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| starring = [[Patricia Healey]]
| starring = [[Patricia Healey]]
| music = Misha Donat
| music = Misha Donat
| cinematography = [[Miroslav Ondrícek]]
| cinematography = [[Miroslav Ondříček]]
| editing = [[Kevin Brownlow]]
| editing = [[Kevin Brownlow]]
| studio = [[Woodfall Film Productions]]
| studio = [[Woodfall Film Productions]]
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==Plot==
==Plot==
The main character, only referred to as 'the girl' ([[Patricia Healey]]) leaves London, goes north on a train full of football fans and takes a trip in a white double-decker bus around an unnamed city she is visiting, although it is clearly based on Manchester; Delaney was born and grew up in nearby Salford. The Mayor ([[Arthur Lowe]]), a local businessman, and the council's ceremonial [[Mace-bearer|macebearer]] ([[John Sharp (actor)|John Sharp]]) happen also to be taking the trip while they show the city to visiting foreigners.
The main character, only referred to as 'the girl' ([[Patricia Healey]]) leaves London, goes north on a train full of football fans and takes a trip in a white double-decker bus around an unnamed city she is visiting, although it is clearly based on Manchester; Delaney was born and grew up in nearby Salford. The Mayor ([[Arthur Lowe]]), a local businessman, and the council's ceremonial [[Mace-bearer|macebearer]] ([[John Sharp (actor)|John Sharp]]) happen also to be taking the trip while they show the city to visiting foreigners.

Locations include [[Albert Square, Manchester|Albert Square]] and its landmark, the [[Manchester Town Hall|Town Hall]] and the nearby [[Manchester Central Library|Central Library]]. The 'model estate' of high-rise flats was shot on the Kersal Flats estate, while the factory sequences were shot in [[Trafford Park]], including the [[Metropolitan-Vickers]] works. It also featured scenes on Cheetham Hill Road and inside Cheetham College (now demolished).

Both the exterior and interior shots of the school were taken in the former Pendleton High School for Girls – now mainly demolished, but with the original Victorian building converted to a retirement home. Using local people, Anderson also staged parodies of paintings by [[Manet]] (''[[Le déjeuner sur l'herbe]]''), [[Jean-Honoré Fragonard|Fragonard]] and [[Goya]] in [[Buile Hill Park]] in [[Salford, Greater Manchester|Salford]]. It was [[Anthony Hopkins]] film debut in a small role, while [[Stephen Moore (actor)|Stephen Moore]] is a young bowler-hatted, possibly upper-class, man who pesters the heroine with nonsense<ref>Paul Sutton (ed.) ''The Diaries: Lindsay Anderson'', London: Methuen, 2004, p.141n.</ref> on the station in London. She may know him, as she says "I'll write" from the train.


==Cast==
==Cast==

Revision as of 11:47, 21 June 2022

The White Bus
File:The White Bus (1967 film).jpg
Directed byLindsay Anderson
Screenplay byShelagh Delaney
Based ona short story by Shelagh Delaney
Produced byLindsay Anderson
StarringPatricia Healey
CinematographyMiroslav Ondříček
Edited byKevin Brownlow
Music byMisha Donat
Production
company
Distributed byUnited Artists Corporation (UK)
Release date
  • December 1967 (1967-12) (UK)
Running time
46 minutes
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish

The White Bus is a 1967 short film directed by Lindsay Anderson. The screenplay was jointly adapted[1] with Shelagh Delaney from a short story in her collection Sweetly Sings the Donkey (1963).[2] The White Bus was also the film debut of Anthony Hopkins.[3]

Plot

The main character, only referred to as 'the girl' (Patricia Healey) leaves London, goes north on a train full of football fans and takes a trip in a white double-decker bus around an unnamed city she is visiting, although it is clearly based on Manchester; Delaney was born and grew up in nearby Salford. The Mayor (Arthur Lowe), a local businessman, and the council's ceremonial macebearer (John Sharp) happen also to be taking the trip while they show the city to visiting foreigners.

Cast

History and production

The film was originally commissioned by producer Oscar Lewenstein, then a director of Woodfall, as one third of a 'portmanteau' feature entitled Red White and Zero, with the other sections supplied by Anderson's Free Cinema collaborators Tony Richardson and Karel Reisz[4] from the other short stories by Shelagh Delaney.

The "first real day's shooting" was on 19 October 1965, and took about a month to complete.[5]

The two other planned sections of the film developed into what became Richardson's Red and Blue and Peter Brook's Ride of the Valkyrie (1967), Reisz having dropped out, both of which are unrelated to Delaney's work. Of these, only The White Bus received a theatrical release in the UK.[6]

Notes

  1. ^ Hedling, E: "Lindsay Anderson: Maverick Film-Maker", Cassell, 1998, p.62
  2. ^ Shelagh Delaney "Sweetly Sings the Donkey", New York: GP Putnam, 1963; London: Methuen, 1964
  3. ^ "Sir Anthony Hopkins – Welsh actor".
  4. ^ Lindsay Anderson, Paul Ryan (ed) "Never Apologise: The Collected Writings", Plexus, 2004, p.105
  5. ^ Sutton, p.140-41
  6. ^ Sutton, p.146

External links