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Since You Went Away

Since You Went Away

  • Status: Released
  • 30-06-1944
  • Runtime: 177 min
  • Score: 6.52
  • Vote count: 50

In 1943, several people enter, re-enter, and exit the difficult life of a Midwestern family whose patriarch has been called up to war, leaving behind his wife and two teen daughters.

Claudette Colbert

Mrs. Anne Hilton

Jennifer Jones

Jane Deborah Hilton

Joseph Cotten

Lieutenant Tony Willett

Shirley Temple

Bridget 'Brig' Hilton

Monty Woolley

Colonel William G. Smollett

Lionel Barrymore

Clergyman

Robert Walker

Corporal William G. 'Bill' Smollett II

Hattie McDaniel

Fidelia

Agnes Moorehead

Mrs. Emily Hawkins

Alla Nazimova

Zofia Koslowska

Albert Bassermann

Dr. Sigmund Gottlieb Golden

Gordon Oliver

Marine Officer Seeking Room

Keenan Wynn

Lieutenant Solomon

Guy Madison

Sailor Harold E. Smith

Craig Stevens

Danny Williams

Lloyd Corrigan

Mr. Mahoney - Grocer

Jackie Moran

Johnny Mahoney

Dorothy Adams

Nurse (uncredited)

Irving Bacon

Bartender at Cocktail Lounge (uncredited)

Conrad Binyon

Page Boy (uncredited)

Dorothy Dandridge

Black Officer's Wife in Train Station (uncredited)

John Derek

Minor Role (uncredited)

Jimmie Dodd

Train Passenger (uncredited)

Rhonda Fleming

Girl at Dance (uncredited)

Ann Gillis

Becky Anderson - Class President (uncredited)

Eddie Hall

Eager Sailor (uncredited)

Warren Hymer

Convalescent Wishing for Tutti Frutti (uncredited)

Edwin Maxwell

Businessman in Cocktail Lounge (uncredited)

Andrew V. McLaglen

Former Plowboy (uncredited)

Terry Moore

Refugee Child on Train (uncredited)

Aileen Pringle

Woman at Cocktail Lounge (uncredited)

Ruth Roman

Envious Girl in Train Station (uncredited)

Grady Sutton

Soldier Hunting for Susie Fleming (uncredited)

Theodore von Eltz

Hotel Desk Clerk (uncredited)

Doodles Weaver

Convalescent Wishing for Watermelon (uncredited)

Butterfly McQueen

WAC Sergeant (uncredited)

CinemaSerf

Claudette Colbert is great as the struggling "Anne", who must bring up her two daughters "Jane" (Jennifer Jones) and "Brig" (Shirley Temple) whilst her husband is off fighting in WWII. To assist with the usual problems of making ends meet, she must take in a lodger "Col. Smollett" (Monty Woolley). At times you cannot help but feel for this poor lady who is constantly at the end of her tether. Their lodger is fastidious to say the least - he hates children, pets and yes, who better to illustrate that military pomposity than an on-form Woolley. To add to her woes, the young "Jane" is obsessed with men - more particularly their family friend "Tony" (Joseph Cotton). A man some years her senior who joins the navy leaving poor old "Jane" unaware that she is the object of the affections of their house guest's rather hapless grandson "Bill" (Robert Walker). On the face of it, this all appears rather convoluted but Colbert, Woolley and Cotten really do gel well together providing a quickly paced and entertaining series of escapades that, though exaggerated, do ring true a little for many households during the war that were left bereft of funds and a father/husband. Temple features now and again, largely do-gooding for the war effort by collecting junk, and Jones delivers well as both girls have to grip up - whether they like it or not. Max Steiner provides a lively, jaunty, score that sets and keeps the pace engaging and sometimes frenetic - but it's Colbert who shows she is very much the star here. I enjoyed it.