Musical biopic- cleaned up from Lillian Roth's bestselling memoir- which is transformed from standard '50s nostalgia for the musical theatre of the depression, into a vehicle for Susan Hayward's huge, dynamic performance. It tells of Lillian's upbringing by her stage-door mother (Jo Van Fleet) and Broadway success before succumbing to alcoholism.
There's a great big band sound from Alex North which adds a flavour of the vaudeville era, back when mother pushed her little girl to auditions, teaching her to fake her true feelings and desires. When stardom arrives, Roth fills her emotional emptiness with the booze that will drive her from pawnshop to fleapit to dives.
Susan Hayward got to sing her own numbers, but the film doesn't really feel so much like a musical. It's all about Lillian's self destruction, whether courtesy of the bottle, or men, or business choices. Alcohol completes her, and then it destroys her.
Daniel Mann creates a rich and credible ambience of backstage rootlessness and after show parties. He has a reputation as a good director of actors and credit to him for allowing Hayward to dominate to such fabulous effect. It's one of the great performances of the decade.