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Piangerò domani

Titolo originale: I'll Cry Tomorrow
  • 1955
  • T
  • 1h 57min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
7,2/10
2641
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Piangerò domani (1955)
Deprived of a normal childhood by her ambitious mother, Katie, Lillian Roth becomes a star of Broadway and Hollywood before she is twenty. Shortly before her marriage to her childhood sweetheart, David Tredman, he dies and Lillian takes her first drink of many down the road of becoming an alcoholic. She enters into a short-lived marriage to an immature aviation cadet, Wallie, followed by a divorce and then marriage to a sadistic brute and abuser Tony Bardeman. After a failed suicide attempt, Burt McGuire comes to her aid and helps her find the road back to happiness after sixteen years in a nightmare world, not counting the first twenty with her mother.
Riproduci trailer3: 00
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35 foto
BiographyDramaMusic

Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaSusan Hayward stars as singer-actress Lillian Roth, whose rise to stardom was nearly destroyed by alcoholism.Susan Hayward stars as singer-actress Lillian Roth, whose rise to stardom was nearly destroyed by alcoholism.Susan Hayward stars as singer-actress Lillian Roth, whose rise to stardom was nearly destroyed by alcoholism.

  • Regia
    • Daniel Mann
  • Sceneggiatura
    • Helen Deutsch
    • Jay Richard Kennedy
    • Lillian Roth
  • Star
    • Susan Hayward
    • Richard Conte
    • Eddie Albert
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    7,2/10
    2641
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    • Regia
      • Daniel Mann
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Helen Deutsch
      • Jay Richard Kennedy
      • Lillian Roth
    • Star
      • Susan Hayward
      • Richard Conte
      • Eddie Albert
    • 40Recensioni degli utenti
    • 21Recensioni della critica
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
    • Vincitore di 1 Oscar
      • 5 vittorie e 5 candidature totali

    Video1

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    Trailer 3:00
    Trailer

    Foto35

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    Interpreti principali99+

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    Susan Hayward
    Susan Hayward
    • Lillian Roth
    Richard Conte
    Richard Conte
    • Tony Bardeman
    Eddie Albert
    Eddie Albert
    • Burt McGuire
    Jo Van Fleet
    Jo Van Fleet
    • Katie Roth
    Don Taylor
    Don Taylor
    • Wallie
    Ray Danton
    Ray Danton
    • David Tredman
    Margo
    Margo
    • Selma
    Virginia Gregg
    Virginia Gregg
    • Ellen
    Don 'Red' Barry
    Don 'Red' Barry
    • Jerry
    • (as Don Barry)
    David Kasday
    David Kasday
    • David as a Child
    Carole Ann Campbell
    • Lillian as a Child
    Peter Leeds
    Peter Leeds
    • Richard
    Tol Avery
    Tol Avery
    • Fat Man
    Don Anderson
    Don Anderson
    • Party Guest
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    Walter Bacon
    • Alcoholics Anonymous Patient
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    Brandon Beach
    • Party Guest
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    Mary Bear
    • Wife
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    Margaret Bert
    • Woman at Alcoholics Anonymous Meeting
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    • Regia
      • Daniel Mann
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Helen Deutsch
      • Jay Richard Kennedy
      • Lillian Roth
    • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
    • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

    Recensioni degli utenti40

    7,22.6K
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    Recensioni in evidenza

    10bkoganbing

    My Life Was Never My Own

    I'll Cry Tomorrow was the title of the autobiography of Lillian Roth, former singing star of the Twenties and Early Thirties whose career like her contemporary Helen Morgan took a nose dive into the toilet. Unlike Morgan, Roth survived to tell about it and became one of the first name clients of Alcholics Anonymous.

    That does seem like an oxymoron because as an organization AA does survive on the anonymity of its members. But Lillian Roth went public with her story as a warning to those becoming to dependent on alcohol.

    Susan Hayward gave one of her best screen performances ever in essaying the part of Lillian Roth. In fact she does her own singing here and even made a record of four of the songs she sang in this film, When the Red Red Robin, Happiness Is Just a Thing Called Joe, Sing You Sinners, and Waltz Hugette. She had previously played singers in With a Song In My Heart and Smash-Up, but was dubbed by others.

    Hayward was an amazing talent, even in some of her worst films she comes across like no other actress. Even Bette Davis who could chew scenery in a bad film to make it entertaining could never hold a candle to my fellow Brooklynite, Susan Hayward. That she could sing too, is no surprise to me.

    Probably Lillian Roth's best known screen roles are in Cecil B. DeMille's Madam Satan, in the Marx Brothers comedy, Animal Crackers and in the first screen version of the Vagabond King. The first two are out, I wish the third was also, a print might no longer exist.

    Jo Van Fleet played Hayward's mother, the Jewish stage mother from the lower depths. Van Fleet gave one of her most acclaimed performances here. Her Jewish New York accent is the only clue to Lillian's ethnic background. It's a sad portrayal of a woman who both lived vicariously through her daughter and is pushing her because she wants her not to have as tough a life as she had.

    Richard Conte, Ray Danton, Don Taylor, and Eddie Albert all play men in in Roth's life and though the protagonist is a woman, each of the guys makes an indelible image. Ray Danton plays her boyhood fiancé who dies young and helps start Lillian's downward spiral. In that Roth's story was very similar to that other star of the Twenties Marilyn Miller who lost a husband early and never recovered from it. That's all depicted in the Marilyn Miller biographical film, Look for the Silver Lining from 20th Century Fox a few years before this.

    Hayward got a deserved Oscar nomination for this part, but lost to Anna Magnani. That was a year for substance abuse because Frank Sinatra got a nomination for playing a junkie in The Man With the Golden Arm. Both Sue and Frank went through gut wrenching withdrawal scenes in both films.

    I'll Cry Tomorrow is always listed among the five best films of Susan Hayward's. It's some people's personal favorite and while mine happens to be I Want to Live, this one is right up there.
    6jhkp

    "This story was filmed on location...inside a woman's soul!"

    MGM director Charles Walters was originally assigned to I'll Cry Tomorrow; and wanted to cast June Allyson (who was not unlike the young Lillian Roth, in some respects). Walters wanted to start with Roth as an innocent girl, slowly chipping away at the surface, until the innocence was eaten away by fear. He knew June was tougher than people realized, and was certain she would excel. They had been working on the role, when Susan Hayward decided she wanted it. Taking her case to Roth herself, she eventually prevailed, causing Walters to quit, noting that Hayward had already played an alcoholic, in Smash Up (1947), and a famous singer who faced tragedy, in With A Song In My Heart (1952). By the way, if you sometimes get all three of these pictures mixed up, join the club.

    At any rate, there are people who think Hayward was brilliant in this film, and those who feel she overdid it. Not over-acting, but perhaps, over-feeling. I fall into the latter category. She starts in a rather high gear, and just goes higher. While she's commendably emotional, and touching, I think we lose track of the story and the character, due to the focus on unbridled histrionics. Eventually, she just seems to be devouring everything in her path - including the movie. If this fascinates you, well, it fascinated me, too, but is it a performance?

    Jo Van Fleet (in the role Walters wanted Mary Astor for) doesn't exactly back away from the big gesture, herself. A good actress with a nice understanding of the material, she nonetheless pulls out the stops, giving us the long-suffering mama complete with European accent (Roth found this surprising, noting that her mother only had a Boston accent). Much younger than her part, she does a good job - but the histrionics may wear you out. Especially when she and Hayward go at it hammer and tong.

    As for the singing of Susan Hayward, you probably won't be asking yourself what took her so long to decide to sing in motion pictures. She does reasonably well, but it's not the voice or style of a successful professional singer.

    Towards the end, we have Eddie Albert and his real-life wife, Margo (whom you may remember had a problem when she tried to leave Shangri-La, in Lost Horizon, back in 1937). They help Susan - I mean, Lillian - get back on her feet, with the assistance of Alcoholics Anonymous. If you're still around (and why not? It's a fairly gripping picture, overall) you may be touched, and a little relieved, that the shouting, and maybe even the singing, is over for a while.
    AndersonWhitbeck

    Susan Hayward's Superb

    This film was the 4th nominated performance for Susan Hayward portraying the true life story of Lillian Ross. Ms. Hayward a 20th star was on loan out to MGM to play this role a role coveted by many including Jane Wyman. This is the first of 3 films Susan Hayward starred in directed by Daniel Mann whom Susan Hayward proclaimed her favorite director.

    Jo Van Fleet, Ray Danton, Richard Conte et al fill out a superb cast but it is Ms. Hayward's commanding performance that grabs the viewer and doesn't let go. Hayward was a favorite to win the Oscar but lost to another Daniel Mann directed star Anna Magnani in Paramount's The Rose Tattoo.(Mann had quite a record directing strong actresses Shirley Booth in Paramount's Come Back Little Sheba and Elizabeth Taylor in MGM's Butterfield 8 won Oscars directed by Daniel Mann.Mann directed Paul Muni in the superb Columbia film The Last Angry Man, and of course directed Hayward in I'll Cry Tomorrow. 5 Nominated Performances 3 of which won Oscars! Quite a track record

    Ms. Hayward deemed this film her favorite of the many fine films she starred in, and Mr. Mann her favorite Director.
    secondtake

    Hayward alone makes this movie great, but the story is well told, too...

    I'll Cry Tomorrow (1955)

    Well, never mind the famous Alcoholics Anonymous ending, Susan Hayward is just fabulous through and through. This is a drama based on real life singer Lillian Roth, and Hayward (who does her own singing) pulls off both the successful early years and the decline into drinking. It's lively and vivid and tragic.

    Richard Conte is second billing, and a big name at this point in his career, but he's got a small, if important, role, perfectly suited to him. I just happened to see Conte and Hayward yesterday in a movie together, "House of Strangers" (from six years earlier). The relationship of their characters is more compact and complicated here, but in both cases Conte plays a cool type, smart and in control. But Conte here has two sides, is wonderfully manipulative, and ends up having his own demons that come from drinking too much.

    Hayward often plays strong characters, and emotional ones, and yet her approach is grounded with an inner calm. I'm not sure why she wasn't a legendary star the way Bette Davis and Ingrid Bergman and Joan Crawford were, because she acts her heart out and has good, rich roles. It's no surprise she got an Oscar nomination for this performance, just as she did for an earlier amazing performance as an alcoholic, the terrific 1949 "My Foolish Heart" across from Dana Andrews, who is a more compelling actor overall than Conte. Hayward did finally win that big Best Actress award for her gutsy performance in "I Want to Live" (where director Robert Wise made everything look good as well as come alive).

    Jo Van Vleet, who play's Lillian Roth's mother, is scary perfect as a controlling mother with seemingly good intentions. There's no shortage of movies about mothers who mess up their daughters by trying too hard ("Mommy Dearest" is the most famous, but it gets even more sordid in "Where Love Has Gone" with Hayward playing the mother).

    There is a terrible colorized version of "I'll Cry Tomorrow" out there which is best to avoid--it's a simple color palette applied across the board, and everyone comes off uniform and pasty. It matters less what color her hair is when it's simply colorless. That colorized version is also cropped (pan and scan) to fit the 4:3 format of television, and the original is shot with some helpful moderately wide widescreen expansiveness, so the edges of faces don't get chopped. Arthur Arling's cinematography is very good in the way that all movies were at this point, but it isn't remarkable on its own terms. The soundtrack, by the way, is interesting to many because it has Hayward singing rather rich versions of some standards of Roth's.
    drednm

    Superb Susan Hayward

    Superb performance by Susan Hayward as Lillian Roth.

    No eye for period detail, not even an attempt, and probably a lot of hooey biographically, BUT....

    Terrific performances by Susan Hayward as Lillian Roth and Jo Van Fleet as her mother. The two women give stunning performances.

    The film is a tad preachy with the AA message but Hayward and Van Fleet (born a year apart) are a feast. I don't think any actress ever gave better performances as a drunk than Hayward (SMASH-UP), And Van Fleet, who made her film debut in 1955, scored in this film as well as EAST OF EDEN and THE ROSE TATTOO--all in 1955! Richard Conte, Eddie Albert, Margo, Don Taylor, Virginia Gregg, Ray Danton, Henry Kulky, Veda Ann Borg, and Tol Avery co-star......

    Anyone know who did the singing voice for Hayward?

    Lillian Roth was a big stage star who made a few good films in the early 30s and always seemed likable.

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    Trama

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    Lo sapevi?

    Modifica
    • Quiz
      Prior to filming, Susan Hayward took the opportunity to study Lillian Roth's vocal style, tone and delivery when Miss Roth performed in Las Vegas. Moreover, the two women became friends during the production.
    • Blooper
      At the AA meeting, speakers give their full names. This is inconsistent with the anonymous nature of AA.
    • Citazioni

      [alcoholic Lillian is desperate for a drink - mother drops the glass bottle on the floor, shattering it]

      Lillian Roth: OH! Look what ya did! And ya DID IT ON PURPOSE! You're still trying to make me do what you want, to be what you want! I can't be anything except what I am! Look, look what did you drop that bottle for? What are you trying to do, drive me crazy? Go on, GET THE BOTTLE! GET IT NOW!

      Katie Roth: All right! All right! All right, it's my fault, huh? I made you become an actress, you didn't want to, all right. I've been a bad mother, you had to support me, all right! All right! ALL RIGHT, EVERYTHING! Just this, and for once in your life you're gonna hear it! Do you know at all why I did it, do you? No you don't! Do you know what kind of a life I had, do you know what it was like to live with your father, put up with his mistakes and afterwards to be left alone with nothing? No money, no career, not young anymore, nothing to fall back on? No you don't! You don't know at all what I tried to save you from, the kind of freedom I never had! I tried to give to you by making you LILLIAN ROTH!

      Lillian Roth: So you admit it! You invented Lillian Roth! All right, now look at me. I said look at me, don't turn your face away! I'm the looking glass you created to see yourself in! All right, all right see yourself now in me! Look at this ugly picture! And then GET OUTTA HERE! But keep this picture before your face for as LONG AS YOU LIVE!

      Katie Roth: It's true! Oh, God help me! I owe you this. Every single word of it is true.

    • Connessioni
      Featured in MGM Parade: Episodio #1.10 (1955)
    • Colonne sonore
      Sing You Sinners
      Music by W. Franke Harling (uncredited)

      Lyrics by Sam Coslow (uncredited)

      Sung and Danced by Susan Hayward (as Miss Hayward) and chorus

      Arranged and conducted by Charles Henderson (uncredited)

      Brief reprise in a medley montage by Susan Hayward (vocal) and Eddie Albert (piano)

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    Dettagli

    Modifica
    • Data di uscita
      • 25 dicembre 1955 (Stati Uniti)
    • Paese di origine
      • Stati Uniti
    • Lingua
      • Inglese
    • Celebre anche come
      • Mañana lloraré
    • Luoghi delle riprese
      • 300 East 5th Street, Los Angeles, California, Stati Uniti(exterior of original Hard Rock Cafe in Skid Row, seen as Roth walks past and enters stairway next door)
    • Azienda produttrice
      • Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM)
    • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

    Botteghino

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    • Budget
      • 2.147.000 USD (previsto)
    Vedi le informazioni dettagliate del botteghino su IMDbPro

    Specifiche tecniche

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    • Tempo di esecuzione
      1 ora 57 minuti
    • Colore
      • Black and White
    • Proporzioni
      • 1.85 : 1

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