Cast

Dennis Price
Lord Byron

Mai Zetterling
Teresa Guiccioli

Joan Greenwood
Lady Caroline Lamb

Linden Travers
Augusta Leigh

Sonia Holm
Annabella Milbanke

Raymond Lovell
John Hobhouse

Leslie Dwyer
Fletcher

Denis O'Dea
Prosecuting Counsel

Irene Browne
Lady Melbourne

Virgílio Teixeira
Pietro Gamba

Ernest Thesiger
Count Guiccioli

Gerard Heinz
Austrian Officer

Cyril Chamberlain
Defending Counsel

Wilfrid Hyde-White
Mr. Hopton

Henry Oscar
Count Gamba

Robert Harris
Dallas

Ronald Adam
Judge

Archie Duncan
John Murray

Barry Jones
Colonel Stonhope

John Stone
Lord Clark
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Reviews
CinemaSerf
Dennis Price doesn't actually look like he is having to do much acting as he portrays the bravely errant soldier-cum-poet in this drama. He is bedridden, seriously ill, and wondering how he might be looked upon by St. Peter as his day of reckoning looms. The film now sets out to show us a little of his reminiscences - his lives and loves, most notably with an on-form Mai Zetterling ("Teresa"), Sonia Holm as his long-suffering wife Annabella and, of course, Lady Caroline Lamb (Joan Greenwood). It takes the form of a trial - with people giving testament to his behaviour and character under the gaze of the sagely, if frequently quite bemused judge (Ronald Adam). Price plays well here, and his scenes with Greenwood remained me of their scenes together in "Kind Hearts and Coronets" (also made in 1949). Sadly, though it starts off quite entertainingly, it becomes very wordy and slow quite quickly and the last forty minutes or so dragged a bit, I thought. I like Price, he has something about him, but this all wears a bit too thin. Maybe his libertine, naughty, side fell foul of the censors, but what we have here is ultimately rather plain. Adequate, nothing more.
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