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Martin Daye
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b. Cincinnati, Ohio, 1924 d. Carmel Valley, California, May 2019 13th May 2019: Headline news in the UK across all media channels. The Doris Day Animal Foundation confirmed that the Hollywood actress died at her home in Carmel Valley in California. The statement said that Ms Day was in "excellent physical health for her age, until recently contracting a serious case of pneumonia". "She was surrounded by a few close friends as she passed," the statement continued Reports suggest she was 97 but I was of the impression she was 95 but whatever it's a sad passing and another link lost to a golden Hollywood era. In the 1970s, she turned away from performing to focus her energies on her animal foundation. According to the organisation, she wished to have no funeral, memorial service or grave marker similar to David Bowie.
----- So the 3rd April 2014 saw Doris reach her 90th bithday. Happy birthday and all that. 90 years of bringing pure joy into this world. How many of us can say that without us life would be a duller place? Not many. Doris is one of those few. In the UK they're celebrating it on the BBC with a documentary on her life on Sunday 6th followed by one of her most famous roles in Hitchcock's The Man Who Knew Too Much. Though there are suggestions she celebrated her 92nd birthday I really have no idea which is right. Whatever: Doris Day can be any age she likes.
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a pop-art blonde who lived on to an age when her simplicity was reinterpreted by instant nostalgia.
She hoped to suggest that the world was okay, that wholesome blonde girls with cheerful voices and big tits were destined to meet nice guys who would woo
them chastely and tunefully On Moonlight Bay (51, Roy del Ruth) or in some such Californian
paradise. She was the home fire that refused to
admit the cold war. She was, too, a grand confidence trick, boasting in Young at Heart (54, Gordon Douglas) that she was "Ready, Willing and
Able" but demonstrating throughout her career
the very opposite. Above all, she was optimistic,
just as the years of her first success were defiantly
hopeful and religiously preoccupied with dating,
78s, and banana splits. She is easy to deride. But
her fans were devoted and her energy was authentic. She was not sophisticated, but in the early
1950s that in itself was cool. What is most impressive about her professionalism is the way she survived into the 1960s, riding new fashions without
actually changing her nature.
She was a famous band singer seen by Michael
Curtiz, who gave her a starring debut in Romance
on the High Seas (48). She had a few straight
roles-in Young Man With a Horn (50, Curtiz) and Storm Warning (50, Stuart Heisler)—but it was in Warners musicals that she found fame: as
the studio waitress in It's a Great Feeling (49, David Butler); My Dream Is Yours (49, Curtiz); Tea for Two (50, Butler); The West Point Story (50, del Ruth); Lullaby of Broadway (51, Butler); I'll See You in My Dreams (51, Curtiz); April in
Paris (52, Butler); By the Light of the Silvery Moon, (52, Butler); Calamity Jane (53, Butler); and Lucky Me (54, Jack Donohue). Nor should it be forgotten that she was one of the first singers whose records were bought as "pop" by teenagers.
Many will remember girls who worked to look like
Doris, and boys who responded warmly to those
efforts.
You should not underestimate the quality of her voice. Not only was she a fine singer, technically, but her singing voice had a natural dramatic force
that carried her beyond her acting ability. Thus, in
many cases, her songs deepen the movie she is
in-I am thinking especially of "Secret Love" in
Calamity Jane and most of Love Me or Leave Me (57, Charles Vidor), where she had a triumph playing singer Ruth Etting and proved her readiness for musicals of more developed content. (If
only she and Sondheim could have worked together.) Listening to her sound tracks makes
you believe her films were richer or more moving
than was really the case.
In addition to Love Me or Leave Me, in the mid-fities she broadened her range, emoting enormously and slipping a ludicrous song ("Che Sera
Sera") into The Man Who Knew Too Much (55,
Alfred Hitchcock); somehow managing to land an
aeroplane in Julie (56, Andrew L. Stone); and her best film, The Pajama Came (57, Stanley Donen and George Abbott), which harnessed her bounce
to the role of factory shop steward. Her work
turned to romantic comedy in The Tunnel of Love
(58, Gene Kelly) and Teachers Pet (58, George Seaton), and she contrived to become the
untainted subject of Ross Hunter's sexual innuendo (and a top box-office attraction) in Pillow
Talk (59, Michael Gordon); Lover Come Back (61,
Delbert Mann); and That Touch of Mink (62,
Mann). She was wide-eyed with fright in Midnight
Lace (60, David Miller); funny in Please Don't Eat the Daisies (60, Charles Walters); and returned to
music in Billy Rose's Jumbo (62, Walters), but pillow talk held sway: The Thrill of It All (63, Norman Jewison); Move Over, Darling (63, Gordon);
Send Me No Flowers (64, Jewison); and Do Not
Disturb (64, Ralph Levy). But since two Frank
Tashlin films—the amusing The Class Bottom
Boat (66) and the woeful Caprice (67)—she has
made nothing of interest and now seems to have
retired to the world of margarine commercials
and looking after animals.
This may also have been influenced by the
death in 1968 of Martin Melcher, her husband
and frequent producer—and also the exploiter of
her money.
Doris Day Memorabilia @ ebay.com (direct link to memorabilia)
Use these photos as reference points for what the official release looks like. Photographed from all angles with all the text and phtos where they should be on the official release. Send Me No Flowers / It Happened to Jane Dvd Cover Send Me No Flowers / It Happened to Jane Dvd Back Cover Pillow Talk / The Thrill Of It All Dvd Cover Pillow Talk / The Thrill Of It All Dvd Back Cover Young At Heart / Lover Come Back Dvd Cover Young At Heart / Lover Come Back Dvd Back Cover
Available:
amazon.co.uk (direct link to Dvd boxset)
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