In September 1962,
Warner Bros. Pictures announced that
Delmer Daves would write, produce and direct a feature film based on the novel. Daves previously made
A Summer Place,
Parrish,
Susan Slade and
Rome Adventure for the studio, all of which had starred
Troy Donahue. Daves spent time deciding which part of the novel he wanted to film. He decided to start with Hawke's rise while driving a truck and end with his recovery in hospital from a near death. The original script took six weeks to write. It was 140 pages in fine print, which would have run six to seven hours. He then cut the script after looking at various locations.
James Franciscus was cast without even a screen test. (Daves saw him in
The Outsider and the pilot for
Mr Novak.) He signed in March 1963. The female lead went to Suzanne Pleshette, who made
Rome Adventure with Daves. Filming began on location in New York in April 1963. ==See also==