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6,4/10
954
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Uma linda garota do rio flutua em seu barco para ir para a faculdade, onde conhece um professor que a acha fascinante.Uma linda garota do rio flutua em seu barco para ir para a faculdade, onde conhece um professor que a acha fascinante.Uma linda garota do rio flutua em seu barco para ir para a faculdade, onde conhece um professor que a acha fascinante.
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Artistas
Stefanie Powers
- Kay
- (as Taffy Paul)
Bill Herrin
- Phil
- (as William Herrin)
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Elenco e equipe completos
- Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro
Avaliações em destaque
It's been four years since the first Tammy film and Sandra Dee has taken over the title role from Debbie Reynolds. Dee is charming and disarming with her country ways and wisdom. Even among the college educated at the college she's decided to take some courses at.
Actually Tammy has the first lesson down very well, the realization that there is a lot out there that one does not know. She heads off to college and first meets speech instructor John Gavin. She gets a job as a companion to the elderly Beulah Bondi whose life has been taken over by her niece Julia Meade who is eyeing that big inheritance.
The plot here is taken quite a bit from Pollyanna, both the silent version with Mary Pickford and the famous Disney one with Hayley Mills. Dee just spreads a lot of sunshine into everyone's life and makes believers of all except possibly Meade who loses a bundle.
Best scenes in the film are with Dee and Bondi whom she invites to go live on her river flatboat for a bit. Bondi did that in her youth and actually enjoys the time away from that mansion that feels like a prison to her. She even gets a little senior citizen romance going with Cecil Kellaway.
If you were a fan of the first Tammy film you will not be disappointed with what Sandra Dee did with this film.
Actually Tammy has the first lesson down very well, the realization that there is a lot out there that one does not know. She heads off to college and first meets speech instructor John Gavin. She gets a job as a companion to the elderly Beulah Bondi whose life has been taken over by her niece Julia Meade who is eyeing that big inheritance.
The plot here is taken quite a bit from Pollyanna, both the silent version with Mary Pickford and the famous Disney one with Hayley Mills. Dee just spreads a lot of sunshine into everyone's life and makes believers of all except possibly Meade who loses a bundle.
Best scenes in the film are with Dee and Bondi whom she invites to go live on her river flatboat for a bit. Bondi did that in her youth and actually enjoys the time away from that mansion that feels like a prison to her. She even gets a little senior citizen romance going with Cecil Kellaway.
If you were a fan of the first Tammy film you will not be disappointed with what Sandra Dee did with this film.
"Tammy Tell Me True" is the sequel to and second film of a series of four that began with "Tammy and the Bachelor" in 1957. The series is based on a 1948 novel by Cid Ricketts Sumner, "Tammy Out of Time." It is set in the bayou country of southern Louisiana and Mississippi around New Orleans.
Debbie Reynolds was the original Tammy Tyree, but four years later she could hardly pass as a teenager as she had been a 17-year-old in 1957, at the age of 25. So, her role was taken over by the now closer to age, Sandra Dee, at 19. And, she does a fairly good job in the role.
The story picks up right where the other one left off, except that Peter Brent has gone off to college. There's a little incongruity here because he wasn't a high school or college kid in the first one, but a young man in his mid-to-late 20s. At least that's how his character was portrayed, along with his fiancé. But, skipping over that, Tammy has been staying with the Brent's at their estate which is in a hilly part of Mississippi, when she decides she needs some formal schooling. Even without having attended school, she is knowledgeable enough in reading and writing to be accepted in a special student assistance program at Seminola College.
Another anomaly appears here, when Tammy gets her houseboat towed downriver to tie up across the swamps near the college campus. As nearly as one can tell, the college must be in or very close to New Orleans, so, it's a real stretch to imagine that there was a bayou place along the river above there from which Tammy moved downstream.
All of that aside, Sandra Dee does a fairly good job, continuing the bayou drawl and lingo. She falls for a speech teacher, Tom Freeman (played by John Gavin) and concludes that her love for Pete was probably just infatuation with the first real man of her age in her life. This story has a good new sub-plot with some good new characters, as Tammy becomes a companion of an elderly lady and winds up helping another couple get their marriage back on track.
The supporting cast has more well-known actors of the day in Beulah Bondi, Charles Drake, Cecil Kellaway, Virginian Grey and others. The is a good continuation of the story, with good performances, but not quite up to the fresh first story with its stars and great performances.
Here are some favorite lines from this film.
Annie Rook Call, paying the boat captain who takes her out to Tammy's houseboat, "Here you are. Remember, not one word to anyone." Captain Armand, "Compared to me, madame, a corpse talks too much."
Tammy, "I'd like the fastest stamp you got, please." Post office clerk (Alan DeWitt, uncredited), "Air mail - we haven't switched to rockets yet."
Debbie Reynolds was the original Tammy Tyree, but four years later she could hardly pass as a teenager as she had been a 17-year-old in 1957, at the age of 25. So, her role was taken over by the now closer to age, Sandra Dee, at 19. And, she does a fairly good job in the role.
The story picks up right where the other one left off, except that Peter Brent has gone off to college. There's a little incongruity here because he wasn't a high school or college kid in the first one, but a young man in his mid-to-late 20s. At least that's how his character was portrayed, along with his fiancé. But, skipping over that, Tammy has been staying with the Brent's at their estate which is in a hilly part of Mississippi, when she decides she needs some formal schooling. Even without having attended school, she is knowledgeable enough in reading and writing to be accepted in a special student assistance program at Seminola College.
Another anomaly appears here, when Tammy gets her houseboat towed downriver to tie up across the swamps near the college campus. As nearly as one can tell, the college must be in or very close to New Orleans, so, it's a real stretch to imagine that there was a bayou place along the river above there from which Tammy moved downstream.
All of that aside, Sandra Dee does a fairly good job, continuing the bayou drawl and lingo. She falls for a speech teacher, Tom Freeman (played by John Gavin) and concludes that her love for Pete was probably just infatuation with the first real man of her age in her life. This story has a good new sub-plot with some good new characters, as Tammy becomes a companion of an elderly lady and winds up helping another couple get their marriage back on track.
The supporting cast has more well-known actors of the day in Beulah Bondi, Charles Drake, Cecil Kellaway, Virginian Grey and others. The is a good continuation of the story, with good performances, but not quite up to the fresh first story with its stars and great performances.
Here are some favorite lines from this film.
Annie Rook Call, paying the boat captain who takes her out to Tammy's houseboat, "Here you are. Remember, not one word to anyone." Captain Armand, "Compared to me, madame, a corpse talks too much."
Tammy, "I'd like the fastest stamp you got, please." Post office clerk (Alan DeWitt, uncredited), "Air mail - we haven't switched to rockets yet."
The first time I saw this movie, I was a very young girl. I loved it then and I own it now. I fell in love with the other two movies as well (Tammy and the Bachelor and Tammy and the Doctor). Sandra Dee slips easily into Debbie Reynolds shoes in the second installment, Tammy Tell me True, and adapts most convincingly into her bayou lass role. A truly entertaining classic that transports one into a more innocent and simpler time and reeks of nostalgia for anyone in the 50+ age group. Sandra Dee is disarming in her mix of innocence and simple wisdom, putting to shame the very people who initially mock her. Sandra shows a true range of acting skills that she proves in another vehicle of the time period: A Summer Place. For pure, fun, entertaining fare, this is it.
Back in 1957, Debbie Reynolds starred as the title character in "Tammy and the Bachelor", a sweet story about a backwoods girl who is a bit like a fish out of water when she comes in contact with citified folks.
This story picks up after the first. Tammy's boyfriend is off at college but inexplicably hasn't contacted her in some time. This is pretty inconsistent with the last film, as he appeared ready to marry her when it ended. Regardless, instead of just sitting back and waiting, Tammy decides she needs some education about the English language, as her backwoods talk sets her apart from everyone. Oddly, instead of going to grade school or high school, she decides on college and is accepted there as a special student.
One of the first persons she meets there is a young instructor. Tom Freeman (John Gavin) is quite taken by her and this handsome guy becomes more and more smitten by Tammy through the course of the film. It's obvious why, as although unschooled and unsophisticated, she is incredibly sweet and abounds with wisdom and charm. And, it's not only Tom who falls for her, but a very cranky old lady (Beulah Bondi) soon succumbs to her charms as well and they become friends AND roommates on Tammy's riverboat. What's next? See the film for yourself!
This is a film that is utterly charming and simply fun to watch. Is it deep entertainment? Nope...but it is quite enjoyable and is a nice sequel even if Debbie Reynolds didn't star in this one (probably because she was a bit old for this role). And, if you, too, like the film, there is another Tammy movie starring Sandra Dee, "Tammy and the Doctor".
This story picks up after the first. Tammy's boyfriend is off at college but inexplicably hasn't contacted her in some time. This is pretty inconsistent with the last film, as he appeared ready to marry her when it ended. Regardless, instead of just sitting back and waiting, Tammy decides she needs some education about the English language, as her backwoods talk sets her apart from everyone. Oddly, instead of going to grade school or high school, she decides on college and is accepted there as a special student.
One of the first persons she meets there is a young instructor. Tom Freeman (John Gavin) is quite taken by her and this handsome guy becomes more and more smitten by Tammy through the course of the film. It's obvious why, as although unschooled and unsophisticated, she is incredibly sweet and abounds with wisdom and charm. And, it's not only Tom who falls for her, but a very cranky old lady (Beulah Bondi) soon succumbs to her charms as well and they become friends AND roommates on Tammy's riverboat. What's next? See the film for yourself!
This is a film that is utterly charming and simply fun to watch. Is it deep entertainment? Nope...but it is quite enjoyable and is a nice sequel even if Debbie Reynolds didn't star in this one (probably because she was a bit old for this role). And, if you, too, like the film, there is another Tammy movie starring Sandra Dee, "Tammy and the Doctor".
Pete is at agricultural college. Tammy Tyree (Sandra Dee) decides to go to college herself. She encounters poetry reading Tom Freeman who teaches public speaking. She joins his class. She needs a job and tries to be companion to elderly Annie Rook Call. Mrs. Call's niece rejects her but Annie is desperate for freedom. Annie runs away to join her on her boathouse, the Ellen B.
This is a sequel to Tammy and the Bachelor (1957). Sandra Dee replaces Debbie Reynolds. Sandra is laying it down thick and play it up to the rafters. That has a charm of its own like a simple caricature. The fish-out-water is fun but some of the reactions go too far. It's fun until it becomes awkwardly unreal. Nobody would laugh at some of those moments. When that feels out of place, it takes away from the resolution's poignancy. Despite some clunkiness, this has a sweetness and charm to it.
This is a sequel to Tammy and the Bachelor (1957). Sandra Dee replaces Debbie Reynolds. Sandra is laying it down thick and play it up to the rafters. That has a charm of its own like a simple caricature. The fish-out-water is fun but some of the reactions go too far. It's fun until it becomes awkwardly unreal. Nobody would laugh at some of those moments. When that feels out of place, it takes away from the resolution's poignancy. Despite some clunkiness, this has a sweetness and charm to it.
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesThis was the first appearance of Sandra Dee in the role of Tammy Tyree. She took taking over the role from Debbie Reynolds.
- Citações
Annie Rook Call: [Paying the boat captain who takes her out to Tammy's houseboat] Here you are. Remember, not one word to anyone.
Captain Armand: Compared to me, madame, a corpse talks too much.
- ConexõesFollowed by Artimanhas do Amor (1963)
- Trilhas sonorasTammy, Tell Me True
Written by Dorothy Squires
Performed by Sandra Dee
[Tammy sings the song after Tom drops her off at the Ellen B]
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Detalhes
- Data de lançamento
- País de origem
- Idiomas
- Também conhecido como
- Tammy Tell Me True
- Locações de filme
- Empresas de produção
- Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro
- Tempo de duração1 hora 37 minutos
- Proporção
- 2.00 : 1
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