Posted on 05/13/2019 7:17:19 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
The actress, who has died aged 97, worked with the greats of Hollywoods golden era and rivalled the crossover success of Frank Sinatra and Elvis Presley
The face of Doris Day, eerily beautiful in all its buttery-blond wholesomeness, beamed over Hollywood in the 50s and early 60s like a gigantic roadside billboard advertising the American way. In that extraordinary period of white Americas postwar prosperity and patriotism, Doris Day was the biggest box office and recording star in the US: easily equalling the music-movie crossover success of alpha males such as Frank Sinatra and Elvis Presley, although somehow without being entitled to the guys iconic status.
Days career was a roll call of studio-era greatness. She worked with Michael Curtiz (who discovered her) and Alfred Hitchcock, and played opposite James Stewart, Clark Gable, James Cagney and Cary Grant. But her uncoolness a vital, mysterious ingredient of her success even in her extraordinary heyday was soon held against her. No one ever says that Doris Day is their favourite star, in the way that no one says vanilla is their favourite ice-cream flavour. Yet a heck of a lot of vanilla ice-cream gets sold.
Day was utterly without irony and she radiated a can-do straightforwardness, optimism and good nature that resonated with millions of filmgoers. She rolled up her sleeves and got on with whatever she was contractually obliged to do: a lot of good pictures, one or two brilliant ones of which, more in a moment and a lot of embarrassing nonsense. But she didnt complain. Day was in her way the presidential first lady of Hollywoods early 60s: dignified, a good sport, lovable.
John Updike, a fan of Days, found something fascinating and alluring in just this niceness.
(Excerpt) Read more at theguardian.com ...
A long life, well lived,......
“White America”?!
What kind of racist diatribe is this article?
Wait...she died?
It’s The Guardian. They’re left of Pravda.
I managed to read about half of the full article.
The author seems to be an effeminate homosexual, and everything signifies that every actor or screenplay is secretly gay.
OK finally saw a thread a bit earlier on FR. This is the kind of thing usually would jump out at me on opening. But even this thread doesn’t really talk about her dying, so I wasn’t sure.
She just had a birthday, too.
Hoping this means lots of DD movies this weekend to record again.
Or not gay enough.
I read the article. I need to wash!
Three. Who are the three?
Peggy Lipton and someone else, now Doris.
Who’s the someone else? I forgot.
Good bye to a caring and lovely woman. R.I.P.
“What kind of racist diatribe is this article?”
How about just writing an article celebrating Doris Day. That’s what one usually does when a person dies. If she, herself, was a racist (and there is no evidence of this of which I am aware) - well, then talk about that. But bringing up “White America” in this context is absurd and disgusting.
Too bad her personal life wasn’t as wholesome.
DD and Ronald Reagan were a hot item at one time.
RIP
RE: Wait...she died?
Yes, today. At age 97.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.