The Happy Ending


1h 52m 1969
The Happy Ending

Brief Synopsis

A middle-aged woman leaves her husband and children in search of herself.

Film Details

MPAA Rating
Genre
Drama
Release Date
Jan 1969
Premiere Information
New York opening: 21 Dec 1969
Production Company
Pax Enterprises
Distribution Company
United Artists
Country
United States

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 52m
Sound
Mono (Westrex Recording System)
Color
Color (Technicolor)
Theatrical Aspect Ratio
2.35 : 1

Synopsis

Suburban housewife Mary Wilson, who is approaching her 16th wedding anniversary, has become bored and disillusioned with her marriage. Her husband Fred, a successful Denver tax lawyer, devotes his energies to his clients. Mary's ideal of marriage has been shattered by Fred's neglect, the tedium of her daily routine, and the responsibility of bringing up a teenaged daughter. She spends most of her waking hours drinking, taking pills, and watching old films on television. To avoid a repetition of her husband's wild anniversary party of the previous year, Mary leaves home and decides to go to Nassau. En route, she meets old college friend Flo, who is on her way to Nassau to meet Sam, the latest in a series of married admirers. In Nassau, Mary is propositioned by Franco, an American who poses as Latin lover, and who intends to run off with her money. Franco drops his guise when Mary reveals that she has left home without a penny. Hurt, Mary takes a sober glance at her past: her attempted suicide over her failed marriage; the heavy drinking that began when Fred, oblivious to her needs, recommended that she take up a pastime; the clothes-buying spree that led Fred to confiscate her credit cards; and her arrest for drunken driving. Sam finally proposes to Flo, and Fred calls Mary in Nassau to apologize. On her return to Denver, Mary is met by her maid. Instead of going home, she takes a job, rents an apartment, and enrolls in night school, where Fred meets her one night. Whatever the future may hold, their relationship will have been drastically altered.

Film Details

MPAA Rating
Genre
Drama
Release Date
Jan 1969
Premiere Information
New York opening: 21 Dec 1969
Production Company
Pax Enterprises
Distribution Company
United Artists
Country
United States

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 52m
Sound
Mono (Westrex Recording System)
Color
Color (Technicolor)
Theatrical Aspect Ratio
2.35 : 1

Award Nominations

Best Actress

1969
Jean Simmons

Best Song

1969

Articles

The Happy Ending


In the 1969 drama The Happy Ending, Jean Simmons plays Mary Wilson, a middle-aged suburban housewife who is deeply dissatisfied with her life. After sixteen years of marriage, Mary walks out on husband Fred (John Forsythe) and flees to the Bahamas in search of herself. During her vacation Mary must do some soul-searching as she has a series of life-changing encounters.

The Happy Ending was the brainchild of Richard Brooks (Cat on a Hot Tin Roof [1958]) who produced, wrote and directed the film. Brooks and star Jean Simmons were married at the time and had previously collaborated on the Academy Award-winning Elmer Gantry (1960).

Looking back on The Happy Ending, Jean Simmons called the experience of making it "painful" in a 1999 interview. "...to be absolutely honest," she confessed, "I had had the problem that the [character] had. And it was brought out and it was tough playing some of the scenes." She believed that having her husband directing her helped in many ways since he knew her so well and was able to bring out her best performance for which she was nominated for an Academy Award as Best Actress.

A talented group of name actors round out the supporting cast of The Happy Ending including Lloyd Bridges, Shirley Jones, Teresa Wright, Dick Shawn, Tina Louise, Bobby Darin and Nanette Fabray. In addition to Jean Simmons' Oscar nomination for Best Actress, the film was also nominated for Best Original Song for "What Are You Doing the Rest of Your Life?"

Producer: Richard Brooks
Director: Richard Brooks
Screenplay: Richard Brooks
Cinematography: Conrad L. Hall
Music: Michel Legrand
Film Editing: George Grenville
Cast: Jean Simmons (Mary Wilson), John Forsythe (Fred Wilson), Lloyd Bridges (Sam), Teresa Wright (Mrs. Spencer), Dick Shawn (Harry Bricker), Nanette Fabray (Agnes), Robert Darin (Franco), Tina Louise (Helen Bricker), Kathy Fields (Marge Wilson), Gail Hensley (Betty), Shirley Jones (Flo), Eve Brent (Ethel), William O'Connell (Minister), Barry Cahill (Handsome Man), Miriam Blake (Cindy).
C-112m. Closed Captioning.

by Andrea Passafiume
The Happy Ending

The Happy Ending

In the 1969 drama The Happy Ending, Jean Simmons plays Mary Wilson, a middle-aged suburban housewife who is deeply dissatisfied with her life. After sixteen years of marriage, Mary walks out on husband Fred (John Forsythe) and flees to the Bahamas in search of herself. During her vacation Mary must do some soul-searching as she has a series of life-changing encounters. The Happy Ending was the brainchild of Richard Brooks (Cat on a Hot Tin Roof [1958]) who produced, wrote and directed the film. Brooks and star Jean Simmons were married at the time and had previously collaborated on the Academy Award-winning Elmer Gantry (1960). Looking back on The Happy Ending, Jean Simmons called the experience of making it "painful" in a 1999 interview. "...to be absolutely honest," she confessed, "I had had the problem that the [character] had. And it was brought out and it was tough playing some of the scenes." She believed that having her husband directing her helped in many ways since he knew her so well and was able to bring out her best performance for which she was nominated for an Academy Award as Best Actress. A talented group of name actors round out the supporting cast of The Happy Ending including Lloyd Bridges, Shirley Jones, Teresa Wright, Dick Shawn, Tina Louise, Bobby Darin and Nanette Fabray. In addition to Jean Simmons' Oscar nomination for Best Actress, the film was also nominated for Best Original Song for "What Are You Doing the Rest of Your Life?" Producer: Richard Brooks Director: Richard Brooks Screenplay: Richard Brooks Cinematography: Conrad L. Hall Music: Michel Legrand Film Editing: George Grenville Cast: Jean Simmons (Mary Wilson), John Forsythe (Fred Wilson), Lloyd Bridges (Sam), Teresa Wright (Mrs. Spencer), Dick Shawn (Harry Bricker), Nanette Fabray (Agnes), Robert Darin (Franco), Tina Louise (Helen Bricker), Kathy Fields (Marge Wilson), Gail Hensley (Betty), Shirley Jones (Flo), Eve Brent (Ethel), William O'Connell (Minister), Barry Cahill (Handsome Man), Miriam Blake (Cindy). C-112m. Closed Captioning. by Andrea Passafiume

Teresa Wright (1918-2005)


Teresa Wright, a talented, Oscar&-winning leading lady of the '40s, and in later life, a versatile character player, died on March 6 at a New Haven, Connecticut hospital of a heart attack. She was 86.

She was born Muriel Teresa Wright in New York City on October 27, 1918. She showed a keen interest in acting in grade school, and by the time she was 19, she made her Broadway debut in Thorton Wilder's Our Town (1938); the following year she scored a hit as Mary, the weeping ingénue in Life with Father (1939). The word was out that New York had a superb young acting talent on hand, and Samuel Goldwyn soon brought her to Hollywood for William Wyler's adaptation of Lillian Hellman's The Little Foxes (1941). She scored an Oscar® nomination for her film debut as Regina Giddens' (Bette Davis), honorable daughter, Alexandria.

She maintained her amazing momentum by scoring two Oscar® nominations the following year for her next two films: as Carol Miniver in Wyler's Mrs. Miniver (Best Supporting Actress Category), and as Lou Gehrig's (Gary Cooper) faithful wife Ellie in Pride of the Yankees (Best Actress Category), and won the Oscar for Miniver. Yet for most fans of Wright's work, her finest hour remains her perfectly modulated performance as young Charlie in Alfred Hitchcock's masterpiece, Shadow of a Doubt (1943). Wright's performance as the self-effacing, impressionable young niece who gradually realizes that her beloved uncle (Joseph Cotton) may have murdered several widows is effective since Wright's air of observation, subtly turns from idol gazing, to a watchful air of caution as the facts slowly being to unravel. 60 years on, fans of Hitchcock still acclaim Wright's performance as an integral part of the film's classic status.

She proved her talents in comedy with the delightful Casanova Brown (1944), but then saw her schedule slow down due to domesticity. After she married screenwriter Niven Busch in 1942, she gave birth to son, Niven Jr., in 1944, and took two years off to look after her family. She soon returned to film with another Wyler project, the Oscar®-winning, post war drama, The Best Years of Our Lives (1946), playing Fredric March's level-headed daughter, Peggy, she again took some time off after giving birth to her daughter, Mary in 1947. On her second attempt to return to the big screen, Wright found her popularity on the wane. Her wholesome image was in sharp contrast of the tougher, more modern women in post-war Hollywood, and her stubborn refusal to pose for any swimsuit or cheesecake photos to alter her image led to her release from Sam Goldwyn's contract.

As a freelance actress, Wright still found some good roles, notably as a young widow in the thriller scripted by her husband, in The Capture; and as a faithful fiancée trying to help Marlin Brandon deal with his amputation in Stanley Kramer's The Men (both 1950). Yet within a few years, she was playing middle-aged mothers in film like The Actress (1953), and The Track of the Cat (1954), even though she was still in her early '30s. By the mid-50s she found work in live television, where she could apply her stage training, in a number of acclaimed shows: Playhouse 90, General Electric Theater, Four Star Playhouse, and The United States Steel Hour.

She took a break from acting when she married her second husband, the playwright Robert Anderson in 1959, (she had divorced her first husband, Busch, in 1952) and was out of the public eye for several decades, save for an isolated theater appearance. When she did return, it was intermittent, but she was always worth watching. In James Ivory's Roseland (1977), a portrait of the New York dancehall; she was poignant as a talkative widow obsessed with her late husband; and as an enigmatic old actress in Somewhere in Time, she nearly stole the picture from leads, Christopher Reeve and Jayne Seymour. She was still active in the '90s, appearing a few hit shows: Murder, She Wrote, Picket Fences; and a final film role in John Grisham's The Rainmaker (1997). She is survived by her son, Niven; daughter, Mary; and two grandchildren.

by Michael T. Toole

Teresa Wright (1918-2005)

Teresa Wright, a talented, Oscar&-winning leading lady of the '40s, and in later life, a versatile character player, died on March 6 at a New Haven, Connecticut hospital of a heart attack. She was 86. She was born Muriel Teresa Wright in New York City on October 27, 1918. She showed a keen interest in acting in grade school, and by the time she was 19, she made her Broadway debut in Thorton Wilder's Our Town (1938); the following year she scored a hit as Mary, the weeping ingénue in Life with Father (1939). The word was out that New York had a superb young acting talent on hand, and Samuel Goldwyn soon brought her to Hollywood for William Wyler's adaptation of Lillian Hellman's The Little Foxes (1941). She scored an Oscar® nomination for her film debut as Regina Giddens' (Bette Davis), honorable daughter, Alexandria. She maintained her amazing momentum by scoring two Oscar® nominations the following year for her next two films: as Carol Miniver in Wyler's Mrs. Miniver (Best Supporting Actress Category), and as Lou Gehrig's (Gary Cooper) faithful wife Ellie in Pride of the Yankees (Best Actress Category), and won the Oscar for Miniver. Yet for most fans of Wright's work, her finest hour remains her perfectly modulated performance as young Charlie in Alfred Hitchcock's masterpiece, Shadow of a Doubt (1943). Wright's performance as the self-effacing, impressionable young niece who gradually realizes that her beloved uncle (Joseph Cotton) may have murdered several widows is effective since Wright's air of observation, subtly turns from idol gazing, to a watchful air of caution as the facts slowly being to unravel. 60 years on, fans of Hitchcock still acclaim Wright's performance as an integral part of the film's classic status. She proved her talents in comedy with the delightful Casanova Brown (1944), but then saw her schedule slow down due to domesticity. After she married screenwriter Niven Busch in 1942, she gave birth to son, Niven Jr., in 1944, and took two years off to look after her family. She soon returned to film with another Wyler project, the Oscar®-winning, post war drama, The Best Years of Our Lives (1946), playing Fredric March's level-headed daughter, Peggy, she again took some time off after giving birth to her daughter, Mary in 1947. On her second attempt to return to the big screen, Wright found her popularity on the wane. Her wholesome image was in sharp contrast of the tougher, more modern women in post-war Hollywood, and her stubborn refusal to pose for any swimsuit or cheesecake photos to alter her image led to her release from Sam Goldwyn's contract. As a freelance actress, Wright still found some good roles, notably as a young widow in the thriller scripted by her husband, in The Capture; and as a faithful fiancée trying to help Marlin Brandon deal with his amputation in Stanley Kramer's The Men (both 1950). Yet within a few years, she was playing middle-aged mothers in film like The Actress (1953), and The Track of the Cat (1954), even though she was still in her early '30s. By the mid-50s she found work in live television, where she could apply her stage training, in a number of acclaimed shows: Playhouse 90, General Electric Theater, Four Star Playhouse, and The United States Steel Hour. She took a break from acting when she married her second husband, the playwright Robert Anderson in 1959, (she had divorced her first husband, Busch, in 1952) and was out of the public eye for several decades, save for an isolated theater appearance. When she did return, it was intermittent, but she was always worth watching. In James Ivory's Roseland (1977), a portrait of the New York dancehall; she was poignant as a talkative widow obsessed with her late husband; and as an enigmatic old actress in Somewhere in Time, she nearly stole the picture from leads, Christopher Reeve and Jayne Seymour. She was still active in the '90s, appearing a few hit shows: Murder, She Wrote, Picket Fences; and a final film role in John Grisham's The Rainmaker (1997). She is survived by her son, Niven; daughter, Mary; and two grandchildren. by Michael T. Toole

Quotes

Trivia

Notes

Location scenes filmed in Denver and the Bahamas. Clips from Casablanca, Susan Lennox-Her Rise and Fall, and Father of the Bride appear within the film.

Miscellaneous Notes

Released in United States Winter December 1969

Released in USA on video.

Released in United States Winter December 1969