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      • Good-bye, My Lady is a 1956 American drama film adaptation of the novel Good-bye, My Lady (1954) by James H. Street. The book had been inspired by Street's original 1941 story which appeared in The Saturday Evening Post. Street was going to be the principal advisor on the film when he suddenly died of a heart attack.
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Good-bye,_My_Lady_(film)
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  2. Good-bye, My Lady is a novel by James H. Street about a boy and his dog. It was published by J. B. Lippincott Company in June 1954 and reprinted in paperback by Pocket Books in February 1978. It is based on Street's short story "Weep No More, My Lady", which was published in the 6 December 1941 issue of The Saturday Evening Post .

    • James Street
    • 1954
  3. Good-bye, My Lady is a 1956 American drama film adaptation of the novel Good-bye, My Lady (1954) by James H. Street. The book had been inspired by Street's original 1941 story which appeared in The Saturday Evening Post .

  4. Aug 26, 2017 · Most people who went to see the movie, “Goodbye, My lady” in 1956 had never heard of a Basenji before. By the film’s end, they know plenty. The movie based on a book James H. Street tells the tale of a boy, “Young Skeeter,” who experiences adulthood by finding, befriending and training a stray dog, only to have to return her to its ...

  5. Feb 22, 2011 · Goodbye, My Lady manages to make one of the more convincing shows out of their bonding process, probably because that part was real. So the boy who was a real-life American movie star gets the rare African Basenji dog for keeps in the end — that which was denied to the poor Southern swamp rat growing up in the backwaters of Mississippi.

  6. Where Track of the Cat uses a daring palette and widescreen compositions, Goodbye, My Lady is in black and white and has a modest, contained feeling, hemmed in by the spooky trees of Florida. Finally, the first film is about a cat, and Lady is a dog.

  7. Based on a novel by James H. Street, Good-bye, My Lady is a coming of age story about an adolescent orphan (Brandon De Wilde), nicknamed Skeeter, growing up in the Mississippi swamp with an elderly, uneducated uncle (Walter Brennan). Skeeter finds a strange dog which doesn't bark, but makes a noise which sounds like a laugh, and even cries real ...

  8. Good-bye, My Lady: Directed by William A. Wellman. With Walter Brennan, Phil Harris, Brandon De Wilde, Sidney Poitier. An old man and a young boy who live in the southeastern Mississippi swamps are brought together by the love of a dog.