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Wherever She Goes

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Wikipedia article




'Wherever She Goes' is a 1951 Australian feature film that tells the early part of the life story of pianist Eileen Joyce. Directed by Michael Gordon, it stars Suzanne Parrett, Eileen Joyce, Nigel Lovell and Muriel Steinbeck.

Synopsis



Eileen Joyce is born on the Tasmanian coast and becomes fascinated with music after hearing a man named Daniel play a mouth organ. When her parents decide to move the family to the Kalgoorlie goldfields Eileen sees a piano and resolves to play it. Her father's mine fails and the family has to live in a tent.

Eileen is given an old piano as a Christmas gift and soon becomes a child prodigy. She enters a local music carnival and wins. The story ends when she leaves Kalgoorlie to go to Perth, then flashes forward to a grown up Eileen playing in a concert.

Cast



*Suzanne Parrett as young Eileen Joyce

*Muriel Steinbeck as Mrs Joyce

*Nigel Lovell as Will Joyce

*George Wallace as the stage manager

*Eileen Joyce as herself (non-speaking role)

*Tim Drysdale as John Joyce

*Rex Dawe as Mr James

*Syd Chambers

*John Wiltshire as Daniel

* Harold Bourne as Bob

Production



The film was one of several planned by independent companies in association with Ealing Studios to use Pagewood Studios in between official Ealing productions.

The director was Michael Gordon (1909 – 2008), an English film editor, and it was the only full-length feature film he directed.[https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0330458/?ref_=tt_ov_dr IMDB "Michael Gordon (III)"]. Retrieved 4 April 2015 He had given a copy of the book on which the film was based to his children, and his wife suggested that it would make a good film.[http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article23155854 "SCREEN: Suzanne Parrett is an up and coming star." 'The Argus (Melbourne)' 5 Jan 1952: 12] Both the book and the film were highly fictionalised accounts of Joyce's life.[http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article18067152 'Eileen And The Wild Wolves.' 'The Sydney Morning Herald' 9 Apr 1948: 2] The opening credits of the film state that only the two children were real people and everyone else was fictionalised.

Gordon arrived in Australia in August 1949 to start work on the film. Eileen Joyce herself is shown at the start and end of the film, performing the Grieg Piano Concerto in A minor, but she was primarily played by Suzanne Parrett, who never made another film. Parrett's hand double was Pamela Page.Andrew Pike and Ross Cooper, 'Australian Film 19001977: A Guide to Feature Film Production', Melbourne: Oxford University Press, 1998, 211.

The bulk of the movie was shot at Pagewood Studios in Sydney, with some location filming in Kalgoorlie and the Huon Valley. It features the last screen performance of comedian George Wallace, who plays a stage manager. The cast also includes Tim Drysdale, son of Australian artist Russell Drysdale.

Reception



The film had its Australian premiere at The Strand Theatre in Hobart, and was introduced by Tasmanian Premier Robert Cosgrove. It was one of the few Australian films of the time to receive a cinema release in the United States as well as the UK, but box office receipts were poor and critical reception mixed[http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article27527311 'Mixed Reception For Eileen Joyce Film.' 'The Sydney Morning Herald' 29 Jan 1953: 3][http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article18495698 "NOTES ON FILMS." 'The Sunday Herald (Sydney)' 28 Jan 1951: 4 Supplement: Features] although Suzanne Parrett's performance was praised.[http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article48647153 'Charms Critics' 'Barrier Miner (Broken Hill)' 11 Jul 1951: 9]

'Filmink' later argued "Steinbeck should have played the title role but is wasted in the part of her mother."

References




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