6/10
Susan Hayward shines in this autobiographical drama about Lillian Roth
8 December 2016
Warning: Spoilers
Directed by Daniel Mann, with a screenplay by Helen Deutsch and Jay Richard Kennedy, this slightly above average biographical drama about the rise and fall (and recovery) of singer-actress Lillian Roth earned Susan Hayward, who sings, her fourth unrewarded Best Actress Oscar nomination (she would win on her fifth and last nomination for I Want to Live! (1958)).

Based on an autobiography co-written by Roth, it details her fast track to fame as a teenager due to a stereotypical, unrelenting, ambitious mother (Katie, played by Jo Van Fleet), the death of her childhood friend David Tredman (Ray Danton), her "pick me up" drinking which led to alcoholism, two failed marriages, attempted suicide and ultimately her recovery with the help of Burt McGuire (Eddie Albert), a recovering alcohol who helps her.

Don Taylor and Richard Conte play Roth's husbands; Taylor a youngster named Wallie and Conte a particularly sadistic brute named Tony Bardeman, who uses Roth's weakness against her to get her money.

The film won an Academy Award for its B&W Costume Design and also received Oscar nominations for its B&W Art Direction-Set Decoration and Cinematography.

The film is almost an advertisement for Alcoholics Anonymous, the film includes the Serenity Prayer:

"God grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change, courage to change the things I can, and wisdom to know the difference."
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