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A Summer Place

  • 1959
  • Approved
  • 2h 10m
IMDb RATING
6.9/10
4.2K
YOUR RATING
A Summer Place (1959)
Shocking events at a summer resort in this trailer
Play trailer3:10
1 Video
99+ Photos
DramaRomance

A self-made businessman rekindles a romance with a former flame while their two teenage children begin a romance of their own with drastic consequences for both couples.A self-made businessman rekindles a romance with a former flame while their two teenage children begin a romance of their own with drastic consequences for both couples.A self-made businessman rekindles a romance with a former flame while their two teenage children begin a romance of their own with drastic consequences for both couples.

  • Director
    • Delmer Daves
  • Writers
    • Sloan Wilson
    • Delmer Daves
  • Stars
    • Richard Egan
    • Dorothy McGuire
    • Sandra Dee
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.9/10
    4.2K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Delmer Daves
    • Writers
      • Sloan Wilson
      • Delmer Daves
    • Stars
      • Richard Egan
      • Dorothy McGuire
      • Sandra Dee
    • 97User reviews
    • 26Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 wins & 3 nominations total

    Videos1

    A Summer Place
    Trailer 3:10
    A Summer Place

    Photos162

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    Top cast35

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    Richard Egan
    Richard Egan
    • Ken Jorgenson
    Dorothy McGuire
    Dorothy McGuire
    • Sylvia Hunter
    Sandra Dee
    Sandra Dee
    • Molly Jorgenson
    Arthur Kennedy
    Arthur Kennedy
    • Bart Hunter
    Troy Donahue
    Troy Donahue
    • Johnny Hunter
    Constance Ford
    Constance Ford
    • Helen Jorgenson
    Beulah Bondi
    Beulah Bondi
    • Mrs. Emily Hamilton Hamble
    Jack Richardson
    • Claude Andrews
    Martin Eric
    • Todd Harper, Handyman at Pine Island Inn
    Eleanor Audley
    Eleanor Audley
    • Waiting Guest at Molly's College
    • (uncredited)
    Marshall Bradford
    Marshall Bradford
    • Dr. Matthias
    • (uncredited)
    Phil Chambers
    Phil Chambers
    • Sheriff
    • (uncredited)
    Joe Connors
    • Driver
    • (uncredited)
    Peter Constanti
    • Captain of Yacht
    • (uncredited)
    Richard Deacon
    Richard Deacon
    • Pawnbroker
    • (uncredited)
    Ann Doran
    Ann Doran
    • Mrs. Talbert
    • (uncredited)
    Gertrude Flynn
    Gertrude Flynn
    • Helen's Mother
    • (uncredited)
    Bonnie Franklin
    Bonnie Franklin
    • Girl in Dormitory
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Delmer Daves
    • Writers
      • Sloan Wilson
      • Delmer Daves
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews97

    6.94.1K
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    Featured reviews

    6atlasmb

    We Know What You Want To Do, Troy Donahue!

    This film from the fifties predates the coming sexual revolution. Just about every character has pretensions of morality. They are do-good nosey parkers whose greatest joy is to find flaws in others. Certain things are automatic triggers for their scorn-like divorce, promiscuity, or wearing white after Labor Day.

    When the Jorgenson family comes to Pine Island, Maine for the summer, the entrenched residents greet them with prejudice because the father, Ken (Richard Egan), used to be a lowly worker on the island. He also used to be involved with the mother of the family who owns the inn where they are staying.

    The melodrama of the story---emphasized by an overly-dramatic score---has the characters using the words "good" and "bad" with frequency, as in "I've been a good girl" and "are you a bad boy?" Everyone fears being bad, which means acting contrary to contemporary morals, but they can't help themselves; human nature drives some to thwart approved behavioral standards.

    The film is a "story of stolen moments", where lovers struggle to maintain appearances and to fight their own impulses. Every romantic gesture is countered by feelings of guilt or condemnation, so the passion in the film is undermined.

    Despite the overdone score, the movie's theme---which is the theme of the young lovers---works well. It has a carefree feeling that, unfortunately, belies the judgmental drama that permeates every scene.

    Sandra Dee and Troy Donahue play the young lovers, Molly and Johnny, and the actors symbolize an idyllic young couple. (Dee also appeared in "Gidget" the same year, as a chaste young lady who pines for James Darren.) Their struggle against society does contain some basic truths about what people had to deal with in that era.
    7Doylenf

    Delinquent parents and delinquent children...make a sudsy melodrama...

    Despite being almost overwhelmingly melodramatic when treating the subject of sex in the context of its time, A SUMMER PLACE manages to rise above the soap suds when dealing with mismatched parents and a rekindled love affair (DOROTHY McGUIRE and RICHARD EGAN) that almost destroys everyone's happiness.

    It's all very lush looking in magnificent color, a Pine Island resort in Maine photographed principally in Northern California along the Monterey coast. Whenever emotions soar, whether quiet emotions or full throttled ones, Max Steiner's music is there ready to lend a helping hand.

    As the teen-aged lovers, SANDRA DEE and TROY DONAHUE are just as photogenic as the landscapes they're photographed against, especially when the color cameras turn their close inspection on the two bronzed, blue-eyed stars. While not quite as photogenic, DOROTHY McGUIRE and RICHARD EGAN are quietly having a love affair of their own which must be kept hidden from their respective spouses until a showdown that leads to a rather satisfying conclusion.

    The handsome production values and earnest performances are matched well against Max Steiner's famous score. His "The Theme from A Summer Place" is as gorgeous and popular as ever with soundtrack fans.

    A SUMMER PLACE can take its place alongside other handsomely produced soapers of the '50s. CONSTANCE FORD and ARTHUR KENNEDY do very well in strong supporting roles and it's all a bit more substantial than it sounds on paper.

    Easy to see why Max Steiner's "Theme from A Summer Place" hit the top of the music charts for a long, long time in the summer of '59.
    7gooelf50

    Who do you think you are? Troy Donahue?

    This was an OK movie. The big draw was Troy Donahue in his first starring film role. A fine looking young Sandra Dee was also a big draw, although not as big as Donahue. I remember that I was a lad in high school when the film was released and all of the girls raved about the fantastic looking blonde wonder boy, Troy Donahue. Whenever one of the guys started acting a little too cool, he was brought quickly back to reality with the question, "Who do you think you are? Troy Donahue?" The Theme song of the movie was played by Percy Faith and his orchestra and was called simply "Theme from a Summer Place" and was on the pop charts for months. Guys loved the song as much as girls because it had a slow and lilting rhythm that even the most awkward oaf could dance to and the girls just loved to be held tightly when it was playing. The scenery was delightful as the film was shot at the seashore where there was lots of water, sand and lush greenery. The plot was fairly comprehensive and involved affairs and marital deceit compounded by the love that developed between Troy and Sandra's characters. All in all not a bad movie, certainly worth the 45 cents admission that I paid to see it in 1959.
    7tdickson

    Gutsy Constance Ford

    I saw A Summer Place for the first time very recently, and one thing that really struck me was just how gutsy Constance Ford's portrayal of Helen Jorgenson was. Not many actors can pull off a character who has absolutely no redeeming qualities whatsoever. Most actors would pressure the director and writer into giving their characters at least a small bit of sympathy, but Ford was excellent at playing someone thoroughly bad.

    I'm sure she got static for her portrayal when she visited the supermarket or whatever in her daily life.

    I'm not kidding, Bruno Ganz' portrayal of Adolf Hitler in Der Untergang/Downfall was more sympathetic and likable than Constance's portrayal of Helen.
    8bkoganbing

    A New Love Born, An Old Love Rekindled

    One of the great young love romances ever done on the screen, A Summer Place is the story of two romances, one born and the other rekindled.

    Richard Egan and Constance Ford with their daughter Sandra Dee are returning to Pine Island, Maine where years ago before Egan became wealthy as a research chemist he was employed as a lifeguard and where he romanced one of the town beauties. Pine Island is like Kennebunkport, the private reserve of the Bush family. This is the private reserve of several old Yankee families who if they can't trace their ancestors on the Mayflower at least they go back to Puritans who might have found New England more hospitable than Restoration Great Britain.

    Egan's rented out several rooms from thinning blue blood Arthur Kennedy and his wife Dorothy McGuire. It was McGuire who Egan loved and lost those many years ago.

    Neither Egan and McGuire have found much happiness in their second choice for spouses. Constance Ford, a truly uptight and frigid woman from Buffalo has not kanoodled with Egan for years. You know he's good and ready. As for McGuire's marriage, Kennedy has all the airs of a patrician, but not the money any more. Did he lose it because of his alcohol problem, or is he drinking because the family fortune has gone? It's your choice.

    So Egan and McGuire discover each other and Sandra Dee discovers Kennedy and McGuire's son, Troy Donahue. Because of her mother, Dee's led a sheltered life and I'm betting the isolation of Pine Isle with its very few inhabitants hasn't improved Donahue's social skills either. The two kids are sadly a textbook case for sex education.

    Feeling betrayed by their parents, all of them when you come right down to it, the young people feel they have only each other. The passion multiplies exponentially.

    Right up there with the human cast members in making A Summer Place a big commercial hit for Warner Brothers is Max Steiner's theme, played when Dee and Donahue are together. It's popularity on the radio and jukeboxes sold many a ticket to this film.

    Egan and McGuire are also appealing in their way to discover their passions are still the same. The odd spouses out are also turning in fine performances. Arthur Kennedy who was never bad in any film he ever did is both arrogant and yet pitiable as the sad sack alcoholic. The villain of A Summer Place is really Ford, she's made life hell for Egan and Dee. Yet you wonder throughout the film what must have she been like back in the day for Egan to fall for her in the first place and what changed her.

    It's Eisenhower era America and the story is dated somewhat, but not all that much. I can see A Summer Place being a candidate for a remake, who would you cast in a remake among today's players?

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    Related interests

    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
    Ingrid Bergman and Humphrey Bogart in Casablanca (1942)
    Romance

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The house where Ken (Richard Egan) and Sylvia (Dorothy McGuire) live toward the end of the film is an actual private residence that was built by Frank Lloyd Wright in 1948. It is called the Clinton-Walker House, still stands today on Scenic Road in Carmel-by-the-Sea, California, and is a prime feature in local tours.
    • Goofs
      When Molly is getting ready to go Christmas shopping with her mother, her mother begins to zip up the back of her dress. Molly breaks away and runs to bed to get letters, argues with her mother, still with her dress unzipped. When she runs to fireplace to burn the letters, her dress is zipped.
    • Quotes

      Helen Jorgenson: [after she has seen Molly Jorgenson and Johnny Hunter kissing] Well, your daughter didn't waste any time. She's let that boy kiss and maul her her very first night here.

      Ken Jorgenson: Where were they?

      Helen Jorgenson: Down below me, in the garden.

      Ken Jorgenson: If they had anything to hide, you think they'd do it right under your window?

      Helen Jorgenson: Are you defending her cheap behavior?

      Ken Jorgenson: Cheap? A girl kissing a boy in the moonlight? You know Molly's as decent as this boy seems to be.

      Helen Jorgenson: [really angry now] No decent girl lets a boy kiss and maul her the very first night they meet! I suppose it's your Swedish blood in her. I've read about how the Swedes bathe together and... and have trial marriages and free love. I've read all about that. Anything goes.

      Ken Jorgenson: [angry and disgusted] So, now you hate the Swedes. How many outlets for your hate do you have, Helen? We haven't been able to find a new house because of your multiplicity of them. We can't buy near a school because you hate kids. They make noise. And there can't be any Jews or Catholics on the block, either. And, oh, yes, it can't be anywhere near the Polish or Italian sections. And, of course, Negroes have to be avoided at all costs. Now, let's see: No Jews, no Catholics, no Italians, no Poles, no children. No Negroes. Do I have the list right, so far? And now, you've added Swedes. And, oh, yes, you won't use a Chinese laundry because you distrust Orientals. And you think the British are snobbish, the Russians fearful, the French immoral, the Germans brutal, and all Latin Americans lazy. What's your plan? To cut humanity out? Are you anti-people and anti-life? Must you suffocate every natural instinct in our daughter, too? Must you label young love-making as cheap and wanton and indecent? Must you persist in making sex, itself, a filthy word?

      [Helen, without a word, leaves the room. Ken slams the door after her]

    • Connections
      Featured in Diner (1982)
    • Soundtracks
      Liebestraum
      (uncredited)

      Composed by Franz Liszt

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • November 18, 1959 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Verano de amor
    • Filming locations
      • Pacific Grove, California, USA(LaPorte Mansion on Lighthouse Ave)
    • Production company
      • Warner Bros.
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Gross worldwide
      • $42,300
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 2h 10m(130 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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