Ida Lupino focused on social issue films that dramatically brought to the fore such taboo subject matters as serial killers (THE HITCH-HIKER) bigamy (THE BIGAMIST), rape (OUTRAGE) and out-of-wedlock birth (NOT WANTED). In 1949’s NEVER FEAR, Lupino tackled the taboo subject matter of illness; specifically, polio. The film follows Carol Williams (played by Sally Forrest, who also starred in Lupino’s NOT WANTED). Carol is a beautiful young dancer whose body, and promising career, is suddenly crippled by polio. Carol’s dance partner and fiancé Guy Richards (played by Keefe Brasselle, a featured actor in 1951’s A PLACE IN THE SUN), wants to see her through her illness, but the angry, self-pitying Carol prefers to go it alone. Her father subsequently takes her to the Kabat-Kaiser Institute for rehabilitation, where she meets fellow patients like Len Randall on her road to recovery.
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