Cross Creek is a 1983 film starring Mary Steenburgen as The Yearling author Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings. The film is directed by Martin Ritt and is based, in part, on Rawlings' 1942 memoir, Cross Creek. In 1928 in New York State, aspiring author Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings advises her husband that her last book was rejected by a publisher, and she has bought an orange grove in Florida and is leaving him to go there. She drives to the nearest town alone, and arrives in time for her car to die. Local resident Norton Baskin takes her the rest of the distance to a dilapidated and overgrown cabin... attached to an even more overgrown orange grove. Despite Baskin's doubts, she stays and begins to fix up the property. The local residents of "the Creek" begin to interact with her. Marsh Turner comes around with his daughter Ellie , a teenage girl who keeps a deer fawn as a pet she has named Flag. A black woman, Geechee , arrives and offers to work for her, despite the fact that Rawlings insists she cannot pay her much.
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| Release date: | 1983 |
| Directed by: | Martin Ritt |
| Rated: |  |
| Runtime: | 127 Minutes |
| Music by: | Leonard Rosenman |
| Cinematography: | John A. Alonzo |
| Genre: | Biography |