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Tammy and the Doctor

  • 1963
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 28m
IMDb RATING
5.9/10
830
YOUR RATING
Sandra Dee and Peter Fonda in Tammy and the Doctor (1963)
ComedyRomance

A Los Angeles doctor falls for a Mississippi girl working as a nurse's aide in his hospital.A Los Angeles doctor falls for a Mississippi girl working as a nurse's aide in his hospital.A Los Angeles doctor falls for a Mississippi girl working as a nurse's aide in his hospital.

  • Director
    • Harry Keller
  • Writer
    • Oscar Brodney
  • Stars
    • Sandra Dee
    • Peter Fonda
    • Macdonald Carey
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.9/10
    830
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Harry Keller
    • Writer
      • Oscar Brodney
    • Stars
      • Sandra Dee
      • Peter Fonda
      • Macdonald Carey
    • 16User reviews
    • 3Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos29

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    Top cast20

    Edit
    Sandra Dee
    Sandra Dee
    • Tammy Tyree
    Peter Fonda
    Peter Fonda
    • Dr. Mark Cheswick
    Macdonald Carey
    Macdonald Carey
    • Dr. Wayne Bentley
    Margaret Lindsay
    Margaret Lindsay
    • Head Nurse Rachel Colman
    Beulah Bondi
    Beulah Bondi
    • Annie Rook Call
    Reginald Owen
    Reginald Owen
    • Jason Tripp
    Alice Pearce
    Alice Pearce
    • Nurse Millie Baxter
    Adam West
    Adam West
    • Dr. Eric Hassler
    Joan Marshall
    Joan Marshall
    • Nurse Vera Parker
    Stanley Clements
    Stanley Clements
    • Wally Day
    Doodles Weaver
    Doodles Weaver
    • Traction Patient
    Mitzi Hoag
    Mitzi Hoag
    • Nurse Pamela Burke
    Alex Gerry
    Alex Gerry
    • Chief of Staff
    Robert Foulk
    Robert Foulk
    • Surgeon
    Jill Jackson
    • Assistant Surgeon
    Forrest Lewis
    Forrest Lewis
    • Dr. Crandall
    Sondra Rodgers
    • First Nurse
    Charles Seel
    Charles Seel
    • Dr. Smithers
    • Director
      • Harry Keller
    • Writer
      • Oscar Brodney
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews16

    5.9830
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    Featured reviews

    6kz917-1

    Tammy goes to L.A.

    In the final movie in the Tammy trilogy Sandra Dee once again stars and calamities ensue. Tammy's houseboatmate Mrs. Call falls ill and needs an operation. Tammy tags along and gets a job at the hospital to be close by and keep Mrs. Call's spirits up. But of course due to Tammy's naive nature trouble follows wherever she goes and it's a wonder no one dies due to some of the mishaps. This time Tammy falls for a doctor played by Peter Fonda. Bonus points for spotting Adam West as a doctor!
    ivan-22

    Hilarious and sweet

    Not as beautiful as "Tammy Tell Me True", but even funnier.

    Tammy is an implausibly innocent country bumpkin who clashes with the modern world. She has derogatory things to say about Shakespeare, Mozart, Psychology, Colleges, modern art, sleeping pills, freeways, conformism, phoniness.

    Tammy: "You mean you been livin' with yourself all your life without ever knowing what you are???"

    Sandra Dee is brilliant in her role - and it is truly hers.

    Much of the movie's delight is in Tammy's ungrammatical speech. She says glorious things like "Be you gonna or be ya ain't" (Will you or won't you?). She asks a man "Bein't ya the dumb waiter?" and he sternly replies: "No, I be the chief of staff!"
    7planktonrules

    A touch more comedy and not quite as strong a romance.

    I love the Tammy films, but one problem with them is continuity. In the first film, "Tammy and the Bachelor", it looks absolutely certain that she was about to marry her love (Leslie Nielsen). But in the second film he was gone and apparently lost interest in this delightful young woman. And, by the end of "Tammy Tell Me True", she was head over heels in love with a gorgeous and sweet professor (John Gavin)....and yet when "Tammy and the Doctor" begins he's gone! This is much more a problem for me than having Debbie Reynolds play Tammy in the first film and Sandra Dee in the next two.

    This movie picks up after the second film. Tammy's good friend and companion, Annie (Beulah Bondi), is ill and needs to get surgery. However, she is awfully close to Tammy and Tammy wants to accompany her to the hospital. The hospital isn't about to let Tammy stay there and they come up with a compromise...to let her work at the hospital in order to be close to Annie.

    So is it any good? Well, yes. But it isn't nearly as heart-warming and sweet as the previous two films. Much of it, in my opinion, is due to this film emphasizing comedy more than romance. Plus, I still kept worrying about her two previous boyfriends! Overall, a good film but not quite up to the very high standards set by the previous two movies.

    By the way, Imdb mentions that this was Beulah Bondi's last film. This is not such as sad thing, as she lived another 17 years and made several notable television appearances during this period.
    7skipyhigh

    Not as good as Tammy and the Bachelor

    I thought this movie was well done, and that Sandra Dee was a very good Tammy Tyree, however I think that Debbie Reynolds did a better job when she originally played this character in Tammy and the Bachelor. I also think that Tammy Tell Me True was a little bit sweeter than this movie. On it's own it is a great film, but when compared to the others, it's just not as good.
    5SimonJack

    Magnified hokeyness and weaker screenplay about do this Tammy film in

    "Tammy and the Doctor" is the third of four films made over a 10-year period, based on the character, Tammy Tyree. She is the heroine of the 1948 novel, "Tammy Out of Time," by Cit Ricketts Sumner. Three different actresses played the role. The very best was Debbie Reynolds in the first film, "Tammy and the Bachelor" of 1957. Sandra Dee made the second film in 1961, and this one two years later. I haven't seen the fourth, which starred little known and remembered Debbie Watson and a supporting cast of little known actors. Watson did star in a TV series of Tammy, from 1965-67, but she had a short acting career that virtually ended shortly after this film.

    While Sandra Dee did a fairly good job picking up as Tammy in the second film, "Tammy Tell Me True," this film goes so overboard with her bayou drawl and lingo that that's almost funny inn itself. The story picks up with the last one ended. She has been in college for some time and a companion to Annie Rook Call, who is living with her on the houseboat. But Annie has taken sick and needs surgery. The doctor arranges for her to be a patient of a world-famous specialist in the field in Los Angeles. So, Tammy flies with her in a private plane to L. A.

    Tammy gets a job at the hospital so that she can room there with staff nurses while she also continues as a companion for Annie. The bulk of this film consists of Tammy making one goof after another that disrupts things in the hospital. It would be funny except that no one could imagine anyone with no training at all being put in the positions she is seen working at. She mixes up babies in the newborn nursery when she changes them and puts them in the wrong cribs. Then, she's in the OR and touches a surgeon who's about to do surgery. Then she's in a room off of surgery and takes one of the scissors on a table that has just come out of surgery before the instruments are checked. There are several like this, and after each one, she's back mopping floors.

    The attempt at humor by putting her in all these positions doesn't work well. It would have worked if she had been kept in the cleaning job, which she didn't mind, and then have a much better script with some good comedy Instead, the funny dialog that was part of the first two films is missing completely here. In place of that, Sandra Dee's Tammy is overboard hokey with the strange lingo and drawl. By this time, she should have toned it down some, and learned enough not to keep referring to doctors as leechers, and medicine practice as leeching. I think she did that around a dozen times in this film.

    Oh, and Tammy finally finds real love this time - the third time's a charm? It with the master surgeon Dr. Bentley's intern assistant, Dr. Mark Cheswick. Peter Fonda plays the role that varies from listless to wooden. The only thing that keeps this film from tanking completely is the supporting cast, especially Beulah Bondi returning as Annie Rook Call, and three new faces. One is Margaret Lindsay as Head Nurse Rachel Colman who adds a touch to the story in her love from Dr. Bentley who doesn't know she exists until Tammy straightens things out. Another is Alice Pearce as Nurse Millie Baxter who provide some little comedy as she job-sits Tammy. And Reginald Owen as patient Jason Tripp. He turns from sour grapes to a good companion and chess player with Annie.

    The hokeyness that was magnified in this third film I think helped do it in. Here's a sample line - the closest to funny, in the film.

    Dr. Cheswick, asking Tammy for a date, "You wanna go to the Bowl?" Tammy, "Bowl? I never heard it called that. Uh, but don't you worry. I'll go afore we leave."

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      In joke: While working in the pediatric ward, Tammy mixes up ID bracelets on babies, one of whom she identifies as "Bernard Schwartz", the real name of Tony Curtis, who Nurse Baxter mentions shortly thereafter in relation to the incident and who was then one of Universal's biggest stars.
    • Goofs
      When Annie is being operated on and her heart momentarily stops, the clock on the wall of the operating room says 10:45. Moments later, when her heart starts up again, it says 8:35 again.
    • Quotes

      Tammy Tyree: [having mixed up the babies' name tags] I could have took an oath on the Bible that he be Bernard Schwartz.

      Millie Baxter, Nurse: There hasn't been so much excitement around here since Tony Curtis came in for a check up.

    • Connections
      Featured in Biography: The Fondas (2004)
    • Soundtracks
      Tammy
      Written by Ray Evans and Jay Livingston

      Performed by Sandra Dee (uncredited)

      [Tammy sings the song on the roof after she believes Mark has departed following their Romeo & Juliet date; the song's theme is also featured throughout the musical score]

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    FAQ14

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • June 21, 1963 (West Germany)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Les lycéennes
    • Filming locations
      • Universal Studios - 100 Universal City Plaza, Universal City, California, USA(Studio)
    • Production companies
      • Ross Hunter Productions Inc.
      • Universal International Pictures (UI)
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 28 minutes
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.66 : 1

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