Doris Day
30 titles
Filmography
30 results

Love Me or Leave Me
(1955)Brilliant performances by Doris Day and James Cagney highlight this story of jazz singing sensation Ruth Etting and the vicious Chicago hood who controlled her life.

Move Over, Darling
(1963)Doris Day, James Garner and Polly Bergen star in this madcap romantic comedy about one groom, two wives, and one crazy, mixed-up honeymoon! Five years after his wife Ellen (Day) is lost at sea and presumed dead, Nick (Garner) is finally ready to get remarried. But he's headed for anything but wedded bliss when Ellen turns up alive - and ready to give first love a second chance - with Nick!

On Moonlight Bay
(1951)A small-town tomboy falls for the boy-next-door in the years before World War I.

Midnight Lace
(1960)Kit Preston is the elegant newlywed wife of British financier Anthony Preston. Shortly after moving to one of London's wealthiest neighborhoods with her husband, Kit is threatened by an unknown party. The tension mounts as the menacing phone calls continue and Anthony shows little concern, until Kit begins to doubt her own sanity and the motives of everyone around her.

Pillow Talk
(1959)In their first romantic comedy together, Doris Day and Rock Hudson are utterly charming as an uptight interior decorator and an amorous playboy who are forced to share a party line.

By the Light of the Silvery Moon
(1953)The stars come out when the night shimmers like this! Young lovers Doris Day and Gordon MacRae return in a moonlit sequel to On Moonlight Bay. Rosemary DeCamp, Mary Wickes and Billy Gray rejoin them in this remembrance of World War I-era Americana. There's a new array of nine nostalgic standards – and a new emphasis on production numbers. Doris and Gordon spin through the Winfield kitchen to "A...

The Pajama Game
(1957)Workers at the Sleeptite Pajama Factory are demanding a raise. But their leader starts to fall for the superintendent hired to oppose the union.

Young at Heart
(1954)Young at Heart is a soft-pedaled, musicalized remake of 1938's Four Daughters. Robert Keith takes over the Claude Rains role as paterfamilias to a family of musical prodigies.

It Happened to Jane
(1959)When a shipment of expired shellfish arrives to her New England lobstery, Jane Osgood decides to take a capitalist railroad tycoon to court.

The Doris Day Show
Doris Day shines in this classic TV series about a forty-something widow’s new reality as a single mother of two young sons in Northern California.

The Glass Bottom Boat
(1966)Doris Day stars as a widowed writer who is mistaken for a spy when she is hired to write a biography of handsome research scientist Rod Taylor.

Lullaby of Broadway
(1951)The steps of the studio set towered before her like a pyramid. All Doris Day had to do was dance up and down those steps wearing a flowing gold lame dress.

Please Don't Eat the Daisies
(1960)A family relocates from the city to the suburbs. Challenges ensue when a damaging play review leads a famed actress to target the husband.

Tea for Two
(1950)The screen version of "No, No, Nanette" in which an actress/heiress bets her uncle that she can say "no" to every question for the length of a weekend. If she wins, she gets the chance to star in her own Broadway show.

I'll See You in My Dreams
(1951)Songwriter Gus Kahn fights to make his name, then has to fight again to survive the Depression.
Julie
(1956)Doris Day and Louis Jourdan star in a terrifying thriller of a woman and her murderous husband in Julie. Lyle Benton (Jourdan) becomes so upset when he discovers his wife, airline stewardess Julie (Day), talking with her late husband's cousin, that he tries to kill his wife and himself in a nearly fatal car crash. After the accident, Julie learns that Lyle murdered her first husband. Horrified, she goes to the police, but with no evidence it's her word against his. Julie hides from Lyle, but when she goes back to work, Lyle is one of the passengers on her flight. In a fit of homicidal madness, Lyle murders the pilot, co-pilot and himself ... leaving Julie at the controls and the only one who can save the lives of her passengers.

With Six You Get Eggroll
(1968)When two widowers fall in love and get married, they return from their honeymoon to discover that their respective children (and pets) might not be as great a match. It's a hysterical comedy classic for the entire family.

The Tunnel of Love
(1958)A drunken misunderstanding leads cartoonist Augie Poole—who couldn’t conceive with his wife—to believe he impregnated an adoption agency employee.

What a Difference a Day Made: Doris Day Superstar
(2009)An endearing account of the life of an iconic American entertainer that reconciles her wholesome, girl-next-door image with a more nuanced reality.

Lucky Me
(1954)Three struggling performers find hope when a renowned songwriter offers them stardom, if he can persuade a wealthy oilman to fund his new musical.