IMDb
6.9 /10
184 votes


Documentary · 1954 · 55 min
Narrated by actress Katharine Cornell and filmed in black and white, it spends the first 24 minutes introducing viewers, through newsreels, interviews, and old photographs, to the story of the deaf and blind disabled-rights pioneer. News footage shows her international appearances and visits with heads of state, including President Eisenhower allowing her to feel his face. The second half takes a day-in-the-(exceptional)-life approach to Keller's existence circa 1955. Made just 13 years before her death, Keller's famed tutor-translator-friend Anne Sullivan had already died, leaving her live-in replacement, Polly Thomson, to share the film's focus. From the time Keller takes her morning walk along the 1,000-foot handrail around her yard through her workday to her nightly reading of her Braille Bible, her serene acceptance of her life will amaze and inspire. Preserved by the Academy Film Archive in 2006.
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Available in United States (data from JustWatch via TMDB · click → opens in provider)
IMDb
6.9 /10
184 votes
Rotten Tomatoes
The tomato isn't ripe
Metacritic took the day off
TMDB
7.4 /10
10 votes
Letterboxd
Letterboxd didn't respond
Weighted average
7.1/10