Say Hello to Yesterday

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Directed byAlvin Rakoff
Screenplay byAlvin Rakoff and Peter King (from an original story by Alvin Rakoff and Ray Mathew)
Produced byJosef Shaftel
Say Hello to Yesterday
Theatrical Release Poster
Directed byAlvin Rakoff
Screenplay byAlvin Rakoff and Peter King (from an original story by Alvin Rakoff and Ray Mathew)
Produced byJosef Shaftel
StarringJean Simmons
Leonard Whiting
Evelyn Laye
Derek Francis
Geoffrey Bayldon
James Cossins
Frank Middlemass
Gwen Nelson
CinematographyGeoffrey Unsworth
Edited byRalph Sheldon
Music byRiz Ortolani
Production
company
Joseph Shaftel Productions
Distributed byCinerama Releasing Corporation
Release date
  • January 14, 1971 (1971-01-14) (Premiere)
Running time
96 minutes
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish
Budget$1.2 million[1] or more than £500,000[2]

Say Hello to Yesterday is a 1971 British romantic comedy-drama film directed by Alvin Rakoff and starring Jean Simmons and Leonard Whiting. It was written by Rakoff and Peter King, based on an original story by Rakoff and Ray Mathew.

Say Hello to Yesterday covers 10 hours in the life of a suburban housewife.

On a winter morning in an affluent suburb, the Woman – having just said goodbye to her stockbroker husband and their two young children – is going to London, shopping. She drives to the station which is shown as Cobham (referencing Cobham, Surrey or Cobham, Kent). Among the crowd, as she boards the train is the Boy. It is his birthday today and he's determined to make the day a different one.

The Boy moves up and down the crowded corridors. The Woman in her non-smoking compartment badly wants a cigarette and starts to scrape away a 'No Smoking' sign. The Boy is attracted by this middle class rebellion, pulls the sign off and presents it to her and tries to engage her in conversation.

Later, battling her way into a department store she finds he has followed her. Leaving the store, she thinks she has lost him. But he catches up with her on a crowded pavement. She tries to throw him off, he finds her again. She flees to her mother's apartment – followed by the Boy. The Woman is desperately embarrassed and tries to explain, but her mother treats the whole thing lightly and the Woman learns with surprise that her parents both had affairs with other people during the war. Mother says 'He's good for you. If you have an affair with that boy you'll regret it. On the other hand, if you don't have an affair with him you'll also regret it...' He tells an estate agent that he is a successful talent agent and gets the keys to an empty flat. The Woman and the Boy have sex together there. He tells her that he loves her and suggests they have an affair, but she declines his offer. She goes to London Victoria station and goes home.

Cast

Actor Role
Jean SimmonsThe Woman
Leonard WhitingThe Boy
Evelyn LayeThe Woman's mother
Derek Francispark keeper
Geoffrey Bayldonestate agent
James Cossinspoliceman
Edward Atienzaporter
Frank Middlemassstation master
Gwen Nelsonchar at Labour Exchange
Constance ChapmanThe Boy's mother (uncredited)
Jack WoolgarThe Boy's father (uncredited)
Ellis Daletrain passenger (uncredited)
Harry Fielderbus conductor (uncredited)
Susan Penhaligongirl on train (uncredited)
Jimmy Gardnerballoon seller (uncredited)

Production

According to Rakoff, Say Hello to Yesterday was "a 1970 Brief Encounter a picture designed purely for entertainment, with no morals or messages unless the public like to find them."[3]

Jean Simmons returned to London after a five-year absence to star in the film.[citation needed]

According to Rakoff, "The original title was to have been Whatever Happened to Happy Endings? but Cinerama didn't want to use this title, partly because Jean Simmons had just starred in and been Academy Award nominated for, the similarly titled The Happy Ending and partly because Cinerama feared that because Whatever Happened to Baby Jane? was a film of the era and there was a series of Whatever Happened... films, they might be sued by other companies."[4]

The song played during the closing credits was sung by Mark Wynter.[5][6][7]

Filming took ten weeks in London at Twickenham Studios and in:

London[8]

  • Victoria station.
  • King's Road.
  • The corner of King's Road and Cheltenham Terrace in Chelsea.
  • Tryon street.
  • Chelsea common, Cale street.
  • Godfrey street(n°11).
  • Holland Park.(The gateway to Holland Park on Kensington High Street, Orangery, fountain).
  • The River Thames with the Houses of Parliament on the left and Westminster Bridge in the centre, as seen from high above Millbank Tower.
  • Tisbury Court.
  • Berwick Street.
  • Walker’s Court.
  • St. Martin's Court (with Wyndham's Theatre on the left).
  • Marylebone road.
  • Marloes Road.
  • Knightsbridge Green,1.
  • London House on Avenue Road NW8.

Slough

  • 18 Franklin Avenue.
  • 342 Edinburg Avenue.
  • Victoria Road.
  • 92 Uxbridge Road.

Ascot railway station

Music

Music was by Riz Ortolani. He was not the choice of the director who cut the film to the music of Joni Mitchell and Donovan's "Colours".[9]

Reception

References

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