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The Warner Years
(Her early film career
profiled by Allen Pollock)
Top hat, tails and icons of the silver screen have always stirred my
imagination. Astaire, with or without Ginger, used the outfit as the
perfect extension of his screen persona, whilst no one donned it as
glamorously or perversely as the ambivalent Marlene Dietrich in her
movies. Then there was Doris Day!...
The
up-and-coming Warner Brothers musical star was just a name to me in the
early ‘50’s and part of jocular word-play humour aimed at her name and the
posters for
Tea for Two
when the school ‘bus stopped each morning outside the Royal Cinema.
Sometime later, a school holiday visit to see the much praised The
African Queen was much enjoyed but it was the featured trailer for
the following week’s film which really grabbed my attention.
Lullaby of Broadway
was the title and Doris Day the star, with top-hat and tails, dazzling
smile and a voice which ensured Bogart and Hepburn were instantly
forgettable! Hardly any need to guess who was in the audience the
following week to enjoy the complete film! Thus began my quest to track
down all the movies, recordings and anything else which would celebrate
the Day talent. It also triggered an on-going journey towards my
appreciation of all types of music and singers following the decision not
to remain solely caught within the full beam of Day’s star quality!
By the time
Lullaby of Broadway
was released, Doris was already a major star with hit records and many
popular films. The circumstances which lead to such a parallel movie and
solo recording career began around 1947 after two embryonic stints with
the Les Brown Band. Sentimental Journey
had been the ideal
popular recording to welcome home returning servicemen in 1945 and with a
few other big-band hits, Doris had established sufficient popularity to
spring-board her departure from band singer to a solo career and initially
much radio work. Already established on Your Hit Parade,
she attended a party at Jules Styne’s house in Beverly Hills and with
encouragement from Sammy Cahn and with Styne’s piano accompaniment, Doris
sang Embraceable You which obviously convinced them of her
potential. The team had written the score for a film due to be produced at
Warner Brothers with a singing part which had been offered and declined by
both Judy Garland and Betty Hutton, possibly due to their respective
iron-clad contracts with MGM and Paramount. The director, Michael Curtiz,
signed up the reluctant Doris to the role after a dramatic and tearful
audition caused by her current personal problems; obviously an emotional
crisis which proved beneficial under the circumstances.
The
film was called
Romance On The High Seas
(1948) and Doris made her screen scene debut with the camera shot just
giving a back-view before the audience was allowed to glimpse the face
which helped make her a major film star for the next twenty years. She
played a hip gum-chewing honky-tonk singer, Georgia Garrett, who not only
desires success but has ambitions to travel but is thwarted by financial
constraints. However, the film’s dense plotting soon involved her in a
multi-layered tale of switched identities in colourful settings on a
cruise ship which happily ended up in Rio at carnival time. With the
appropriate casting of Warner Brothers’ stalwarts, Jack Carson, Janis
Paige and Don Defore, the fourth-billed Doris was listed ahead of Oscar
Levant and S. Z "Cuddles" Sakall. She displayed a fresh and natural
talent which made her an instant star with audiences, and the tuneful
score included I'm In Love, Put 'Em In A Box, Tie 'Em
With A Ribbon and It's You Or No One; all
accompanied by the Page Cavanaugh Trio. However, It's Magic
became the hit for Doris and was also the popular choice of many other
singers and its success encouraged Warner Brothers to rename the film for
its UK release.
My Dream Is Yours
(1949) a remake of the
thirties film, Twenty Million Sweethearts was again
directed by Michael Curtiz. It used the formula of an up-and-coming
singer, Martha Gibson, seeking fame in radio and discovering the chosen
path, people and journey to be somewhat less optimistic and smooth than
anticipated. The role gave Doris many scenes which showcased her natural
acting ability, and echoing her period with Les Brown, she had a young
child to consider within the plot equation. With top-billed, Jack Carson,
Doris was listed ahead of the somewhat bland Lee Bowman and pompous
Adolphe Menjou, with S.Z. Sakall on hand to fuss and fluster, and acerbic
Eve Arden ready with welcome one-liners. The thin plot was boosted by a
technically advanced dream sequence featuring the Bugs Bunny and Tweety
cartoon characters, combined with the live action Doris and Jack in the
number, Freddy Get Ready (based on The Hungarian
Rhapsody No 2). Another novelty number, Tic, Tic, Tic had lyrics
to do with the atomic bomb and Geiger-counters! Doris was in great voice
with the updated lyrics of
Canadian Capers, originally dating from 1915, giving her
another hit. Other songs involved the talents of Harry Warren, Ralph Freed
and Harry Dubin with I'll String Along With You surviving the original 1934 movie
when Dick Powell made it popular. The title song was also an ideal ballad
for Doris, with the effective up-tempo Someone Like You
providing a likeable contrast.
Modern
satire is cruel and often ill-defined so the ‘40’s equivalent,
It's A Great Feeling
(1949), can merely be considered a gentle send-up of the studio system.
Warner Brothers obviously viewed the script as a good public relations
exercise with many cameo appearances by contract stars like Gary Cooper,
Joan Crawford and Sydney Greenstreet, who sent up their established movie
images? Directors, Michael Curtiz (who directed her first two films),
David Butler (director of this film), King Vidor and Raoul Walsh were also
actively involved in the plot, as was Ray Heindorf, the studio’s musical
director. The slender tale of a home-town girl working as a studio
waitress in the hope of stardom, but finally settling for marriage and
presumably domesticity, was, and still is fun to view. Let's face it, in
the Forties, most girls dreamed of ending up with Errol Flynn as their
bridegroom! Needless to say, Doris, second-billed to Dennis Morgan, played
the eye-fluttering starlet with relish, aided once more by Jack Carson;
the two men playing themselves and competing for Doris’ on-screen
attention. She sang That Was A Big Fat Lie which when
reprised by Jack Carson’s Maurice Chevalier impersonation derived from the
famous vocal-dub joke in Singin' in the Rain. With so many
comedy set-pieces and sight jokes it would have been easy for the score to
have become minor key, but fortunately Sammy Cahn and Jule Styne again
supplied Doris with a few good songs, which made up for some of the
unflattering fashions she had to wear while singing them! At the
Cafe Rendezvous was performed in black wig, thick French accent
which ended with a prat-fall to end the scene! The big production number
There's Nothing Rougher Than Love, was a bizarre fantasy dream
sequence and possibly the reason Doris did not record it commercially.
However, Doris had no such distractions when singing the film’s ballad, Blame My Absent Minded Heart, nicely reprised by Dennis Morgan,
with the title song a lively credit-opener to preface the erratic plot
which followed.
Pre-dating
the vinyl album, soundtrack recordings were a rarity at this time and
Doris re-recorded almost all her film songs for Columbia. They are
available on many current compilations as well as the Bear Family
box-sets. Fortunately,
Doris Day - It's Magic - Her Early Years At Warner Bros.
(WSM 8122755432) was released in 1998 and includes almost all the
soundtrack versions of Doris’ featured songs with the exception of
At The Cafe Rendezvous. It should be noted, however, that with the
emphasis on Doris, songs performed by others have been omitted, even
though, with a running time of just 42 minutes, non-Day featured songs
like the calypso-styled, The Tourist Trade and Run, Run, Run by The
Samba Kings and Avon Long featured in
Romance on the High Seas,
could and should have been included.
Moving from
Technicolor gloss to stark black and white,
Young Man With A Horn
(1950 - UK title: Young
Man Of Music), a musical melodrama, was directed by Michael Curtiz
and vaguely based on the life of Bix Beiderbecke. Harry James provided
Kirk Douglas with the necessary ghost trumpet needed to obsess the musical
perfection he reaches for but fails to achieve. Lauren Bacall played the
ambivalent society bitch determined to emotionally destroy all around her.
Third-billed was Doris in the sympathetic but somewhat subservient role of
Jo Jordon, a big-band singer; a life she knew only too well. In her first
dramatic part, she acted with sincerity and sang The Very Thought Of
You,
With A Song In My Heart
, I May Be Wrong and Too Marvellous For Words
between the taut and sombre plot twists. The intense performance by
Douglas, was backed-up by Hoagy Carmichael and Juano Hernandez as
believable musicians. The Columbia album
Young Man With A Horn
(Columbia/Legacy - CK 65507),
available on CD is not soundtrack but does reunite Doris with Harry James
on several tracks and also includes some James solo instrumentals.
Around
this time servicemen in Korea voted Doris "the girl we would take a
slow boat back to the States with"; an affirmation she had finally
arrived with the right to be finally topped-billed. It was fortuitous she
moved from stark reality to a fluffy musical comedy which allowed not only
ample opportunity to sing, but also to dance on screen for the first time.
The
“Let’s put on a show”
Tea For Two
(1950) was loosely based on the stage success, No, No Nanette,
but rewritten as a typical Warner Brothers back-stage tale. It mattered
not that most of the likeable score had been discarded in favour of other
songs, and with the mood bright and breezy, director David Butler ensured
Doris had the full support of Gordon MacRae for songs and Gene Nelson for
some nifty footwork. Adding the comedic force of Eve Arden, the effete
humour of Billy De Wolfe, and the neurotic outpourings of S.Z. Sakall was
pure necessity, with Patrice Wymore occasionally jamming a jealous spanner
in the works. Doris played an heiress eager to invest in a Broadway show
and grab some show business star-dust for herself in a plot which involved
a bet that she should say
“No” to every question for twenty-four hours. Coached by Nelson’s
wife, Miriam, Doris worked hard enough to make the dancing look easy on
screen. However, no musical can be successful without songs and Doris,
MacRae and Nelson, sang I Want To Be Happy, I Know
That You Know,
Do, Do, Do,
I Only Have Eyes For You
and the
agreeable title number Patrice Wymore took care of a production number,
Crazy Rhythm with Gene Nelson adding some spectacular dancing
whilst The Charleston showcased young dancers in a lively
work-out and provided the only reminder the action was set in the year of
the Stock Market crash (1929) as costumes and hairstyles reflected pure
Fifties! An attractive medley from an on-stage No, No Nanette
production tied up all the loose ends of the plot in the speedily reached
finale.
Despite the
huge box-office success of
Tea For Two,
the film which followed,
The West Point Story
(1950 – re-titled Fine
and Dandy in the UK) was a disappointing backward step for Doris
as she was third-billed behind James Cagney and Virginia Mayo. At least it
reunited her with Gordon MacRae and Gene Nelson but this routine tale
about a Broadway director staging a revue at West Point promised more than
it delivered and was let down by the film’s drab black-and-white
photography and routine direction by Roy Del Ruth. Cagney had the
opportunity to sing, dance, and veer between feisty light-weight comedy
with a nice line in on-the-spot tantrums, with It Could Only Happen in Brooklyn his big number. The Sammy
Cahn/ Jule Styne score also included the attractive Military Polka heavily promoted by marching men in uniforms in keeping with the location.
Gordon MacRae smoothly delivered Long Before I knew You and
shared You Love Me with Doris who triumphed in solo mode on
the perky Ten Thousand Sheep; fortunately she recorded the
two latter songs. The Kissing Rock was reprised throughout
the film by all the cast. An ensemble piece rather than a Day movie, the
lack of clear focus branded this film as lacking in distinction.
The
melodramatic
Storm Warning
(1951) gave Doris her first
non-singing role. This change of pace was significant for several reasons;
the hard-hitting subject matter involving the Ku Klux Klan; the
opportunity for Doris to work with her childhood idol, Ginger Rogers (who
played her sister) and the only Day movie in which her character dies.
With Steve Cochran moodily menacing as the husband and Ginger in a gutsy
sophisticated role, Doris was somewhat grounded as the pregnant wife which
at least allowed her sympathetic nature to believably flourish in a part
which stretched her dramatic abilities. Ronald Reagan was also on hand as
a good guy. Director Stuart Heisler, an expert at such film noir
assignments, provided the intense atmosphere, and the film, rarely seen,
still stands up well in the context of its subject and as one of Doris’
less typical films.
From
realism to familiar back-stage musical territory must have delighted Doris
and
Lullaby of Broadway
(1951), directed by David Butler, and was a lavish song and dance event in
full Technicolor. Warner Brothers otherwise cut other costs by raiding
their own music catalogue in order to provide Doris and others with lively
numbers. The plot involved Doris as an aspiring singer/dancer, Melina
Howard, returning from Europe to seek her mother (Gladys George), a faded
Broadway star well in decline but intent on hiding the truth from her
daughter. The opening number, Just One of Those Things, the
heart-stopper which originally grabbed my attention with Doris in top hat
and tails, still confirms what a great number it is! Doris’ co-star was
the amiable Gene Nelson and they seemed to strike sparks in their duets
and dance numbers together. You're Getting To Be A Habit With Me,
Somebody Loves Me and I Love The Way You Say Goodnight
are shared and Gene sings and keeps his twinkling taps busy on Zing
Went The Strings Of My Heart. Gladys George, a once popular Warner
Brothers star, was ideally cast, pulling the heartstrings despite her hard
exterior and delivering
A Shanty In Old Shanty Town and Please Don't Talk About
Me When I'm Gone in the defiant way certain aging divas nowadays
identify Sondheim’s I’m Still Here! as their anthem of
survival! Comedy provided by Billy De Wolfe, Florence Bates and
“Cuddles” Sakall kept the buoyant mood busy and somewhat unbelievable
and prevented the plot from overdosing on cloying sentimentality. The
perfect finale featuring the title song gave Doris and Gene the benefit of
spectacular staging and slow-motion dance choreography which added
elegance to the inevitable happy ending.
On a gentler
level,
On Moonlight Bay
(1951), based on the Penrod
stories by Booth Tarkington, was clearly seeking to emulate the style and
success of Meet Me In St. Louis. Maybe it failed to reach
the same level of period charm, but the film was successful enough to
inspire a sequel and it remains a movie Day fans cherish with each
television transmission adding further numbers to her fan-base. With the
emphasis on tomboy Marjorie Winfield played by Doris, the plot dwelled on
her family’s light-hearted tribulations in-between nostalgic songs. Cuddle Up A Little Closer,
Tell Me, Till We Meet Again, I’m Forever
Blowing Bubbles and the title song sung by Doris, Gordon MacRae
and Jack Smith who played her suitors. On hand with spiky comments, Mary
Wickes played the busybody maid and key figure in the corny plot. The film
provided pure entertainment with the feeling nothing too drastic would
ever happen to threaten the cosy atmosphere permeated by Roy Del Ruth’s
assured direction.
The bio-pic
I’ll See You In My Dreams
(1951) detailed the life of
the lyricist, Gus Kahn, who claimed fame with Ain't We Got Fun,
It Had To Be You, The One I Love Belongs To Somebody Else
and many other songs. Intended as a starring role for Danny Thomas, Warner
Brothers’ on one hand needed to protect the film’s box-office potential by
giving Doris top-billing yet opted for black and white photography, which
conversely did the movie no favours! However, directed by Michael Curtiz,
this formulaic movie artfully combined the dramatic and interpolated
musical elements of the story. Doris in the role as wife and composer
expanded her innate acting ability in scenes with Thomas and they gelled
well together. The show business milieu was well-conceived and the passing
years indicated changing period and fashion with effective simplicity.
Humour and poignancy was shared in equal measure as the tale unfolded with
Frank Lovejoy and Patrice Wymore, who had Love Me Or Leave Me
as her big production number, in the supporting cast.
Starlift
(1951) is
probably Doris Day’s rarest film, having never been shown on UK
television. She was top-billed and supported by Gordon MacRae, Gene Nelson
and Virginia Mayo with numerous Warner Brothers stars, like Cagney, Phil
Harris, Jane Wyman and Randolph Scott making token appearances as
themselves. The background was a Californian US base during the Korean War
and Hollywood’s flag-waving idea of providing troop entertainment without
their stars having to travel too far from the studio. To emphasize realism
and propaganda, Air Force officers explained to the stars the mechanics of
looking after injured troops, the departure of men to the front and other
base operations. The forgettable romantic plot involving a publicity stunt
existed as an excuse to link the songs, dances and comedy. Doris sang
You're Gonna Lose That Girl with MacRae and her solo numbers
were You Outta Be In Pictures, You Do Something To Me,
‘S Wonderful
and a snatch of Lullaby of Broadway. However, Doris only occupied a small
section of the movie which short-changed moviegoers who expected more
considering her star-billing.
The Winning Team
(1952) may have top-billed
Doris but Ronald Reagan was really the star. He played Grover Cleveland
Alexander, a telephone company technician who aspired to and succeeded in
becoming a professional baseball player. Reagan was convincing if slightly
too old for the part, with the plot following the usual highs and lows of
baseball fame and the resulting detrimental effect on family life. Doris
as girlfriend/wife gallantly offered a sensitive performance but there was
no escaping her second place billing and status within the plot. She did
get to sing Ol’ St. Nicholas
and personally succeeded in giving her character some personable
charm, but this film with its pedestrian direction by Lewis Sieler
continued the lull in the silvery
Day movie
career with the feeling that Warner Brothers merely exploited her name in
order to boost its box-office viability.
At
least
April In Paris
(1952) returned Doris to musicals even if the movie, directed by
dependable David Butler, was a dull affair. It involved a State Department
invitation to represent the USA at a Paris festival being sent in error to
the slightly zany Ethel “Dynamite” Jackson, played by Doris, when
in fact it is intended for the great actress Ethel Barrymore! Doris’
co-star was Ray Bolger who although an excellent dancer lacked leading man
potential in movies; his milieu was comedic roles on Broadway. Adding to
the problem was third-billed Claude Dauphin’s inept acting and terrible
English which left Doris to finely shine her radiance over the thinly
plotted proceedings. Initially set in New York, a journey by luxury liner
soon found her in Hollywood’s idea of Paris. The ensuing misunderstandings
and mistaken identities indolent of such a banal plot did at least leave
room for some lively musical moments. Apart from his collaboration with
E.Y Harburg on the title song nicely sung by Doris, Vernon Duke teamed
with the ubiquitous Sammy Cahn for new songs I’m Gonna Ring The Bell
Tonight and That's What Makes Paris Paree which
provided the musical means to mount decent production numbers whilst the
ballad I Know A Place was well ahead of the remainder of the
score.
By
The Light Of The Silvery Moon
(1953), the sequel to
On Moonlight Bay
put the Day career back on track. It featured the same co-stars, family
and a similar plot mix of good-natured comedy set in the pure nostalgia of
1917 which just moved the action on from where the previous movie left
off. Doris set the mood with her portrayal of the likeable tomboy now
exhibiting female foibles on her capricious journey to womanhood and love!
On the way, she finally fell for Gordon MacRae who celebrated this fact
with Just One Girl while Doris had fun with King
Chanticleer. The remaining songs If You Were The Only Girl In The World, Ain't We Got
Fun, Your Eyes Have Told Me So and I’ll Forget
You just added tuneful resonance to a warmly appealing movie.
Despite
the return to form and box-office success, Doris must have wondered just
where her career was heading. Fortunately
Calamity Jane
(1953) gave her a tailor made role equal to her abilities. Doris turned
the vivacious if ambivalent, two-fisted, back-slapping, pistol-toting
tomboy into the bombastic but irresistible character we all rooted for.
The plot was quite predictable, leaving welcome spaces for the songs which
were certainly top-notch, having been written by Sammy Fain and Paul
Francis Webster for an unproduced stage musical until Warner’s snapped it
up as the ideal vehicle for their musical star. That great opener,
The Deadwood
Stage [Whip-Crack-Away]
was followed by Just Blew In From The
Windy City, The Black Hills of Dakota, A
Woman's Touch and the massive hit Secret
Love
which
received an Oscar as Best Song. The film’s finale emphasized the
reassuring notion that love had tamed Calamity Jane’s excesses and with
her newly found femininity in full bloom and finally hitched, she headed
for life-long domestic bliss with Wild Bill Hickok played with gusto by
Howard Keel. No matter if the character and theme echoed Annie Get
Your Gun in many ways: at least
Calamity Jane
has had the advantage of being seen constantly over the years and is the
Doris Day movie which has kept her name popular with younger generations,
whereas MGM’s movie of Irving Berlin’s masterpiece was unfortunately
locked in the archives for over thirty years until its DVD/video reissue
not long ago.
Calamity Jane
was particularly popular in the UK and every song received extensive
airplay with Philips releasing four 78’s until the availability of the 10
inch album at a later date. Most of the songs had been re-recorded by
Doris for Columbia, including Tis Harry I'm Going To Marry
which she did not sing in the film and the only included soundtrack items
were The Deadwood Stage (without the middle segment),
I Can Do Without You, Secret Love (alleged to have
been recorded in a single take), and Howard Keel's Higher Than A Hawk.
Warner’s first
musical in Cinemascope,
Lucky Me (1954)
was a slip-shod affair which came nowhere near the quality of
Calamity Jane.
Doris played Candy, a
superstitious member of a theatrical troupe stranded without work in Miami
and so down on luck they are forced to survive by working in a hotel
kitchen. Adding a songwriter (Robert Cummings) and false identities to the
mix of overdone backstage capers from Phil Silvers, Eddie Foy Jr. and
Nancy Walker, plus a bitchy turn from spoilt socialite played by Martha
Hyer, at least provided Doris with the love interest and the script’s
basic function. Fortunately, she surmounted these odds, looked great, and
delivered vivacious performances of The Superstition Song; I Wanna Sing Like An Angel, I Speak To The Stars
and The Bluebells Of Broadway. The remaining Sammy Fain/Paul
Francis Webster songs included a couple unused from the Calamity
Jane score (Love You Dearly and Men!) which joined High Hopes and
Parisian Pretties for additional tuneful moments. Only I
Speak To The Stars and The Bluebells Of Broadway
were released as a single by Columbia which clearly signalled lack of
faith in the movie but the unreleased Love You Dearly was
later rescued from permanent obscurity and included in the Bear Family
anthology.
Dream casting
teamed Doris with Frank Sinatra for
Young At Heart
(1954), a remake of the 1938
movie Four Daughters based on a story by Fanny Hurst and
produced by Doris’ own Arwin production company for Warners. With
Sinatra’s movie come-back fully established and the name of his previously
released hit chosen as the films’ title, this drama with music had all the
ingredients to induce box-office excitement. The story of a family of
three (reduced from four) daughters; their romances; overseen by a musical
father and a grouchy but wise aunt (Ethel Barrymore) was classily mounted
and played as totally irresistible soap opera. Doris looked terrific in
her role as one of the sisters, Laurie Tuttle, and handled her excellent
songs contributed by many including Mack Gordon and James Van Heusen, with
great feeling which consolidated her warm-hearted performance. These
included the ballads There's A Rising Moon, Hold Me In
Your Arms and the happy hit
Ready, Willing and Able
. Sinatra obviously insisted on
bringing his own choice of standards from his favourite repertoire and Just One Of Those Things, Someone To Watch Over me
and One For My Baby were set in a suitably smoky night club
atmosphere to match his moody and convincing performance as a
disillusioned songwriter/performer. The happy ending he demanded in place
of the original downbeat finale, at least found him smiling and fully
recovered from the preceding angst, and he and Doris shared You My
Love with both committing their individual versions to disc and
Sinatra’s version reaching the Charts.
As Doris’ 17th
and final film under her Warner Brothers contract, she was now free to
look to other studios for interesting projects, with third husband, Marty
Melcher, whom she married in 1951, eager to extend his role from manager
to producer. She later commented about the ending of her contract:
“I had but one year
to go on my seven year contract and no prisoner ever waited deliverance
day more eagerly than I anticipated being sprung from Warners. I just
wanted the privilege of being able to say “No”. It was a word that had
been banished from my vocabulary and I meant to put it back where it
belonged”
However,
after three movies for MGM and Paramount, Doris returned to Warner
Brothers on her own terms for
The Pajama Game
(1957) which was directed by Stanley Donen. The hit musical which had
starred Janis Paige on Broadway, had a catchy score by Richard Adler and
Jerry Ross, with choreography by Bob Fosse, and offered Doris a role too
good to miss. Labour relations, pay negotiations and management problems
may have seemed an unlikely subject to form the basis of such a musical
but with a believable central romance, peripheral comedic characters and
engaging songs, this one was a winner. As Babe Williams, head of the
factory’s grievance committee, Doris soon set her heart on the physically
and vocally virile John Raitt who played the newly arrived factory-floor
manager. Complications ensured the path to romance was particularly bumpy
when a negligible and crooked pay deal inflamed the workers to take
necessary strike action. With most of the original stage cast imported
from New York, Doris was the sole box-office name and she lead the
proceedings with energetic enthusiasm combined with occasional
vulnerability and was in great voice for I'm Not
At All In Love
backed by the factory girls, Small Talk and There Once
Was A Man with John Raitt; joining the ensemble for Once-A-Year Day and Seven And A Half Cents. The
secondary jealousy-driven relationship between the Carol Haney and Eddie
Foy Jr. characters set up numbers like Hernando's Hideaway
and
I’ll Never Be Jealous Again which left John Raitt with the
hit song,
Hey There, and although Doris just caught its crumbs, her
brief tearful reprise was a key scene set evocatively against the changing
colours of a railway crossing and demonstrating her ability to act through
the lyrics of the song. Three minor songs had been omitted from the film
adaptation so Adler and Ross decided to write an additional ballad,
The Man Who Invented Love for Doris but unfortunately despite the
fact Columbia released her commercial recording, the filmed scene and song
was cut from the film which probably caused Doris some disappointment.
However the Region 1(USA) DVD of
The Pajama Game
(Warner Bros. 35085) has rescued the scene from the cutting room floor and
included it as a welcome “extra”. Overall, this film was a faithful
adaptation of a popular musical and despite the ailing musical genre by
the late 50’s it was a critical and box-office success which later
encouraged Warner Brothers to snap up other Broadway successes like
The Music Man, My Fair Lady and
Gypsy for similarly high-profile transfers to the big screen
without the loss of their original integrity.
After
The Pajama Game
Doris never worked for the studio again. The films Doris made at Warners
certainly succeeded in making her a star name, despite the fact many of
them fell short of expectation, but the musicals were entertaining and
popular. Maybe the few dramatic movies expanded her acting range but these
roles could have been played by any competent actress. No doubt her
contract made it necessary that she should accept such parts and did no
harm to her movie stardom which peaked in the early Fifties and would do
so again ten years later when working at Universal Studios. Her need to
concentrate on movies possibly overshadowed her recording career and only
in recent years has her vocal ability been fully appreciated. It is
perhaps ironic that this realisation came after she had made her last
album and movie around 1968. Now living in Carmel, Doris has championed
animal rights and her own contingent of dogs and cats keep her near home
with her maxim firmly fixed on today and not the past.
Allen Pollock
(British music/film
critic and researcher)
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