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IMDbPro

A Touch of the Sun

  • 1956
  • 1h 20m
IMDb RATING
5.4/10
202
YOUR RATING
Frankie Howerd, Ruby Murray, and Dennis Price in A Touch of the Sun (1956)
Comedy

Willie is a hall porter who is left a fortune but after living it up for a while he returns to his old hotel which is in financial difficulties.Willie is a hall porter who is left a fortune but after living it up for a while he returns to his old hotel which is in financial difficulties.Willie is a hall porter who is left a fortune but after living it up for a while he returns to his old hotel which is in financial difficulties.

  • Director
    • Gordon Parry
  • Writer
    • Alfred Shaughnessy
  • Stars
    • Frankie Howerd
    • Ruby Murray
    • Dennis Price
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.4/10
    202
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Gordon Parry
    • Writer
      • Alfred Shaughnessy
    • Stars
      • Frankie Howerd
      • Ruby Murray
      • Dennis Price
    • 12User reviews
    • 1Critic review
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos19

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    Top cast38

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    Frankie Howerd
    Frankie Howerd
    • William Darling
    Ruby Murray
    • Ruby
    Dennis Price
    Dennis Price
    • Digby Hatchard
    Dorothy Bromiley
    • Rose Blake
    Katherine Kath
    • Lucienne
    Gordon Harker
    Gordon Harker
    • Sid
    Reginald Beckwith
    Reginald Beckwith
    • Herbert Hardcastle
    Pierre Dudan
    • Louis
    Colin Gordon
    Colin Gordon
    • Cecil Flick
    Richard Wattis
    Richard Wattis
    • Purchase
    Alfie Bass
    Alfie Bass
    • May
    Miriam Karlin
    Miriam Karlin
    • Alice Cann
    Willoughby Goddard
    Willoughby Goddard
    • Golightly
    Nana Aslanoglu
    Nana Aslanoglu
    • Belly Dancer
    • (as Aiché Nana)
    George Margo
    • Howard Cann
    Esma Cannon
    Esma Cannon
    • Miss Tickle
    Lucy Griffiths
    • Aggie
    • (as Lucy Griffith)
    Naomi Chance
    Naomi Chance
    • Miss Caroline Lovejoy
    • Director
      • Gordon Parry
    • Writer
      • Alfred Shaughnessy
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews12

    5.4202
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    Featured reviews

    4richardchatten

    "By the holy saints, what's goin' on in this hotel?"

    An ambitious but fascinatingly shambolic attempt at a big screen vehicle for Frankie Howerd (that morphs into a rehash of 'The Happiest Days of Your Lives') that simply ensured that he henceforth concentrated on cabaret and TV.

    The sleazy North Country financial backers played by Alfie Bass (who is hardly inside the door before he promptly propositions receptionist Dorothy Bromley with the smooth chat up line "Give us a kiss love!!") and Reginald Beckwith (who gets so drunk he propositions a dragged-up Howerd) demonstrated over sixty years before the Harvey Weinstein scandal that this sort of thing had been going on since the days of Herod.
    8xmasparty_2003

    Delightful British Farce!

    Despite somewhat low vote averages, this classic Frankie Howerd film is one of the better 1950s British farces. Howerd, playing a hotel concierge, inherits a sum of money, and decides to use it for a holiday in the south of France. All manner of hilarious debacles follow, leading Howerd to the conclusion that he was better off in the first place.

    Among some of the better character parts are performed by Ruby Murray, one of Ireland's greatest pop singers of the 1950s, Dennis Price (The Pure Hell of St Trinians), Alfie Bass (Are You Being Served?), and John Vere (Hancock's Half Hour). Alfred Shaughnessy's script is sharp and witty, and most of the humor holds to the present.
    5The-Other-Monkey

    Howerd's Way!

    A surprisingly low key (for him!) performance from Frankie Howerd as a hotel concierge. He longs for the quiet life on the French Riviera and when he inherits some money off he goes.

    However, despite his best efforts, he can't get any rest and decides to go back to the hotel. He then has to save the hotel from closing by persuading three "ey up, reet grand" northern businessmen to invest in the hotel. Of course he succeeds and gets the girl.

    A cheerful British comedy helped along with able support from, Denis Price, Gordon Harker, Richard Wattis, Alfie Bas and Colin Gordon. Just enough laughs to cheer you up on a wet weekend!
    6CinemaSerf

    A Touch of the Sun

    I was never a great fan of Frankie Howerd's brand of comedy, but he's actually not bad in this rather quirkily entertaining tale of rags to riches. He is "Darling" who takes great pleasure in quitting as an hotel porter when he is left a small fortune. He soon bores of the high life and returns to his former workplace only to find it's struggling. He sees a chance to rescue it, settle a few old scores - and maybe even turn a profit if he can rope in a few gullible investors. To that latter end, he galvanises the staff and some of their friends to create the impression that this is a bustling, thriving, business that is a must-have for anyone looking to get into the hotel business. Howerd tones down his usual style of smutty humour here and tempered by the practically minded "Ruby" (Ruby Murray) and the odd dignifying appearance from manager "Hatchard" (Dennis Price) delivers a quickly moving story of the grass not always being greener. If nothing else, it does serve as a reminder of just what we were watching back then - simple comedy themes rather over-delivered, and though it's a bit on the long side I found it an OK watch.
    7robert-temple-1

    A very funny early Frankie Howerd film

    Frankie Howerd began appearing in feature films in 1954 (THE RUNAWAY BUS), but by 1956 he had this comedy star vehicle, in which he truly shines. Back then, he was far more restrained than he became later. There were not so many oohs nor so much suggestive sexual innuendo as appeared in his later persona. Nor did he 'take over', but instead he played a role in a definable story. This film is extremely amusing, and works very well. It is good to see the excellent Gordon Harker lending his support, though I wished his role had been larger. A young Irish popular singer from Belfast named Ruby Murray, aged 21, is given a role in the film. It is the only film in which she ever appeared. She gets to sing, of course. Her acting is sweetly amateurish, which in my opinion only adds to her elfin charm. Pardon my ignorance of Irish singers of the 1950s, but I plead that one cannot know everything, and hence I have to confess I had never previously heard of her. But it seems that she was 'one of the most successful Irish singers of all time'. Well done, then, she and John MacCormack (a friend of my wife's grandparents). Ireland is 'busting out all over' with talent and always has been, and whether green or orange, they are all very charming, apart from the ones who blow everybody up, that is. (As someone who is both part Irish and part Ulster, I consider myself a potential cross-border phenomenon and wish they would just all learn how to get along and stop causing trouble.) Alfred Shaughnessy, later famous for writing the hit TV series UPSTAIRS DOWNSTAIRS (1971-1975), wrote the story and script for this film, and that helps explain why it is so good. There is plenty of wit, but the story is a satirical one. Frank Howerd plays a hall porter in a swank London hotel (swank for 1956, that is, though we would not call it that now) who inherits a lot of money from an elderly customer of the hotel who had taken a fancy to him. He quits his job and fulfils his dream of going off to the French Riviera to live the life of Riley (there's those Irish again), but finds it dull and empty so that he longs to go back to his old life. He uses what is left of his inherited fortune to buy the hotel where he once worked, but has none left for operations costs. For that, he is dependent upon a favourable investment decision by a group of three hard-nosed Yorkshire businessmen. The film has wonderful opportunities to make fun of the Yorkshiremen, with their clipped accents, bluntness, and naïve susceptibility to being impressed by titles. Frank gets his old chums who had been on the staff of the hotel before it closed to come and work for free while the Yorkshiremen visit, but to dress up in outrageous disguises (he himself masquerades successfully as a duchess!) to try to fool the potential investors into believing that the failed hotel is a centre of high society, patronised by the rich and titled. There are many opportunities for high comedy as the staff rush from room to room changing costumes and wigs, to maintain the fiction. This is all good fun, and will cheer up anybody suffering from a dreary, wet British afternoon.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Ruby Murray receives an "introducing" credit .
    • Soundtracks
      In Love
      Music by Norrie Paramor (uncredited)

      Lyrics by Jack Fishman (uncredited)

      Sung by Ruby Murray

      with Norrie Paramor (uncredited) and His Orchestra

      As recorded on Columbia Records

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • October 1956 (United Kingdom)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Auringon kosketus
    • Filming locations
      • Nettlefold Studios, Walton-on-Thames, Surrey, England, UK(studio: made at)
    • Production company
      • Raymond Stross Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 20 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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