Here's a gay musical in color, loaded with nostalgic songs of the "Twenties sung delightfully by Doris Day and Gordon MacRae...Doris dances for the first time on the screen, and brings down the house with her " I Know That You Know" number with Gene Nelson.
This is Gordon's sixth and Doris' fifth movie and the first time they are onscreen together. I really enjoy their chemistry. They do another 4 straight after this together. Doris worked with the cream of the crop of the actors, but couple wise I think she looked beautiful and well suited with Rock Hudson, James Garner and Gordon MacRae. Eve Arden is her ususal character and she does it beautifully. It must have amazed people to see Doris dance as well as she sings. She looks cute, bubbly and just gorgeous.
This is not one of my favourite DD films and that hairstyle and fashions do not do Doris any favours (she more of less admits this herself). However I love both Gene Nelson and Gordon MaCrae and the songs etc and adore Eve Arden - so maybe I should give this one another go again - it's been a while!
Leading Men - Doris also looked good with John Raitt, Louis Jordan and Rod Taylor.
I was a kid when I first saw Doris in “Tea For Two” in 1950. I had seen three of her first four pictures and had a couple of 78 rpm records of hers (“Canadian Capers” and “The Game Of Broken Hearts”) but didn’t know anything about her background and personal life. I was just simply smitten by her and loved everything she did. So when I saw her dance with Gene Nelson early in TFT, I was amazed that she could dance as well as sing and act and look wonderful all the time.
I really liked this movie at that age and time. Doris got top billing for the first time and had a handsome leading man in Gordon MacRae and a handsome dance partner in Nelson. It was good to see her in Technicolor again after the black-and-white “Young Man With A Horn”. I really liked Eve Arden and S.Z. Sakal.
I haven’t seen it for a long time and I would like to see it again although I’m sure, except for the songs and dances, it would be more difficult to sit through now.
This is one of D.D'S movies that shows all her wonderful and outstanding abilities i.e Dancing, Singing, Acting/Comedy. For this type of a movie, I vote "Good".....Very...Very...."Good!"
I rated this film as "Good". Not "excellent", but better than "average".
Doris was great as always and how wonderfully she sings and acts with Gordon MacRae and how brilliantly she dances with Gene Nelson. There is real "chemistry" there, unlike her awful relationship with Ray Polger in "April in Paris" which (sorry) I hated.
The main thing wrong with this film was the "crazy" and farfetched plot which I tried hard to ignore. Just put all the songs and dances together and cut out the rest and that would do fine for me.
"Calamity Jane" is still my favourite musical by far (that opening sequence leaves me breathless!) followed by "By the light of the silvery moon".
Yes, I agree with you Brian, Tea For Two is not as good as "Jane". But as you say, the singing and dancing are great, and so is the chenistry. Of couse, I haven't seen a movie that Doris wasn't good in. I love all the actors in Tea. I also heard this was Robert Wagner's first film.
I read this information a long time ago so it might not be acuate. He would have been 20 years old, so i don't know who he could have been. I can't find any other information about his first film. The first one I found listed was in 1954.
Well - she was just a doll !!
Not the best script - story got a little out of hand with all the cast at her mansion running amok ! And some of the songs without Doris were not to my liking. But -- it was great to see Doris DANCE ! And she was great with Gordan Macrae and Gene Nelson... and Billy DeWolfe and S.Z. Sakall. Eve Arden is always fun. She has a great delivery !
Doris was so good in her songs and dancing with Gene Nelson. So - I will always watch this one.
We cannot change the cards we are dealt - just how we play the hand --- Randy Pausch