Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
I'll Cry Tomorrow (1955) is a biopic that tells the story of Lillian Roth, a Broadway star who rebels against the pressure of her domineering mother and struggles with alcoholism after the death of her fiancé.
Roth wrote her autobiography I'll Cry Tomorrow with author-collaborator Gerold Frank in 1954, and a softened version of the story became the basis of a hit film of the same title the following year, starring Susan Hayward, who was nominated for an Academy Award. The book became a bestseller worldwide and sold more than seven million copies in ...
I'll Cry Tomorrow is a 1954 autobiography by Lillian Roth, co-written by Roth, Gerold Frank and journalist Mike Connolly.It is a "brutally frank" depiction of Roth's alcoholism, one of the earlier books by a celebrity on addiction, and influential in drawing attention to alcoholism as a disease.
Lawrence Weingarten (December 30, 1897 – February 5, 1975) was an American film producer. He was best known for working for Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer and producing some of the studio's most prestigious films such as Adam's Rib (1949), I'll Cry Tomorrow (1955) and Cat on a Hot Tin Roof (1958).
If Tomorrow Comes (1971 TV) If Tomorrow Never Comes (2016) If War Comes Tomorrow (1938) If We All Were Angels: (1936 & 1956) If We Only Knew (1913) If You Are the One (2008) If You Meet Sartana Pray for Your Death (1968)
Our hearts will go on. Perhaps the most beloved on-screen pairing of the last 30 years has come together again. Leonardo DiCaprio took the stage before a screening of Kate Winslet's new film Lee ...
Frank was a renowned ghostwriter and had previously worked on I'll Cry Tomorrow, a popular book about another alcoholic celebrity, Lillian Roth. [5] The book, released as Too Soon Too Much, was published through Henry Holt & Co. in 1957, and re-published in 1958 through Signet publishing. [6] Warner Bros. picked up the film a year later in 1958.
And I’ll be honest with you, it’s an election year,” he said this past summer. “They don’t want to do anything that is going to upset the public.” In November 2013, The New York Times published “Addiction Treatment With A Dark Side,” a piece that linked hundreds of deaths in the U.S. to buprenorphine and Suboxone.