Mary Sharron
Susan Hayward
Mary Sharron

“She hated the child whose life stirred within her...because it was part of him whom she loathed and despised...”
After her husband dies in a fire, a woman (Susan Hayward) is left to tend for her young son and the family farm on her own. Soon, she takes in a drifting handyman, they fall in love, and a resentment begins to build between the son and his new "step-father" who treats the boy harshly on purpose to prepare him for life on the frontier.
Mary Sharron
Susan Hayward
Mary Sharron
Fred Carter
Stephen Boyd
Fred Carter
Mayme Radzevitch
Barbara Nichols
Mayme Radzevitch
Robbie Sharron
Dennis Holmes
Robbie Sharron
Dr. R. W. Gibbs
Theodore Bikel
Dr. R. W. Gibbs
Sergeant Le Moyne
Ken Scott
Sergeant Le Moyne
Henri
James Philbrook
Henri
Mrs. Bedelia Gibbs
Florence MacMichael
Mrs. Bedelia Gibbs
I found the title of this film slightly misleading as Susan Hayward shuns her glamorous looks to play "Mary". She lives happily with her husband and young son "Robbie" (Dennis Holmes) until a forest fire renders her a widow and she really begins to struggle to maintain their small farm. Things might improve though when "Fred" (Stephen Boyd) arrives on the scene. He had been working at a local lumber mill but the conflagration put paid to that. For C$80 per month, he agree to stick around the place and help out. He sleeps in an annexe to the barn and as time passes it becomes clear what's going to happen next... "Fred" has something of the "Jekyll" to him though, and as he struggles to relate to the youngster and increasingly to his new wife, we discover that he has some baggage of his own and that is seriously compromising his new family. Tempers - and the weather - flare up and soon lives are in danger. Boyd does an ok job here, but is hampered by the scope of his character. The man we see at the start of the film isn't really the violent, bad-tempered, man we see in the middle - and we only have sparse crumbs to explain this change from the rather undercooked screenplay. The production benefits from some fine cinematography, it also suffers from some clearly studio based external scenes and a snow storm that must have all but exhausted the Californian confetti supply. Hayward offers a convincing performance here as the doting mother and the film tells a story of the pioneering spirit from a slightly different perspective.
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