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Doris

Que Sera Sera

About Me


WELCOME To My Page. . . I am not Doris Day. This page is a dedication to her. To let people learn more about Doris Day.
Doris Day has packed four careers into one lifetime, two each in music and movies. The pity is that all most people remember are her movies from Teacher's Pet (1957) onward, as the quintessential all-American girl, the perpetually virginal screen heroine, cast opposite such icons of masculinity as Clark Gable and, rather ironically, Rock Hudson. She also transposed this following to television at the end of the 1960s with a situation comedy that lasted into the early '70s. If most people remember her as a singer, it's usually for such pop hits as "Secret Love" and her Oscar-winning "Que Sera, Sera (Whatever Will Be, Will Be)," which became her signature tune.But before all of that, from 1939 until the end of the 1940s, Doris Day was one of the hottest, sultriest swing band vocalists in music. That body of work -- which contains at least one unabashed classic early-'40s recording, "Sentimental Journey" -- is one of the most impressive in the fields of swing and popular jazz, and deserves to be heard far more than it is. Moreover, before those late-'50s comedies, Day had a film career that included adaptations of Broadway musicals (The Pajama Game), classic thrillers (The Man Who Knew Too Much), and searing social drama (Storm Warning).She was born Doris Mary Anne von Kappelhoff on April 3, 1924, in Evanston, OH, a suburb of Cincinnati. Her father was a music teacher, choir master, and church organist. Her mother loved popular music, especially (surprisingly) country music.Her parents divorced when she was 12, and Doris lived with her mother and older brother in College Hill, OH. From age six, she had taken dancing lessons, and that was the career she ultimately intended to pursue. In 1937, when she was 13, she and a young male partner won a 500 dollar prize in an amateur dance contest. The family decided to pursue stardom for their young child in Hollywood.Her hopes for a career in dance were shattered on the trip out West in an automobile accident that severely injured her right leg. Her recuperation, over the Cincinnati tavern owned by an uncle, gave the young teenager access to a jukebox that played the hits of the day; and by the time she was 14, she had developed a taste for swing stars such as Benny Goodman and the Dorsey Brothers, among numerous other bands. She also started singing along with Ella Fitzgerald's records and tried to develop her own style.Music became a new aspiration, and the timely intervention of voice coach Grace Raine helped her develop the approach to song that was to characterize her career. Raine arranged for Doris to appear on the Cincinnati radio station WLW on an amateur showcase -- the song that she sang was Howard Dietz and Arthur Schwartz's "Day After Day," from 1932, which earned her a featured spot on the station.She was still known as Doris Kappelhoff when she got a job singing at a local club, but when a chance for radio broadcasts from the club was brought up. She ultimately took the name Doris Day, owing to the popularity of "Day After Day," and while the gig didn't last, the name did. In 1939, however, she was told of the opening for a vocalist in the band of Bob Crosby, Bing's brother and a star band leader in his own right. Day auditioned and got the job at age 17. She stayed with Crosby's band for three months before she was approached by band leader Les Brown.This was 1940, and the musical world was dominated by the big bands, jazz-influenced swing outfits that gave singers like Sinatra (who was just getting rolling himself as a star vocalist) extraordinary opportunities to interpret the songs of the day. Tin Pan Alley still ruled the airwaves (though country and, to a lesser degree, blues were making inroads), and there was no shortage of great songs.In the middle of all that was this little 17-year-old girl, who could impart a feeling of world-weary sensuality or sensual innocence to a song, shading her voice in textures almost too delicate to analyze. And Doris Day became a budding star, in an era in which Bing Crosby and Frank Sinatra -- not to mention Ella Fitzgerald -- were just a few of the vocalists competing for public attention.While singing with Bob Crosby's band, she first worked with many of the sidemen -- Bob Haggart, William Stegmeyer, Billy Butterfield, and Zeke Zarchy -- who would later work on her own recording sessions. It was with Les Brown's band, however, that the public first got to hear her voice and know her name, initially on the radio and then on Brown's recordings. From 1940 until 1946, with a two-year break for an unhappy marriage, Day was a star vocalist, most notably on hits like "Sentimental Journey" and "My Dreams Are Getting Better All the Time," both of which were monster hits for the band. "Sentimental Journey" also became especially popular among American soldiers stationed overseas during World War II. By the end of the war and her time with Les Brown, when she was barely into her 20s, Day was considered one of the top band vocalists in the world.Apart from having a beautiful voice and command of its every shading, Day's success was based on her approach to songs and audiences. When she sang, she sounded as though she were singing not to a crowd or a mass "audience," but to each individual listener. People resonated to her records and her performances personally, and coupled with the considerable merits of her voice and the quality of Brown's band, it made her a huge favorite with almost anyone who heard her.Her tenure with the band was interrupted by another unsuccessful marriage, and when it ended, Day -- with a young son named Terry from her first marriage to provide for -- was ready to return to Cincinnati and forget about music. So the story goes, her agent persuaded her to attend a party in Hollywood where she impressed songwriters Jule Styne and Sammy Cahn with an impromptu performance of "Embraceable You." They were writing the score for a Warner Bros. movie called Romance on the High Seas, which had been planned for several leading ladies, all of whom fell out for one reason or another. Sammy Cahn got Day and her agent down to the studio, and she auditioned before director Michael Curtiz, who ordered a screen test for her. Day's screen test was run for the studio executives alongside two actresses whom they'd previously asked to audition, and she won the role.The movie was a hit, and Day became a star, not in the perky, virginal persona that people remember today, but as a top-flight singer and actress. After that, Day's two careers went along in tandem, as she starred in movies and often turned their songs into hits. She also appeared in non-musical films, and revealed herself a superb dramatic actress in the groundbreaking topical dramatic thriller Storm Warning (1950), in which she played the victimized wife of a boorish, murderous Ku Klux Klan member (Steve Cochran); but she could also play perky tomboyish parts in movies like On Moonlight Bay (1951).Day resumed her recording career in 1947, and even amid the growing number of ballads in her output, her early solo sides remained very jazzy, and are among her best sides. Her music softened somewhat as the 1940s wore on, although she did record some superb jazz-style sides for the 1950 movie Young Man With a Horn.Her most visible sides from the 1950s onward were pop songs. She had huge hits with "Secret Love," a song derived from the movie Calamity Jane (1953), and "Que Sera Sera (Whatever Will Be, Will Be)," which she'd sung in the Alfred Hitchcock thriller The Man Who Knew Too Much (1956), in which she co-starred with James Stewart. During the 1950s, Doris Day was the most popular and one of the highest paid singers in America; and the sudden burst of popularity of her movies, beginning with Teacher's Pet (1958), only added to her overall impact on the country's popular culture, though the movies ultimately eclipsed the music career. In the midst of her pop-music/movie career, Day recorded an entire album of jazz with Andre Previn as her accompanist, entitled Duet. Its impact was muted by the popularity of her movies which, by the early '60s, turned her into a cultural icon, her wholesome innocence the perfect non-threatening match for Marilyn Monroe's innocent sexuality.The growth of rock music as the dominant force in popular music in the mid-'60s left Day on the musical sidelines; ironically, her son Terry Melcher became one of the most successful rock producers of the period, most notably in association with the Byrds' early work and Paul Revere & the Raiders.Day's personal and professional life took a bad turn in the wake of the death of her third husband, Marty Melcher, in 1968. Melcher had managed her business affairs for 17 years, and she learned after his death that he had lost or embezzled her entire career's earnings. Day was left broke, and the ensuing stresses led her to a nervous breakdown.Her recovery came in 1968, when she began work on her CBS network situation comedy. Melcher had committed her to doing the show immediately prior to his death, without her consent, but the program was a success and Day was restored to solvency during the series' four-year run. A year after the program ended, she was awarded a $22 million dollar judgment against her former attorney for his role in Melcher's handling of her finances. Since the cancellation of the CBS series in 1973, she has been less visible, although she did a cable television series, Doris Day and Friends, in the mid-'80s. ~ Bruce Eder, All Music Guide

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Music:


Click on the link to hear the song
The Bob Hope Show 3/21/50 with Bing Crosby
The Railroad Hour "No No Nanette" with Gordon MacRae
I Got the Sun in the Morning
Pretty Baby
It's Magic
My Darling, My Darling
With A Song in my Heart
Till the End of Time
My Young and Foolish Heart
Too Marvellous for Words
I Didn't Slip - I Wasn't Pushed - I Fell
Day By Day
Let's Be Buddies
Enjoy Yourself (It's Later Than You Think)
I Didn't Know What Time It Was
Barbara Allen
A Woman's Touch
A Chocolate Sundae
Baby Doll
But Not For Me
You Made Me Love You
All I Do Is Dream of You
A Guy Is A Guy
A Load Of Hay
As Long As He Needs Me
Bright and Shiny
Ain't We Got Fun
Sugar Bush
Lullaby of Broadway
You Won't Be Satisfied
If I Give My Heart To You
I Only Have Eyes For You
Pillow Talk
Again
Sooner or Later
Just Blew In from the Windy City
Secret Love
Darn That Dream
That Old Feeling
I Confess
I'll Always Be With You
Please Don't Talk About Me When I'm Gone
Tea For Two
Love Somebody
Now That I Need You
Canadian Capers
Aren't You Glad You're You
Ma Says, Pa Says
My Dreams Are Getting Better All The Time
A Very Precious Love
Foolishly yours
My Number One Dream Came True
Why Did I Tell You I Was Going to Shanghai?
Que Sera Sera
Mister Tap Toe
The Deadwood Stage
I'll Never Stop Loving You
Sentimental Journey
Anything You Can Do

1949 You're My Thrill
1950 Young Man with a Horn (w/ Harry James) (soundtrack)
1951 Lullaby of Broadway (soundtrack)
1951 On Moonlight Bay (soundtrack)
1951 I'll See You in My Dreams (soundtrack)
1953 By the Light of the Silvery Moon (soundtrack)
1953 Calamity Jane (soundtrack)
1954 Young at Heart (soundtrack) (w/ Frank Sinatra)
1955 Love Me or Leave Me (soundtrack)
1956 Day By Day
1957 The Pajama Game (soundtrack) (w/ John Raitt and cast of film)
1957 Day By Night
1958 Hooray for Hollywood Vol. 1
1959 Hooray for Hollywood Vol. 2
1959 Cuttin' Capers
1960 What Every Girl Should Know
1960 Show Time
1961 Bright and Shiny
1961 I Have Dreamed
1962 Duet (w/ Andre Previn)
1962 You'll Never Walk Alone
1962 Billy Rose's Jumbo (soundtrack) (w/ cast of film)
1963 Annie Get Your Gun (w/ Robert Goulet)
1963 Love Him
1964 The Doris Day Christmas Album
1964 With a Smile and a Song
1965 Latin for Lovers
1965 Doris Day's Sentimental Journey
1967 The Love Album (released in 1994)

Movies:


Romance On The High Seas
(released as It's Magic in UK)
(1948 - Warner Bros)
View Trailer
Doris Day's first film, a romanticmusical set aboard an ocean liner.
Confusion reigns when wealthyMichael Kent (Don DeFore) and hiswife Elvira (Janis Paige) suspecteach other of unfaithful behaviour.Elvira recruits club singer GeorgiaGarrett (Doris Day) to take herplace on a cruise to Rio, while shestays behind in New York to keep aneye on her husband. In turn,Michael hires private detectivePeter Virgil (Jack Carson) to jointhe cruise to watch 'his wife'. Georgia leaves behind her admirerOscar Farrar (Oscar Levant), andwhen she and Virgil meet on thevoyage, they fall for each other.Farrar joins the ship mid-voyage,and after many misunderstandingsthe film reaches a climax when allparties concerned meet up in ahotel in Rio.
Notes:
Judy Garland was earmarked to playDoris Day's character in this film,but was unable to commit herself toit.
The song from the film, 'It'sMagic', was such a massive hit thatthe title was adopted for thefilm's release in Britain.
Hollywood legend has it that 'DorisDay' happened to attend a showbizparty the night before planning toleave for New York and abandon herhopes of film stardom. When shesang for the crowd at the party,and was heard by director MichaelCurtiz, he immediately realized Daywould be perfect for the role'Betty Hutton' had just refusedbecause she was thenpregnant.
When she saw herself in "dailies"early in this film's production,Doris Day claims she was soembarrassed by her own performanceshe asked director Michael Curtizto recommend a drama coach. "No,no!" Curtiz replied, "You're anatural just as you are - if youlearn how to act, you'll ruineverything."
The original title was apparently"Romance on the High C's".
Toward the end there is a runninggag about how awful Mrs. ElviraKent's singing voice is, as she isrepeatedly begged not to sing. Shedoes not sing. However, Janis Paigewas in fact at that time a musicalstar in the movies and would playthe lead in "The Pajama Game"(1954) on Broadway.
My Dream Is Yours
(1949 - Warner Bros)

Doris's second outing with JackCarson tells the story of a youngwar widow hoping for a break inshow business.
Hopeful singer Martha Gibson(Doris Day) is plucked fromobscurity by Doug Blake (JackCarson), an agent for a radio show.As Blake does all he can toprogress Martha's career withoutsuccess, he begins to fall for her.However, Martha only has eyes forsuave, conceited top radio starGary Mitchell (Lee Bowman). Blake finally helps Martha toachieve the great success shedeserves, but can he win herheart?
Notes:
The film includes a short dreamsequence mixing cartoon animation(Bugs Bunny) with live actionfootage. In the 1940s, prior to theadvent of children's TV, Bugs Bunnywas aimed mainly at adult audiencesin cinemas!
The scenes in this film featuringDoris Day and her young on-screenson had a special emotionalresonance for Day, since in reallife she had often had to leave herown pre-school-aged son Terrybehind with his grandmother whiletouring as a big band singer in the1940s.
It's A Great Feeling
(1949 - Warner Bros)

A waitress (Doris Day) at theWarner Brothers commissary isanxious to break into pictures. Shethinks her big break may havearrived when actors Jack Carson andDennis Morgan agree to helpher.
Young Man With A Horn
(1950 - Warner Bros)

As a boy, orphan and dropout RickMartin (Kirk Douglas) finds hisonly outlet in music. Throughchance-met black jazzman ArtHazzard (Juano Hernandez), hedevelops into a greattrumpeter...too great for jazz-hating Jack Chandler (Walter Reed),leader of the dance band he joins.But before long he's in a betterbig band, thanks to the interest ofsweet singer Jo Jordan (Doris Day),who alas introduces him to herslinky, rich, highly neuroticfriend Amy North (Lauren Bacall).Amy's inconsistent ways soon makeRick a virtual basket case. Is hewashed up, or will he find thatelusive high note his trumpet won'tplay? Allegedly based on the lifeof jazz great Bix Beiderbecke.
Tea For Two
(1950 - Warner Bros)

In this reworking of "No, No,Nanette," wealthy heiress NanetteCarter (Doris Day) bets her uncle(S.Z. Sakall) $25,000 that she cansay "no" to everything for 48hours. If she wins, she can investthe money in a Broadway showfeaturing songs written by her beau(Gordon MacRae), and of course, inwhich she will star. Trouble is,she doesn't realize her uncle'sbeen wiped out by the Stock Marketcrash.
Notes:
In this version of the Broadwaymusical "No, No, Nanette", EveArden plays Pauline, but in theoriginal 1940 version she playedWinnie.
West Point Story
(1950 - Warner Bros)

Broadway director Bix Bixby (JamesCagney), down on his luck (thanksto gambling), is reluctantlypersuaded to go to West Pointmilitary academy (with Eve(VirginaMayo), his gorgeous assistant andon-and-off love) to help thestudents put on a show. Ulteriormotive: to recruit student star TomFletcher (Gordon MacRae) for HarryEberhart's (Roland Winters) newproduction (Eberhart just happensto be Tom's uncle). Then, Bixbyfinds that he himself must live asa cadet. Of course, sundered heartscome into the story also...
Storm Warning (1950 - Warner Bros)
A chilling story echoing theactivities of the Ku Klux Klan inthe middle of the last Century.
Marsha Mitchell (Ginger Rogers)visits her relatives in a smalltown only to discover that hersister Lucy Rice (Doris Day) ismarried to a member of a viciousvigilante gang. After Marshawitnesses the killing of a man bythe gang, D.A. Burt Rainey (RonaldReagan) sets out to break theirgrip on the town, but with dramaticconsequences for Doris Day'scharacter Lucy in the closingscenes.
Notes:
The studio wanted Lauren Bacall andDoris Day to star in the film, butBacall went to Africa with herhusband Humphrey Bogart to film TheAfrican Queen (1951)
This is the only film in which acharacter played by Doris Day dies.
Lullaby Of Broadway
(1951 - Warner Bros)

Pretty Melinda Howard (Doris Day)has been abroad singing with amusical troupe. She decides toreturn home to surprise her mother(Gladys George) whom she thinks isa successful Broadway star with amansion in Manhattan. She doesn'tknow that her mother is actually aburnt-out cabaret singer with alove for whiskey. When she arrivesat the mansion, she is taken in bythe two servants (Billy De Wolfeand Anne Triola) who are friends ofher mother's. The house actuallybelongs to Adolph Hubbell (S.Z.Sakall), a kind-hearted Broadwayproducer who also gets drawn intothe charade. Hubbell takes a shineto Melinda and agrees to star herin his next show. Melinda alsofinds romance with a handsomehoofer named Tom (Gene Nelson)who's also in the show. All isgoing well for Melinda except thatshe wants to see her mother whokeeps putting off theirreunion.
On Moonlight Bay
(1951 - Warner Bros)

The Winfield family moves into anew house in a small town inIndiana. Tomboy Marjorie Winfield(Doris Day) begins a romance withWilliam Sherman (Gordon MacRae) wholives across the street. Marjoriehas to learn how to dance and actlike a proper young lady.Unfortunately William Sherman hasunconventional ideas for the time(setting is during W.W.I, but thewar does not play a major part formost of the movie.) His ideasinclude not believing in marriageor money, which causes frictionwith Marjorie's father (Leon Ames),who is the local bank vicepresident.
I'll See You In My Dreams
(1952 - Warner Bros)

Musical biopic telling the storyof the legendary lyricist Gus Kahn.
Grace Leboy (Doris Day) is thesongwriter who writes the music forGus Kahn's (Danny Thomas) firsthit. Romance blossoms and theyeventually marry, but a rocky roadlies ahead. The appearance on thescene of glamorous star GloriaKnight (Patrice Wymore) is too muchof a temptation for Kahn, but Gracesticks by him he and they arereconciled in the closing stages ofthe film.
Starlift
(1951 - Warner Bros)

Attractive Janice Rule plays thestarlet who falls in love with ayoung air force corporal, RonHagerthy. There are the usualmisunderstandings of young loversas the boy accuses the girl ofusing him for publicity purposes.Hagerty's buddy, Dick Wesson,provides the humor in trying topatch things up. During all this,air force officers are around toexplain to the stars the mechanicsof an air force base, how injuredtroops coming back are lookedafter, the departure of men for thefront, and so forth.
The Winning Team
(1952 - Warner Bros)

View Trailer
The Big Leagues' Big Love Story
Based on a true story, RonaldReagan stars as Grover ClevelandAlexander, a former worker for thetelephone company whose hobby ispitching baseball. Recruited by thePhiladelphia Nationals, Alexanderrises to stardom while only losingabout 200 games over twenty years.After playing with the Nationals,"Alex the Great," as he was known,was traded to the Chicago Cubs, andlater, to the St. Louis Cardinalswhere he was befriended by FrankLovejoy who plays the manager.Doris Day is exceptional as hisbeautiful and loyal wife, Aimee.
April In Paris
(1953 - Warner Bros)

Miss Ethel 'Dynamite' Jackson(Doris Day) is a chorus girl whomistakingly receives an invitationfrom the State Department torepresent the American theatre atan arts exposition in Paris,France. There's only one problem,the invitation was meant for MissEthel Barrymore. Meanwhile, S.Winthrop Putnam (Ray Bolger), thebureaucrat who made the mistaketries unsuccessfully to correct hismix-up. It's too late, for DynamiteJackson is off to Paris, where thetwo meet and marry, or so theythink!
By The Light Of The SilveryMoon
(1953 - Warner Bros)

Bright romantic comedy... gay withsong... to welcome the Spring.
The trials and tribulations of theWinfield family in small townIndiana as Marjorie Winfield's(Doris Day) boyfriend, WilliamSherman (Gordon MacRae), returnsfrom the Army after W.W.I. Bill &Marjorie's on-again, off-againprovide the backdrop for otherfamily issues, primarily brought onby little brother Wesley's (BillyGray) overactive imagination andtall tales.
Calamity Jane
(1953 - Warner Bros)

Doris is at her best in thislively musical comedy based on thefrontierswoman of the old west.
Classic musical western in whichtomboy Calamity Jane (Doris Day)lives up to her name. In order toprovide some much neededentertainment at the Golden GarterHotel, Calamity sets off forChicago to bring singing starAdelaide Adams (Gale Robbins) backto remote Deadwood. However, a caseof mistaken identity means Calamityunknowingly brings instead MissAdams' assistant Katie Brown (AllynAnn McClerie), who sees theopportunity as a chance to become asinger. Back in Deadwood, Katie'sperformance is less thanconvincing, and Calamity receives ahostile reception from the clientsof the 'Golden Garter'. Romantic interest for Calamity andKatie is provided by Wild BillHickock (Howard Keel) and Lt.GilMartin (Philip Carey).
Notes:
'Secret Love' was an Academy Awardwinning song for Doris.
Appearing on "The Tonight ShowStarring Johnny Carson" (1962) inthe 1970s, Doris Day recalledseeing early dailies from thisfilm, in which she was stompedabout the set in buckskins andleather, speaking in a high,girlishly feminine voice. Sheimmediately brought her linereadings down several registers, soshe'd sound as tough as she looked.
Doris Day has often cited thisparticular movie and title role asher personal favorite among her 39film appearances.
Lucky Me
(1954 - Warner Bros)

The fastest-paced pleasure thatever spread a wide smile across theface of the screen!
Candy Williams (Doris Day) is astruggling performer in a musicaltroupe, headed by Hap Schneider(Phil Silvers). Unfortunately, thetroupe has fallen on hard times,forcing the members to get jobscleaning hotel rooms. This allchanges when one day Candy catchesthe eye of celebrity song writer,Dick Carson (Robert Cummings).Candy has no idea who he is, but,the rest of the troupe, especiallySchneider, believes this is theirlucky break. When Candy realizeswho he really is, she's furiousbecause he deceived her. By thistime, Dick has "fallen head overheels" for Candy - this could be aproblem, since he is currentlydating another girl, Lorainne(Martha Hyer), the daughter of anoil tycoon. Dick secretly sitsthrough one of Candy'sperformances, and is impressed,giving him a brilliant idea - Candycould perform the songs from themusical he has been preparing, andwhich he hopes Lorainne's father(Bill Goodwin) will finance.However, this is not going to beeasy, since Lorainne has becomevery jealous, especially, when itcomes to Candy getting closer toDick.
Young At Heart
(1955 - Warner Bros)

When Alex (Gig Young) enters thelives of the musical Tuttle family,each of the three daughters fallsfor him. He is charming, goodlooking and personable. Laurie(Doris Day) and Alex seem made foreach other and become engaged. WhenBarney (Frank Sinatra) comes intothe picture to help Alex with somemusical arrangements matters becomecomplicated. He is seen as achallenge by Laurie, who can'tbelieve anyone could be as cynical,and she is more than a match forhis gloomy outlook on life.
Notes:
While making this film, FrankSinatra took an almost immediatedislike to Doris Day's husband,Martin Melcher, thought thatMelcher was "using" her to getahead in the movie business andtried to convince Day of that fact.When Day refused to listen toSinatra's advice, he had Melcherbanned from the set. AfterMelcher's death in 1968, it wasdiscovered that he had squanderedall the money Day had earned duringher 20-year film career.
This may be the only Hollywoodmusical that bears no musiccredits. Musical director RayHeindorf had his name removedbecause of a new ruling that theterm "musical director" was to bereplaced with the credit "Musicsupervised and conducted by..."
Love Me Or Leave Me
(1955 - MGM)

View trailer
Life-Inspired Drama From Dance Hallto Ziegfield Follies!
Jazz Age singing sensation RuthEtting (Doris Day) had looks,ambition and a haunting,smoketinged voice. It took morethan that to make her a star. Ittook Marty 'The Gimp' Snyder (JamesCagney), the limping, evil-temperedChicago hood who propelled Ruthfrom dingy dance halls to Broadwayfame...but turned her offstage lifeinto a nightmare of violence andfear.
Notes:
It was James Cagney who suggestedto producer Joe Pasternak that hecast Doris Day in the role of RuthEtting. They had worked togetherpreviously in The West Point Story(1950).
According to an interview with RuthEtting, she never actually workedas a dance hall hostess. This wasdramatic fiction, to underscore thesong "Ten Cents a Dance".
This was the only time, afterbecoming a star in the 1930s, thatJames Cagney ever accepted secondbilling for a major role. Hethought that Doris Day's characterwas more central to the film'splot, and so ceded top billing toher.
The character James Cagney played,Martin Snyder (aka "Moe the Gimp"),was portrayed in the film as asmall-time hood. Ironically heended up working in the licensedepartment in Chicago's City Hall.
'Jane Russell' turned down the opportunity to play RuthEtting in hopes of landing the roleof Lillian Roth in I'll CryTomorrow (1955). That role ended upgoing to Susan Hayward, leavingRussell with neither part.
The Man Who Knew Too Much
(1956 - Paramount)

Alfred Hitchcock strikes thehighest note of suspense the screenhas yet achieved!
Dr. Ben McKenna (James Stewart),his wife Jo (Doris Day) and theirson Hank (Christopher Olsen) are ona touring holiday of Africa whenthey meet the mysterious LouisBernard (Daniel Gelin) on a bus.The next day Bernard is murdered inthe local marketplace, but beforehe dies he manages to revealdetails of an assassination aboutto take place in London. Fearingthat their plot will be revealed,the assassins kidnap Hank in orderto keep the McKenna's silent. Benand Jo go to London and takematters into their own hands.
Notes:
Director Cameo: [Alfred Hitchcock]in the Moroccan marketplacewatching the acrobats with his backto the camera just before themurder.
Bernard Herrmann (the composer ofthe score) can be seen conductingthe orchestra during the AlbertHall sequence.
The plot calls for a man (DanielGélin in the role of Louis Bernard)to be discovered as "not Moroccan"because he was wearing blackmakeup. The makeup artists couldn'tfind a black substance that wouldcome off easily, and so theypainted the fingers of the otherman (Jimmy Stewart) white, so thathe would leave pale streaks on theother man's skin (according toPatricia Hitchcock, this idea wassuggested by Daniel Gélin).
The Albert Hall sequence lasts 12minutes without a single word ofdialogue and consists of 124 shots.
The film was unavailable fordecades because its rights(together with four other picturesof the same period) were boughtback by Alfred Hitchcock and leftas part of his legacy to hisdaughter. They've been known forlong as the infamous "Five lostHitchcocks" amongst film buffs, andwere re-released in theatres around1984 after a 30-year absence. Theothers are Rear Window (1954), Rope(1948), The Trouble with Harry(1955), and Vertigo (1958).
Alfred Hitchcock previously filmedthis story as The Man Who Knew TooMuch (1934).
Conductor Bernard Herrmann playshimself on-screen. He's not listedas such in the credits, but hisname can be seen on the poster playbill when Doris Day exits the taxiat Albert Hall.
When she first heard this film'sOscar-winning tune "Que Sera,Sera", Doris Day refused to recordit, calling it "a forgettablechildren's song." It not only wonthe Academy Award, but went on tobecome the biggest hit of herrecording career.Throughout the filming, Doris Daybecame increasingly concerned thatAlfred Hitchcock paid moreattention to camera setups,lighting and technical matters thanhe did to her performance.Convinced that he was displeasedwith her work, she finallyconfronted him. His reply was, "Mydear Miss Day, if you weren'tgiving me what I wanted, *then* Iwould have to direct you!"
It was during the making of thisfilm, when she saw how camels,goats and other "animal extras" ina marketplace scene were beingtreated, that Doris Day began herlifelong commitment to preventinganimal abuse.
The crucial concert piece for theAlbert Hall sequence was the samepiece composed by Arthur Benjaminspecifically for the original 1934version of the film. AlfredHitchcock offered Bernard Herrmannthe opportunity to compose a newwork for the scene, but Herrmannchose not to, citing anappreciation of the originalconcerto.
Many of the Moroccan extras hadbeen mistakenly informed that theywould only be paid if they wereactually visible in the film. Thisled to a lot of pushing and shovingto get close to the camera untilthe crew explained to them thatthey would be paid no matter what.
The aeroplane shown in this film(G-AMOF) was a Viscount 701 ownedby BEA.
Julie
(1956 - MGM)

Run JULIE Run, Run For Your Life!
Her new husband's (Louis Jourdan)behaviour convinces Julie Benton(Doris Day) that his jealousy isdangerous, and when he admits hekilled her first husband sherealises she has to get away. Along-time friend (Barry Sullivan)helps all he can, but even in atown the size of San FransiscoBenton seems able to track themdown. The police can do nothingdespite a death threat, so the nextmove is up to Julie.
Notes:
While on location for this film,Doris Day fell in love with theregion. She retired there in thelate 1970s, and has lived thereever since.
While making this film on location,Doris Day repeatedly complained toher husband 'Martin Meclher' ,whose first film as a producer thiswas, that she felt ill and needed arest. He insisted that she adhereto her Christian Science beliefs -and the film's shooting schedule -and "have faith" that whatever wasailing her would pass. Onceshooting was completed, Dayconsulted her doctor in BeverlyHills, and discovered a largeovarian tumor, which required herto have a hysterectomy.
Doris Day has written that herclose friendship with co-star'Louis Jourdan ' angered herjealous producer husband 'MartyMelcher' , mirroring the character-relationships in the film.
Doris Day did not want to do thisfilm. The character of Lyle Bentonwas painfully reminiscent of herfirst two husbands, Al Jorden andGeorge Weidler.
The Pajama Game
(1957 - Warner Bros)

Employees of the Sleeptite PajamaFactory are looking for a whoppingseven-and-a-half cent an hourincrease and they won't take no foran answer. Babe Williams (DorisDay) is their feisty employeerepresentative but she may havefound her match in shopsuperintendent Sid Sorokin (JohnRaitt). When the two get togetherthey wind up discussing a whole lotmore than job actions!
Notes:
39% of the cast is from theoriginal Broadway production.
Teacher's Pet
(1958 - Paramount)

View Trailer
James Gannon (Clark Gable), thehardboiled city editor of anewspaper, believes that the onlyway to learn the business is by wayof the School of Hard Knocks, andhas a very low regard for college-taught journalism, so he's notpleased when his managing editororders him to help Erica Stone(Doris Day), a college professor,with her journalism class. Findinghimself attracted to her, hepretends to be a student in herclass, not revealing he's Gannon,whom she despises. As they bob andweave around their mutual growingattraction, they both begin to gainrespect for each other's approachesto reporting news, but how willErica react when she finds out whohe really is?
Notes:
The script by Fay and Michael Kaninwas first written as a drama. Whenthey were turned down by everystudio they submitted it to, theyrewrote it as a comedy. ParamountStudios immediately purchased theproperty.
Cary Grant and James Stewart bothturned down the role of JamesGannon.
The Tunnel Of Love
(1958 - MGM)

The Pooles (Richard Widmark andDoris Day) are unable to have ababy after years of trying. Theyapply to the Rock-A-Bye AdoptionAgency, and are assigned MissNovick (Gia Scala) as aninvestigator. Through a farfetchedmis-communication she gets a verybad impression of Augie Poole andindicates her report will beunfavorable. Through even more far-fetched circumstances, Augie isable to change Miss Novick's mind,and later comes to believe the babyshe is carrying is his. Rock-A-Byedoes find the Pooles a baby, andAugie is convinced it is MissNovick's, and that he is the realfather...so much so that his wifecomes to believe it, too. Shethreatens to leave him, but all themisunderstandings are finallycleared up for a happy ending.
It Happened To Jane
(otherwise known as Twinkle AndShine and Jane from Maine)
(1959 - Columbia)

Jane Osgood (Doris Day) is tryingto support her two young childrenby running a lobster business.After one of her shipments isruined by inattention at therailroad station, Jane decides totake on Harry Foster Malone (ErnieKovacks), director of the line andthe "meanest man in the world".With the help of her lifelongfriend - and lawyer - George Denham(Jack Lemmon), Jane sues Malone forthe price of her lobsters & herlost business. What she ends upwith is a lot more that either ofthem bargained for.
Pillow Talk
(1959 - Universal)

It's what goes on when the lightsgo off!
Starring in their first romanticcomedy together, Hollywood's toptalent, Doris Day and Rock Hudson,team up for hilarity in this"...brightly ingenious example ofcinematic know-how"(The HollywoodReporter) for which Miss Day earneda "Best Actress" Oscar nomination.
Jan Morrow (Doris Day) is anuptight interior decorator forcedto share a party line with BradAllen (Rock Hudson), an amorousplayboy who ties up the line withhis exploits while she's tring toconduct business. When the twoaccidentally meet, he's taken withher beauty and, pretending to be awealthy Texan named Rex Stetson,begins to court her mercilessly.Though flattered by this"stranger's" attention, it's notlong before she discovers his trueidentity. Now, it's her turn tohave a little fun...at hisexpense!
Notes:
In the diner scene near the end,the restaurant patrons weresupposed to deck Tony Randall, whowould fake a reaction to the blowand slide down "unconscious" in thebooth seat. However, during filmingthe actor overestimated his hookand accidentally knocked outRandall for real. The shot wound upbeing so good that the accidentalknockout is the one shown in thefilm.
This movie would be the first ofthree to showcase the trio of DorisDay, Rock Hudson and Tony Randallall together. It was followed byLover Come Back (1961) and Send MeNo Flowers (1964), with all threeactors portraying different rolesin each.
Julia Meade (Marie) did acommercial every Sunday night liveon Ed Sullivan's show, "Toast ofthe Town" (1948), in New York City.So every Saturday she flew back toNew York City.
Towards the end of the movie RockHudson picks up Doris Day andcarries her through the lobby anddown the street. After many takes,Hudson's arms were hurting, so theycreated a sort of sling which heldDay in a crate-like device andhooked over Hudson's shoulders toevenly distribute her weight.
Rock Hudson turned down the filmthree times, believing the scriptto be "too risky".
Michael Gordon had hoped to make asequel to this film in 1980. It wasto star Kristy McNichol as Jan andBrad Allen's daughter and GregoryHarrison as her boyfriend.Unfortunately, Gordon was unable tolure Doris Day out of retirement tomake the film.
Please Don't Eat the Daisies
(1959 - MGM)

The Uproarious Movie From The BigBest-Seller!
Drama professor Lawrence McKay(David Niven) gets caught up in theManhattan social circle when hetakes a job as a theater critic fora New York daily. His wife Kay(Doris Day), however, wants thecouple and their four rowdy sons tomove to the country. She soon findsherself dealing with fixing uptheir dilapidated country home andcompeting for her husband'saffections with flirtatiousBroadway diva Deborah Vaughn (JanisPaige).
Midnight Lace
(1960 - Universal)

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Kit and Anthony Preston (Doris Dayand Rex Harrison) never had a realhoneymoon and the midnight lacepajamas are for when they canfinally get out of London.Anthony's business is very pressingthese days. Then Kit is frightenedone day in a London fog by a voicebehind a statue. Next the telephonecalls start. Then there is a newman on the block, the architect(John Gavin) of a building going upnext to the Prestons' vintageapartment. That vintage buildinghas the kind of curving stairwelland cage-type elevator thatHitchcock and other suspensemasters have loved. Could Kitmerely have an overactiveimagination?
Notes:
The white gown that Doris Day wearsis the same dress she wore to theOscar ceremony for her nominationin Pillow Talk (1959)
In her autobiography, Doris Daysays that during the filming of oneof the more emotional scenes, sheused a "sense memory" of beingabused by ex-husband Al Jordanwhile she was pregnant in reallife. It worked too well. "I wasn'tacting hysterical," she said. "I*was* hysterical!" Production wastemporarily halted while sherecovered.
Lover Come Back
(1962 - Universal)

In their second film together, RockHudson, Doris Day and Tony Randalllight up the screen with laughteraplenty in this romantic comedythat features Day and Hudson as twoMadison Avenue rivals.
Jerry Webster (Rock Hudson) andCarol Templeton (Doris Day) areboth in the advertising business,but for different agencies. Annoyedby Jerry's methods of using alcoholand women to ensure contracts forhis agency, Carol tries to get himthrown out of his profession. Toavoid this Jerry bribes the girl(Edie Adams) who'd testify againsthim, by starring her in a TVcommercial for a product named VIPthat he's just made up. By accidentthese commercials are broadcastedand to keep his job, Jerry has tocome up with VIP for which heenlists the help of Doctor LinusTyler (Jack Kruschen). Carol goesto see the Doctor to try and getthe VIP account, but because sheand Jerry have never met, shemistakes Jerry for the Doctor.Jerry then takes advantage of thissituation to win her.
That Touch Of Mink
(1962 - Universal)

Adult Sophisticated Comedy!
Cathy Timberlake (Doris Day) is anold fashioned country girl whomeets the man of her dreams, PhilipShayne(Cary Grant), after his RollsRoyce splashes her with mud on herway to a job interview. Philip is aromantic businessman who is takenby Cathy's honest heart. There'sone problem, he's not interested inmarriage while Cathy has neverthought of anything else.
Notes:
Cary Grant was a big fan of "TheHoneymooners" (1955) and AudreyMeadows in particular, and wasresponsible for getting her thepart of Connie.
Billy Rose's Jumbo
(otherwise known as Jumbo)
(1962 - MGM)

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Jump for joy it's Jumbo!
Pop (Jimmy Durante) and KittyWonder (Doris Day) are the ownersof the Wonder Circus and because ofPop's addiction to gambling theyare constantly in debt and thecreditors are very close toforeclosing on them. Their mainattraction is Jumbo, the elephantand it seems that their competitor,John Noble (Dean Jagger) wantsJumbo and is luring away all oftheir acts leaving them withvirtually nothing. Then all of asudden a mysterious man named SamRawlins (Stephen Boyd) joins themas a wire walker and Kitty is takenwith him, what they don't know isthat he's Noble's son.
Notes:
This musical marked the end ofBusby Berkeley's movie career.
This was Doris Day's lastappearance in a full-on musical and one of the last of thelavishly-budgeted MGM musicals aswell. Despite Day being ranked the..1 box office star at the time ofits release, it was widelyconsidered a box office failure.
This movie was based on BillyRose's 1934 musical extravaganzaand he insisted that the full titlebe used on the movie.
The Thrill Of It All
(1963 - Universal)

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At a diner party, Beverly Boyer(Doris Day), wife of anobstetrician (James Garner) andmother of two, tells themanufacturer of Happy soap abouther experiences with his product.Charmed by her spontaniousappearance he offers her a chanceto tell her story in hiscommercials. After somehesitations, Beverly accepts andshe quickly turns from a housewifeinto a famous televisionpersonality, much to the dislikingof her husband Gerald.
Notes:
The ad agency's viewing room hasboth color and black-and-white TVsside by side. This was common at adagencies in the 1960s to confirmthat color commercials would alsobe acceptable on black-and-whitesets.
Move Over Darling
(1963 - 20th Century Fox)

Five years to the day after hiswife Ellen (Doris Day) disappearedin the sea after a plane crash,lawyer husband Nicholas (JamesGarner) has her declared legallydead, remarries and sets off toMonterey with new wife Bianca(Polly Bergen). The same morning,Ellen arrives home after beingrescued by the Navy from a desertisland and follows to try andprevent the honeymoon developingfurther. Nick, still in love withEllen, is delighted to see her butfinds he still can't break the newsto Bianca, while Ellen equallyhasn't got round to telling thechildren she is their mother. Couldget complicated.
Notes:
A re-shot version of Something'sGot to Give (1962), the filmMarilyn Monroe was working on whenshe died.
The movie that Ellen describes toBianca while giving her a massageis My Favorite Wife (1940), ofwhich this is a remake.
Doris Day proved what a trouper shetruly was when James Garneraccidentally broke her rib (duringthe massage scene, when he pullsher off of Polly Bergen). Garnerwasn't even aware of what hadhappened until the next day, whenhe felt the bandage while puttinghis arms around her.
The producers scheduled the scenewith Doris Day riding through a carwash for the last day of shootingbecause they were concerned thatthe detergents used in the car washmight affect the star's complexion.When the scene went off without ahitch, they admitted their ploy toDay, then used the story inpromotional materials for the film.
Send Me No Flowers
(1964 - Universal)

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Rock is ready to make loveyesterday, tomorrow, and especiallyto Day (Doris that is!)
Norman Jewison directs one ofHollywood's most famous teams,Doris Day and Rock Hudson, as aperky housewife and herhypochondriac husband in this,their third and final filmtogether.
George Kimball (Rock Hudson) is anobsessed hypochondriac whomistakenly overhears his doctordiscussing the impending death of apatient. Believing the poor victimis himself, George elicits the helpof his friend and neighbor, ArnoldNash (Tony Randall), to find a newhusband for his soon-to-be-widowedwife. Arnold, unfortunately, isn'tmuch hel as he deals with hisupcoming loss b swigging martinis.Alarmed by her husband'sincreasingly strange behavior, Judy(Doris Day) becomes even morefrustrated when an old paramour,Bert Power (Clint Walker) shows upat their country club and Georgeencourages his attentions towardher!
Notes:
Although many people think DorisDay and Rock Hudson co-starred asoften as Spencer Tracy andKatharine Hepburn, this was onlytheir third - and final -appearance as a screen team. TonyRandall also appeared with them inall three films: Pillow Talk(1959), Lover Come Back (1961) andthis.
Do Not Disturb
(1965 - 20th Century Fox)

A farcical comedy centred aroundMike Harper (Rod Taylor), anAmerican wool executive, who istransferred to London with his wifeJanet (Doris Day). She then makeshim jealous after she beginsflirting with a French antiquedealer (Paul Bellasi).
Notes:
Although this film is set inEurope, the entire production wasfilmed on the 20th Century Foxbacklot in Hollywood.
The Glass Bottom Boat
(1966 - MGM)

Is this the girl next door?
Jennifer Nelson (Doris Day) andBruce Templeton (Rod Taylor) meetwhen Bruce reels in her mermaidsuit leaving Jennifer bottomless inthe waters of Catalina Island. Shelater discovers that Bruce is thebig boss at her work (a researchlab). Bruce hires Jennifer to behis biographer only to try and winher affections. There's a problemBruce's friend General WallaceBleeker (Edward Andrews) believesshe's a Russian spy and has hersurveillanced. But when Jennifercatches on...Watch out!
The Ballad Of Josie
(1967 - Universal)

A young woman stirs things up in awestern town by raising sheepinstead of cattle, and organizingthe local women to demonstrate forwomen's suffrage.
Josie Minick (Doris Day) is awidow, who is forced to fend forherself. Josie living in a cattlecountry, finds herself in odds andwar with the cattlemen of the town,when she decides to make a sheepfarm her livelihood.
Caprice
(1967 - 20th Century Fox)
Patricia Fowler (Doris Day) anindustrial designer who getsherself into a whole heap oftrouble when she sells a secretcosmetics formula to a rivalcompany in Paris.
Notes:
Patricia ('Day, Doris' ) goes tosee a Richard Harris and Doris Dayfilm. According to the marqueeoutside the theater, it's this one.
In her autobiography, 'Doris Day'says that when she read thisscript, she remarked to herproducer/husband Martin Melcher:"Thank God we don't have to domovies like that anymore!" Hisresponse: "We've already made thedeal - there's no sense getting allsteamed up about it!"
The last film ever released inCinemascope by 20th Century-Fox.
During a chase scene, we see thetwo leads run past a televisionshowing one of the studio's biggesthit programs at the time, "Batman"(1966/II).
Richard Harris hated this film somuch that he reportedly never sawit.
Where Were You When the LightsWent Out?
(1968 - MGM)

The story of 8 million New Yorkerswho were lost in the dark... untilthey found each other.
Doris Day spoofs herself asMargaret Garrison, a cosmopolitanactress who has made a career outof playing virgins. She'sconsidering retirement, which sendsher producer (Terry-Thomas)straight to the analyst's couch.Her husband (Patrick O'Neil), who'sbeen keeping her in the dark forsome time, is being "interviewed"by a voracious lady reporter (LolaAlbright). Corporate drone WaldoZane (Robert Morse) is about toembezzle millions. It's businessas usual in Manhattan, but then theinfamous Eastern Seabord blackoutof 1965 hits, forcing them all tocope with total darkness - and eachother.
Notes:
Doris Day's character in this film,an actress constantly beingtypecast as a virginal heroine, wasmeant to be a parody of Day's ownsqueaky-clean screen image.
Loosely based on the actual NewYork City blackout of November 1965 nine months after which New York'shospitals noted a sharp upturn inthe city's birthrate.
With Six You Get Eggroll
(1968 - Warner Bros)

Keeping this family together isn'tchild's play!
Abby McClure (Doris Day), a widowwith three sons, and Jake Iverson(Brian Keith), a widower with ateen-age daughter, get fixed up.They start dating and decide to getmarried. They're not prepared forthe hostile reactions from theirchildren, especially Jake'sdaughter Stacy (Barbara Hershey),who wants to be the woman of thehouse, and Abby's oldest son Flip(John Findlater), who hates Jake.
Notes:
The Grassroots is the band thatperformed the song "Feelings" in anightclub.
This was Doris Day's final bigscreen appearance, following a 20year career in the movies.
The final scenes of this filmfeature Doris Day teary-eyed,wearing a housecoat and slippers.When her husband of 17 years MartinMelcher died suddenly just afterproduction was completed, gossipmagazines at the time used stillsof Day from this movie, lookingdistraught and out-of-sorts, toaccompany their articles aboutMelcher's death.

Television:

The Doris Day Show

Books:

Doris Day by Eric Braun (Paperback - April 2004)
Doris Day: Sentimental Journey by Garry McGee (Hardcover - January 14, 2005)
Doris Day Her Own Story by A.E. Hotchner (Hardcover - October 01, 1976)
Doris Day: The Illustrated Biography by Michael Freedland (Hardcover - June 1, 2000)

My Blog

With $5.25 million you get egg roll

A symbol of celebrity life in Beverly Hills is on the market for the first time in more than 40 years at $5.25 million.It's the Crescent Drive house that actress Doris Day and her then-husband, produc...
Posted by Doris on Tue, 07 Mar 2006 06:46:00 PST

Que Sera Sera: A Tribute to Doris Day

Cabaret Singer to Debut "Tribute to Doris Day" in Seattle Broadway Singer/Actress Yolanda "Yoly" Tolentino, best known for her role as Lady Thiang in the Broadway production of "The King and I"...
Posted by Doris on Thu, 23 Feb 2006 04:23:00 PST

Annual Spay Day USA

Spay Day USA events will take place all over the nation on February 22. What is Spay Day? It is an annual spay and neuter campaign in the USA to help reduce the vast numbers of unwanted pets that are ...
Posted by Doris on Tue, 21 Feb 2006 07:41:00 PST

Doris tells the Story of Calamity Jane

Calam...that's what they call the character I play, back in Deadwood City. Don't rightly know why. Except maybe they figure a woman who wears pants and shoots dead -very dead- straight is a bit of ...
Posted by Doris on Sat, 18 Feb 2006 03:48:00 PST