Yield To The Night: Difference between revisions

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[[File:Diana Dors Yield still.jpg|200px|thumb|none|Diana Dors still used as cover art]]
[[File:Diana Dors Yield still.jpg|200px|thumb|none|Diana Dors still used as cover art]]


Morrissey briefly mentions the cover art (chosen by Warners):<br>
Morrissey briefly mentions the cover art (chosen by Warners) in [[Autobiography]]:<br>
<blockquote>
<blockquote>
"For the sleeve of Singles Warner had used a bleakly soothing shot of Diana Dors that I had housed at Rough Trade many years ago in readiness for the next block of Smiths dynamite."  
"For the sleeve of Singles Warner had used a bleakly soothing shot of Diana Dors that I had housed at Rough Trade many years ago in readiness for the next block of Smiths dynamite."  

Revision as of 06:59, 22 February 2022

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A still from this film was used as cover art for The Smiths "Singles" collection.

Diana Dors still used as cover art

Morrissey briefly mentions the cover art (chosen by Warners) in Autobiography:

"For the sleeve of Singles Warner had used a bleakly soothing shot of Diana Dors that I had housed at Rough Trade many years ago in readiness for the next block of Smiths dynamite."

Mentioned In

Wikipedia Information

Yield_to_the_Night.jpg

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, Yvonne Mitchell and Michael Craig. It was written by John Cresswell and Joan Henry based on Henry's 1954 novel Yield to the Night. 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".