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  1. Goodbye, My Lady

    Goodbye, My Lady

    1956 · Drama · 1h 35m

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  1. Good-bye, My Lady is a 1956 American drama film adaptation of the novel Good-bye, My Lady (1954) by James H. Street. The book had been inspired by Street's original 1941 story which appeared in The Saturday Evening Post. Street was going to be the principal advisor on the film when he suddenly died of a heart attack. [1]

  2. Good-bye, My Lady: Directed by William A. Wellman. With Walter Brennan, Phil Harris, Brandon De Wilde, Sidney Poitier. An old man and a young boy who live in the southeastern Mississippi swamps are brought together by the love of a dog.

    • (1.1K)
    • Drama
    • William A. Wellman
    • 1956-05-12
  3. Summaries. An old man and a young boy who live in the southeastern Mississippi swamps are brought together by the love of a dog. Skeeter has found this dog and discovers no one knows what kind it is. He discusses the matter with his uncle, expressing a desire to keep and train the dog for bird hunting, after finding the dog has super-sensing ...

  4. Based on a novel by James H. Street, Good-bye, My Lady is a coming of age story about an adolescent orphan (Brandon De Wilde), nicknamed Skeeter, growing up in the Mississippi swamp with an elderly, uneducated uncle (Walter Brennan). Skeeter finds a strange dog which doesn't bark, but makes a noise which sounds like a laugh, and even cries real ...

  5. Good-bye, My Lady (1956) cast and crew credits, including actors, actresses, directors, writers and more.

  6. Oct 12, 2014 · Video Detective. 134K subscribers. Subscribed. 86. 17K views 9 years ago. Goodbye, My Lady Trailer 1956 Director: William A. Wellman Starring: Brandon de Wilde, Sidney Poitier, Walter...

    • 43 sec
    • 18K
    • Video Detective
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  8. Plot summary. Major themes. Inspiration and 1942 sequel. 1956 film. Footnotes. Good-bye, My Lady is a novel by James H. Street about a boy and his dog. It was published by J. B. Lippincott Company in June 1954 and reprinted in paperback by Pocket Books in February 1978.

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