The Christine Keeler Story

The Christine Keeler Story
American theatrical release poster
Directed byRobert Spafford
Screenplay byRobert Spafford
Produced byJohn Nasht
StarringYvonne Buckingham
John Drew Barrymore
Alicia Brandet
CinematographyMichel Rocca
Edited byJim Connock
Music byRoger Bourdin
Production
company
Topaz Films
Release date
  • 1963 (1963)
Running time
90 minutes
CountryDenmark
LanguageEnglish

The Christine Keeler Story (also known as The Keeler Affair, The Christine Keeler Affair, Ich, Christine Keeler and Scandal '64) is a 1963 Danish film directed and written by Robert Spafford and starring Yvonne Buckingham, John Drew Barrymore and Alicia Brandet. The film dramatises the Profumo affair.[1][2]

Cast

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Production

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The film was shot in Denmark over six weeks.[4]

To promote the film, photographer Lewis Morley photographed Keeler sitting on a chair on the first floor of Peter Cook's Establishment Club, with implied nudity. Though the film was never released, the photo was published in the Sunday Mirror and has since become well-known.[5]

Release

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The film was twice rejected by the British Board of Film Censors (BBFC) in 1963 and 1969, and the second time was also rejected by the Greater London Council. It was never released in the UK, banned in New Zealand, and shown in Australia only after being edited. These factors, combined with the BBFC rejection, substantially limited its exposure and profitability.[4][6]

In 1971, the film was screened in London at the New Cinema Club by Derek Hill as an act of defiance against the censor. Derek Malcolm of The Guardian said "it was scarcely worth seeing even as a curiosity, a fact that Mr Hill openly admits".[7]

Reception

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Box Office wrote; "An uncompromising, poignantly probing dramatization of what will probably be the decade's most sordid story of professionalized vice. ... It has the "name" of John Drew Barrymore, son of The Great Profile, and the pacing conventionally accepted within this sphere-and-scope, and while the kiddie trade and the more impressionable viewers shouldn't be encouraged, of course, there is enough of an adult audience for this to play profitably. It's long on shock, brief on logical script denouement. But the technical writing aspects aren't of primary concern to the audience certain to be attracted by title and local-level selling. Yvonne Buckingham is a winsome Christine, and Barrymore delineates the tragic Ward figure with an impressive style. Alicia Brandet, as Mandy Rice-Davies, Christine's girl friend, and Mel Welles, as the Soviet naval attache with a wandering eye, contribute adequately. But the main acting demands – and rightly so – are on Miss Buckingham and Barrymore.[8]

The Blackpool Tribune, reviewing the film in Boston, called it "a filmic equivalent to a sex comic."[9]

References

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  1. ^ "The Christine Keeler Story". British Film Institute Collections Search. Retrieved 13 August 2024.
  2. ^ "The Keeler Affair (1963)". British Board of Film Classification. Retrieved 19 June 2017.
  3. ^ "Alicia Brandet as Mandy Rice-Davies and Yvonne Buckingham as Christine Keeler in 'The Christine Keeler Affair'". National Portrait Gallery. Retrieved 8 January 2022.
  4. ^ a b Farmer, Richard (3 July 2017). "The Profumo affair in popular culture: The Keeler Affair (1963) and 'the commercial exploitation of a public scandal'". Contemporary British History. 31 (3): 452–470. doi:10.1080/13619462.2016.1261698.
  5. ^ "Christine Keeler Photograph: A Modern Icon". Victoria and Albert Museum. Retrieved 2 February 2014.
  6. ^ Farmer, Richard (2018). "An almost continuous picture of sordid vice: The Keeler Affair, the Profumo Scandal and 'Political' Film Censorship in the 1960s" (PDF). Journal of British Cinema and Television. 15 (2). Edinburgh University Press: 228–251. doi:10.3366/jbctv.2018.0416. ISSN 1743-4521.
  7. ^ Come back, Stan and Ollie: DEREK MALCOM on films not at all for maiden aunts The Guardian 4 Feb 1971: 8.
  8. ^ "The Christine Keeler Story". Boxoffice. 85 (19): a11. 31 August 1964 – via ProQuest.
  9. ^ "The story of my life" Haworth, J D S. Tribune; Blackpool Vol. 28, Iss. 34, (Aug 21, 1964): 15.
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