Les Brown and his orchestra play the title song, while Doris Day and Jimmie Palmer sing in this soundie.
It's one of thousands of soundies, short musical films created from the late 1930s through the middle of the 1940s to play on a device known as a Mills Panoram. You may think of them as video jukeboxes, or precursors to music videos. You could find them in bars, and a dime in the machine would bring you one of ten songs.
It's one of three soundies that Miss Day appeared in at the age of 19. She had been singing for Brown's band for a couple of years at this point, long before she was "discovered" and "premiered" in the movies for Warner Brothers.
It's one of thousands of soundies, short musical films created from the late 1930s through the middle of the 1940s to play on a device known as a Mills Panoram. You may think of them as video jukeboxes, or precursors to music videos. You could find them in bars, and a dime in the machine would bring you one of ten songs.
It's one of three soundies that Miss Day appeared in at the age of 19. She had been singing for Brown's band for a couple of years at this point, long before she was "discovered" and "premiered" in the movies for Warner Brothers.