VALUTAZIONE IMDb
6,2/10
145
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaKing Charles sees actress Nell perform and they become close, as he favors her over the Duchess. Nell serves Charles devotedly though she and the Duchess clash. Despite the King's fondness, ... Leggi tuttoKing Charles sees actress Nell perform and they become close, as he favors her over the Duchess. Nell serves Charles devotedly though she and the Duchess clash. Despite the King's fondness, as an actress she's barred from the royal circle.King Charles sees actress Nell perform and they become close, as he favors her over the Duchess. Nell serves Charles devotedly though she and the Duchess clash. Despite the King's fondness, as an actress she's barred from the royal circle.
Laurence Baskcomb
- Minor role
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
O.B. Clarence
- Clockmaker
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Roland Culver
- Bit Part
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Toni Edgar-Bruce
- Minor role
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Polly Emery
- Minor role
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Anthony Holles
- Actor At Drury Lane
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Vi Kaley
- Lady In Audience Who Thows Tomato At Nell
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Recensioni in evidenza
This is one of my favorite movies. Sir Cedric Hardwicke is brilliant as the lonely King Charles II. Mostly forgotten today, Hardwicke, in my humble opinion, was the greatest actor of the twentieth century. This is one of his most important screen roles and ranks right beside his portrayals of the bishop in "Les Miserables" and Claude Frollo in "The Hunchback of Notre Dame" as his best. Hardwicke brings dignity to the role of the womanizing king and portrays him in a kind and sympathetic light rather than the debauched and dissipated image in which Charles is presented today. If only we had Hardwicke's great stage performances preserved on film... Highly recommended for its script, music, and acting (especially Sir Cedric). Don't miss this film!
As kids we were taught about Nell Gwynn at school albeit skirting around the true nature of her relationship with Charles II
It s hard to belive that this film was made almost a century ago with the kind of cheeky postcard humour that could be described as the seed of "carry on"
Anna Neagle is as much a british treasure as the monarchy itself or at least she was. Sadly only viewers of a certain vintage will be aware of just how influential she was to British cinema and her versatility is as wide ranging as the characters she plays.
Ive just rewatched this at 6am and it's put a smile on my face to start what is going to be a long hard day.
Sadly as it's black and white and 90 + years old most people will dismiss it out of hand however, if they give it a chance it may well surprise them.
Anna Neagle is as much a british treasure as the monarchy itself or at least she was. Sadly only viewers of a certain vintage will be aware of just how influential she was to British cinema and her versatility is as wide ranging as the characters she plays.
Ive just rewatched this at 6am and it's put a smile on my face to start what is going to be a long hard day.
Sadly as it's black and white and 90 + years old most people will dismiss it out of hand however, if they give it a chance it may well surprise them.
Now, this is an Anna Neagle completely unlike her later, Great British typecast roles - and all the better for it! This saucy, bawdy comedy is just the ticket - although brief by modern standards, it's so full of life it certainly doesn't feel short.
Cedric Hardwicke and Anna Neagle play off one another to the hilt as the merry monarch and bouncy, irreverent Nell, and the verbal pyrotechnics of the script kept up a ripple of laughter among the audience. Broader visual comedy includes a multitude of impromptu meaningful looks, a cheeky dog and the sleeping Nell's voluptuous little wiggle.
Jeanne de Casalis was somewhat irritating as Louise de Keroualle, Duchess of Portsmouth, sporting a heavily over-the-top French accent and mannerisms; however, the character was supposed to be irritating, so this was not an insurmountable problem!
A film for fans of Ealing comedy and screwball romance, this was a thoroughly enjoyable romp, based a little too accurately on historical fact for the American censors, that took an unexpected serious twist towards the end. I found myself left wondering what did happen afterwards to Nell Gwyn...
Cedric Hardwicke and Anna Neagle play off one another to the hilt as the merry monarch and bouncy, irreverent Nell, and the verbal pyrotechnics of the script kept up a ripple of laughter among the audience. Broader visual comedy includes a multitude of impromptu meaningful looks, a cheeky dog and the sleeping Nell's voluptuous little wiggle.
Jeanne de Casalis was somewhat irritating as Louise de Keroualle, Duchess of Portsmouth, sporting a heavily over-the-top French accent and mannerisms; however, the character was supposed to be irritating, so this was not an insurmountable problem!
A film for fans of Ealing comedy and screwball romance, this was a thoroughly enjoyable romp, based a little too accurately on historical fact for the American censors, that took an unexpected serious twist towards the end. I found myself left wondering what did happen afterwards to Nell Gwyn...
In the wake of Alexander Korda's worldwide hit with 'The Private Life of Henry VIII', the hunt was on for rollicking stories about monarchs' love affairs. Herbert Wilcox had filmed King Charles II's dalliance with the orange seller and actress Nell Gwyn ten years before, as a silent starring Dorothy Gish. The tale was an old dramatic chestnut, partly because it was set in London's theatreland, Covent Garden: for instance, Claude Rains's debut as a boy actor had been in 'Nell of Old Drury'. Wilcox rushed his protege Anna Neagle into their fifth collaboration as Ms Gwynn, daughter of a jailbird father and drunken mother who was one of the first women to win fame on the stage-- when such ladies were seen as little better than prostitutes. (The new release 'Stage Beauty' gives the background.)
The future Dame Anna was still gamine and skittish, not yet the stately heroine of Wilcox's post-war 'London' movies. Born into poverty in the East End, she had been a chorine, and Wilcox gives her two long dance sequences. When she sings the song that first attracts the King, she is more like a music hall billtopper such as Marie Lloyd than a Restoration beauty. Nell's 'merry monarch', Cedric Hardwicke, who had won renown as an interpreter of Bernard Shaw, is accordingly stronger on cynical wit than passionate captivation; but he gives as good as he gets in their rollicking exchanges. Newly knighted, barely 40, Hardwicke gives the modest but not tatty production its touch of class.
The core of the narrative is Nell's rivalry with his French mistress, who accuses her of treachery. It unfolds between the Drury Lane Theatre, where Nell is in her performing element, and at the Court, where she is snubbed by disdainful aristos until Charles II ostentatiously bestows his favour on her. They remain together for almost 20 years and we do not see the downbeat end of the story: her slide into poverty, despite the King's deathbed injunction to his brother and successor: 'Let not poor Nelly starve'.
There is no sense of greater events beyond the intrigues, but the film is fairly true to the spirit if not the letter of history. Charles was unique among English kings in having lived an outlaw's and exile's life after his father's execution. He mingled with poor folk and sometimes had to disguise himself as one. None ever betrayed him for a reward. That may well have left him with a jaded view of the upper crust and a taste for rougher company.
Like most early-1930s talkies, the sound is tinny, with a lack of bass resonance in the music and dead spots between dialogue where the director could not be bothered to dub on background noises. Performances seem framed by an invisible proscenium arch-- Wilcox's camera-work was never as fluid as Korda's-- but the theatrical style of the West End cast works better than in most films of the period. After all, half the film is set backstage, and the other half is at a royal court never so ritual and artificial (or as licentious) as in the Restoration period. Charles II was contemporary with Louis XIV of Versailles and had to live life like a play.
Alas, Wilcox could not get wide distribution in the States. America had just set up the Hays Office to purge impurities from movies. 'Nell Gwynn' was suspect because she was not married to her Charles: an ahistorical scene showing a secret wedding had to be inserted. Anna's cleavage caused more trouble, ten years before Margaret Lockwood's in 'The Wicked Lady'. And the dialogue was too bawdy for the censors. Words such as 'trollop' and 'strumpet' and sexual innuendos flow freely. A maid calls the French rival a 'dirty, wicked, shameless, scheming foreign whore' and Nell answers: 'We must be fair to her. She can't help being foreign.'
All this was twenty years before Preminger was forbidden to use the word 'virgin' in 'The Moon is Blue'. It would be 1939 before Wilcox and Neagle got the call to Hollywood.
The future Dame Anna was still gamine and skittish, not yet the stately heroine of Wilcox's post-war 'London' movies. Born into poverty in the East End, she had been a chorine, and Wilcox gives her two long dance sequences. When she sings the song that first attracts the King, she is more like a music hall billtopper such as Marie Lloyd than a Restoration beauty. Nell's 'merry monarch', Cedric Hardwicke, who had won renown as an interpreter of Bernard Shaw, is accordingly stronger on cynical wit than passionate captivation; but he gives as good as he gets in their rollicking exchanges. Newly knighted, barely 40, Hardwicke gives the modest but not tatty production its touch of class.
The core of the narrative is Nell's rivalry with his French mistress, who accuses her of treachery. It unfolds between the Drury Lane Theatre, where Nell is in her performing element, and at the Court, where she is snubbed by disdainful aristos until Charles II ostentatiously bestows his favour on her. They remain together for almost 20 years and we do not see the downbeat end of the story: her slide into poverty, despite the King's deathbed injunction to his brother and successor: 'Let not poor Nelly starve'.
There is no sense of greater events beyond the intrigues, but the film is fairly true to the spirit if not the letter of history. Charles was unique among English kings in having lived an outlaw's and exile's life after his father's execution. He mingled with poor folk and sometimes had to disguise himself as one. None ever betrayed him for a reward. That may well have left him with a jaded view of the upper crust and a taste for rougher company.
Like most early-1930s talkies, the sound is tinny, with a lack of bass resonance in the music and dead spots between dialogue where the director could not be bothered to dub on background noises. Performances seem framed by an invisible proscenium arch-- Wilcox's camera-work was never as fluid as Korda's-- but the theatrical style of the West End cast works better than in most films of the period. After all, half the film is set backstage, and the other half is at a royal court never so ritual and artificial (or as licentious) as in the Restoration period. Charles II was contemporary with Louis XIV of Versailles and had to live life like a play.
Alas, Wilcox could not get wide distribution in the States. America had just set up the Hays Office to purge impurities from movies. 'Nell Gwynn' was suspect because she was not married to her Charles: an ahistorical scene showing a secret wedding had to be inserted. Anna's cleavage caused more trouble, ten years before Margaret Lockwood's in 'The Wicked Lady'. And the dialogue was too bawdy for the censors. Words such as 'trollop' and 'strumpet' and sexual innuendos flow freely. A maid calls the French rival a 'dirty, wicked, shameless, scheming foreign whore' and Nell answers: 'We must be fair to her. She can't help being foreign.'
All this was twenty years before Preminger was forbidden to use the word 'virgin' in 'The Moon is Blue'. It would be 1939 before Wilcox and Neagle got the call to Hollywood.
...in the title role of this historical drama. She plays the infamous actress/courtesan attached to Charles II (Cedric Hardwicke), a player who takes London society and the royal court by storm but never loses her common roots. Neagle is mainly remembered for a series of lady-like portrayals in a series of romantic dramas and musicals (often with Michael Wilding) that just didn't show a wide range even though they were highly entertaining. But here, at age 30, she busts loose and gives a great performance that zeroes in on the bawdy humor and also includes singing and dancing. Simply marvelous.
Her main nemesis is the Duchess of Portsmouth (Jean De Casalis), and their exchanges are hilarious, culminating in Nell's stage act that shames the ambitious French woman. I've always admired Neagle for her dramatic roles as Queen Victoria and Edith Cavell as well as her 40s musicals with Wilding, but the role of Nell Gwyn is nothing like her others. It's truly good stuff.
Her main nemesis is the Duchess of Portsmouth (Jean De Casalis), and their exchanges are hilarious, culminating in Nell's stage act that shames the ambitious French woman. I've always admired Neagle for her dramatic roles as Queen Victoria and Edith Cavell as well as her 40s musicals with Wilding, but the role of Nell Gwyn is nothing like her others. It's truly good stuff.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizWhen the movie was presented to the American censors, they asked for 35 cuts, and suggested a "moral" ending with Nell marrying the King!
- Curiosità sui creditiDIALOGUE: King Charles II Nell Gwynn Samuel Pepys ADDITIONAL DIALOGUE: Miles Malleson
- Versioni alternativeThe American censors ordered that footage be added showing King Charles II and Nell marrying, and that a prologue and epilogue be put into the US release of the film showing Nell ending up an old hag in the gutter, with the British-filmed portion of the film presented as a long flashback.
- ConnessioniFeatured in Shepperton Babylon (2005)
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- How long is Nell Gwyn?Powered by Alexa
Dettagli
- Tempo di esecuzione1 ora 25 minuti
- Colore
- Proporzioni
- 1.37 : 1
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By what name was La favorita di Carlo II (1934) officially released in Canada in English?
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