Henry Hobson owns and tyrannically runs a successful Victorian boot maker’s shop in Salford, England. A stingy widower with a weakness for overindulging in the local Moonraker Public House, he exploits his three daughters as cheap labour. When he declares that there will be ‘no marriages’ to avoid the expense of marriage settlements at £500 each, his eldest daughter Maggie rebels.
Directing | David Lean | Director |
Writing | David Lean | Screenplay |
Writing | Harold Brighouse | Theatre Play |
Directing | Adrian Pryce-Jones | Assistant Director |
Editing | Peter Taylor | Editor |
Art | Wilfred Shingleton | Art Direction |
Costume & Make-Up | John Armstrong | Costume Design |
Sound | Malcolm Arnold | Original Music Composer |
Camera | Jack Hildyard | Director of Photography |
Costume & Make-Up | Tony Sforzini | Makeup Artist |
Production | David Lean | Producer |
Costume & Make-Up | George Partleton | Makeup Artist |
Writing | Wynyard Browne | Screenplay |
Production | John Palmer | Production Manager |
Production | Norman Spencer | Associate Producer |
Writing | Norman Spencer | Screenplay |
Sound | Ken Ritchie | Boom Operator |
Production | Margaret Townsend | Production Secretary |
Camera | Ray Hearne | Still Photographer |
Costume & Make-Up | Gladys Atkinson | Hairdresser |
Sound | John Cox | Sound Supervisor |
Directing | Maggie Unsworth | Continuity |
Sound | Muir Mathieson | Music Director |
Camera | Peter Newbrook | Camera Operator |
Sound | Red Law | Sound Recordist |
Costume & Make-Up | Julia Squire | Costume Supervisor |
Art | William Hutchinson | Assistant Art Director |
Sound | Buster Ambler | Sound Recordist |
Sound | Barbara Hopkins | Sound |
Camera | Alan Hall | Clapper Loader |