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Que Sera, Sera (Whatever Will Be, Will Be): Difference between revisions

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*1960: Doris Day also sings just a few lines of song in the film, ''[[Please Don't Eat the Daisies (film)]]''. Her character, Kate, is out to dinner with husband, Lawrence. She hears the restaurant playing the music to the song and quietly sings the chorus to him.
*1960: Doris Day also sings just a few lines of song in the film, ''[[Please Don't Eat the Daisies (film)]]''. Her character, Kate, is out to dinner with husband, Lawrence. She hears the restaurant playing the music to the song and quietly sings the chorus to him.
*1964: [[Allan Sherman]] quoted the words "Que Sera Sera" in the song "That is why America's a nice Italian Name" on his album "For Swinging Livers Only".
*1964: [[Allan Sherman]] quoted the words "Que Sera Sera" in the song "That is why America's a nice Italian Name" on his album "For Swinging Livers Only".
1965: The Chipmunks sang the song with a chorus of children, featuring an altered verse for the album: "I asked old Alvin", instead of the children asking their mother, instead. This version also appeared on the 1969 album of the Chipmunks going to the Movies.
1965: The Chipmunks sang the song with a chorus of children, featuring an altered verse for the album: "I asked old Alvin", instead of the children asking their mother. This version also appeared on the 1969 album of the Chipmunks going to the Movies.
*1966: Doris Day and [[Arthur Godfrey]] (playing her dad in the movie) both sing a few lines as Godfrey strums his trademark ukelele in the film, "Glass Bottom Boat."
*1966: Doris Day and [[Arthur Godfrey]] (playing her dad in the movie) both sing a few lines as Godfrey strums his trademark ukelele in the film, "Glass Bottom Boat."
*1989: The song was used in the [[title sequence]] of the movie ''[[Heathers]]'', with an arrangement by [[Van Dyke Parks]] and performed by [[Syd Straw]]. The Sly & the Family Stone cover version is also in the film.
*1989: The song was used in the [[title sequence]] of the movie ''[[Heathers]]'', with an arrangement by [[Van Dyke Parks]] and performed by [[Syd Straw]]. The Sly & the Family Stone cover version is also in the film.

Revision as of 16:47, 17 February 2007

"Que Sera, Sera (Whatever Will Be, Will Be)" is a popular song written by the Jay Livingston (music) and Ray Evans (lyrics) songwriting team.

Published in 1956, it was featured in Alfred Hitchcock's 1956 remake of The Man Who Knew Too Much (which Hitchcock had previously made in 1934) with Doris Day and James Stewart in the lead roles. Doris Day's recording of the song for Columbia Records with catalog number 40704 was a hit in both the United States and the United Kingdom and, from 1968 to 1973, the theme song for the sitcom The Doris Day Show.

The song reached the Billboard magazine charts in July, 1956. Listed with the alternate title, "Whatever Will Be, Will Be (Que Sera, Sera)," it received the 1956 Academy Award for Best Original Song. It was the third Oscar in this category for Livingston & Evans, who previously won in 1948 and 1950.

Cover versions

Trivia

1965: The Chipmunks sang the song with a chorus of children, featuring an altered verse for the album: "I asked old Alvin", instead of the children asking their mother. This version also appeared on the 1969 album of the Chipmunks going to the Movies.

See also

Preceded by Academy Award for Best Original Song
1956
Succeeded by