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All That Heaven Allows
1955 Jump to Synopsis and Details
 
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Contributed by Daniel López
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Description

All That Heaven Allows (1955) is a romance feature film starring Jane Wyman and Rock Hudson in a story about a well-to-do widow falling in love with a young landscape designer. The screenplay was written by Peg Fenwick based upon a story by Edna L. Lee and Harry Lee. The film was directed by Douglas Sirk and produced by Ross Hunter. In 1995, the film was selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry. All That Heaven Allows has been broadcast on American television and is available in VHS and DVD format.

Synopsis

Jane Wyman is a repressed wealthy widow and Rock Hudson is the hunky Thoreau-following gardener who loves her in Douglas Sirk's heartbreakingly beautiful indictment of 1950s small-town America. Sirk utilizes expressionist colors, reflective surfaces, and frames-within-frames to convey the loneliness and isolation of a matriarch trapped by the snobbery of her children and the gossip of her social-climbing country club chums.

Review from Amazon.com

Rock Hudson and Jane Wyman were so successful in Douglas Sirk's Magnificent Obsession that they reteamed for this, his first melodrama masterpiece. Young hunk Rock is a strapping son of mother nature, a gardener who woos middle-aged, middle class widow Wyman to the snooty disapproval of her conservative social circle and embarrassment of her self-centered children. Wyman discovers a new life with his open-armed friends and back-to-nature lifestyle, but struggles with life-changing decisions in the face of social pressure and vicious gossip. Living the Henry Thoreau dream, Rock inhabits his personal Walden in a rustic country cabin by a bubbling brook, a dream house lit by a giant picture window overlooking an idyllic countryside where deer pose just outside the window. Wyman's elegant but sterile suburban home transforms into a tomb when she sacrifices her love for the "good name" of her children, and the lonely widow sees her future in the pale, colorless reflection of her TV screen. But don't despair just yet: Sirk's heroines are dynamic and resourceful and no Sirk melodrama ends without a heart-tugging, over-the-top twist. German director Rainer Werner Fassbinder, who championed Sirk as a master and a mentor, remade the film as Ali: Fear Eats the Soul decades later. --Sean Axmaker

Cast:

Jane Wyman as Cary Scott

Rock Hudson as Ron Kirby

Agnes Moorehead as Sara Warren

Conrad Nagel as Harvey

Virginia Grey as Alida Anderson

Gloria Talbott as Kay Scott

William Reynolds as Ned Scott

Charles Drake as Mick Anderson

Hayden Rorke as Dr. Dan Hennessy

Jacqueline deWit as Mona Plash

Leigh Snowden as Jo-Ann

Donald Curtis as Howard Hoffer

Alex Gerry as George Warren

Nestor Paiva as Manuel

Forrest Lewis as Mr. Weeks

Tol Avery as Tom Allenby

Merry Anders as Mary Ann

Helen Andrews as Myrtle

Eleanor Audley as Mrs. Humphrey

Lillian Culver as Mrs. Taylor

Jack Davidson as Bit Part

Alan DeWitt as Stationmaster

Helen Dickson as Party Guest

Donna Jo Gribble as Miss Taylor

Jim Hayward as John

Helene Heigh as Ann

David Janssen as Freddie Norton

Anthony Jochim as Mr. Adams

Paul Keast as Mark Plash

Jack Lomas as Fred

Joseph Mell as Mr. Gow

Forbes Murray as Country Club Member

Vernon Rich as Bill

Gia Scala as Manuel's Daughter

Edna Smith as Miss Edna Pidway

Paul Smith as Tom

Ted Stanhope as Country Club Waiter

Rosa Turich as Rozanna

  
 

Directed by
Douglas Sirk 

Writing credits
Peg Fenwick - writer
Edna L. Lee - story
Harry Lee - story

Produced by
Ross Hunter 

Original Music by
Frank Skinner 

Cinematography by
Russell Metty 

Film Editing by
Frank Gross 
Fred Baratta

Art Direction by
Alexander Golitzen 
Eric Orbom

Set Decoration by
Russell A. Gausman 
Julia Heron 

Costume Design by
Bill Thomas (gowns)

Makeup Department
Joan St. Oegger. as hair stylist
Bud Westmore. as makeup artist

Second Unit Director or Assistant Director
Joseph E. Kenney. as assistant director (as Joseph E. Kenny)
George Lollier. as assistant director

Sound Department
Leslie I. Carey. as sound
Joe Lapis. as sound

Camera and Electrical Department
Ledge Haddow. as assistant camera
Eddie Hobson. as best boy grip
Philip H. Lathrop. as camera operator
Max Nippell. as gaffer
Dean Paup. as key grip
Kenneth Smith. as dolly grip

Costume and Wardrobe Department
Rose Brandi. as wardrobe supervisor: Jane Wyman

Editorial Department
William Fritzsche. as color consultant: Technicolor

Music Department
Joseph Gershenson. as music supervisor

Other crew
Jack Daniels. as dialogue director
Betty A. Griffin. as script supervisor


 
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