Dory Previn Movies

Dory Previn (aka Dory Langdon) was a successful lyricist for motion picture theme songs during the 1960s and early 1970s, earning three Academy Award nominations for Best Song. Later in her career, she became a critically acclaimed singer-songwriter. She was born on October 22. Different sources list the year of her birth as early as 1925, though 1929 seems most probable. She was deeply influenced by her father, who was mentally disturbed due to his experience in World War I, and she had a difficult childhood. She began to perform in her teens and after high school attended the American Academy of Dramatic Arts for a year. Thereafter, she worked as an actress and a dancer until she began writing song lyrics, which landed her a job at MGM, where she wrote under the name Dory Langdon. She was assigned to collaborate with composer André Previn, with whom she became romantically involved. She and Previn married on November 7, 1959.

In 1960, continuing to use the name Dory Langdon, she began to get frequent assignments to write lyrics for songs used in motion pictures, usually in collaboration with her husband. That year they wrote "Your Smile" for Who Was That Lady?, though it was cut from the film; the title song for Tall Story (music also by Shelly Manne); and "Why Are We Afraid" for The Subterraneans, again a cut song. The lyricist also added words to David Raksin's theme for The Bad and the Beautiful to create the song "Love is for the Very Young." But her most extensive and successful work in 1960 was her several collaborations for Pepe: "That's How It Went, All Right" and "The Faraway Part of Town", with André Previn, the latter sung in the film by Judy Garland and nominated for an Academy Award; "Suzie", with Johnny Green; the title song, originally a German tune by Hans Wittstatt; and "Lovely Day", the English lyric to "Concha Nacar", composed by Augustin Lara and Maria Teresa.

Dory Previn's next film assignment came with the 1961 film The Long and the Short and the Tall, for which she and Sim Simmons wrote "Hi Jig A Jig, Cook A Little Pig." Later that year, she and her husband's "One, Two, Three Waltz" was used in One, Two, Three. In 1962, the Previns wrote "Mine For The Moment" for Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse and "A Second Chance" for Two for the Seesaw. The latter earned Dory Previn her second Academy Award nomination. The Previns wrote "Look Again," used to exploit Irma La Douce in 1963, and in 1964 contributed two songs to Goodbye Charlie, a title song and "Seven at Once."

In 1965, Dory Previn suffered a nervous breakdown and was institutionalized briefly. Nevertheless, she continued to write with her husband, and began to use the name Dory Previn professionally for the first time. In 1965, the Previns had two songs in Inside Daisy Clover, "The Circus is a Wacky World" and "You're Gonna Hear From Me." They wrote songs for three 1966 films: "Livin' Alone," used in Harper; a title song written to exploit The Fortune Cookie; and the title song for The Swinger. Their last creative work together was some of their most popular: In 1967, they wrote five songs for Valley of the Dolls, "Come Live With Me," "Give A Little More," "I'll Plant My Own Tree," "It's Impossible," and "(Theme From) Valley of the Dolls." The Valley of the Dolls soundtrack album spent six months on the charts, and Dionne Warwick scored a Top Ten hit with her recording of the theme song, while her own Valley of the Dolls LP went gold. Dory Previn also wrote scripts for television series during the 1960s.

In the late 1960s, André Previn made a transition from composing music for films to conducting orchestras worldwide, while living abroad. He took up with 24-year-old actress Mia Farrow, and, when it became known that she was pregnant by him, he and Dory Previn separated in the spring of 1969. Their divorce became final in July 1970, and he married Farrow. Buffeted by the dissolution of her marriage, Dory Previn, after being institutionalized again, returned to writing for films in an increasingly introspective style typified by both "(Theme From) Valley of the Dolls" and her next major film song, "Come Saturday Morning" (music by Fred Karlin) from The Sterile Cuckoo (1969). The Sandpipers, who sang the song in the film, recorded it for a Top 40 hit, and it earned Previn her third Oscar nomination. The same year, she and John Williams wrote the title song for Daddy's Gone A-Hunting. In 1970, she wrote both words and music for "Didn't I Turn Out Nice?," used in the film Up in the Cellar.

Previn's increasingly personal style and the trend toward confessional singer-songwriters in the early 1970s earned her the opportunity to launch a career as a recording artist, and she released her debut album, On My Way to Where, in July 1970. She wrote the lyrics to the title song of Last Tango in Paris (1973) with music by Gato Barbieri. On March 10, 1973, ABC broadcast the TV movie Third Girl From the Left, for which she had written the screenplay and the title song, which she sang in the film. ~ William Ruhlmann, Rovi
1999  
 
Add Harold Arlen: Somewhere Over the Rainbow to QueueAdd Harold Arlen: Somewhere Over the Rainbow to top of Queue 
Songwriter Harold Arlen is the subject of this documentary. Arlen wrote several songs for famous artists, but remained in the shadows as singers such as Frank Sinatra and Tony Bennett received the acclaim. Arlen's most popular song "Somewhere Over the Rainbow", the noted song from the Wizard of Oz, is added to the title. Filmed performances by Frank Sinatra, Tony Bennett, Lena Horne, Mel Torme, and many others are included as they sing songs penned by Arlen and take part in several interviews that make up the bulk of this film, but his life is also well documented. ~ Ed Atkinson, Rovi

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1982  
 
Though Two of a Kind was hardly George Burns' television debut, it was his first dramatic TV appearance. Burns is cast as Ross "Boppy" Minor, who is shunted away to a nursing home by his unfeeling son-in-law Cliff Robertson. Robby Benson co-stars as Nolie Minor, Boppy's mentally retarded grandson. Both outcasts from "normal" society, Nolie and Boppy form a strong bond in this touching domestic drama. An Emmy Award went to songwriters James Di Pasquale and Dory Previn for their theme song "We'll Win the World." Two of a Kind first aired October 9, 1982. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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Starring:
George BurnsRobby Benson, (more)
 
1975  
 
Tvaa kvinnor is two separate shorter films gathered under one title. The first, "The White Wall," stars Harriet Andersson as a divorcee, with a son to raise, who finds her pleasure where she can. The movie shows her picking her son up at school and looking for (unskilled) office work. The second, "Five Days At Falkoebing," chronicles the experience of a young actress during her return to her childhood home. ~ Clarke Fountain, Rovi

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Starring:
Harriet AnderssonLena Nyman, (more)
 
1973  
 
The Third Girl From the Left might have passed without notice had the film not been the highly touted TV-movie debuts of Kim Novak and Tony Curtis. Kim heads the cast as an ageing Las Vegas chorus girl, while Tony plays a third-rate nightclub comic. Determining that her romance with Curtis is dead-ending, Kim takes up with handsome young delivery boy Michael Brandon. The screenplay by Dory Previn (Andre's ex) paints a fairly bleak picture of the Vegas showbiz scene. Previn also supplies a song, "Gloria" sung not by Novak but by Curtis! Third Girl from the Left was originally telecast October 16, 1973. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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1971  
 
Gene Wilder and Bob Newhart star as husbands who have some explaining to do in this made-for-television comedy. Wilder stars as Harry Evers and Newhart as Marvin Ellison, two friends who decide to keep up their Thursday night escapades after their weekly poker game breaks up. When their wives find out though (Ellen Burstyn and Cloris Leachman, respectively) they want to know just what their husbands have been doing. ~ Bernadette McCallion, Rovi

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1970  
 
A light, almost beach-party atmosphere pervades this comedy, based on The Late Boy Wonder, a novel by Angus Hall. Larry Hagman plays a college president with political aspirations who flunks out a college student (Wes Stern) and then has the temerity to save the boy from committing suicide. In revenge, the boy decides to bed the three women most important to the nefarious college head, including his wife (Joan Collins). Though he is a real bumbler, somehow he succeeds in wooing the man's wife, daughter, and secretary. This is one place where two of the more successful stars of America's night-time soap operas from the 1980s (Dallas and Dynasty) can be seen working together. ~ Clarke Fountain, Rovi

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Starring:
Joan CollinsLarry Hagman, (more)
 
1969  
PG  
Kenneth Daly (Scott Hylands) is the right-wing anti-abortion fanatic who snaps when his girlfriend has an abortion. The couple naturally breaks up, but Kenneth remains bent for revenge against Cathy (Carol White). She goes on to marry a politician, but the vengeful Kenneth returns and subjects her to mental torture in an effort to get her to kill her child as revenge for the previous abortion in this disturbing drama. ~ Dan Pavlides, Rovi

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Starring:
Carol WhiteScott Hylands, (more)
 
1967  
PG13  
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A cinematic take on a 1960s best-seller, Valley of the Dolls traces the ups and downs of three young women as fame, booze, pills, and men consume their lives. Well-bred, small-town Anne Welles (Peyton Place star Barbara Parkins) arrives in New York eager for fame but settles for a job assisting theatrical attorney Henry Bellamy (Robert H. Harris). The job leads her to cross paths with Helen Lawson (Hollywood veteran Susan Hayward), the grand dame of Broadway musicals, and Neely O'Hara (sitcom star Patty Duke), an up-and-coming performer whom Lawson unceremoniously boots from her latest show. Neely lands on her feet thanks to a series of nightclub gigs, and soon she and Anne befriend Jennifer North (Sharon Tate), a buxom starlet. As Neely becomes a huge star of stage and screen and Jennifer appears topless in a string of European "art" films, Anne becomes a wealthy cosmetics spokeswoman and suffers though a passionate but failed affair with aspiring writer Lyon Burke (Paul Burke). As the pressures of fame and failed romance take their toll on all three women, they take refuge in food, sex, liquor, and pills -- especially Neely, who becomes downright monstrous (the titular "dolls" are the uppers and downers to which she becomes hopelessly addicted). Although the film's characters are fictitious composites, Neely most closely resembles Judy Garland; Garland herself was originally cast as Lawson, but she was replaced after only a few days by Hayward. Although the film's trailer played up the story's titillating subject matter, the script for Valley of the Dolls actually toned down Jacqueline Susann's novel. And despite the fact that Dionne Warwick can be heard singing "(Theme From) The Valley of the Dolls" twice during the film, contractual snags kept her from releasing the soundtrack version; a different arrangement later became a number two pop hit in 1968. ~ Brian J. Dillard, Rovi

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Starring:
Barbara ParkinsPatty Duke, (more)
 
1966  
 
The most interesting aspect of The Swinger is the name of the character played by Ann-Margret: the former Ann Margaret Olsson essays the role of Kelly Olsson. A naive small-town girl, Kelly aspires to become a writer in the Big City. When her stories are rejected because they aren't exciting and provocative enough, she decides to do some hands-on research by posing as the titular "swinger." She is so successful at this subterfuge that Hefner-like publisher Anthony Franciosa makes it his mission in life to reform the "fallen" Kelly. Didn't they do this one in the 1930s as Theodora Goes Wild, with Irene Dunne and Melvyn Douglas? ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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Starring:
Ann-MargretAnthony Franciosa, (more)
 
1966  
 
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Screenwriter William Goldman has claimed that Paul Newman agreed to do Harper, the film that established the grateful writer's career, only because he was working unhappily on Lady L. (1965) in Europe, and was looking for something as unlike that film as possible. He stars as Lew Harper, a hip L.A. private dick whose business has gotten so bad that he's re-using his coffee grounds. At the suggestion of his friend, attorney Albert Graves (Arthur Hill), the detective takes on the investigation of the disappearance of the wealthy husband of waspish cripple Elaine Sampson (Lauren Bacall). After finding a photograph of former actress Fay Estabrook (Shelley Winters), Harper locates the alcoholic actress in a bar, plies her with booze, and takes her home to search her apartment while she's unconscious. There he takes a call which leads him to another bar to meet Betty Fraley (Julie Harris), a singer with a heroin problem. To curtail his inquisitive behavior, some large and unpleasant gentleman beat him up outside the saloon. Hoping for sympathy from his soon to be ex-wife (Janet Leigh), who has just filed divorce papers, the weary detective is much more successful than he has any right to expect. ~ Michael Costello, Rovi

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Starring:
Paul NewmanLauren Bacall, (more)
 
1965  
 
Daisy Clover (Natalie Wood) goes from teenage girl to movie star practically overnight when her demented mother enters her voice in a talent-search contest. From a broken-down carnival on the Santa Monica Pier, in no time at all she is attending glamorous Hollywood parties. But Daisy soon learns that misery and pain go hand-in-hand with fame and fortune. Before Daisy completes her first film, the studio execs have her mother committed to an asylum without permission. Daisy tries to find happiness in a series of unfulfilling romances, her one-day marriage to Wade Lewis (Robert Redford) leaving her alone and divorced. After her mother dies, Daisy has a nervous breakdown and refuses to work, but the cold-hearted studio moguls threaten her with starvation if she does not report back to the soundstage. Christopher Plummer, Ruth Gordon (in an Oscar-nominated performance) and Roddy McDowell co-star in this story of a Hollywood dream that turns into a nightmare. ~ Dan Pavlides, Rovi

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Starring:
Natalie WoodChristopher Plummer, (more)