MY DREAM IS YOURS: Blu-ray (Warner Bros. 1949) Warner Archive
Doris Day’s fledgling film career was ill-served by My
Dream is Yours (1949), a rather tepid and haphazardly slapped together
musical mélange whose only real selling feature was Day – on fire, after her magical
screen debut in Romance on the High Seas the previous year. Ironically,
director, Martin Scorsese has cited My Dream is Yours as his inspiration
for New York, New York (1977) – a movie musical of as much dubious
distinction with its own follies and flaws. Day’s wholesomeness herein shines
through this treacle. But her best days as a musical comedy star were decidedly
still ahead of her, this stepping stone, ironically, from the eminent, Michael
Curtiz, more of a pebble than a boulder at the box office as it nimbly tripped
along some very contrived scenarios, wedging songs between the barely
connective dialogue for Day to sing with her usual skillfulness and fresh-faced
sex appeal. The movie also marked the final appearance of delightful comedian,
Edgar Kennedy as Uncle Charlie; Kennedy, a veteran of more than 500 movies,
dying of throat cancer shortly after completion of his partaking here and never
to see the finished movie hit theater screens. Screenwriters, Laura Kerr, Harry
Kurnitz, Dane Lussier, and, Allen Rivkin, basing their fluff and nonsense on a
story by Paul Finder Moss and future producer, Jerry Wald, gleaned some
invaluable insight into the character of Martha Gibson by pilfering inspiration
from Day’s real life; chiefly, in Day’s pre-movie career as a hit singer on the
radio. The movie’s subplot, addressing Martha’s heartbreak at being separated
from her young son, Freddie (Duncan Richardson) also reflected Day’s painful decision
to place her child, Terry, in the care of his grandmother while she pursued her
career, touring in the big band circuit. Indeed, in an era where stars
decidedly did not call the shots, Day’s singular stipulation before signing a
7-year contract with Warner Bros. was their agreement to help her establish a
home in Burbank, shared by her son and mother.
My Dream is Yours is more than a bit of a mutt, and
in more ways than are immediately apparent on the screen. Those with keen eyes
will be able to easily identify portions of the apartment set from Hitchcock’s Rope
(1949) recycled as pop singer, Garry Mitchell’s (Lee Bowman) fashionable digs. And
apart from the screenplay – a real/reel cobbled together affair, loosely held
together by Day’s silken warbling of a handful of songs, the best of the lot
being the smooth and tender, ‘Someone Like You’, bouncy ‘Canadian
Capers’, and dreamily yearning, ‘I’ll String Along With You’ – the plot
of this practically plot-less yarn, inveigles Day’s Martha in the frantic
search of talent scout, Doug Blake (Jack Carson) who – no kidding – ‘discovers’
Martha, then promotes her as a jukebox princess on the fictional radio program,
‘The Hour of Enchantment’ while simultaneously falling in love with her.
Day’s meteoric ascendance to the top echelons of screen stardom was evident in
her ‘second billing’ here, just under Carson, and 2 steps up from her 4th
billing in the aforementioned Romance on the High Seas. It would take
another 3 movies before she received ‘top billing’ on the marquee. And the
picture was something of an ‘old home’s week’ for composer, Harry Warren, whose
legendary songs had graced many a Busby Berkeley musical back in the mid-1930’s. But by 1949, Warren was at MGM, his best
years as a song writer behind him, and loaned out for this occasion.
Given the studio’s ambitions to continue Day’s upward
trajectory as a new and highly marketable commodity, My Dream is Yours
remains a thoroughly undistinguished follow-up for their newest leading lady,
and odd too, in that it was directed by Curtiz, whose back catalog included
such monumental efforts as 1935’s Captain Blood, 1936’s Charge of the
Light Brigade, 1938’s The Adventures of Robin Hood, 1939’s The
Private Lives of Elizabeth and Essex, 1940’s The Sea Hawk, 1941’s The
Sea Wolf, 1942’s Casablanca, and, Yankee Doodle Dandy, 1943’s
This Is the Army, and, 1945’s Mildred Pierce. The chief
difficulty with My Dream Is Yours (1949) is its slight screenplay, a rather amiable, though totally forgettable remake of 1934’s 20
Million Sweethearts. The film’s most captivating asset is thus Doris Day as
young hopeful, Martha Gibson – a single mom who can really belt out the tunes
if anyone would stop to give her a chance to prove it. Alas, talent and stardom
do not necessarily go hand in glove, and, Martha remains curiously out of the
limelight. However, when conceited radio personality, Garry Mitchell (Lee
Bowman) decides he has had enough of the big time and refuses to renew his
contract, the station sends contact agent, Doug Blake (Jack Carson) on a
talent-scouting mission to find a fresh new face to take his place.
Blake soon discovers Martha. But he also encounters
infinite opposition from the sponsors who are wary of an ‘unknown’ and would
much prefer to have Garry back – whatever the price. If things are looking down
professionally, they are even worse – privately. Soon, Martha and Blake are
inseparable. But as fame draws nearer, it also tugs at Martha’s affections,
away from Blake to Garry instead. The heavy-handed script leaves zero tolerance
for the saccharine sweetness – pushed to its limit in a very awkward blend of
live action and animation, cut-and-pasted together by Fritz Freleng, and,
featuring Warner Bros. most valuable cartoon asset - Bugs Bunny. For the rest,
Day was given the opportunity to warble some fine tunes, the best being the
utterly heart-felt, ‘I’ll String Along with You.’ Resident Warner
contract players, Eve Arden, Adolph Menjou, and one of the all-time treasures
of the American cinema - S.Z. Sakall – ‘shoooosh!’, are all welcome
additions to the cast. But in the end, the picture does little to sell Day, relying
instead on the magnet pull of her previous effort to sell the tickets.
Worse for Curtiz, much of the plot of the original
movie had already been regurgitated in Swing Hostess (1944). Thus, the
encroaching ennui resulting from yet another trip to the same well…well
– it left a decided sour taste in most critic’s mouths. Eve Arden – often
inserted as the perennial tart-mouthed ‘bright spot’ of such drivel, makes the
most of her go-getter business woman, Vivian Martin, a rancorous co-worker on
the fictional ‘Hour of Enchantment’ and proves integral to the plot later on
when, in a blind leap of faith, she hocks her expensive furs to help launch
Martha’s singing career. Alas, the focus remains squarely on a clumsily assembled
lover’s triangle between Doug, Martha, and Garry. As this goes nowhere – and fast – the
resultant contrivances, all rather obviously directed to the picture’s
proverbial ‘happy ending’ seemed even more convivial at best, to down-right mechanical
at their worst. Production was also
delayed when the usually ‘healthy-as-a-horse’ Day contracted a virulent flu,
requiring 3-bed-ridden days of recuperation. If My Dream is Yours is
remembered fondly at all today, it likely remains for its animated and
Easter-themed ‘dream sequence’ in which an exuberant Bugs Bunny and
Tweety cavorts with Jack Carson and Doris Day to Franz Liszt’s Hungarian
Rhapsody No. 2.
The picture is also brightened by the presence of the
inimitable Eve Arden, whose career as the life-long, sharp-eyed and
shoot-from-the-hip kind’a gal was just beginning. Born, Eunice Mary Quedens in
1908, Arden made her film debut in 1929 before embarking on a sting of Broadway
successes under her stage name, rumored to be an amalgam of the perfume, ‘Eve’ning
in Paris, and Elizabeth Arden. Her initial contract with RKO in 1937 would
lead to bigger and better things, though here, she established her presence as
the razor-witted, best pal ‘type’, loaned out to MGM and Warner Bros. where she
briefly settled into a string of memorable ‘supporting’ roles, Oscar-nominated as
Joan Crawford’s wise-cracking sidekick, Ida, in Mildred Pierce (1945). Arden would later prove a very fine actress,
in Anatomy of a Murder (1959). Yet, despite being voted by exhibitors as
the sixth-most promising ‘star of tomorrow’ in 1946, it would take radio, then
television to make her a household name. In both, she played the memorable ‘Our
Miss Brooks’ – on the radio, from 1948 to 1957, crossing over to TV,
playing the same character from 1952 to 1956; a role so popular, Arden was
afforded the title of honorary member of the National Education Association and
also received the Teachers College of Connecticut's Alumni Association award in
1952 “for humanizing the American teacher”. My Dream is Yours doesn’t
give Arden much playtime, but what’s here illustrates what a superior comedienne
she was, and, whenever she appears, the screen is a little bit brighter and
more invigorated for her presence.
Despite not being advertised as anything better than a
‘new master’ created last year, the results on this Warner Archive (WAC) title
prove spectacular – with caveats. So, some work has decidedly been done to
achieve a gorgeous Technicolor image that remains true to those bold and brassy
3-strip Technicolor hues. Flesh tones still teeter – just slightly – into that
pasty pink range. But this could be the result of vintage make-up and lighting.
Contrast is fairly solid, with inky
blacks. Whites, however, occasionally adopt a slight bluish caste. Minor Technicolor
mis-registration is scattered throughout. Owing to dupes and multi-exposures,
grain gets exaggerated during the animated ‘dream sequence’ but the age-related
dirt and scratches to also have afflicted these portions on the old DVD
release, have now been eradicated. The DTS 2.0 mono is adequately represented. WAC
has also included the 3 short subjects that were originally marketed with the
DVD release, albeit, without any additional clean-up or upgrades performed to
their video masters. Bottom line: My Dream is Yours is forgettable
fluff. If you love Doris Day – and, let’s be honest, who doesn’t? –
then, I suppose this one will do. But Day has done far better work elsewhere
and some of it, like 1951’s Lullaby of Broadway, still remains absent in
hi-def. Here’s to hoping. Recommended
for Day completionists. Others can pass.
FILM RATING (out of 5 - 5 being the best)
2
VIDEO/AUDIO
4
EXTRAS
1
Comments
best resteration l seen for a long time
thank you for you recommendtion
anthony quinn
thank you for advice l have added to my collection