When Gene Tierney made the British drama Personal Affair (1953), she was living in England partly because it was financially advantageous to do so -- thanks to a new American tax law -- and partly because of her ongoing romantic relationship with European playboy Prince Aly Khan. Tierney had recently been divorced from costume designer Oleg Cassini; her friends all disapproved of her new romance, but she ignored their concerns.

Still, she was dealing with doubts and depression and had an awful lot of trouble focusing on this dialogue-heavy picture and memorizing her lines. Things got so bad she called in a psychiatrist, but he proved to be of little help. In the end, her devoted maid Ruby came to the rescue, going over lines with Tierney night and day. (One can imagine the real-life Ruby being a little bit like the fictional "Bessie," Tierney's faithful maid in Laura [1944]).

As Tierney later recounted: "I would never have gotten through Personal Affair had it not been for the loyalty of my Cockney maid, Ruby. She had that traditional British resistance to admitting defeat, even someone else's. When I told her I could no longer absorb the script and would have to quit, she scolded me. 'Never mind, Miz Tierney,' she said. 'You are going to do it. We will go over these lines until you know them in your sleep.' When the filming started I never missed a cue. Ruby simply would not allow me to fail."

The film itself is written by Lesley Storm, who adapted her own play, "A Day's Mischief." It's about the cruel power of gossip, and how it affects the lives of innocent people. In a small British town, a teenage schoolgirl (Glynis Johns) falls in love with her Latin teacher (Leo Genn, recently Oscar®-nominated for Quo Vadis [1951]). When Genn's American wife (Tierney) tells Johns that she knows of her secret, the girl goes missing, and an otherwise quiet town is transformed into a hive of scandal, gossip and suspicion.

The rather meticulous drama, released in America by United Artists, was generally well-received, though The New York Times complained it was overly talky, a problem which often plagues theatrically-based movies.

Producer: Antony Darnborough
Director: Anthony Pelissier
Screenplay: Lesley Storm (screenplay and play "A Day's Mischief")
Cinematography: Reginald Wyer
Art Direction: Cedric Dawe
Music: William Alwyn
Film Editing: Frederick Wilson
Cast: Gene Tierney (Kay Barlow), Leo Genn (Stephen Barlow), Glynis Johns (Barbara Vining), Walter Fitzgerald (Henry Vining), Pamela Brown (Evelyn), Megs Jenkins (Vi Vining), Michael Hordern (Headmaster Griffith), Thora Hird (Mrs. Usher), Norah Gaussen (Phoebe), Nanette Newman (Sally).
BW-82m.

by Jeremy Arnold

Sources:
Gene Tierney, Self-Portrait
Michelle Vogel, Gene Tierney: A Biography