Sunrise at Campobello (play): Difference between revisions
Line 54: | Line 54: | ||
* A peer-reviewed study in 2003 determined that Roosevelt's paralytic illness was more likely caused by [[Guillain-Barré syndrome]], not [[polio]]. See separate article on [[Franklin D. Roosevelt's paralytic illness]]. |
* A peer-reviewed study in 2003 determined that Roosevelt's paralytic illness was more likely caused by [[Guillain-Barré syndrome]], not [[polio]]. See separate article on [[Franklin D. Roosevelt's paralytic illness]]. |
||
{{TonyAwardBestPlay 1948-1969}} |
|||
[[Category:Broadway plays]] |
[[Category:Broadway plays]] |
||
[[Category:American plays]] |
[[Category:American plays]] |
Revision as of 04:24, 1 August 2007
Sunrise at Campobello | |
---|---|
Written by | Dore Schary |
Characters | Franklin Delano Roosevelt Eleanor Roosevelt Sara Delano Roosevelt |
Date premiered | January 30, 1958 |
Subject | FDR's battle with polio |
Setting | New Brunswick, Canada |
Sunrise at Campobello is a Tony Award-winning stage play by American producer and writer Dore Schary based on U.S. President Franklin Delano Roosevelt's struggle with polio. The film version was released in 1960.
Stage version
The original Broadway production was presented at the Cort Theatre by The Theatre Guild and Dore Schary and directed by Vincent J. Donehue. It opened on January 30 1958 and closed on May 30 1959 running for 556 performances. It starred Ralph Bellamy as Roosevelt. Bellamy won a Tony Award for Best Actor. Others in the cast included Henry Jones as Louis McHenry Howe; Mary Fickett as Eleanor Roosevelt; Anne Seymour as Sara Delano Roosevelt and, in his Broadway debut, James Earl Jones.
The production won three other Tonys including Best Play (producers were Lawrence Langner, Theresa Helburn, Armina Marshall and Dore Schary), Best Director of a Play (Vincent J. Donehue) and Henry Jones won for Tony Award for Best Featured Actor in a Play.. Mary Fickett was nominated for Best Supporting or Featured Actress in a Play.
Campobello Island was Roosevelt's summer home in New Brunswick, Canada. Most of the play's actions take place there, where we see Roosevelt struggle to overcome the paralyzation of his legs. The play ends with the 1924 Democratic National Convention speech, which catapulted him back into politics after an absence of several years.
Film versions
1960
- Main aricle, see Sunrise at Campobello
The film version, released by Warner Bros., in 1960, starred Bellamy again with Greer Garson as Eleanor and Hume Cronyn as Louis Howe. The film also starred Jean Hagen, Tim Considine and Lyle Talbot. Ann Shoemaker who played FDR's mother, also played that role on Broadway after the original actress left the show.
Schary, who began his career in Hollywood wrote, directed and produced the film.
Despite it being perhaps Bellamy's most famous role, it was Greer Garson who received the critical attention. She won the Golden Globe and National Board of Review Award for Best Actress. The film received four Academy Award nominations: Best Actress (Garson), Art Direction, Sound and Costume Design.
2005
In 2005, HBO premiered an original production called Warm Springs, which was also based on FDR's struggle to overcome polio. It too, had a big ending at the 1924 convention. It starred Kenneth Branagh as FDR and Cynthia Nixon as Eleanor.
Trivia
- Bellamy would play Roosevelt again, in the television miniseries The Winds of War and War and Remembrance.
- Eleanor Roosevelt said of the play: "A good play, but as much like the Roosevelt family as some people from Mars."[citation needed]
- There has never been a Broadway revival of the play.
- Anthony Quayle was considered as Roosevelt, but it was decided that it had to be an American actor.
- A peer-reviewed study in 2003 determined that Roosevelt's paralytic illness was more likely caused by Guillain-Barré syndrome, not polio. See separate article on Franklin D. Roosevelt's paralytic illness.