IMDb-BEWERTUNG
7,4/10
195
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuA recently widowed research doctor is convinced by a colleague to join him in an inner-city clinic.A recently widowed research doctor is convinced by a colleague to join him in an inner-city clinic.A recently widowed research doctor is convinced by a colleague to join him in an inner-city clinic.
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Saw this movie as a teenager some 30 plus years ago, and it still impacts me today. Movie was a real tear jerker, and they just don't make them like this anymore. Hayward was fantastic in the role! Made me a huge Susan Hayward fan, and tried to see everything of hers that I could after this. But this one sticks out in my mind as one of her best, besides I Want to Live! If you are a Susan Hayward fan, then make a point to see this movie. I know it was an after school movie, one of those at 4:30 PM deals, but it was one worth seeing. Even though this was a "made for TV" deal, it could have had big success in the theaters if they had opted for that. To this day, I still don't know why they never did release it on the big screen. A real shame.
Unlike other star's of her era, (Bette Davis, Joan Crawford) Susan Hayward's last role is quite memorable and touching even for a TV Movie of the Week. Movie starts off with Susan's character having to watch her husband die in a small plane accident. He is at the controls while having a heart attack and crashes killing him. Movie then follows Susan around as she decides what to do with her life, she is a doctor. She then decides to give something back to the community and works in an inner city clinic. Movie is quite good, Susan is great as usual. Also listen for the haunting and beautiful opening theme by non other than Dusty Springfield. A very fitting and dignified exit for a talented actress like Hayward.
10kwipinky
I agree Susan Hayward is great in this movie. I watched it as a youngster and it stayed with me into my 40's. It is a tearjerker for sure. Hayward played Maggie Cole, a doctor in pain after losing her husband. She is convinced to offer health-care to inner city patients who might not be able to be seen by a doctor. There were many stories in the movie but one stuck out: Dr. Cole cared for a charismatic youngster with leukemia. Although she worked hard to save the young girl, her illness was terminal and unbeatable. Dr. Cole is devastated, but with the help of her friends and co-workers the doctor found strength. The audience learned, through the doctors eyes, the ability to stand up to any awful event that life tossed out. Maggie Cole believed in herself again, and saying goodbye to the pain and suffering allowed her to go on. The message was relevant and needed then, and maybe needed still.
A terrific movie. I would definitely buy a DVD.
A terrific movie. I would definitely buy a DVD.
Susan Hayward has always been my favorite dramatic actress and though she made some bad films, I always credited her with toward the end of her career when some of her contemporaries were taking work in garbage horror films, she never sunk to that level. As was said about another screen legend, what there is is 'cherce'.
Though she never planned it her last role was in a fine made for TV film, Say Goodbye Maggie Cole. Hayward plays the title role of a recently widowed doctor who decides to make a complete change in her surroundings and career.
She and her late husband Richard Anderson were both doctors involved in a research facility with a good reputation headed by Dane Clark. Even after Clark pleads with her to stay, she decides to move to Chicago and takeover a practice that general practitioner Darren McGavin has.
This is all new to Hayward, dealing with people instead of test tubes. And McGavin's not an easy guy to work with. But she does take it all in stride, although not without a lot of heartache on the way.
Say Goodbye Maggie Cole was filmed at 20th Century Fox where during the Fifties Hayward had some of her best roles so it was fitting that her last work be done there. She got a really good supporting cast besides those I've mentioned, Beverly Garland is also in this as the wife of Richard Carlyle who Hayward suspects of having something seriously wrong with him. Maidie Norman delivers a fine performance as McGavin's nurse and all around girl Friday.
Jeanette Nolan plays the grandmother of a young girl who Hayward boards with when arriving in Chicago. The young girl is Michelle Nichols who is a clerk at a drugstore that Hayward and McGavin patronize. She is also diagnosed with leukemia which at that time was a death sentence in 1972. Almost 40 years later there are drugs that leukemia patients take that have prolonged life way beyond what could be expected back then. Part of the plot involved Hayward using her research connections to get some untested drugs to use on Nichols.
In any event Susan's best scenes are with Nichols and they are guaranteed to get an emotional reaction out of a turnip. As for Nichols she does a good job playing a most innocent young woman who is facing life's end before she's really lived.
Say Goodbye Maggie Cole might have been a good pilot for a television series and maybe we might have seen Susan Hayward once a week in this part had her own health problems not killed her. Though the film does tend a little bit to be soap opera, it's still a wonderful part for one of the best actresses ever to take her curtain call.
Though she never planned it her last role was in a fine made for TV film, Say Goodbye Maggie Cole. Hayward plays the title role of a recently widowed doctor who decides to make a complete change in her surroundings and career.
She and her late husband Richard Anderson were both doctors involved in a research facility with a good reputation headed by Dane Clark. Even after Clark pleads with her to stay, she decides to move to Chicago and takeover a practice that general practitioner Darren McGavin has.
This is all new to Hayward, dealing with people instead of test tubes. And McGavin's not an easy guy to work with. But she does take it all in stride, although not without a lot of heartache on the way.
Say Goodbye Maggie Cole was filmed at 20th Century Fox where during the Fifties Hayward had some of her best roles so it was fitting that her last work be done there. She got a really good supporting cast besides those I've mentioned, Beverly Garland is also in this as the wife of Richard Carlyle who Hayward suspects of having something seriously wrong with him. Maidie Norman delivers a fine performance as McGavin's nurse and all around girl Friday.
Jeanette Nolan plays the grandmother of a young girl who Hayward boards with when arriving in Chicago. The young girl is Michelle Nichols who is a clerk at a drugstore that Hayward and McGavin patronize. She is also diagnosed with leukemia which at that time was a death sentence in 1972. Almost 40 years later there are drugs that leukemia patients take that have prolonged life way beyond what could be expected back then. Part of the plot involved Hayward using her research connections to get some untested drugs to use on Nichols.
In any event Susan's best scenes are with Nichols and they are guaranteed to get an emotional reaction out of a turnip. As for Nichols she does a good job playing a most innocent young woman who is facing life's end before she's really lived.
Say Goodbye Maggie Cole might have been a good pilot for a television series and maybe we might have seen Susan Hayward once a week in this part had her own health problems not killed her. Though the film does tend a little bit to be soap opera, it's still a wonderful part for one of the best actresses ever to take her curtain call.
Susan Hayward a great star known worldwide starred in this TV film which was supposed to be a pilot for a TV series starring the great Redhead.
Susan had painful headaches and during the filming it was developed Susan had incurable brain cancer and would die within weeks! Somehow Susan Hayward got thru the filming and gives a typically fine Hayward performance.
The film opens up with the shapely Susie showing off her great figure nd new hairstyle only to witness her husband's death inane airplane accident. Susan in this film moves to Chicago to practice medicine.
First rate production values, a theme song by the great Dusty Springfield adds up to a great finale for the splendid Susan Hayward.
Admired by her peers notably Greta Garbo, Kate Hepburn, Barbara Stanwyck, Roz Russell, John Wayne, Greg Peck, Bill Holden, Gary Cooper,
As someone posted for years in Variety about Susan:
A Star Is A Star Is A Star!
Susan had painful headaches and during the filming it was developed Susan had incurable brain cancer and would die within weeks! Somehow Susan Hayward got thru the filming and gives a typically fine Hayward performance.
The film opens up with the shapely Susie showing off her great figure nd new hairstyle only to witness her husband's death inane airplane accident. Susan in this film moves to Chicago to practice medicine.
First rate production values, a theme song by the great Dusty Springfield adds up to a great finale for the splendid Susan Hayward.
Admired by her peers notably Greta Garbo, Kate Hepburn, Barbara Stanwyck, Roz Russell, John Wayne, Greg Peck, Bill Holden, Gary Cooper,
As someone posted for years in Variety about Susan:
A Star Is A Star Is A Star!
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesSusan Hayward's last film.
- PatzerAlthough set in Chicago, when Lisa and Maggie are walking to the boarding house, you can see the top of a palm tree in the background.
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