Birds Do It
Brief Synopsis
Cast & Crew
Andrew Marton
Soupy Sales
Tab Hunter
Arthur O'connell
Edward Andrews
Doris Dowling
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
When a dust particle ruins a space rocket being constructed at Cape Kennedy, Melvin Byrd becomes a "top secret" janitor equipped with selfpropulsion cleaning utensils. Since his duties are not divulged to outsiders, enemy agents infiltrate the base and unsuccessfully attempt to eliminate him. Melvin's affection for Judi, an astrochimp, results in his accidentally becoming "negatively ionized" so that he not only floats and flies like a bird but becomes irresistible to women. As Melvin soars away over the base, he is watched by a stunned group of visiting congressmen, field personnel, and the enemy agents. And young Claudine Wald, the daughter of Melvin's superior, forgets her usual indifference to Melvin and races after him, wildly screaming her love. Melvin's journey over the bay creates havoc among commercial and private planes and among the boats in the harbor. But just as the Coast Guard arrives on the scene, the "ionizer" at the base is turned off and Melvin descends to the ground. The Coast Guard gathers all of his pursuers into a huge cargo net, picks out the enemy agents, and releases the others. Despite the loss of his extraordinary powers, a delighted Melvin discovers that Claudine still finds him irresistible.
Director
Andrew Marton
Cast
Soupy Sales
Tab Hunter
Arthur O'connell
Edward Andrews
Doris Dowling
Beverly Adams
Louis Quinn
Frank Nastasi
Burt Taylor
Courtney Brown
Russell Saunders
Julian Voloshin
Bob Bersell
Warren Day
Jay Laskay
Burt Leigh
Crew
Howard A. Anderson Co.
Irene Aparicio
Art Arthur
Mel Bledsoe
Ben Chapman
Stanley Colbert
Erwin Dumbrille
George Fiala
Joseph Gannon
Howard Greenfield
Edward Haldeman
Don Ivey
Jack Johnson
Leonard Kaufman
Jack Keller
Arnie Kogen
Peggy Kunkle
Samuel Matlovsky
James Gordon Mclean
Andrew Pallack
Preston Rountree
Mildred Simpkins
Ivan Tors
Howard Warren
Howard Winner
Film Details
Technical Specs
Articles
Doris Dowling (1923-2004)
Doris Dowling was born on May 15, 1923 in Detroit, Michigan. She showed an interest in acting at a young age, and after a few years of stage work in the Midwest, she joined her older sister, the leading lady Constance Dowling, in Hollywood. Paramount soon took notice of the sultry brunette with the soulful expression and husky voice, and promptly signed her to a contract.
She made a stunning film debut as Gloria, the hooker who befriends Ray Milland at a bar, becoming his good-humored confidante in The Lost Weekend (1945); she followed that up in the overlooked, film noir gem, The Blue Dahlia (1946), playing Alan Ladd's shrewish wife before being killed by a mystery killer in the first reel. She made another noir thriller, the forgettable, The Crimson Key (1947), playing, once again, an unsympathetic part before heading off to Europe. Once there, Italian director Giuseppe de Santis used her effectively in Bitter Rice (1948), arguably her best performance as the jewelry thief hiding among women rice workers in Northern Italy; another notable role was as Bianca in Orson Welles' French production of Othello (1951).
She returned to Hollywood in the late '50s, and spent the next three decades doing television work: Bonanza, Perry Mason, Alfred Hitchcock Presents, Barnaby Jones, and The Streets of San Francisco, just to name a few. She retired quietly from acting by the early '80s. She was briefly married to bandleader Artie Shaw (1952-56), and is survived by her son through that marriage, Jonathan; and her husband of 44 years, Leonard Kaufman.
by Michael T. Toole
Doris Dowling (1923-2004)
Quotes
Trivia
The cab driver is played by Frank Nastasi who was the puppeteer that did White Fang, Black Tooth and Pookie on "Soupy Sales Show, The" (1976).
Miscellaneous Notes
Released in United States 1966
Released in United States 1966