I'd Climb the Highest Mountain
1951I'd Climb the Highest Mountain is a 1951 Technicolor religious drama film made by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corporation. It was directed by Henry King and produced by Lamar Trotti from a screenplay by King and Trotti. The story is based on a 1910 novel by Corra Harris about a minister and his wife in southern Appalachia (specifically Mossy Creek, Georgia) in the early 20th century. The music score was by Sol Kaplan and the cinematography by Edward Cronjager.
The film stars Susan Hayward and William Lundigan with Rory Calhoun, Barbara Bates, Gene Lockhart, Alexander Knox and Lynn Bari.
The movie was shot in Dawsonville, Georgia in the Appalachian Mountains, an unusual and out-of-the-way location at the time. Other scenes were shot in Sautee-Nacoochee, Georgia , Demorest, Georgia, and Cleveland, Georgia. On June 1, 1950, Hayward nearly lost her life when she slipped near a waterfall she was photographing. Luckily, William Gray, a studio chauffeur, caught her and they escaped with only minor injuries.[3] (Hayward would later move to another part of rural Georgia a few years later, settling down to farm and ranch with her second husband when she was not making films. The couple are buried near the town of Carrollton, Georgia.)
Kinostart: | 1951 | ||||||
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Genre: | Filmdrama | ||||||
Herstellungsland: | Vereinigte Staaten | ||||||
Originalsprache: | Englisch | ||||||
Farbe: | Farbe | ||||||
IMDB: | 574 | ||||||
Verleih: | 20th Century Studios |
Regie: | Henry King | |
Drehbuch: | Lamar Trotti | |
Henry King | ||
Kamera: | Edward Cronjager | |
Schnitt: | Barbara McLean | |
Musik: | Sol Kaplan | |
Produzent: | Lamar Trotti | |
Darsteller: | Susan Hayward | |
William Lundigan | ||
Rory Calhoun | ||
Barbara Bates | ||
Gene Lockhart | ||
Alexander Knox | ||
Lynn Bari | ||
Kathleen Lockhart | ||
Ruth Donnelly |
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