"Lux Radio Theater" broadcast a 60 minute radio adaptation of the movie onJanuary 10, 1944 with Charles Boyer and Alexis Smith reprising their film roles.

"The Screen Guild Theater" broadcast a 30 minute radio adaptation of the movie on March 20, 1944 with Charles Boyer and Alexis Smith reprising their film roles.

Alfred Hitchcock was considered for directing this film. Hitchcock's wife Alma Reville was one of the writers of The Constant Nymph 1928 version.

A 16mm print of this film can be found in the collection of the Wisconsin Center For Film and Theater Research in Madison, WI.

A Nitrate Print of the film survives in the UCLA Film and Television Archives, and is not listed for Preservation.



For a long time, this film wasn't available because the rights to Margaret Kennedy and Basil Dean's play, Margaret Kennedy's novel and the original film rights owned by Gaumont British all became separated at different times in the late 1950s and eventually expired. The script and screen version used in 1943 was a combination of novel and play. Separate contracts were negotiated at that time with both authors. The Kennedy Estate had no objection to the film being shown, but it would have required expensive legal intervention to resolve the contractual situation. Somehow this must have been straightened out as the film is now available. The Library of Congress Film Archive restored it and it premiered at the Turner Classic Movie Festival in spring 2011 and aired later on the TCM cable movie channel.

This film was preserved at the Packard Campus of the National Audio-Visual Conservation Center and shown on Turner Classic Movies, September 28, 2011.


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