Anna Magnani and Marlon Brando had both originally been offered the parts in the Broadway production of
Orpheus Descending but turned it down. The roles were played on Broadway by Maureen Stapleton and Cliff Robertson. Film rights to the play were originally optioned by Hal Wallis, who had made a movie of
The Rose Tattoo with Anna Magnani (that role had also been originally written for Magnani but played by Stapleton on Broadway). After reception to
Orpheus on Broadway proved disappointing, Wallis allowed his option to lapse. The film was set up by a new team of producers, Martin Jurow and Richard Shepherd, both former agents. They arranged to option the movie rights from Tennessee Williams by obtaining the interest of Anna Magnani and
Tony Franciosa as possible stars (both had just made
Wild Is the Wind together). United Artists agreed to finance. Marlon Brando became interested in the project and he was given Franciosa's role and the latter actor was paid out.
Variety later reported that the budget of
The Fugutive Kind was $2.3 million, of which $1 million went to "talent", with Brando and Anna Magnani on percentages; Joanne Woodward was borrowed from 20th Century Fox. Brando wrote in his memoirs he rejected the role on Broadway because he did not wish to return to the stage. He was willing to appear in the film because "I was divorcing my first wife and needed money". Brando felt Magnani was "a troubled woman" who was "miscast". He added, "I’ve always thought of Tennessee as one of the greatest American writers, but I didn’t think much of this play or the movie. Like most great American writers, he turned black people into windowpanes". Filming began in June 1959 and took place on location in the town of Milton, New York, and at Bronx Studios in New York City. According to Brando, Magnani tried to seduce him before making the movie but he rejected her. Lumet thought Magnani "hated acting in English. Of course, Tennessee had written it for her, and she was a great friend of his. But what happens is that when you get down to an emotion, you revert. Under certain emotional conditions, the accent would become stronger and stronger and stronger, until she was finally incomprehensible. So after the shooting she had to come back and loop about 50 percent of her line". Filming was difficult in partly due to the breakdown of the relationship between Brando and Magnani. Also during the shoot Brando constantly flew back to Los Angeles to oversee the editing of
One Eyed Jacks. Lumet later said he enjoyed working with Brando and Woodward but struggled with Magnani "who was going through a personal crisis and hated being in America and in a film studio. This actress, so honest, authentic, sincere, had reached an age where her sole preoccupation was her appearance.... It was as though all the hardships in her life had taken away all her tenderness, and when she gets mad in the film, she is brilliant! The rest of the time she rings false, looks spiritless." According to Sidney Lumet, the theme of the film was "the struggle to preserve what is sensitive and vulnerable both in ourselves and in the world." ==Critical reception==