Suddenly Last Summer
The Roman Spring of Mrs. Stone
Based on the Tennessee Williams one-act play, this film is rife with the playwright's favorite themes of obsession and madness. Director Mankiewicz was known for his ability to draw effective and highly theatrical performances from his actors. Mankiewicz intercuts cinematographer Jack Hildyard's high contrast hallucinogenic flashback sequences with this story of incest, homosexuality and madness. Critic Arthur Knight called it "a wholly admirable rendering into film of a work at once fascinating and nauseating, brilliant and immoral."
Celebrated theater director Josè Quintero crossed over into film in order to adapt this Tennessee Williams novel for the screen. Vivien Leigh (already known for her portrayal of a Williams heroine a decade earlier in A Streetcar Named Desire) plays the title character, an American widow who has abandoned a waning career on the New York stage and come to Rome to assuage her spirits. Ready to assist Mrs. Stone is the legendary stage actress Lotte Lenya, cast as a procuress, and a very young Warren Beatty, the gigolo who attracts her attentions. The real star of this film, however, is the Eternal City itself, captured here in its various moods, glimmering and textured, gauzed and misty, by cinematographer Harry Waxman.