When a beautiful socialite falls in love with an embittered composer who is blind, she feigns blindness herself in order to get closer to him.When a beautiful socialite falls in love with an embittered composer who is blind, she feigns blindness herself in order to get closer to him.When a beautiful socialite falls in love with an embittered composer who is blind, she feigns blindness herself in order to get closer to him.
Whit Bissell
- Party Guest
- (uncredited)
Leonard Bremen
- Chez Mamie Headwaiter
- (uncredited)
Charles Cirillo
- Sailor at Chez Mamie
- (uncredited)
Angela Clarke
- Woman
- (uncredited)
George Cooper
- Bellboy
- (uncredited)
Lynn Craft
- Party Guest
- (uncredited)
Suzi Crandall
- Fur-Coated Pedestrian
- (uncredited)
Herbert Evans
- Butler
- (uncredited)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaDana Andrews wore opaque contact lenses throughout filming to give him a realistic sensation of blindness.
- GoofsWhen Chick begins singing the verses on the song "Who Kill Er", you hear horn riffs playing in the background. But when it cuts to the horn players on stage, they are sitting still and not playing although you can hear the horns in the music.
- Quotes
Miss Willey: My heart's an old wastepaper basket, filled with unpaid bills and paperback novels.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Let's Go to the Movies (1949)
- SoundtracksI COULDN'T SLEEP A WINK LAST NIGHT
(uncredited)
from Higher and Higher (1943)
Music by Jimmy McHugh
Performed by "Chick Morgan Band"
Featured review
They used to show it on Turner Classic Movies on Ethel Barrymore's birthday (when they would show all of her movies). It contains a wonderful original mini-concerto by film composer, Leith Stevens, written just for this film. I think this movie is wonderful, in part, because it really exemplifies the best sort of films that glamorize classical music and not only give the film-goer a glimpse into the life and excitement of being a musician, but a peak into the collaborative creative process, itself. Many of these films were made in the '30s, '40s and '50s. They are rarely made now; usually films about musicians, especially about classical musicians, alienate the audience from the artists rather than inspiring empathy and a desire to emulate the stars on screen. Also, such clever and moving plots in love stories are fairly rare now. Ironically, it has wonderful scenes where Hoagy Carmichael takes dictation for the blind composer but in real life, Hoagy Carmichael, one of the great jazz musicians of the 20th Century, could not read music. I wonder if the plot was inspired at all by the fate of the '20s Jazz Great, Bix Beiderbeck, who drank himself to death at a young age because he found it increasingly hard to get work in the Paul Whiteman-inspired era of big bands who played from written parts. It also has some wonderful quotable one-liners and great, even profound dialogue, I wish it were available. That a film with such a star-studded line-up should be completely out of print is astounding: Dana Andrews, Merle Oberon, Hoagy Carmichael, Ethel Barrymore, the great pianist, Arthur Rubenstein (who even has a couple of lines), the great Conductor, Eugene Ormandy, and the New York Philharmonic, as it was at its peak at the end of the '40s. There is a lot that is original in this film. For example, The scene in which Dana Andrews gives Merle Oberon a piano lesson is an amazing look at what brilliant interpretation based on musical maturity and advanced education can accomplish. Merle Oberon plays Chopin perfectly but mechanically, and then Dana Andrews plays it perfectly but brings it to life. We hear it from the kitchen along with Carmichael and Barrymore. She tells him archly that she doubts there is much he could teach her, as we hear it the first time together with them, and the second time, he tells her, matching her archness, exactly, "looks like she is improving already." One can neither rent nor buy Night Song. I wonder if it was issued on VHS. I just saw that a 16 mm copy went at auction for several hundred dollars on E-Bay. Pity.
- pinchinnat
- Jan 24, 2007
- Permalink
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Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Counterpoint
- Filming locations
- Broad Beach, Malibu, California, USA(aka Trancas Beach - beach scenes)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $1,700,000
- Runtime1 hour 42 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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