Sickly girl finds an outlet in music.Sickly girl finds an outlet in music.Sickly girl finds an outlet in music.
Carol Brannon
- Fredonia Jannings
- (as Carol Brannan)
Erville Alderson
- Dingle Clerk
- (uncredited)
Charles Bradstreet
- Stubby Stubblefield
- (uncredited)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaA rare nasty role for Spring Byington (Carrie Jannings).
- GoofsThe call letters of the radio station that broadcasts the operetta from the fictional small town in Illinois were, in 1947, really the call letters of a radio station in New York City. It's highly unlikely that an Eastern metropolis would broadcast a high school musical from a Midwestern town.
- ConnectionsFeatured in That's Entertainment! (1974)
- SoundtracksMelody Of Spring
(1947) (uncredited)
Music by Hans Engelmann
Lyrics by Ralph Freed
Performed by Elizabeth Taylor
Featured review
Elizabeth Taylor seemed to go almost overnight in films from child to voluptuous young woman. But in this nice low-budget (for MGM) movie, made when she was 15 at most, there is something of the sweetly awkward colt about her, in the title role. There are scenes in which she sort of oscillates between childhood and adulthood--the visual equivalent of an adolescent's voice cracking--and it was in this movie that she got her first screen kiss (from an engaging James Lydon).
It's a bittersweet movie, about the deferrals and compromises that one has to make in life--the parents who don't continue their higher education, the soldier who resumes his, the refugee professor. As Cynthia's mother, Mary Astor brings her usual warmth and common sense, and there are vague echoes of her questing, yearning character in "Dodsworth." Cynthia's illness is used as something of a metaphor for domestic discontent, and in view of Taylor's chronic health problems is a little unsettling in retrospect.
It's a bittersweet movie, about the deferrals and compromises that one has to make in life--the parents who don't continue their higher education, the soldier who resumes his, the refugee professor. As Cynthia's mother, Mary Astor brings her usual warmth and common sense, and there are vague echoes of her questing, yearning character in "Dodsworth." Cynthia's illness is used as something of a metaphor for domestic discontent, and in view of Taylor's chronic health problems is a little unsettling in retrospect.
- hildacrane
- Sep 10, 2005
- Permalink
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Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Cynthia: The Rich, Full Life
- Filming locations
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- $1,318,000 (estimated)
- Runtime1 hour 38 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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