Original novel The novel was published in 1955. The
New York Times wrote that "the whole country will be reading... [it] this winter... it is the most challenging novel of the year." The
Los Angeles Times called it "extraordinary." The book became a best seller. The book was later banned by Detroit police.
Development O'Hara originally set a price of $500,000 for the film rights in December, 1955. In April 1956 he sold it to
20th Century Fox for $300,000. O'Hara then entered into a screenwriting contract with the studio, to do three scripts over three years working on
The Best Things in Life Are Free and
The Bravados. The movie was assigned to Phillip Dunne to write and direct. "I thought it was O'Hara's best novel", said Dunne. "I thought it had great compassion in it." Dunne decided to focus his script on Joe Chapin's affair with his daughter's friend which only took up a few pages of the novel. He decided to make that the centrepiece of the script and have everything build up to and flow on from that. In the original novel Joe's daughter has an abortion but this was changed in the script to a miscarriage due to censorship concerns. Dunne went to Sun Valley to shoot second unit footage in April 1957, before any lead roles had been cast.
Casting That month
Spencer Tracy was cast as Joseph Chapin. This meant filming, originally scheduled for May, was pushed back until October so Tracy could appear in
The Old Man and the Sea. Because of Tracy's repeated teaming with
Katharine Hepburn, the film's producer
Charles Brackett announced he was enthusiastic about casting Hepburn as his wife. In May 1957, model-actress
Suzy Parker told the press in an interview: "If I'm good in
Kiss Them for Me with
Cary Grant,
Buddy Adler is going to give me a very good role in
10 North Frederick with Spencer Tracy. Parker was eventually cast, which, according to insiders, did not satisfy Tracy, who left the production in November 1957. Tracy dismissed these rumours, saying: :"I don't even know her. The real reason I didn't want to make the picture is because, at long last,
John Ford is getting ready to produce
The Last Hurrah, the life of
James Michael Curley, and I waited so long to get John and to do this story, which I want to do more than anything else. So, I couldn't run the risk of starting one picture and losing John Ford."
Gary Cooper replaced Tracy in late November 1957. This meant the Cooper-starring
Man of the West had to be postponed. Dunne says, "Gary Cooper jumped at it, saying, 'I've lived in that guy's shoes.' He'd had a long affair with
Patricia Neal before deciding to return to his wife. John O'Hara said it was the only decent movie adaptation of one of his books, although I only used a quarter of his plot." That month Geraldine Fitzgerald agreed to come out of retirement to play Cooper's wife. Shortly after,
Diane Varsi was cast as his daughter.
Shooting Filming started in late November 1957. On December 23, Varsi suffered a
nervous breakdown, and following a collapse on the set, she was hospitalized for a week. It was an early key role for Stuart Whitman. ==Critical reception==