The March Hare (1956 film)

The March Hare is a 1956 British comedy film directed by George More O'Ferrall and starring Peggy Cummins, Terence Morgan, Martita Hunt and Cyril Cusack.[2] The film follows the efforts in Ireland to turn a seemingly useless racing horse, called The March Hare, into a Derby-winner.[3]

The March Hare
Directed byGeorge More O'Ferrall
Produced byAlbert Fennell
Bertram Ostrer
Written byGordon Wellesley
Allan MacKinnon
Paul Vincent Carroll (additional dialogue)
Based onthe novel Gamblers Sometimes Win by T.H. Bird[1]
Music byPhilip Green
CinematographyJack Hildyard
Edited byGordon Pilkington
Production
company
B & A Productions (as Achilles)
Distributed byBritish Lion Film Corporation (UK)
Release date
  • April 1956 (1956-04) (UK)
Running time
85 minutes
CountryUK
LanguageEnglish

Plot

The film begins at Royal Ascot. Sir Charles Hare (Terence Morgan) is an Irish baronet who loses his ancestral home and its racing stables after someone fixes a race that Hare has gambled on. Forced to sell his estate, he decides to stay on when the new American owner's attractive daughter Pat (Peggy Cummins) mistakes him for a groom. Playing along with her mistake, romance develops between the two.

Meanwhile, Hare's aunt Lady Anne (Martita Hunt) and his friend Col Keene (Wilfrid Hyde-White), save one colt from the sale, and rear it with the help of Mangan (Cyril Cusack), who is invariably drunk but has strong control over the horse by invoking the power of the fairies. Hare names the colt "The March Hare".

We jump two years to a racecourse where Peggy discovers Sir Charles's true identity and "The March Hare" only manages to race after Mangan calms the horse using fairy words. Hare and Pat go for a date in London. After Mangan falls ill, he becomes teetotal, which restores his health but means he can no longer remember the fairy words.

Derby Day arrives and Hare needs to track down Mangan... Lady Anne has got him drunk in the pub in the hope that it will restore his memory of the fairy words. They get him to the track in time to whisper his magic words to the horse. As the race starts March Hare lags behind: it appears that someone has sabotaged the race again, but March Hare forges forward and wins.

Sir Charles is rich again and Peggy is happy to marry him.

Cast

Critical reception

In the Radio Times, Tony Sloman gave the film three out of five stars, and wrote, "Best remembered (if at all) for Philip Green's jaunty theme music, this British Lion horse-racing romp gains from the fact that it was photographed in colour and CinemaScope by the great Jack Hildyard. It also has good-looking leads in handsome Terence Morgan and sultry Peggy Cummins who, together with a sly performance from Cyril Cusack, keep the whole thing a good deal more watchable than it deserves to be. Comedy fans might care to note the pre-Carry On casting of Charles Hawtrey, while Wilfrid Hyde White also puts in an appearance."[4]

References

  1. Goble, Alan (1 January 1999). The Complete Index to Literary Sources in Film. Walter de Gruyter. ISBN 9783110951943 via Google Books.
  2. "The March Hare". 1 April 1956 via IMDb.
  3. "The March Hare (1956)". Archived from the original on 14 January 2009.
  4. "The March Hare - Film from RadioTimes".


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