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  1. I'd Climb the Highest Mountain is a 1951 Technicolor religious drama film made by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corporation. It was directed by Henry King and produced by Lamar Trotti from a screenplay by Trotti.

  2. I'd Climb the Highest Mountain (1951) Susan Hayward, William Lundigan | Biography, Drama, Romance - YouTube. Classic Studio. 58.1K subscribers. 870K views 5 years ago. ...more. A...

    • 88 Min.
    • 838,4K
    • Classic Studio
  3. With Susan Hayward, William Lundigan, Rory Calhoun, Barbara Bates. The simply told story, based on Corra Harris' biographical book of a Methodist minister, called to a north-Georgia mountain-community in 1910 who, with his gently-bred new bride, meets the problems and crises of his circuit-riding congregation fearlessly and honestly.

    • (632)
    • Biography, Drama, Romance
    • Henry King
    • 1951-02-17
  4. Methodist minister William Thompson (William Lundigan) moves to a rural town in the Blue Ridge Mountains of Georgia with his wife, Mary Elizabeth (Susan Hayward). The townspeople are skeptical ...

    • (3)
    • Henry King
    • Drama
    • Susan Hayward
  5. Jack Stark. Barbara Bates. Jenny Brock. Gene Lockhart. Jeff Brock. Photos & Videos. View All. Film Details. Also Known As. A Circuit Rider's Wife. Genre. Drama. Release Date. Feb 1951. Premiere Information. World premiere in Atlanta, GA: 6 Feb 1951; Los Angeles opening: 25 Feb 1951. Production Company. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.

    • Henry King, Henry Weinberger
    • Susan Hayward
  6. 15. Juli 2005 · The Novel The Film. The 1951 film I’d Climb the Highest Mountain, starring Susan Hayward and William Lundigan, tells the story of a Methodist circuit-riding minister and his new city-born wife on their first assignment in the north Georgia mountains. Written and produced by Atlanta native Lamar Trotti, the film is based on the 1910 ...

  7. A minister from the Deep South is assigned a new parish and moves with his wife to a town in Georgia's Blue Ridge Mountains, where he tends to the spiritual and emotional needs of his small flock. Henry King. Director, Screenplay. Corra Harris.