Two Gentlemen Sharing
Brief Synopsis
Cast & Crew
Ted Kotcheff
Robin Phillips
Judy Geeson
Hal Frederick
Esther Anderson
Norman Rossington
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
Roddy, a white advertising executive, places an ad in the newspaper for a roommate to share the expenses of his London flat, and Andrew, a black Jamaican lawyer, responds. At first hesitant, the two men discover that they are both Oxford graduates and decide to have a trial period. Andrew moves into the apartment, and his Jamaican girl friend, Caroline, pays him frequent visits. One evening, the two roommates and their girl friends go to a nightclub. Bored with Ethne, his aristocratic partner, Roddy turns his attention to Jane, a pretty white woman surrounded by admiring Negroes, and later escorts her home, where he is intrigued to discover that she lives in a house owned by a Negro man. The following week, Roddy and Andrew plan a trip to Roddy's stately Elizabethan mansion, and Roddy invites Jane. When Roddy's parents protest Andrew being brought to the house, Andrew and Caroline return to the apartment only to be interrupted in their lovemaking by the sudden appearance of the landlady who, in an outpouring of racial hatred, demands that they leave. Hastily leaving a note for Roddy, the couple move back to the black ghetto and decide to return to Jamaica where society accepts them. Several days later, Roddy gives a party, hoping to convince Andrew to stay, and drunkenly declares his desire to marry Jane, even though he has learned that the black man at her house is her stepfather; but Jane now sees Roddy as the weak man he really is. He collapses on the bed and rejects the advances of Marcus, a guest who recognizes Roddy's latent homosexual tendencies. The police arrive and break up the party, leaving Roddy alone and confused.
Director
Ted Kotcheff
Cast
Robin Phillips
Judy Geeson
Hal Frederick
Esther Anderson
Norman Rossington
Hilary Dwyer
Rachel Kempson
Daisy Mae Williams
Ram John Holder
Earl Cameron
Shelagh Fraser
David Markham
Avice Landon
Philip Stone
Elspeth March
Thomas Baptiste
Linbert Spencer
Willy Payne
Thors Piers
Nathan Dambuza
Robert Burnell
Hamilton Dyce
John Humphrey
Harold Lang
Lionel Ngakane
Tommy Ansah
George Baizley
Harcourt Curacao
Carl Adam
Anna Wing
Benny Nightingale
Charles Leno
Phillamore Davidson
Norman Mitchell
John Chandos
David Edwards
John Snow
Gary Sobers
Les Flambeaux Steel Band
Crew
Gus Angus
Samuel Z. Arkoff
Mary Bredin
Ken Bridgeman
Chris Cook
Jerome Epstein
Gabriella Falk
Colin Garde
David Harcourt
Ed Harper
Evan Jones
J. Barry Kulick
Stanley Myers
James H. Nicholson
Douglas Peirce
David Price
Barbara Rowland
Billy Williams
Scott Wodehouse
Film Details
Technical Specs
Articles
Rachel Kempson, 1910-2003
Born on May 28, 1910, in Dartmouth, England, Kempson longed for a career in acting. She trained as an actress at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art (RADA) in London and made her professional stage debut in 1932 at the legendary Stratford-on-Avon Theater in the lead of Romeo and Juliet. She went on to perform with such distinguished theatrical companies including the Royal Shakespeare Company, the English Stage Company and the Old Vic. In 1935 she was asked to star in the Liverpool Repertory production of Flowers of the Forest. Her leading man was Michael Redgrave, one of the top actors of his generation. Within a few weeks they fell in love and were married on July 18, 1935.
Kempson took a break for the next few years, to give birth to her three children: Vanessa, Corin and Lynn, but by the mid '40s, she came back to pursue her career in both stage and screen. She began to appear in some films with her husband: Basil Dearden's The Captive Heart (1946); and Lewis Gilbert's tough war drama The Sea Shall Not Have Them (1954). She hit her stride as a character actress in the '60s with a string of good films: Tony Richardson's (at the time her son-in-law) hilarious, award-winning Tom Jones (1963); Silvio Narizzano's classic comedy Georgy Girl (1966) starring her daughter, Lynn; and John Dexter's underrated anti-war film The Virgin Soldiers (1969), again with Lynn. In the '80s Kempson had two strong roles: Lady Manners in the epic British television series The Jewel in the Crown (1984); and as Lady Belfield in Sydney Pollack's hit Out of Africa (1985), starring Robert Redford and Meryl Streep.
Kempson had been in semi-retirement after the death of her husband, Sir Michael in 1985. She made her last film appearance in Henry Jaglom's romantic Deja vu (1998) poignantly playing the mother to her real life daughter Vanessa. Kempson is survived by her three children and 10 grandchildren.
by Michael T. Toole
Rachel Kempson, 1910-2003
Quotes
Trivia
Notes
Copyright length: 112 min. Location scenes filmed in London.
Miscellaneous Notes
Released in United States Fall September 1969
Released in United States September 1969
Shown at Venice Film Festival August 31, 1969.
b&w and color
rtg MPAA R
Released in United States Fall September 1969
Released in United States September 1969