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What's Your Favorite Day?


[i]The Winning Team[/i] 1952 (opposite Ronald Reagan) 0 votes

[i]Calamity Jane[/i] (1953, opposite Howard Keel) 1 votes

[i]The Man Who Knew Too Much[/i] (1956, opposite James Stewart) 4 votes

[i]The Pajama Game[/i] 1957 (opposite John Raitt) 1 votes

[i]Teacher's Pet[/i] 1958 (opposite Clark Gable) 2 votes

[i]Pillow Talk[/i] (1959, opposite Rock Hudson) 1 votes

[i]The Glass Bottom Boat[/i] (1959, opposite Rod Taylor) 0 votes

[i]Please Don't Eat the Daisies[/i] (1960, opposite David Niven) 0 votes

[i]Lover Come Back[/i] (1961, opposite Rock Hudson) 0 votes

[i]That Touch of Mink[/i] 1962 (opposite Cary Grant) 0 votes

[i]With Six You Get Egg Roll[/i] (1968 opposite Brian Keith) 0 votes

[i]Move Over Darling[/i] (1963, opposite James Garner) 0 votes

[i]The Thrill of It All[/i] (1963, opposite James Garner) 0 votes

[i]Send Me No Flowers[/i] (1964, opposite Rock Hudson) 0 votes

Other (Please Specify) 0 votes

Edgy MD
May 13 2019 12:12 PM

You're on a desert island, that remarkably has a film projector, a screen, working power, and reels and reels of old Doris Day films.



You don't want to spend too much time with Doris, what with you needing devote most of every day to survival and pursuing rescue, but when you need to rest at night, you're not above cranking up the projector. What's going to be your go-to film?

MFS62
May 13 2019 03:52 PM
Re: What's Your Favorite Day?

Only one?

Teacher's Pet is a comedy and Pajama Game is a musical.

And I loved them both.

Later

dgwphotography
May 13 2019 07:54 PM
Re: What's Your Favorite Day?

Pillow Talk was my first, and still my favorite.

Double Switch
May 14 2019 10:46 PM
Re: What's Your Favorite Day?

As an ardent Hitchcock aficionado, I must go with the remake of The Man Who Knew Too Much even if after a while Que Será Será crawls all over my last nerve. The scene where Bernard Herrmann conducts Storm Clouds Contata stands out. Reggie Nalder, spooky as ever.



The other caveat is that I don't believe I saw any of the other movies listed. Mine was a sheltered childhood, no further explanation necessary.

Frayed Knot
May 15 2019 06:26 AM
Re: What's Your Favorite Day?

I haven't seen many DD films either, although I'm not sure that NOT watching them constitutes a sheltered childhood. In fact, one could argue that it's kind of the opposite.

There's an old joke concerning Doris and the studio-created chaste image that served her for many roles and many years. I can't remember now to whom it was first

attributed, but whoever it was claimed that; 'I knew Doris Day before she was a virgin'.

Double Switch
May 15 2019 09:24 AM
Re: What's Your Favorite Day?

Frayed Knot wrote:

I haven't seen many DD films either, although I'm not sure that NOT watching them constitutes a sheltered childhood. In fact, one could argue that it's kind of the opposite.

There's an old joke concerning Doris and the studio-created chaste image that served her for many roles and many years. I can't remember now to whom it was first

attributed, but whoever it was claimed that; 'I knew Doris Day before she was a virgin'.


Supposedly Oscar Levant said that, which sounds exactly like something he'd have said. Similar to the jibe toward George Gershwin and his long-time love, Kay Swift, whom he never married before he died: "Ah, look! Here comes George Gershwin with the future Miss Kay Swift."



OK, a "sheltered childhood" means, in my case, we didn't have movie options for a lot of my childhood but when we did, it was movies my mother wanted to see. She was not a DD fan. She was not into chick flicks. She tended toward movies such as Mister Roberts, Trapeze, The Greatest Show on Earth, Around the World in 80 Days, The Seventh Voyage of Sinbad, The Russians are Coming, The Russians are Coming; Auntie Mame, stuff like that. So that shelter meant if I was to see a movie, mom wanted to see it and took us kids along. We had no nearby theatre to trot off to.



Sometimes I speak circumspectly.

Edgy MD
May 15 2019 09:32 AM
Re: What's Your Favorite Day?

Double Switch wrote:

As an ardent Hitchcock aficionado, I must go with the remake of The Man Who Knew Too Much even if after a while Que Será Será crawls all over my last nerve.


It kind of works, doesn't it, though? Singing that goofy song like she has a gun to her head, knowing it may be the salvation or doom of her child, is as tense as it gets.



As with Jimmy Stewart, one of Hitchcock's talents was finding a pained, disquieting dark side even in America's favorite paragons of easy wholesomeness.

batmagadanleadoff
May 15 2019 11:44 AM
Re: What's Your Favorite Day?

Double Switch wrote:

Frayed Knot wrote:

I haven't seen many DD films either, although I'm not sure that NOT watching them constitutes a sheltered childhood. In fact, one could argue that it's kind of the opposite.

There's an old joke concerning Doris and the studio-created chaste image that served her for many roles and many years. I can't remember now to whom it was first

attributed, but whoever it was claimed that; 'I knew Doris Day before she was a virgin'.


Supposedly Oscar Levant said that, which sounds exactly like something he'd have said. Similar to the jibe toward George Gershwin and his long-time love, Kay Swift, whom he never married before he died: "Ah, look! Here comes George Gershwin with the future Miss Kay Swift."



OK, a "sheltered childhood" means, in my case, we didn't have movie options for a lot of my childhood but when we did, it was movies my mother wanted to see. She was not a DD fan. She was not into chick flicks. She tended toward movies such as Mister Roberts, Trapeze, The Greatest Show on Earth, Around the World in 80 Days, The Seventh Voyage of Sinbad, The Russians are Coming, The Russians are Coming; Auntie Mame, stuff like that. So that shelter meant if I was to see a movie, mom wanted to see it and took us kids along. We had no nearby theatre to trot off to.



Sometimes I speak circumspectly.


That before she was a virgin line is attributed to Levant, and also, Groucho Marx.

Double Switch
May 15 2019 11:48 AM
Re: What's Your Favorite Day?

Since Levant was famous for playing Gershwin's music, I tend to believe he said it first. But who knows.

Edgy MD
May 15 2019 08:16 PM
Re: What's Your Favorite Day?

I love that somebody voted for Calamity Jane, because any invocation of Howard Keel is funny.



He was, like, the real-life Troy McClure.