Yield to the Night

Yield to the Night (U.S. title: Blonde Sinner) is a 1956 British crime drama film directed by J. Lee Thompson and starring Diana Dors. The film is based on the 1954 novel of the same name by Joan Henry.

The storyline bears a superficial and coincidental resemblance to the Ruth Ellis case, which had occurred the previous year but subsequent to the release of Henry's novel. The film received much positive critical attention, particularly for the unexpectedly skilled acting of Dors, who had previously been cast solely as a British version of the typical "blonde bombshell".

Premise
Mary Hilton has been convicted of murder and sentenced to hang, and she spends her last weeks in the condemned cell in a British women's prison. While there she remembers the events in her life leading up to the murder.

Cast

 * Diana Dors as Mary Hilton
 * Yvonne Mitchell as Matron Hilda MacFarlane
 * Michael Craig as Jim Lancaster
 * Marie Ney as Prison Governess
 * Geoffrey Keen as Prison Chaplain
 * Liam Redmond as Prison Doctor
 * Olga Lindo as Senior Matron Hill
 * Joan Miller as Matron Barker
 * Marjorie Rhodes as Matron Brandon
 * Molly Urquhart as Matron Mason
 * Mary Mackenzie as Matron Maxwell
 * Harry Locke as Fred Hilton
 * Michael Ripper as Roy, bar good-timer
 * Joyce Blair as Doris, storeclerk-friend
 * Charles Clay as Bob
 * Athene Seyler as Miss Bligh
 * Mona Washbourne as Mrs. Thomas, landlady
 * Alec Finter as Mr. Thomas, landlord
 * Mercia Shaw as Lucy
 * Marianne Stone as New Matron Richardson
 * Charles Lloyd-Pack as Mary's lawyer
 * Dandy Nichols as Mrs. Price
 * John Charlesworth as Alan Price

Production
The film was based on a book by Joan Henry, a writer and former debutante who had gone to prison. Henry wrote a memoir about her experiences which was filmed as The Weak and the Wicked (1954), directed by J. Lee Thompson and starring Diana Dors. Thompson married Henry and they decided to collaborate on another movie. Thompson was anti-capital punishment and wanted to do a story about a man in a death cell. Henry said she could not write about a man but might be able to do it about a woman. "So he really gave me the idea, and then I showed him a plan", she said. The novel of Yield to the Night was published in 1954.

The storyline bore some similarities to the Ruth Ellis case but Henry wrote the story and script during the filming of The Weak and the Wicked. Dors (who had been briefly acquainted with Ellis on the film Lady Godiva Rides Again in 1951) said it "wasn’t about Ruth Ellis at all. Everybody thinks it was but the script was written two years before Ruth Ellis committed the murder. It's a fascinating syndrome that all this was put down on paper before it happened."

Thompson later said "For capital punishment you must take somebody who deserves to die, and then feel sorry for them and say this is wrong. We did that in Yield to the Night: we made it a ruthless, premeditated murder."

Dors said this "was the first time I ever had a chance to play such a part. I was very thankful to Lee J. Thompson for having faith in me. Until then everybody thought I was just a joke, and certainly not an actress to be taken seriously, even though I knew within myself I was capable of playing other roles. The big problem was trying to convince other people."

Filming started at Elstree Studios on 2 November 1955.

Michael Craig said Thompson was "a small, very intense man with a violent temper, which could be provoked by practically anything or nothing. He had a nervous habit of tearing sheets of paper into long thin strips." Craig thought Dors was "terrific... one of the most free-spirited and professional actresses I worked with."

Reception
The Monthly Film Bulletin wrote: "Assessment of Yield to the Night can only be made on two levels, those of the film itself: the study of a young woman awaiting execution for murder; and the novelettish flashbacks full of rejected and unfaithful lovers, etc. With this latter material we are in familiar screen territory – extensive London location shooting, a flashy camera style, wafer-thin characterisation and improbable motivation. On the film's other level a definite attempt has been made, in the writing and presentation, objectively to penetrate the condemned cell and the doomed psychology of the murderess. As a plea against capital punishment, however, the producers' conception of their drama seems to lack passion, and this makes it difficult to assimilate the film's emotional climate. Diana Dors, her natural exuberance muted, plays Mary Hilton touchingly, evoking gradual but positive sympathy."

Variety called it "a grim form of entertainment."

Filmink called it "a masterpiece, a stunningly good drama, where Dors plays a character who never asks for sympathy but gets it anyway: she's guilty of the crime, isn’t friendly to her family or death penalty protestors, still loves the louse who drove her to murder. The movie is full of little touches that speak volumes for Henry's personal experience in prison – the routine of changing guards, the conversations, the way the seconds drag on by, the visiting officials, the small privileges, the overwhelming pressure of the longing for a reprieve – and the final moments are devastating: it's one of the best British movies of the decade."

A 19-year-old woman reportedly committed suicide within hours of watching the film.

Despite the film's success Dors never worked with Thompson again.

Accolades
The movie was nominated for the Palme d'Or at the 1956 Cannes Film Festival.

In popular culture
An image of Diana Dors in a cell from the film was used on the cover of the Smiths' Singles album.