84 Charing Cross Road
Brief Synopsis
Cast & Crew
David Jones
Anne Bancroft
Anthony Hopkins
Judi Dench
Betty Low
Kate Napier Brown
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
A writer's correspondence with a London book dealer leads to a close friendship.
Director
David Jones
Cast
Anne Bancroft
Anthony Hopkins
Judi Dench
Betty Low
Kate Napier Brown
Danielle Burns
Lee Burns
Connie Booth
Gwen Nelson
Zoe Hodges
J. Smith-cameron
Freda Rogers
Tony Todd
Charles Lewsen
Ronn Carroll
Jean De Baer
Maurice Denham
Max Harvey
Wendy Morgan
Kevin Mcclarnon
Tom Isbell
James Eckhouse
Anne Dyson
Michael John Mcgann
Eleanor David
Daniel Gerroll
Marty Glickman
Rebecca Bradley
David Davenport
Janet Dale
Barbara Thorn
Sam Stoneburner
Mercedes Ruehl
Bernie Passeltiner
Roger Ostime
Ian Mcneice
John Bardon
Crew
Gary Alper
Linda Armstrong
Randy Auerbach
Bi Benton
Carol Brock
Mel Brooks
Anthony Cain
Anthony Cain
Don Cerrone
Bill Chaiken
Bill Chaiken
Julia E Cort
Judy Courtney
Desmond Crowe
Louis Digiaimo
Eileen Diss
Richard Dobson
Eileen Eichenstein
George Fenton
Mark Fitzmartin
Peter Frampton
Paul Frift
Edward Gazero
Edward Gazero
Ken Golden
Jane Greenwood
Jeff Hammond
Helene Hanff
Steve Hedinger
Steve Hedinger
Geoffrey Helman
Lindy Hemming
Johanna Jensen Santi
David John
Marilyn Johnson
Jo Jones
Amy Kaplan
Alice Katz
Christine Kiolbassa
Gerry Levy
Jo Lustig
Mark Mcgann
Roseann Milano
Andy Nelson
D L Newton
Alan Paley
Edward Pisoni
Gretchen Rau
James Roose-evans
Steven Schottenfeld
Robert Stewart
Joyce Stoneman
Daniel L Turrett
Daniel L Turrett
Frank Vinall
Brian West
Hugh Whitemore
Chris Wimble
Ken Withers
Jake Wright
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Articles
84 Charing Cross Road - 84 Charing Cross Road
The story is based on the 1970 autobiographical book of the same name by New Yorker Helene Hanff, a playwright, magazine author, and scripter of many early television dramas. The book detailed the 20-year correspondence between her and Frank Doel, staff member of the antiquarian bookshop Marks & Co. Hanff, in search of long out-of-print classics and obscure British titles unavailable in the States, contacted the company at the titular London address in 1949 after seeing an ad for it in the Saturday Review of Literature. (Charing Cross Road, in fact, is known for its many booksellers.)
Doel's correspondence with Hanff was at first formal and related strictly to literature and the book business, but there soon developed a warm friendship, and their frequent letters took on subjects as diverse as cooking, sports, and their own personal lives, and occasionally included an exchange of gifts. Hanff and Doel never met face-to-face; he died in 1968 before she had a chance to visit. The bookstore closed not long after, and Hanff wrote about her 1971 visit to the empty but still-standing shop in a subsequent book, The Duchess of Bloomsbury Street.
84 Charing Cross Road was first adapted into a play by James Roose-Evans, which ran on Broadway for 96 performances between December 1982 and February 1983. It starred Ellen Burstyn as Helene and Joseph Maher as Frank and took place in her New York apartment and his bookstore. Whitemore, an old hand at turning books and plays into movies and television shows, opened up the action and also added another character not in the play, that of Frank Doel's wife Nora. She was played by Judi Dench, already a significant actor in British film, theater, and television. She has since gone on to great international success, winning a Best Supporting Actress Oscar® for Shakespeare in Love (1998) and nominated another five times. She was created Dame of the Order of the British Empire in 1988.
Ironically, Dench and her husband Michael Williams had turned down an offer to play the roles of Hanff and Doel on the British stage "because we thought it smacked of a recital eveningwhich goes to show what my judgment is!" Dench almost turned down the role of Nora, too. At the time, she did not enjoy film work (and insists she still will not watch herself on screen). Dench got on well with Hopkins, enjoying his witty humor and instinctual approach to characterization. It was only later, when they worked together on stage in Antony and Cleopatra, that she became aware of what she characterized as his volatile, intense temperament.
84 Charing Cross Road brought Bancroft a Best Actress Award from the British Academy (BAFTA). It also received BAFTA nominations for Dench and Whitemore and won Hopkins Best Actor at the Moscow International Film Festival.
The real Marks & Co. bookstore was most recently a wine bar but bears a plaque commemorating its connection to the book and film. There is also a plaque on the apartment building where Hanff lived at 305 E. 72nd St. in New York, which has been dubbed "Charing Cross House" in honor of the story. Hanff died in 1997 at the age of 80.
Director: David Hugh Jones
Producer: Mel Brooks
Screenplay: Hugh Whitemore, based on the play by James Roose-Evans and the book by Helene Hanff
Cinematography: Brian West
Editing: Chris Wimble
Original Music: George Fenton
Cast: Anne Bancroft (Helene Hanff), Anthony Hopkins (Frank P. Doel), Judi Dench (Nora Doel), Maurice Denham (George Martin), Mercedes Ruehl (Kay).
C-96m. Closed captioning.
by Rob Nixon
84 Charing Cross Road - 84 Charing Cross Road
Quotes
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Miscellaneous Notes
Winner of the first annual Scripter Award, given by the Friends of the University of Southern California (USC) Libraries, for the best film adaptation of a book.
Released in United States 1988
Released in United States January 23, 1987
Released in United States March 20, 1987
Released in United States March 25, 1987
Released in United States Winter February 13, 1987
Re-released in United States on Video October 10, 1995
Shown at Munich Film Festival June 25 - July 3, 1988.
Shown at San Francisco International Film Festival March 25, 1987.
Shown at United States Film Festival Park City, Utah January 23, 1987.
Began shooting March 24, 1986.
Completed shooting June 1986.
Released in United States 1988 (Shown at Munich Film Festival June 25 - July 3, 1988.)
Released in United States January 23, 1987 (Shown at United States Film Festival Park City, Utah January 23, 1987.)
Released in United States Winter February 13, 1987
Released in United States March 20, 1987 (Los Angeles)
Released in United States March 25, 1987 (Shown at San Francisco International Film Festival March 25, 1987.)
Re-released in United States on Video October 10, 1995