| Photos (See all 32 | slideshow) | Videos (see all 2) |
| Richard Widmark | ... | Jed Towers | |
| Marilyn Monroe | ... | Nell Forbes | |
| Anne Bancroft | ... | Lyn Lesley | |
| Donna Corcoran | ... | Bunny Jones | |
| Jeanne Cagney | ... | Rochelle | |
| Lurene Tuttle | ... | Ruth Jones | |
| Elisha Cook Jr. | ... | Eddie Forbes | |
| Jim Backus | ... | Peter Jones | |
| Verna Felton | ... | Mrs. Ballew | |
| Willis Bouchey | ... | Joe the Bartender (as Willis B. Bouchey) | |
| Don Beddoe | ... | Mr. Ballew | |
| rest of cast listed alphabetically: | |||
| Emmett Vogan | ... | Toastmaster (unconfirmed) | |
| Harry Bartell | ... | Bellboy (uncredited) | |
| Gloria Blondell | ... | Janie - Cafe Photographer (uncredited) | |
| John Call | ... | Bellboy (uncredited) | |
| Dick Cogan | ... | Bell Captain (uncredited) | |
| Charles J. Conrad | ... | Speaker (uncredited) | |
| Tom Daly | ... | Man in Elevator (uncredited) | |
| Elizabeth Flournoy | ... | Undetermined Role (uncredited) | |
| Bess Flowers | ... | Woman at Awards Dinner (uncredited) | |
| Charles Flynn | ... | Uniformed Cop at End (uncredited) | |
| Robert Foulk | ... | Doorman (uncredited) | |
| Grace Hayle | ... | Mrs. McMurdock (uncredited) | |
| Marjorie Holliday | ... | Phone Operator (uncredited) | |
| David McMahon | ... | Uniformed Cop at End (uncredited) | |
| Eda Reiss Merin | ... | Maid (uncredited) | |
| Harold Miller | ... | Banquet Guest (uncredited) | |
| Vic Perrin | ... | Elevator Operator (uncredited) | |
| Michael Ross | ... | Pat - Hotel Detective (uncredited) | |
| Olan Soule | ... | Bespectacled Desk Clerk (uncredited) | |
Directed by | |||
| Roy Ward Baker | (as Roy Baker) | ||
Writing credits | ||
| Daniel Taradash | (screenplay) | |
| Charlotte Armstrong | (novel) | |
Produced by | |||
| Julian Blaustein | .... | producer | |
Cinematography by | |||
| Lucien Ballard | |||
Film Editing by | |||
| George A. Gittens | |||
Art Direction by | |||
| Richard Irvine | |||
| Lyle R. Wheeler | (as Lyle Wheeler) | ||
Set Decoration by | |||
| Paul S. Fox | |||
| Thomas Little | |||
Costume Design by | |||
| Travilla | |||
Makeup Department | |||
| Ben Nye | .... | makeup artist | |
Sound Department | |||
| Bernard Freericks | .... | sound | |
| Harry M. Leonard | .... | sound | |
Special Effects by | |||
| Ray Kellogg | .... | special photographic effects | |
Costume and Wardrobe Department | |||
| Charles Le Maire | .... | wardrobe director | |
Music Department | |||
| Earle Hagen | .... | orchestrator | |
| Bernard Mayers | .... | orchestrator | |
| Lionel Newman | .... | musical director | |
Other crew | |||
| Jerry Goldsmith | .... | scoring tasks (uncredited) | |
| Recent Posts (updated daily) | User |
|---|---|
| The Script. | chris-harron |
| Anne Bancroft sings? | wilcabral |
| Verna Felton | dmnemaine |
| Anyone Read the Book? | melslovepotion |
| ending, need help because of cable company | tomtac |
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| Single White Female | The Bird with the Crystal Plumage | A Face in the Crowd | Mr. & Mrs. Smith | Flightplan |
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| Full cast and crew | Company credits | External reviews |
| News articles | IMDb Drama section | IMDb USA section |
On so many levels. Not just because of the character Marilyn Monroe played . . . but also because of the course she afterwards chose to take, as a performer.
In life, MM was never the dumb-blonde clown she so often portrayed on film. Yet she chose to follow that path of "marketability" from her earliest days -- perhaps because of advice -- "The only thing I had on was the radio," she famously said regarding her early calendar shoot (though that quote was delivered to her by her public relations handler).
Yet, in "Don't Bother to Knock," we have evidence of a talent far deeper and more affecting than anything she ever did, before or since.
Though then, and still, a B-movie, DBTK remains a highly disturbing piece of work from a remarkable natural actress who subsequently decided to pursue -- who knows, whether from instinct, advice or "the line of least resistance" -- a career based on superficial appearance rather than emotive depth.
Finally, of course, she morphed into the silly, slithering, sewn-into-her-Jean-Louis-gown "songstress" at President Kennedy's birthday party in Madison Square Garden in 1962, all drug-addled spray-netted helmet-haired breathiness and off-key baby-voiced "vocalizing." In DBTK, however, is ample evidence of the powerfully effective actress she could have been, had she taken a different road.
This is not to criticize the choices she made as a performer.
Doubtless, she would not be the legend she remains today, had she lived into her 60s or 70s.
But DBTK remains an archive of a complex and affecting screen acting talent, caught at the fork in her career's road, who chose surface over substance.
No matter how beguiling MM will always remain as a screen icon, there is this one and only proof of a talent even more devastating -- had she the guts or the advice to honor and follow it.
Sad, and disturbing, indeed.