The Trouble with Angels (film)

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The Trouble with Angels
File:The Trouble with Angels (theatrical poster).jpg
Theatrical release poster
Directed by Ida Lupino
Produced by William Frye
Screenplay by Blanche Hanalis
Based on Life With Mother Superior
1962 novel
by Jane Trahey[1]
Starring Rosalind Russell
Hayley Mills
June Harding
Music by Jerry Goldsmith
Frank De Vol
Cinematography Lionel Lindon
Edited by Robert C. Jones
Distributed by Columbia Pictures
Release dates
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  • March 30, 1966 (1966-03-30)
Running time
112 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Budget $2 million
Box office $4.1 million (rentals)[2]

The Trouble with Angels is a 1966 comedy film about the adventures of two girls in an all-girls Catholic school run by nuns. The film was directed by Ida Lupino and stars Hayley Mills (in her first film after her contract with Walt Disney expired), Rosalind Russell and June Harding.

The film's cast also includes Marge Redmond (who would play a nun in the television series The Flying Nun which premiered the following year) as math teacher Sister Liguori, Mary Wickes (who later on in her career played a nun in the movie Sister Act and its sequel Sister Act 2: Back in the Habit) as gym teacher Sister Clarissa, and Portia Nelson as art teacher Sister Elizabeth (who also played a nun in The Sound of Music).

A sequel to The Trouble with Angels, called Where Angels Go, Trouble Follows was released in 1968.

Plot

The movie is set at St. Francis Academy (also the name of the school in Sister Act 2), a fictional all-girls Catholic boarding school in Pennsylvania, operated by an order of nuns. Rosalind Russell plays the Mother Superior, who spends the movie at odds with Mary Clancy (Hayley Mills), a rebellious teenager, and her friend Rachel Devry (June Harding). The episodic storyline follows the young women through their sophomore, junior and senior high-school years as they pull pranks on the sisters and repeatedly get in trouble. After spending much of the film resenting the authority of the Mother Superior, Mary receives the "call" senior year and, after graduation, remains at the school in the novitiate of the order.

Cast

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The Nuns:

The Girls:

  • Hayley Mills as Mary Clancy
  • June Harding as Rachel Devry
  • Barbara Hunter as Marvel-Ann
  • Bernadette Withers as Valerie
  • Vicky Albright as Charlotte
  • Patty Gerrity as Sheila
  • Vicki Draves as Kate
  • Wendy Winkelman as Sandy
  • Jewel Jaffe as Ginnie-Lou
  • Gail Liddle as Priscilla
  • Michael-Marie as Ruth
  • Betty Jane Royale as Gladys
  • Ronne Troup as Helen
  • Catherine Wyles as Brigette

The Outsiders:

Background

The Trouble with Angels was based on the book, Life with Mother Superior by Jane Trahey about her own high-school years at a Catholic school near Chicago, Illinois in the 1930s. While in the novel the school was portrayed as a boarding school outside the city, Trahey attended what is now Providence-St. Mel's High School, which was a day school. Many of the incidents mentioned in the book were based on Trahey's experiences at Mundelein College in Chicago. The character of Mary Clancy (Mills) was based on Jane's friend, Mary, who later became Sister John Eudes, a Sinsinawa Dominican nun.

Production

The Trouble with Angels was filmed from September to December 1965. The St. Francis Academy in the film was filmed on location at St. Mary's Home for Children in Ambler, Pennsylvania. All interior shots were filmed at Columbia Studios at Sunset & Gower in Hollywood. The exterior train depot scenes at the opening and closing of the movie were shot at an abandoned rail station ( which still exists) in Duarte, California. The film was budgeted at $2 million.[3]

Impact

The film marked a departure for Mills, who was attempting to emerge from her juvenile leads in Walt Disney-produced teen comedies as a comedic actress.

The Trouble with Angels enjoyed good reviews and enough success to warrant a sequel (Where Angels Go, Trouble Follows). However, Mills opted not to reprise her role as the progressive protagonist and was replaced by Stella Stevens, who played Sister George, foil to Rosalind Russell’s Mother Superior. Variety magazine said "An appealing story idea...hip Mother Superior nun who outfoxes and matures two rebellious students in a Catholic girls' school...has lost impact via repetitious plotting and pacing, plus routine direction".[3]

Cameos

Burlesque performer Gypsy Rose Lee appears in a small role.

An uncredited Jim Hutton appears briefly as the principal of a competing school.

See also

References

External links