Cast

Shirley Booth
Mrs. Vivien Leslie

Robert Ryan
George Leslie

Marjie Millar
Nadine Roland

Alex Nicol
Lan McKay

Sammy White
Harry Willey

James Bell
Mr. Herbert Poole

Eilene Janssen
Pixie Croffman

Philip Ober
Mort Finley

Harry Morgan
Fred Blue

Ellen Corby
Mrs. Croffman

Maidie Norman
Camilla

Kasey Rogers
Felice

Nana Bryant
Mrs. McKay

Ray Teal
Barney

Ian Wolfe
Mr. Pope

Pierre Watkin
Lewis

Virginia Brissac
Mrs. Poole

Amanda Blake
Gilly

Percy Helton
Hackley

Mabel Albertson
Mrs. Sims
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Reviews
CinemaSerf
“Mrs. Leslie” (Shirley Booth) spends a fair amount of her time helping out her lodgers at her Los Angeles home whilst benignly reminiscing about her own true love. That all started when she was a chanteuse in a bar and he an occasional visitor. The two immediately spark, and he invites her to spend six wintry weeks with him in warmer climes. Despite warnings from her boss that breaking her contract will see her blacklisted, she goes to spend her time with her mysterious stranger (Robert Ryan). Now he is no one-track minded user, and before long both are enamoured of the other and their six week dalliance becomes an annual occurrence. It’s only when she makes a visit to the cinema that she discovers his true identity, status and secret but will that kibosh her love for the man, or any love he may have for her? I though Booth and Ryan worked really quite engagingly here. Sure, there are some questionable morals but these two characters manage to illicit a sense of “so what”. Their memories are interspersed with the current romantic shenanigans of wide-boy “Lan” (Alex Nicol) and his girlfriend “Nadine” (Marjie Millar) which serves effectively as an antidote to her own, low-boil, lurid past. Robert Ryan was probably more famous for his grittier parts, but here he brings a complementary degree of humanity to the stoically savvy one from the on-form Booth. There is some good humour and even some angst in this (for the time) quiet daring observation of clandestine true love, and what’s more - there obviously isn’t a rose-tinted denouement, either.
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