Death of an Angel

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Directed byCharles Saunders
Written byFrank King (story)
Reginald Long (screenplay)
Produced byAnthony Hinds
Starring
Death of an Angel
Opening titles
Directed byCharles Saunders
Written byFrank King (story)
Reginald Long (screenplay)
Produced byAnthony Hinds
Starring
CinematographyWalter J. Harvey
Edited byJohn Ferris
Music byFrank Spencer
Production
company
Distributed byExclusive Films
Release date
  • February 1952 (1952-02)
(UK)[1]
Running time
64 minutes
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish

Death of an Angel is a 1952 British 'B'[2] crime drama directed by Charles Saunders and starring Patrick Barr, Jane Baxter and Jean Lodge.[3] The screenplay was by Reginald Long, based on an original story called This is Mary's Chair by Dr. Frank King. It was filmed at Bray Studios 2 – 27 April 1951. It was trade shown at the Hammer Theatre on 17 January 1952, and opened in February.[4]

Dr. Welling, a doctor in a small rural town who has been suffering ill-health, asks young Dr. Boswell to move there and become a partner in his medical practice. Later, Dr. Welling's wife is poisoned, and Welling becomes a suspect. Dr. Boswell attempts to find out who killed her, and discovers that Dr. Welling is innocent. He had suspected that his wife was poisoning him in their nightly glasses of milk, and one evening swaps the glasses. When he returns from a night call, he finds his wife on the verge of death, sends her to the hospital, then goes on the run. Eventually it emerges that it was not his wife who was poisoning him, and another life is placed in danger before the real killer is discovered and falls to their death while being pursued by the police.

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