He attended the City College of New York, and graduated from there in 1938. He had a very mixed ancestry of Irish, French, German, Dutch and Russian, strange for the time period. William Gibson, the author of our play The Miracle Worker, was born on Novemin New York City.
Running time: 106 minutes.Annie Sullivan. At the Astor, Broadway at Forty-fifth Street, and the Trans-Lux Fifty-second Street, Lexington Avenue and Fifty-second Street. The CastTHE MIRACLE WORKER, screen play by William Gibson, from his play of the same name directed by Arthur Penn and produced by Fred Coe for United Artists release. Pathos is superfluous at this point, and such sophistication is unthinkable. Gibson to work a hackneyed heart tug into the film, which by this time has either got you with its concept of humane conquest or it hasn't got you at all. That is the flummery at the end that has the barely communicative youngster signaling a handy "I love you" to the nurse. Andrew Prine is impressively malicious and caustic as a grownup half-brother.On one point, we file a strong objection. Penn, who directed with great vigor, has also let Victor Jory play the father of the child a bit too harshly and loudly for the already loud tone of the whole, and Inga Swenson performs the mother a bit too softly and winsomely, in turn. Inevitably, the young actress has grown since she did the play and she now is a shade too uncomfortably formidable as an adversary for the nurse.Mr. And little Miss Duke, in those moments when she frantically pantomimes her bewilderment and desperate groping, is both gruesome and pitiable. This is the disadvantage of so much energy.However, Miss Bancroft's performance does bring to life and reveal a wondrous woman with great humor and compassion as well as athletic skill. Thus the bruising encounters between the two, even from their first meeting-the knock-down-and-drag-out fights in which the child wildly bucks against the efforts of the nurse to reach her mind with crude hand signs-are intensely significant of the drama and do excite strong emotional response.But the very intensity of them and the fact that it is hard to see the difference between the violent struggle to force the child to obey (which is the nurse's first big achievement) and the violent struggle to make her comprehend words makes for sameness in these encounters and eventually an exhausting monotony. It will take miraculous skill and energy. It is clear that the bold decision the stalwart young Annie makes when she arrives at the Southern home of the Kellers to try to train their desperately afflicted child is that she must go about it with the brute force one would apply to the breaking of a head-strong colt.To "disinter the soul" of the youngster from the depths of the little animal that darkness and silence since infancy have cruelly made of her, the nurse sees it will take more than patience. One may well feel that Annie has just been winner in three falls out of five.This has advantages and disadvantages in working toward the aim of a powerful emotional experience, which is the obvious object of the film. The picture opened at the Astor and the Trans-Lux Fifty-second Street yesterday.But because the physical encounters between the two in their strongly graphic roles of trained nurse and deaf-and-blind pupil seem to be more frequent and prolonged than they were in the play and are shown in close-ups, which dump the passion and violence right into your lap, the sheer rough-and-tumble of the drama becomes more dominant than it was on the stage.Indeed, one may well leave this picture with the feeling that the triumph achieved by Annie Sullivan with the child Helen Keller (which are the roles the two actresses play) was more a matter of muscle over sinew than of a strong mind over a raw, young, uncurbed will. THE absolutely tremendous and unforgettable display of physically powerful acting that Anne Bancroft and Patty Duke put on in William Gibson's stage play "The Miracle Worker" is repeated by them in the film made from it by the same producer, Fred Coe, and the same director, Arthur Penn.