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  1. Baby, the Rain Must Fall

    Baby, the Rain Must Fall

    1965 · Drama · 1h 40m

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  1. Baby the Rain Must Fall is a 1965 American drama film directed by Robert Mulligan and starring Lee Remick, Steve McQueen and Don Murray. Dramatist Horton Foote, who wrote the screenplay, based it on his 1954 play The Traveling Lady.[2]

  2. Baby the Rain Must Fall: Directed by Robert Mulligan. With Lee Remick, Steve McQueen, Don Murray, Paul Fix. In Texas, a woman and her young daughter head down to another town where the girl's irresponsible, hotheaded and immature father has just been released from prison on parole.

    • (2.1K)
    • Drama
    • Robert Mulligan
    • 1965-01-12
  3. It is the title song of the movie, Baby the Rain Must Fall and is heard during the opening credits. Yarbrough put it up front on his 1965 album, Baby the Rain Must Fall, which was recorded at RCA Victor's Music Center of the World in Hollywood, California. [3]

  4. Baby the Rain Must Fall, the title song of the 1965 film of the same name made it to No. 12 on the singles chart, making it his biggest hit. An LP, also called "Baby the Rain Must Fall", hit No. 35 on the albums chart.

  5. With her infant daughter Margaret Rose in tow, Georgette Thomas pulls up stakes from Tyler, Texas to head to Columbus, Texas to be reunited with her husband, Henry Thomas, who has just been released from prison on parole. Columbus is Henry's hometown. Margaret Rose has never met her father.

  6. Georgette Thomas and her daughter, Margaret Rose, travel by bus to a small Texas town to meet her husband, Henry, when he is released from prison after serving time for stabbing a man during a drunken brawl. Slim, the local sheriff and boyhood friend of Henry, takes Georgette to her husband, a guitar-playing singer still dominated by Miss Kate ...

  7. Baby the Rain Must Fall is a 1965 American drama film directed by Robert Mulligan and starring Lee Remick, Steve McQueen and Don Murray. Dramatist Horton Foote, who wrote the screenplay, based it on his 1954 play The Traveling Lady.

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