Sweet Bird of Youth thumbnail
Sweet Bird of Youth
Synopsis
Paul Newman recreates his Broadway role in the 1962 film version of Tennessee Williams' Sweet Bird of Youth. Newman plays handsome hustler Chance Wayne, who romances fading film star Alexandra Del Lago (Geraldine Page) in hopes of winning a movie contract for himself. The mercenary Wayne and the self-destructive Alexandra find themselves in Chance's home town, where corrupt politician Boss Finley (Oscar-winner Ed Begley) rules the roost. Finley's daughter Heavenly (Shirley Knight), impregnated by Chance during his last visit, dreams of a reunion with her old beau, but Finley and his brutish son Tom Jr. (Rip Torn) make certain that no such reunion occurs. Even the well-intentioned interventions of Heavenly's Aunt Nonny (Mildred Dunnock) fail to move the stubborn Finley. Warned to leave town or risk a broken skull, Chance is dumped by Alexandra, whose recent comeback film has proven a success and who thus no longer needs a gigolo to feed her ego. From this point on, Richard Brooks' screenplay departs so radically from the Tennessee Williams original that to elucidate the differences would require a book in itself. Suffice to say that the play's Chance Wayne is rendered less than a man by the vengeful Finley, whereas the film's Wayne emerges with all his working parts intact. A second version Sweet Bird of Youth (1989), purportedly based on Williams' own rewrite of his earlier material, was filmed for television in 1989, with Elizabeth Taylor and Mark Harmon in the leads, and with Rip Torn, Tom Finley Jr. in the original, stepping into the role of Boss Finley.~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
Watch at home
Full Credits
  • Director:
    Richard Brooks,
  • Writer:
    Richard Brooks, Tennessee Williams,
  • Producer:
    Pandro S. Berman,
  • Cinematographer:
    Milton Krasner,
  • Editor:
    Henry Berman,
  • Cast:
    Mildred Dunnock, Paul Newman, Shirley Knight, Geraldine Page, Rip Torn, Ed Begley, Shirley Knight,
  • Associate Producer:
    Kathryn Hereford,
  • Theatre Play:
    Tennessee Williams,
  • Set Decoration:
    Hugh Hunt, Henry Grace,
  • Other:
    Joan Joseff,
  • Costume Design:
    Orry-Kelly,
  • Art Direction:
    Urie McCleary, George W. Davis,
  • Recording Supervision:
    Franklin Milton,
  • Special Effects:
    Lee LeBlanc,
  • Color Assistant:
    Charles K. Hagedon,
  • Hairstylist:
    Sydney Guilaroff,
  • Makeup Artist:
    William Tuttle, John Truwe,
  • Assistant Director:
    Hank Moonjean,
  • Screenplay:
    Richard Brooks,
  • Stunts:
    Charles Bail,

Technical specifications

Sweet Bird of Youth logo