image of person or book cover 7665504570833936205.jpg
Screen cap from opening credits
form y separately published work icon Saraband for Dead Lovers single work   film/TV  
Adaptation of Saraband for Dead Lovers Helen Simpson , 1935 single work novel
Issue Details: First known date: 1948... 1948 Saraband for Dead Lovers
The material on this page is available to AustLit subscribers. If you are a subscriber or are from a subscribing organisation, please log in to gain full access. To explore options for subscribing to this unique teaching, research, and publishing resource for Australian culture and storytelling, please contact us or find out more.

Film Details - Ealing Studios , 1948

Producers:

Michael Balcon (Producer)
Michael Relph (Associate Producer)

Production Companies:

Ealing Studios

Director of Photography:

Douglas Slocombe

Editors:

Michael Truman

Production Designers:

William Kellner
Jim Morahan

Composer:

Alan Rawsthorne

Cast:

Incl. Stewart Granger (Count Philip Konigsmark), Joan Greenwood (Sophie Dorothea), Flora Robson (Countess Clara Platen), Françoise Rosay (The Electress Sophia), Frederick Valk (The Elector Ernest Augustus), Peter Bull (Prince George Louis), Anthony Quayle (Durer), Michael Gough (Prince Charles), Megs Jenkins (Frau Busche), Jill Balcon (Knesbeck), David Horne (Duke George William), Mercia Swinburne (Countess Eleanore). For further cast details see the International Movie Database entry.

Release Dates:

1. Premiered in London (England) on 8 September 1948. Released commercially in the UK on 4 October 1948. Later released in Sweden (6 December 1948), Finland (6 May 1949), USA (11 June 1949 - New York City), Denmark (6 October 1949), West Germany (25 November 1949), and Austria (13 December 1949).
2. Released on videocassette format in the UK by Lumiere and in Australia by Polygram Video (ca. 1990s).

Location:

  • Filmed largely at the Ealing Studios, London (UK).

Awards:

  • Academy Awards (1950), Best Art Direction: Set Decoration, Color - Jim Morahan, William Kellner and Michael Relph (nominated)

Notes:

1. Also known as Saraband (Sweden and USA); Kærlighed og Kårde (Denmark); Königsliebe (West Germany); La Prisionera del Castillo (Argentina); Matrimonio de Estado (Spain); Sarabanda Tragica (Italy); Sydämen Yksinäisyys (Finland); Tödliche Liebe (Austria).

X