen BennettBELOW – On the cover of ‘Illustrated’ at the time that she had just finished ‘Much Too Shy’
Eileen Bennett
After ‘Much Too Shy’ she made one other film and about that time must have met her future husband who was a High Ranking Officer in the US Army and stationed over here in the latter stages of the Second World War.
She then travelled back to the US and lived there for the rest of her long life
Eileen Bennett in the 1942 film Much Too Shy
Eileen Bennett, who has died aged 105, was known to George Formby fans as his love interest in the 1942 comedy Much Too Shy and, during the war, played the ingénue lead, from 1942 to 1945, at the Strand Theatre in the West End production of Arsenic and Old Lace, when she was described by one critic as “the very essence of blonde pulchritude”.
In July 1945, however, she married Col Thomas Hammond, an American soldier stationed in London as an adjutant to General Eisenhower, and gave up her acting career for family life.
Eileen Mary Bennett was born in London on July 8 1919. Her father had been killed in the First World War and her mother Phyllis worked at the Royal College of Midwifery. From St Christopher’s School, Letchworth, she trained at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art, graduating in 1936. During the war years she performed in BBC radio plays, had mostly small roles in films, and was one of the first on-air announcers for the BBC’s early television broadcasts.
In ‘Much Too Shy’ she played Jackie, a milkmaid who catches the eye of Formby’s handyman-artist. She recalled the production as a hand-to-mouth affair: “We even did our own hair and make-up,” she told the George Formby Society website. “Wartime rationing meant few precious clothing coupons so we had to provide our own clothes. Luckily I owned a smart Hyde Park riding outfit consisting of some good-looking riding boots and breeches, so I became one of the best dressed milkmaids in England.”
In Much Too Shy she played a milkmaid who catches the eye of George Formby’s handyman-artist
Eileen had a Hillman Minx and was allowed just enough petrol coupons to get her to and from the studios at Borehamwood, so she would give other cast members a lift.
Filming took place under the watchful eye of Formby’s famously domineering wife Beryl, but Eileen recalled that when Beryl had to go to a dental appointment, Formby’s manner underwent a dramatic change: “George and I were sitting in the milk wagon… Suddenly [he] started uttering all sorts of endearments and moving closer until our legs were touching.
“He was trembling with emotion. Poor man, he was so frustrated. I was petrified that Beryl would appear and could see that the crew knew what was going on by their winks.”
Eileen appeared in one more film, the comedy Thursday’s Child (1943) starring Sally Ann Howes and Wilfrid Lawson. Otherwise her main memory of the war years was being bombed out twice: “Fortunately I was out both times. The second time I was out gallivanting. I came back… and found the street cordoned off, my flat completely demolished, and my dog killed.”
Eileen Bennett, right, in Thursday’s Child with Sally Ann Howes (1943) Credit: Alamy
She recalled that actors and audiences became quite insouciant about bombing raids. One day during a matinee performance of Arsenic and Old Lace, the theatre received a direct hit: “There was a tremendous explosion. The dust… was so overwhelming that we couldn’t see each other. We just waited for it to settle a bit and then continued. No one on stage or in the audience had moved.”
Eileen left Arsenic and Old Lace after her marriage, in September 1945. Postwar she followed her husband around military postings, to Paris and the US, and brought up their two sons, of whom Nicholas would follow his mother into acting, starring as Friedrich von Trapp in the film version of The Sound of Music (1965).
In 1970, soon after retirement in Washington, Thomas Hammond died from a heart attack. Eileen remained in Washington working as a guide for visiting foreign diplomatic families and at the Hillwood museum, home to a large decorative arts collection. Later she moved to an army retirement community
I have recently been asked about a British TV Series which was, it seems, also shown in the USA.
Peter asks and describes the opening sequence and I think this could be the series ‘ Fabian of Scotland Yard’
So here we go again
Who could forget this excellent BBC Television series in the mid 1950s – Bruce Seton was Fabian in our eyes – such was the impact of the show.
I must admit I loved this series – particularly the Opening Sequence – when Bruce Seton as Fabian, sitting in the back seat of a speeding Humber Hawk said in a terse voice ‘This is Fabian – Of Scotland Yard’
Great stuff !!
ABOVE – Bruce Seton as Fabian of Scotland Yard
ABOVE – Bruce Seton in Scenes from an episode of Fabian of Scotland Yard
In two of her most famous films: The Window (1949), she plays a murderer and in Strangers On A Train (1951), as FARLEY GRANGER’s fiancée, she is high-class and elegant.
I remember her in ‘Lightning Strikes Twice’ with Richard Todd – not a particularly good film and maybe not the best of parts for Ruth
Ruth Roman and her son, Richard, are reunited after the sinking of the Andrea Doria ocean liner in 1956.
RUTH ROMAN was born Norma Roman on December 22, 1922, in Lynn, Massachusetts, Nr Boston. Ruth’s father died when she was eight, and her mother was forced to move her and her two sisters, Ann and Eve, to Boston’s West End tenement district. Mrs. Roman took on menial jobs to keep the family afloat. They moved often because they couldn’t afford the rent.
Mrs. Roman created a loving home for her girls, and as Ruth would later say, “It wasn’t dreary at all. When you start out poor, you don’t know what you’re missing. I’ve never met a family, rich or poor, who had a happier life than we did together.”
Ruth started acting at school. She knew this was her destiny. After two years of high school, she dropped out to pursue her career full-time.
She worked as a Cinema usherette during the day while working at the New England Repertory Company at night. For three years, she appeared in small roles and worked as a stagehand.
Ruth was determined to learn
Ruth then set out to try her luck on Broadway but she struggled there for three years with no luck.
In the meantime, she paid the rent by working as a waitress, babysitter, salesgirl, and other odd jobs. She then got a break in 1942 when she won a small role in the musical film Stage Door Canteen (1943), which was filmed in New York.
Everyone of note seemed to be in this film. With the money she made for her four days of filming, Ruth bought herself a one-way ticket to Hollywood, where her luck would change.
ABOVE – One of her first breaks – this time in a Serial with her in the title role – ‘Jungle Queen’
Some time laterRuth got a good part – the title role in the lively western Belle Starr’s Daughter (1948), in which she arrives in a rough town to avenge her mother’s murder.
However, her real breakthrough came when producer Stanley Kramer cast her as Kirk Douglas’s wife in Mark Robson’s Champion (1949).
A Warner Bros contract followed, and the Studio immediately cast her in three 1950 Westerns, opposite Randolph Scott (Colt ’45), Gary Cooper (Dallas) and Dane Clark (Barricade).
Ruth was also in a favourite of mine ‘ Tanganyika’ – a film that doesn’t often see the light of day unfortunately but it is a good action packed adventure
Van Heflin and Ruth Roman star. Ruth Roman looks very beautiful in those African locations – in fact the locations were Studio Sets on the backlot of Universal in Hollywood with some location work in the US plus stock footage – but to me, it all works pretty well.
In 1956 Roman had the most exciting role of her life; she and her three year old son were returning from Italy aboard the luxury liner Andrea Doria when it was struck by another ship and sunk.
She became separated from her son =- they ended up in different lifeboats, and she and her child were finally among the 760 survivors of the disaster in which 50 people drowned.
In the late 1950s, Ruth Roman gradually scaled down her work. After appearing with Curt Jurgens and Richard Burton in Bitter Victory (1958), she started to appear more often in television shows such as Naked City, Route 66, The Defenders and Dr Kildare, and later in the 1975 mini-series The Long Hot Summer.
Ruth Roman, disliked the trappings of stardom – she claimed that her only extravagance was a collection of 35 pairs of Indian moccasins.
TANGANYIKA 1954
Van Heflin and Ruth Roman star but there seems little chemistry between them although Ruth Roman looks very beautiful in those African locations – in fact the locations were Studio Sets on the backlot of Universal in Hollywood with some location work in the US plus stock footage – but to me, it all works pretty well.
I must have said this before, but again this is a film I saw many years ago in St. Albans where we always holidayed and stayed with my Mother’s family. So it would be shown at either The Odeon on London Road, The Gaumont or The Chequers – the Odeon is now the wonderful Odyssey Cinema after being saved from extinction by the local hard working community
The film made in Hollywood by Universal Pictures, TANGANYIKA (1954) takes place in 1903 in the territory of East Africa
The story is of a hunt for a fugitive white man who’s stirred up the a tribe of natives into making raids on white settlements. Directing the hunt is John Gale (Van Heflin) who leads a group of native porters from East Africa into Tanganyika.
On the way he picks up Peggy Marion (Ruth Roman), a schoolteacher from Canada, and her young niece and nephew (Noreen Corcoran, Gregory Marshall), after rescuing them from a native attack that killed Peggy’s brother. He also picks up a wounded white man, Dan Harder (Howard Duff) who, we learn early on, is the brother of the renegade white man, although he keeps that little fact a secret.
Above a Publicity Still from the film The highlight of the film is the explosive climax that is typically well-staged by experienced action Film Director Andre De Toth.
This film I remember well although I always thought that it was in Colour which it isn’t.
Directed by Anthony Mann
Cast: James Stewart (Lin McAdam), Shelley Winters (Lola Manners), Dan Duryea (Waco Johnny Dean), Stephen McNally (Dutch Henry Brown), Millard Mitchell (High-Spade Frankie Wilson), Charles Drake (Steve Miller), John McIntire (Joe Lamont), Will Geer (Wyatt Earp), Jay C. Flippen (Sergeant Wilkes), Rock Hudson (Young Bull)
Winchester ’73 is the first of Anothony Mann’s pictures with James Stewart, The film was a big hit, and James Stewart’s deal was very good for him financially. After this others followed suit, which ultimately helped bring to an end the Studio system.
Anthony Mann and James Stewart would make four more Westerns together in one of Hollywood’s most significant director-star collaborations.
The prize rifle of (James Stewart) is stolen by (Stephen McNally), apprehended by a gun-trader (John McIntire), involved in a cavalry vs. Indian clash, and ends up in the hands of a man who struggles with cowardice (Charles Drake) before being taken by outlaw (Dan Duryea). Meanwhile Lin McAdam ( James Stewart) searches and chases to get the rifle back
Although “Winchester ’73” (1950) was shot Black and White, it’s an action-packed Western with a strong cast, which also includes Will Geer and Shelley Winters. Look out for Rock Hudson as the brave Young Bull and Tony Curtis as a cavalry trooper.
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Anthony Mann keeps us on edge throughout Winchester ’73..
For some reason I always thought that this film was in Technicolor but it was not. The later ones like ‘Where the River Bends’ certainly is I am happy to say
Where the River Bends 1952
Where the River Bends 1952
Julie Adams – then Julia Adams – starred alongside James Stewart in Where The River Bends (1952), William Powell in The Treasure of Lost Canyon (1952), Rock Hudson in The Lawless Breed (1953) and Van Heflin in Wings of the Hawk (1953).
As a publicity stunt, Universal Studios once declared her legs “the most perfectly symmetrical in the world” and insured them for $125,000. And in “The Case of the Deadly Verdict,” a 1963 episode of Perry Mason, Adams’ character had the notable distinction of being one of the lawyer’s few clients to be found guilty.
Then the actress was offered the role that assured her a place in monster-movie history.