Mrs. Helen 'Nelly' Alistair
Freda Jackson
Mrs. Helen 'Nelly' Alistair

“The Film of the Play by Sylvia Rayman That Makes 'No Room at the Inn' Look Like a Bedtime Story!”
When a nightclub singer is arrested for murder, his pregnant girlfriend moves into a boarding house for women, but the mother-to-be soon discovers that her new lodgings harbors a horrific secret.
Mrs. Helen 'Nelly' Alistair
Freda Jackson
Mrs. Helen 'Nelly' Alistair
Vivianne Bruce
Rène Ray
Vivianne Bruce
Christine "Chris" Ralston
Lois Maxwell
Christine "Chris" Ralston
Jerry Nolan
Laurence Harvey
Jerry Nolan
Jessie Smithson
Vida Hope
Jessie Smithson
Olga
Dora Bryan
Olga
Rosie Gordon
Joan Dowling
Rosie Gordon
Sally
Dorothy Gordon
Sally
Lilli
Ingeborg von Kusserow
Lilli
Veronica
Mary Germaine
Veronica
Molly
Clare James
Molly
Nurse
Betty Henderson
Nurse
Dora Bryan's voice always appeared on screen at least half an hour before she did - and she's just as personable here in this gritty tale of a pregnant chanteuse, "Vivianne" (Rene Ray) who rents a room in a house while her lover - the crooning Laurence Harvey ("Jerry") is being tried for murder. It doesn't take long for her to discover that their landlady "Nelly" (Freda Jackson) has a pretty sinister ulterior motive and habitually preys on women down on their luck - and she determines she is not going to be her latest victim. Gordon Parry has done quite an efficient job with Sylvia Rayman's play - and for the early 1950s, the rather sordid subject matter is probably more remarkable than any of the performances - though Jackson is quite menacing and Lois Maxwell delivers quite strongly too. It's certainly worth a watch as, embellished or not, it does depict a seedier side of life that is pretty unpleasant. You may also recognise the song "I Can't Believe that You're gone", too.
Read full reviewMore movies you might want to watch next.