Hollywood comes to Dunstable
This was a costume melodrama with Miss Hobson, fresh from a huge success in David Lean’s Great Expectations, playing the title role of a governess who witnesses a murder.
One of the dramatic scenes involved the two stars riding on horseback over the Dunstable downsland, and then having a rough encounter with gipsies in a Romany encampment.
Advertisement
Hide AdAdvertisement
Hide AdA Gazette photographer took these pictures between takes and the negatives have just been traced by Luton Museum’s Chris Grabham among the Gazette’s collection at Wardown Park.
Alas, there’s nothing recognisably Dunstable in the finished film, and the gipsy caravans were probably sited on another location.
The film also starred Walter Fitzgerald and Michael Gough and was produced by Valerie Hobson’s husband Anthony Havelock-Allen.
They divorced in 1952, just before she took the lead role in the first London stage production of the musical The King and I, at Drury Lane.
Advertisement
Hide AdAdvertisement
Hide AdA notable figure on the Dunstable location was the cinematographer Guy Green, a key figure in numerous classic movies.
> Yesteryear is compiled by John Buckledee, chairman of Dunstable and District Local History Society