Baby the Rain Must Fall
Theatrical release poster
Directed byRobert Mulligan
Screenplay byHorton Foote
Based onThe Traveling Lady
1954 play
by Horton Foote
Produced byAlan J. Pakula
StarringLee Remick
Steve McQueen
Don Murray
CinematographyErnest Laszlo
Edited byAaron Stell
Music byElmer Bernstein
Color processBlack and white
Production
companies
Park Place Production
Solar Productions
Distributed byColumbia Pictures
Release date
  • January 13, 1965 (1965-01-13) (New York City)
Running time
100 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Box office$1,500,000[1]

Baby the Rain Must Fall is a 1965 American drama film directed by Robert Mulligan and starring Lee Remick, Steve McQueen and Don Murray. Dramatist Horton Foote, who wrote the screenplay, based it on his 1954 play The Traveling Lady.[2] This is Glen Campbell's film debut, in an uncredited role.

Plot

Georgette Thomas and her six-year-old daughter Margaret Rose travel from the East Texas town of Tyler to (unknown to him) meet her husband Henry Thomas in his small coastal prairie Southeastern Texas hometown of Columbus. Henry is a somewhat irresponsible rockabilly singer-guitarist who has recently been released from prison after serving time for stabbing a man during a drunken brawl, and wasn't thinking of Georgette at all.

After his reunion with his wife, and his introduction to his daughter, Henry tries to make a home for his family. But Kate Dawson, the aging spinster who raised him after his parents died, remains a formidable presence in his life and tries to sabotage his efforts. She threatens repeatedly to have him returned to prison if he fails to acquiesce to her demands to give up singing, go to night school, and get a real job. He resists this and convinces Georgette he will be a star someday, as he continues playing and working a part-time job with the Tillmans.

When Kate Dawson dies, Henry drunkenly destroys her possessions the evening after the funeral – several shots show the belt she beat him with, untouched, hanging on a door near her bedroom – leaves with the silver willed to Mrs. Tillman, then wrecks his car on the cemetery gate and repeatedly stabs her grave with a knife in hysteria while, unbeknownst to him, his wife is nearby watching in horror.

Henry is destined for prison again, so Georgette and Margaret Rose leave Columbus in a car driven by Henry's childhood friend, the local sheriff's deputy, Slim. Slim had tried to help straighten Henry out since before the arrival of Georgette and Margaret Rose to Columbus, but failed. Georgette had done her best to love and gently comfort her self-tortured and cold husband Henry, but was also unsuccessful.

In the final scene, after an indeterminate time has passed and they have loaded their vehicle and driven away from the rented house, Georgette sees Henry (as does Slim) in the barred back of a sheriff's vehicle at a road crossing stop. She turns Margaret Rose away before she sees him, bound on his way back to "the pen".

As they drive out of town and enter the open highway, Georgette answers Margaret Rose's question of where they are going; that they are driving away to the warm Valley, to begin a new life together. Georgette tells Margaret Rose that they have traveled a long way, from Lovelady to Tyler, from Tyler to Columbus, and now to the distant Valley (Lovelady is Georgette's hometown, and where she and Henry met and married), and notes to the child that nobody could say they don't get around.

Cast

Production

The film was shot on location in the Texas cities of Columbus, Bay City, Wharton and Lockhart, and a scene in which Lee Remick works at a hamburger joint was filmed at the Baskin-Robbins ice cream store in Tarzana, California.

Many of the scenes were filmed in Columbus (the movie's actual locale), including those of the Colorado County Courthouse, the downtown store and bus shots (to the west of the Courthouse, on Milam St.), the Tillman's house (a block away from the Courthouse), and those of the Columbus Cemetery. A significant evening scene, in which late-working Deputy Slim and Judge Ewing walk away from the Courthouse toward the street, shows a notable Columbus building (now a museum) across Spring Street: the historic 1886 Stafford-Miller House.[4] Some of the downtown scenes show another notable Columbus building in the background, the 1886 Stafford Opera House[5] (next to the Stafford-Miller House; both south of the Courthouse), especially the morning scenes in front of the real estate office.

The last part of the "goodbye" scene, in which Henry leaves behind deputy Slim, the sheriff, Georgette and Margaret Rose, and takes off running, trips, then grabs onto the back of a flatbed truck, falls to the road and is captured by Slim, was filmed in Wharton at the southern end of Texas Farm to Market Road 102, (FM-102). The isolated country rental house scenes in which Henry, Georgette and Margaret Rose live together were filmed near Bay City, just inland of the Gulf coast, south of Wharton and Columbus.

The title song, with music composed by Elmer Bernstein and lyrics written by Ernie Sheldon, was performed by Glenn Yarbrough during the opening credits. Yarbrough's recording reached #12 on the Billboard Hot 100 and #2 on the Easy Listening[6] chart. An instrumental version of the title song is used on some versions of film.

In one scene in which McQueen sings at a bar with his rockabilly band, one of his bandmates (to Henry's right) is singer-songwriter Glen Campbell, who is extremely visible standing behind McQueen in a close two-shot but is uncredited in the film. The band drummer, also uncredited, is fellow session musician Hal Blaine, both members at that time of the famed Los Angeles-based "Wrecking Crew". The songs McQueen sung were dubbed by Wrecking Crew member Billy Strange despite not remotely sounding like McQueen, except when singing a song directly to his character's child later in the film, during which the singing matches McQueen's voice perfectly.

Lee Remick had top billing in the film itself, but Steve McQueen had it for the posters; similar to the arrangement for John Wayne and James Stewart in The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance three years earlier.

Critical reception

Bosley Crowther, film critic for The New York Times, wrote, "As honest and humble as is the effort to make the viewer sense a woman's baffled love for a shifty and mixed-up fellow in Baby, the Rain Must Fall, there is a major and totally neglected weakness in this film from a Horton Foote play that troubles one's mind throughout the picture and leaves one sadly let-down at the end. It is the failure of the screenwriter--Mr. Foote himself--to clarify why the object of the woman's deep affection is as badly mixed-up as he is and why the woman, who seems a sensible person, doesn't make a single move to straighten him out...Granting that the wife is astonished and distressingly mystified at the neurotic behavior of her husband, this doesn't mean that the viewer is satisfied to be kept in the dark as to the reasons for the stark and macabre goings-on...As it is, we only see that these two people are frustrated and heart-broken by something that's bigger than the both of them. But we don't know what it is."[7]

The staff at Variety wrote that the film's chief assets were "outstanding performances by its stars and an emotional punch that lingers...Other cast members are adequate, but roles suffer from editorial cuts (confirmed by director) that leave sub-plots dangling."[8]

See also

References

  1. Anticipated rentals accruing distributors in North America. See "Top Grossers of 1965", Variety, 5 January 1966 p 36
  2. Baby the Rain Must Fall at IMDb
  3. Friskics-Warren, Bill (February 24, 2012). "Billy Strange, '60s Session Guitarist, Dies at 81". The New York Times. p. D8.
  4. "Colorado County Historical Markers". Coloradocountyhistory.org. Retrieved 2017-03-25.
  5. "Colorado County Historical Markers". Coloradocountyhistory.org. Retrieved 2017-03-25.
  6. Whitburn, Joel (2002). Top Adult Contemporary: 1961-2001. Record Research. p. 264.
  7. Crowther, Bosley. The New York Times, film review, January 14, 1965.
  8. Variety. Film review, January 13, 1965.
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