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Dance Hall |
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Dance Hall - 1950 | 80 mins | Drama | B&WThe Production TeamDirector: Charles
Crichton. Producer: Michael Balcon. Associate Producer: E.V.H. Emmett. Script: E.V.H. Emmett, Diana Morgan and Alexander Mackendrick. Cinematography: Douglas Slocombe. Art Direction: Norman Arnold. Editing: Seth Holt. Music: Orchestras of Geraldo and Ted Heath plus Hy Hazell, Wally Fryer and Margaret Barnes. |
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The CastNatasha Perry - Eve Jane Hylton - Mary Diana Dors Carole Petula Clark - Georgie Donald Houston - Phil Bonar Colleano - Alec Douglas Barr - Peter Fred Johnson - Mr Wilson Gladys Henson - Mrs Wilson Dandy Nicholls - Mrs Crabtree Sydney Tafler - Manager |
Plot Synopsis Dance Hall was one of Ealing's rare attempts to get to
grips with a feminine subject. Directed by Charles Crichton, the film
contrasted the monotony of factory life with the glamour and excitement
of the Palais, following the stories of four girls played by Diana Dors
(her only Ealing appearance), Petula Clark, who had only just emerged
from children's roles, Jane Hylton, who had been in It Always Rains on
Sunday and Passport to Pimlico, and Natasha Parry, the future wife of
Sir Peter Brook, making her film debut. The storyline is somewhat thin,
and the purpose of the film is to get behind the scenes of a big dance
hall and show something of the life it represents.
Natasha Parry stars as Eve, whose marriage to Phil (Donald Houston)
is imperilled when she takes a different partner for an upcoming dance
contest. Her reasoning is that Phil is a lousy dancer, but she loves
him all the same; Phil, however, is the jealous type, who doesn't quite
see things Eve's way. Although the background is reasonably authentic,
with famous bands such as those of Geraldo and Ted Heath given opportunities
to perform on camera, little is revealed about the girls, who are far
too actressy to be taken as genuine working-class fugitives from the
shop floor. |
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