Listen to the opening music and "The Superstition Song"
"The film Doris Day didn't want to
make"
"Lucky Me" was the first musical to be shot
in CinemaScope. It was also a picture that Doris Day, Hollywood's Golden
Girl, did NOT want to make. Because of contractual obligations,
she decided to do the film and to give it 110% of herself in the role
of 'Candy Williams'.
Her co-star was Robert Cummings, long-time Hollywood leading man and
television star. In support, she had Phil Silvers, Nancy Walker, who
later gained fame as Ida Morgenstern in "Rhoda", and Eddie Foy, Jr.
It was reported that Martha Hyer, a blond, was forced to dye her hair red
so as not to conflict with the star, Miss Day.
This film is famous for another reason. Judy Garland was on the Warner
Brothers lot filming "A Star is Born". She and Miss Day visited
each other's sets and became friends.
"Lucky Me" is a fun musical which opens with Doris
Day's dynamite opening number, "The Superstition Song", which
she sings while bouncing down the streets of Miami! A TRUE STAR PERFORMANCE!
Only Doris could have gotten away with this, and she was brilliant.
She played Candy Williams, a singer-actress who was appearing in a travelling
show, "Parisian Pretties" which bombed in Miami. Stranded,
she meets a New York songwriter, Cummings, who is casting a new Broadway
show. He pretends to be someone else to court Candy, but falls in love
with her. During
the proceedings, Doris Day sings most of the numbers including her chart
hit, "I Speak to the Stars". The highlight is "I Wanna
Sing Like an Angel" and "Love You, Dearly," a lovely ballad,
which should have been a hit.
Phil Sivers was wonderful and had
a great number with Day called "Men!" The
other actors gave Miss Day able support and everyone seemed to work
well with each other.
Angie Dickinson made her film debut in a walk-on scene at the big party,
but you probably won't recognise her (she had black hair). Bill Goodwin
played the same role he played in many a film at various studios.
Again, Doris
Day fans will just love seeing their favourite star do anything.
Even though Miss Day didn't like the picture, her fans seem to love every
minute of it. I must admit, I liked it! Ralph McKnight, New York, Nov 1998
"Doris Day is a trouper, and she knows her lines in this
manuscript by heart, having done it so many times before, but she has a
good following, and she sells her songs with skill sufficient to make anybody,
however bored with the basic idea, stop, look and listen to the familiar
routines. And none will be unhappy about the treatment she gives the stuffy
situations." - Box Office Magazine
Listen to "I Speak to the Stars"
"Lucky" for us, it stars DORIS!"
"Lucky Me" was the next to last film under Doris
Day's Warner Brothers contract. Although she has stated that she didn't
believe in the project to the same extent that she'd believed in some
of her prior films, you'd not know it while watching her performance.
While far from the best
film made during her seven years on the Burbank lot, Miss Day is a delight.
In technicolor and wide screen (The first musical to be so filmed), she
looks a treat. Her performance is filled with spunk, vitality, exuberance
and that unmistakable "Doris Day" glow that never seems forced or
contrived. From the first moment we see her bouncing down the street letting
loose with "The Superstition Song", we are sold. There's not a false moment
in her performance. Her comic skills are given a chance to delight us, even
if the script might not be as fresh as we might like. Vocally, she runs the
gamut from the lovely "I Speak to the Stars" to "The Bluebells of Broadway".
She gives every song the full treatment, again dispelling any displeasure
she might have personally felt about this picture.
The cast work well together. Bob Cummings gives the same
kind of smooth performance he gave opposite another blonde star, Betty
Grable, a decade or so earlier. He seems ageless. Phil Silvers shows he
can play more than Sgt. Bilko, and Nancy Walker, years before she started
selling paper towels, reminds us of her musical-comedy roots. Eddie Foy,
Jr., is amusing and Martha Hyer, who later married famed producer Hal Wallis
and wrote (uncredited) the screenplay for the 1975 teaming of John Wayne
and Katharine Hepburn, "Rooster Cogburn" is
pretty window dressing.
The plot about a troupe of "down on their luck" performers, is not new. Since
the inception of talkies it has been done by virtually every performer - male
and female. This version doesn't add a lot of new twists. However, the cast
play their roles with such conviction, you find yourself smiling at their antics
and tapping your feet to the catchy songs.
"Lucky Me" didn't break box-office records when it was released but it deserves
a better reputation than it has earned through the years. Thanks to Doris and
company, the film is a lucky break for viewers! Paul Brogan, September 2003
Listen to "Love You Dearly"
Doris Day reported in the publicity
at the time of the film that as an actress she had to work at keeping
in shape. Some actresses
would have to attend gym classes between pictures to keep in condition.
But as it was, she had an energetic young son to keep her in trim
by “bouncing
volleyballs in her face, beating her at tennis, and racing her to first
base. I suppose I should be very grateful to Terry for keeping me in shape.”.
It was reported that using the new CinemaScope camera for
the production helped keep all the dancers and singers in full-length
close-ups. The CinemaScope camera could be placed only 30 feet away while
an ordinary camera would have to be 50 feet away in order to get the
whole troupe in. This is another major reason why “formatted” CinemaScope movies sometimes seem
so distorted or awkward in their artificial “forced closeups.”
Doris Day had a beautiful wardrobe for this film and seldom
looked lovelier, nor has her voice ever sounded better. Doris, herself,
remembers little of the film. She felt she had only one good song (“I
Speak to the Stars”),
but reported in her book that she was not feeling up to full vitality
during production. She initially questioned the wisdom of doing the
film at all until Martin Melcher (her husband) reminded her that the
studio was counting on her to do her best. And she agreed fully. And
she was a perfect trouper. Her dynamic spirit and bubbly personality
came through completely. She said: “There were some pictures
(I performed in) that I didn’t
like at all. I couldn’t sit through them for any amount of money.
But many people have been entertained by them and don’t share
my feelings. So there it is again - nothing is good or bad.” Derald
Hendry