The Happiness of Three Women is a 1954 British second feature ('B')[1] drama film directed by Maurice Elvey and starring Brenda de Banzie, Donald Houston and Petula Clark.
He gets entangled with three women who arrive at the Wishing Well Inn, run by his girlfriend Jane Price – a widow, an unhappily married lady, and a rich but idle woman.
The plot (which concerns, in fact, the happiness of four women) is artifcial, the dialogue is banal, while the more farcical clements of the story combine badly with the gummy sentiment and the moments of high-flown melodrama.
The yarn has a leisurely Welsh charm, mainly derived from the homely philosophy of the village postman who believes that he can solve other people's problems.
Brenda de Banzie, Petula Clark, Donald Houston and Patricia Cutts head the cast in competent fashion while the author makes a promising screen debut in the role of the postman.