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Doris Day: Innocence on Screen, Turmoil Off Screen

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  • @AgeOfVintage
    @AgeOfVintage10 ай бұрын

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  • @alancrisp1582
    @alancrisp158210 ай бұрын

    😊 I have always since childhood admired Doris Day..Any person who only respected and wanted to be around animals, especially 🐶 dogs !. Will always have my true love and support. RIP Doris.................😢

  • @hokikatipa3711
    @hokikatipa371110 ай бұрын

    She will always be remembered for her beautiful voice...

  • @melaniekeeling7462
    @melaniekeeling746210 ай бұрын

    Her husbands were awful. That's why she knew Manson was so dangerous.

  • @WILLIAM1690WALES
    @WILLIAM1690WALES10 ай бұрын

    Doris Day was a class act. Of course, she had difficulties in her personal life with relationships, but she was a true trooper and a good American.🇬🇧🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿🇺🇸

  • @JamesVaughan
    @JamesVaughan10 ай бұрын

    She should be forever remembered and honoured for all the work she did for animal rights and animal welfare. And she was a genuinely good person as well as a talented actress and singer.

  • @micheleparker3780
    @micheleparker378010 ай бұрын

    Doris Day remains one of the most beautiful and talented women to ever bless Hollywood. I hate she was treated so badly by men. What a voice!!! I don't blame her for putting animals above humans - smart move on her part, if you ask me. She was radiant in 'Pillow Talk'.

  • @MrOmega52
    @MrOmega5210 ай бұрын

    Doris Day is my favorite actress. She is one of the most talented ladies to have ever been in motion pictures. Doris and Reagan were two of the greats.

  • @kellyr4479

    @kellyr4479

    10 ай бұрын

    I have to disagree with you . Doris was a great actress. I love all her movies. Ronald on the other hand was an absolutely horrible actor hence the reason he never made it further than B movies

  • @MrOmega52

    @MrOmega52

    10 ай бұрын

    @kellyr4479 I always liked Reagan's movies that I sW. Loved he and Errol Flynn in The Santa Fe Trail. Hey ,he certainly served the actors well as president of the screen actors guild and helped to keep the communist party in check in Hollywood. To bad its went to hell in the Las few decades.

  • @carriedillmann4455

    @carriedillmann4455

    10 ай бұрын

    Ronald Reagan was The Best President ever!!!!!’

  • @Harlandwolf
    @Harlandwolf10 ай бұрын

    Thank you for yet another indepth and entertaining presentation. You do your homework and it shows. Having been a lifelong fan of Doris Day, I was familiar with much of what was covered here. Yet, again, I found myself enlightened by some details that I had been unaware of until viewing this...fine tuning my preception of Doris. I love that! Despite the heartbreak and tragedy she endured, I admired her ability to hold herself together regardless the situation, unlike some others. With Doris there were no public breakdowns, drunken fits, or suicide attempts.(Ring any bells?) What we saw instead was a trooper who continued to put her best foot forward, sharing her wonderful gifts with warmth, humor and infectious optimism. A testament to her character and who she truly was as an individual. Having said that...now I think I'll watch, "That Touch of Mink". Doris and Cary, oh yeah!😉❤️

  • @carriedillmann4455

    @carriedillmann4455

    10 ай бұрын

    Oh how I agree with you!!!! She was so sexy in WHITE!! When I was 40 my Dad gave me the best compliment ever!!!!! He said “ you like like a young Doris Day!”

  • @Harlandwolf

    @Harlandwolf

    10 ай бұрын

    @@carriedillmann4455 🥰

  • @robertdoherty2001
    @robertdoherty200110 ай бұрын

    Robert Osborne stated on TCM that Day was not seriously offered the role of Mrs. Robinson, and that if they had she would have accepted it as a complete overhaul of her icky sweet image.

  • @barbarawebb7185

    @barbarawebb7185

    3 ай бұрын

    That’s not what she stated in her autobiography.

  • @sallykohorst8803
    @sallykohorst880310 ай бұрын

    Doris day was a great lady so thanks for her srory.

  • @GarrettDavis-nu3ti
    @GarrettDavis-nu3ti10 ай бұрын

    One of my mom's favorite actress's.

  • @reginawilliams1398
    @reginawilliams139810 ай бұрын

    Ronald Horn Dog Regan 😂😂 Now that is funny !

  • @8gagee
    @8gagee9 ай бұрын

    I always loved Doris day. I use to watch her TV show, in the 70's....loved it! I thought she was so pretty and that smile!

  • @kimberleyblair3392
    @kimberleyblair339210 ай бұрын

    ❤😊Thanks AOV!❤

  • @52dislikes
    @52dislikes10 ай бұрын

    YOU LEFT OUT ALL THE JUICY STORIES FROM THE BOOK by David Kaufman

  • @dalehoward3704
    @dalehoward37049 ай бұрын

    Thank God for her forsight about Manson and that house! It saved her son and Candace Bergman. RIP SHARON TATE and the rest 🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏✝️✝️✝️✝️✝️😇❤️

  • @williamj.crofts41

    @williamj.crofts41

    7 ай бұрын

    Yes....she saved her son's life....and isn't ironic that Doris Day and Charles Manson were both from Cincinnati 😮

  • @lanacampbell-moore6686
    @lanacampbell-moore668610 ай бұрын

    Thanks AOV❤

  • @waynemahler2455
    @waynemahler245510 ай бұрын

    Portraying her as a craven nymphomaniac, a MESSALINA, is a bit much!

  • @stephenarnold403
    @stephenarnold4032 ай бұрын

    I think these things would be more interesting if they only had their facts correct! Not only that there are 2 photos of Susan Hayward in here that are not Doris day!

  • @ruthnagarya2028
    @ruthnagarya2028Ай бұрын

    I thoroughly enjoyed watching Doris on the movies, it gave us an IDEAL to reach for instead of the drug addled prostitutes of today

  • @gbtiling221
    @gbtiling22110 ай бұрын

    For the love of dogs

  • @DonizeteMesa-zi3rf
    @DonizeteMesa-zi3rf10 ай бұрын

    Brasil audio Portugues. Nao tem que pena tiao.

  • @ErinMcIntyre-cw2qc
    @ErinMcIntyre-cw2qc9 ай бұрын

    💖

  • @billobrien5118
    @billobrien511810 ай бұрын

    I dislike the condescending tone of this biography. Stars are people as well and go through many foibles and disappointments. Miss Day left us in 2019 and so let us leave her peace. Just watch the DVDS and also listen to her CDS.

  • @carriedillmann4455

    @carriedillmann4455

    10 ай бұрын

    This biography is just true! It’s not condescending . She is the one who told everyone about her life .

  • @billobrien5118

    @billobrien5118

    10 ай бұрын

    I wrote that I do NOT like the condescending tone of this narrator's approach. He sounds very much ENGLAND which is fine but he does have a cynical and skeptical way@@carriedillmann4455 in relating the facts. Though true he misses that mark as so many in this revisionists view on Doris. Doris was very much a product of her own era with her music and screen appearances. She came to fame as a band singer during the WWII years where she was a ray of sunshine during a bleak and uncertain time. Her purpose was to lift the spirits - whether or not that was her original intent. Her style just lent itself to a cheerful look at life - looking at the donut and NOT the hole. Though these are more aspired to rather than actually met in real life. Still, DD was a most necessary tonic and antidote to the all the gloom and doom pervasive throughout. Doris did NOT set out purposely to be built up as the 'perennial virgin' or 'Girl Next Door' or ''Miss Goody Two-Shoes', or 'SUZIE CREAMCHEESE' etc. These were descriptions that were heaped on her by the Warner Brothers Publicity Office. PR has this obsession with trying to hype everything in order for audiences to come and see the shows and bring in the revenue. NO one in their right mind should have expected of it her - nor others for that matter. She was under a studio contract and had to endure the not too realistic platitudes the Press Dept. doled out - though she knew it was a most exaggeration portrayal of her. She should NOT have been made as the butt of jokes. Those people took it too far and pictured Doris as being 'over-the-top' in the sweetness department. Cynical People are infamous for this. Many times in life, one sets off on a career. They had only themselves to bring to any project and cannot hope to fake it in order to succeed as she clearly is NOT faking it in her films. She painted a picture of how people should be - very nice, pleasant, warm, optimistic, and friendly. What do these attributes have anything to do with VESTAL VERGIN or CHAST AS THE DRIVEN SNOW or any of those preposterous terms? This has nothing to do with sex or whether or not a person became involved or not. I do not think she set out to create an image either. Her cheeriness flowed from her personality and it is nothing that can be controlled. Despite all of which she went through, she was a hardy survivor who rolled with the punches of which there were many. However, she has left us in 2019, we do have her music and movies (though the music is hardly to be found on any a radio station in the USA), and her unquestionable love for the animals. Be they cats or dogs. I think she loved horses as well if not mistaken. As with everyone, her life had its ups and downs and she did not have the good fortune to find that special man in her life. All of these guys were 'false calls'. She had hoped for a wonderful relationship though they ultimately let her down.

  • @carolcaponigro
    @carolcaponigro10 ай бұрын

    She had bad taste in men

  • @jenniferbrown5688
    @jenniferbrown568810 ай бұрын

    This narrator seems to be addicted to finding gays or in his words "queer# good grief!! the movie industry was a joke in America but private sexual experiences blimey who cares!!! Famous people work hard so don't need to be harrased in their personal lives it is their right!!!! This guy needs to really get with the times!!!

  • @carriedillmann4455

    @carriedillmann4455

    10 ай бұрын

    He is telling the history OF THE TIME!!! YOU need to understand a true professional researcher!!

  • @carriedillmann4455

    @carriedillmann4455

    10 ай бұрын

    But Ronald Reagan was true loyalty when he committed to Jane Wyman and NANCY!!! 🎉🎉🎉

  • @suebrubaker6182
    @suebrubaker618210 ай бұрын

    She mat have eventually disliked the image that was shown on the screen but she obviously wanted the stardom so much that she sold her soul to become a movie star.

  • @alancrisp1582

    @alancrisp1582

    10 ай бұрын

    🤔 No body especially women ,reach the top in Hollywood. Unless they sale their soul !. Some even admitted this late in their life....😢

  • @20alphabet
    @20alphabet10 ай бұрын

    "Homophobic"? Being repulsed by sodomy is hardly a phobia. Nothing unreasonable or irrational about finding such behavior or celebrations of such disgusting. Good pictures, but ease up on the intolerance of those who disagree with your inclinations.

  • @cutekoala5492

    @cutekoala5492

    9 ай бұрын

    Finally someone with a brain!!

  • @barbarawebb7185

    @barbarawebb7185

    3 ай бұрын

    If you think about it objectively, any sex could be thought of as repulsive. Most children hearing about sex for the first time between a man and a woman would be disgusted.

  • @brendaleverick3655
    @brendaleverick36556 ай бұрын

    I doubt that homosexual Rock Hudson is in heaven now, unfor- tunately.

  • @rachelsremedies2602
    @rachelsremedies260210 ай бұрын

    She was a big bigot! So sad!

  • @HowieHoward-ti3dx

    @HowieHoward-ti3dx

    10 ай бұрын

    Who cares. Some races live up to their stereotype.

  • @sheilahballard1039

    @sheilahballard1039

    9 ай бұрын

    What, may I ask, makes you believe Doris Day was a bigot? I really would like to know.

  • @HowieHoward-ti3dx

    @HowieHoward-ti3dx

    9 ай бұрын

    @@sheilahballard1039 He's just yapping

  • @tommyvictorbuch6960
    @tommyvictorbuch696010 ай бұрын

    "Ronald Reagan did to the USA, what he could no longer do to his wife." - Christopher Hitchens -