The Rank OrganisationPresents
A Maurice Cowan Production
TURN THE KEY SOFTLY
Starring
Yvonne Mitchell Kathleen Harrison Terence Morgan Thora Hird Dorothy Allison Glyn Houston
Geoffrey Keen Russell Waters Clive Morton
&
Joan Collins as Stella Jarvis
Screenplay by Jack Lee & Maurice Cowan From a Novel by John Brophy
Music by Mischa Spollansky Director of Photography - Geoffrey Unsworth
Produced by Maurice Cowan Directed by Jack Lee
(c) 1953 Rank .. 81 Mins .. B/W ..
Promotion for the film in 'The Sketch' 1953 |
"Turn The Key Softly" is another of Joan's films which cast her as a wayward woman. She plays a west end prostitute, who after been released from prison, vows to give up the profession by marrying her bus worker boyfriend Bob and move to Cannenbury! Shot on location in London in the middle of winter, Joan spent her days freezing, in her far from winter wardrobe. She had to wear the traditional tarts outfit of tight black satin skirt, with a flimsy low cut lurex sweater! After a days filming, she then had to go home exhausted and attempt to cook dinner for her then husband, Maxwell Reed, who's raging moods and occasional episodes of flinging her less than gourmet cooking at the walls of their Mayfair flat. It did not help matters having to share the flat with Max's pet monkey!
But on the other hand she was beginning to get noticed by the press, who were featuring her so often, that she was crowned Miss Press Clippings of 1952. She accepted her award from the Hollywood actor Forrest Tucker. One press photo used to publicize "Turn The Key Softly", showed so much cleavage, that the paper got letters of outrage! Joan was still unhappy with her roles, as she continued to get the "Coffee Bar Jezebel" parts. She had auditioned for the role of Monica that eventually went to Yvonne Mitchell, but had to settle for the part of Stella.
Joan is crowned Miss Press Clippings 1952 |
Nevertheless the film did get some good reviews, including this from -
The New York Times:
" Turn The Key Softly" is pointedly realistic of it's examination of the short courses of the lives of three ladies of varying degree, after they have left London's Holloway prison. While not precisely on a heroic scale, the producers have endowed the proceedings with compassion, sensitivity and a modicum of irony. Credit Jack Lee, the director and Maurice Cowan, the producer, who also collaborated on the script, with keeping their heroines in the move, without snarling the traffic in tales.Joan Collins is properly lush and brassy as the cockney charmer who almost, but not quite, reverts to her gay way of life!"Joan on location in this promo shot |
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.