''A Woman's Tale'' is a 1991 Australian film directed by
Paul Cox and starring
Sheila Florance
Sheila Mary Florance (24 July 1916 – 12 October 1991) was an Australian actress known for her work in theatre, television and film.
Born in Melbourne, she married an Englishman in 1934 and relocated to London. Her early career was based ...
,
Gosia Dobrowolska
Małgorzata Dobrowolska (born 2 June 1958, in Kamienna Góra), known as Gosia Dobrowolska, is a Polish-born Australian actress.
Biography
She has one brother, Janusz Dobrowolski, who also made a minor appearance in the 1984 film, '' Silver C ...
,
Norman Kaye
Norman James Kaye (17 January 1927 – 28 May 2007) was an Australian actor. He was best known for his roles in the films of director Paul Cox.
Early life and education
Kaye was born into a tough childhood in Depression Era Melbourne, as one ...
,
Chris Haywood
Chris Haywood (born ) is an English-born Australian actor, writer and producer, with close to 500 screen performances to his name. Haywood has also worked as a casting director, art director, sound recordist, camera operator, gaffer, grip, lo ...
,
Max Gillies
Maxwell Irvine Gillies AM (born 16 November 1941) is an Australian actor and a founding member of the 1970s experimental theatre company, the Australian Performing Group.
Early life and education
Gillies studied art teaching at Frankston Te ...
and Ernie Gray. It was the final performance of Sheila Florence, was dying of cancer as the film was being shot. She died, aged 75, nine days after being awarded the 1991
.
Premise
Martha is an elderly woman living alone in her flat and dying of cancer. Her love of life leads to an ambivalence about her age; her unique moral code leads to her
playing cupid for her friend and nurse Anna and Anna's married lover Peter; her worrisome son Jonathan wants her to move into a home; her neighbour Billy has
dementia
Dementia is a syndrome associated with many neurodegenerative diseases, characterized by a general decline in cognitive abilities that affects a person's ability to perform activities of daily living, everyday activities. This typically invo ...
.
Martha remembers the death of her baby in a bombing attack during World War Two.
She is hospitalised after a serious fall.
Cast
*
Sheila Florance
Sheila Mary Florance (24 July 1916 – 12 October 1991) was an Australian actress known for her work in theatre, television and film.
Born in Melbourne, she married an Englishman in 1934 and relocated to London. Her early career was based ...
as Martha
*
Gosia Dobrowolska
Małgorzata Dobrowolska (born 2 June 1958, in Kamienna Góra), known as Gosia Dobrowolska, is a Polish-born Australian actress.
Biography
She has one brother, Janusz Dobrowolski, who also made a minor appearance in the 1984 film, '' Silver C ...
as Anna
*
Norman Kaye
Norman James Kaye (17 January 1927 – 28 May 2007) was an Australian actor. He was best known for his roles in the films of director Paul Cox.
Early life and education
Kaye was born into a tough childhood in Depression Era Melbourne, as one ...
as Billy
*
Chris Haywood
Chris Haywood (born ) is an English-born Australian actor, writer and producer, with close to 500 screen performances to his name. Haywood has also worked as a casting director, art director, sound recordist, camera operator, gaffer, grip, lo ...
as Jonathan
* Ernie Gray as Peter
*
Alex Menglet
Alex Menglet, born ''Alexei Menglet'' in Moscow, USSR, is an actor who has found success working in Australia.
Early life
Menglet was born in Moscow, USSR to parents Maya Menglet and Leonid Satanovskiy. He came from a theatrical family. As a ...
as Con 2
*
Monica Maughan
Monica Cresswell Maughan (née Wood, 15 September 1933 – 8 January 2010) was an Australian actor with roles in theatre, radio, television, film and ballet over a career spanning 52 years.
Early life and education
She was born Monica Cresswel ...
as Billy's daughter
*
Max Gillies
Maxwell Irvine Gillies AM (born 16 November 1941) is an Australian actor and a founding member of the 1970s experimental theatre company, the Australian Performing Group.
Early life and education
Gillies studied art teaching at Frankston Te ...
as Billy's son-in-law
*
Tony Llewellyn-Jones
Tony Llewellyn-Jones is a British-born Australian actor. He was nominated for the 1976 AFI Award for Best Actor in a Supporting Role for his role in '' Picnic at Hanging Rock''.
Born in London, England, Llewellyn-Jones lived in Singapore, Kua ...
as Celebrant
*
Melita Jurisic
Melita Jurisic is an Australian actress.
Jurisic was born in Croatia and migrated to Australia with her family at age five. She began her career as part of the Lighthouse Company (Playhouse) in Adelaide.
Career
Screen, stage and music
Jur ...
as Judy (voice)
Production
Florance had a long relationship with Paul Cox having appeared in his first feature. She wanted to star in a movie and Cox devised the idea, inspired by the story of a woman whose house burned down.
Cox later said, "We always used to joke that I would make her a star. When I heard suddenly that she was dying of cancer I visited her immediately. There was no sentimentality or anything on her part—she was an incredible woman—but she said jokingly, “There is still time to turn me into a star, but let's be quick.” I went home and spent three days and three nights writing the script and then with Barry Dickins and Sheila we did another draft."
In August 1990, Florence took a draft of the script with her to England, where she was doing a tour due to her popularity in ''Prisoner''. She became critically ill and was in hospital; she received last rites, but recovered after some operations and returned to Australia to make the film. It was shot over 24 days.
Cox said " She was given eight weeks to live and so we made ''A Woman's Tale'' with this hanging over us. This motivated us, of course, but Sheila had a degree of greatness about her. She was a very powerful woman.
Florence died in Melbourne Hospital on 12 October 1991. She had been too ill to attend the AFI ceremony.
Release
The film screened at the Telluride Film Festival.
Reception
Box office
''A Woman's Tale'' grossed $49,584 at the box office in Australia.
The film grossed $405,137 in the United States.
According to Cox in 2001 "The film won an enormous response around the world and still does. It is still being screened in Japan, which is amazing. I don't know who got the money for it, but that's another very dirty business. At the time nobody wanted to know but we ploughed on and finished it and suddenly it is accepted. This saddened me as well. Why couldn't people trust me, why did I have to go through all this trauma? Nobody wanted to back the film. We had no insurance, in fact, after I completed the film I had to sell my house in a hurry otherwise I would have gone totally bankrupt."
Critical
Roger Ebert
Roger Joseph Ebert ( ; June 18, 1942 – April 4, 2013) was an American Film criticism, film critic, film historian, journalist, essayist, screenwriter and author. He wrote for the ''Chicago Sun-Times'' from 1967 until his death in 2013. Eber ...
added ''A Woman's Tale'' to his
Great Movies
''The Great Movies'' is the name of several publications, both online and in print, from Roger Ebert, an American film critic and columnist for ''The Chicago Sun-Times''. The object was, as Ebert put it, to "make a tour of the landmarks of the f ...
list in 2004.
[
]
''Variety'' wrote Florance "carries the film on her frail shoulders."
Jonathan Rosenbaum wrote "I’ve never been much of a Paul Cox fan, but this 1991 feature... is rather special, largely because Cox regular Sheila Florance who, like the character she plays, was dying of cancer over the course of the film is magnificent. Affirmative without being sentimental, this is a deeply absorbing movie with no false notes or wasted motion."
Awards
In 1992, the film won the Grand Prix for Best Film at
Film Fest Gent
Film Fest Gent, also known as International Film Fest Gent, is an annual international film festival in Ghent, Belgium. The festival held its first edition in 1974, under the name Internationaal Filmgebeuren Gent, and has since grown into the la ...
.
Cox called it one of his favourite films:
It's a homage to a very great and wonderful human being, Sheila Florance. It's very much a film about life, but using death. It's a very daring movie, because you're not allowed to make films like this, playing with a million dollars, making a film about an old woman. That's pretty tricky. All the sentiments are really against it. I didn't have insurance so everything I had was at stake, making this film. I always knew it would work - I had great faith in Sheila and in what we were doing. I judge people by this film, you see. When people cannot understand or appreciate it or the process of making it, I judge them by that. From the film you can only become a more thinking and feeling human being. When I see ''A Woman's Tale'' basically being ignored here, that's disgusting, absolutely disgusting. The only bad crits I get are in Australia but the whole world raves about ''A Woman's Tale'', the whole world. Why not be proud of it?["Interview with Paul Cox", ''Signet'', 13 January 2001](_blank)
References
External links
*
''A Woman's Tale''at Screen Australia
''A Woman's Tale''at Letterbox DVD
*''A Woman's Tale'' at th
Australian screen''A Woman's Tale''at Oz Movies
1991 films
Australian independent films
Australian drama films
Films directed by Paul Cox
1991 drama films
1991 independent films
1990s English-language films
1990s Australian films
English-language drama films
English-language independent films
{{indie-drama-film-stub