Theme from A Summer Place
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
For the album by Billy Vaughn, see Theme from A Summer Place (album).
“Theme from A Summer Place” is a song with lyrics by Mack Discant and music by Max Steiner, written for the 1959 film A Summer Place, which starred Sandra Dee and Troy Donahue. It was recorded for the film as an instrumental by Hugo Winterhalter.
Originally known as the “Molly and Johnny Theme“, this lush extended cue, as orchestrated by Murray Cutter, is not the main title theme of the film, but an oft-heard secondary love theme for the characters played by Dee and Donahue.
Following its introduction in the film by the Warner Bros. studio orchestra, the theme was recorded by many artists in both instrumental and vocal versions, and has also appeared in a number of subsequent films and television programs. The best-known version of the theme is an instrumental version by Percy Faith and his Orchestra that was a number-one hit for nine weeks on the Billboard Hot 100 chart in 1960.
Percy Faith version
“Theme from A Summer Place” | |
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Single by Percy Faith | |
from the album A Summer Place | |
B-side | “Go-Go-Po-Go” |
Released | September 1959 |
Recorded | 11 September 1959 |
Studio | Columbia 30th Street (New York City) |
Genre | Easy listening waltz |
Length | 2:25 |
Label | Columbia/CBS Records |
Songwriter(s) | lyrics by Mack Discant and music by Max Steiner |
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Percy Faith recorded the most popular version of the theme, an instrumental orchestral arrangement, at the Columbia 30th Street Studio in New York City. It was released in September 1959 as a single on Columbia Records, credited to “Percy Faith and his Orchestra”, prior to the November 1959 release of the film A Summer Place.
The single was not an immediate hit, but after it entered the Billboard Hot 100 singles chart at No. 96 on 11 January 1960, it ascended to number one in just six more weeks, on 22 February 1960, going on to set an at-the-time record of nine consecutive weeks at number one, a record that would not be broken until 1977, when “You Light Up My Life” spent ten weeks at the top of the chart.
(Perez Prado‘s “Cherry Pink and Apple Blossom White” remained at number one for 10 weeks on the Best Sellers in Stores chart in 1955,
and Elvis Presley‘s double-sided hit “Don’t Be Cruel
remained at number one for 11 weeks on the Best Sellers in Stores and Jockeys charts in 1956, all prior to the 4 August 1958, creation of the Hot 100 chart.)
The single was also in front of five consecutive No. 2 singles, none of which ever reached the Hot 100’s summit: Jimmy Jones‘ “Handy Man” (29 February),
Jim Reeves‘ “He’ll Have to Go” ( 7–21 March),
Bobby Rydell‘s “Wild One” (28 March),
Paul Anka‘s “Puppy Love” ( 4–11 April),
The Brothers Four’s “Greenfields” (sometimes spelled “Green Fields”) (18 April),
with Elvis Presley‘s “Stuck on You” (25 April – 9 May) in front of “Greenfields” during its last three weeks at No. 2.
“Theme From A Summer Place” remains the longest-running number one instrumental in the history of the Hot 100. Billboard ranked Faith’s version as the Number One song for 1960. The Faith version reached number 2 in the UK Singles Chart, spending 31 weeks on the chart, and it was also a number 1 hit in Italy under the title “Scandalo Al Sole.”
Faith won a Grammy Award for Record of the Year in 1961 for his recording. This was the first movie theme and the first instrumental to win a Record of the Year Grammy.
Faith re-recorded the song twice: first, in 1969, as a female choral version,
then, in 1976, as a disco version titled “Summer Place ’76.”
As reported by Casey Kasem on the American Top 40 broadcast of 25 September 1976, “Theme from A Summer Place” is the biggest hit on the American charts by a Canadian artist.
In 2008 Faith’s original version was ranked at number 18 on Billboard‘s top 100 songs during the first 50 years of the Hot 100 chart. The Billboard Book of Number One Hits called it “the most successful instrumental single of the rock era.”
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“Theme from A Summer Place” | |
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Single by The Lettermen | |
B-side | “Sealed With a Kiss” |
Released | 31 May 1965 |
Recorded | 1965 |
Genre | Easy listening |
Length | 2:00 |
Label | Capitol Records |
Songwriter(s) | lyrics by Mack Discant and music by Max Steiner |
The Lettermen singles chronology | |
“Girl with a Little Tin Heart” (1965)”Theme from A Summer Place“ (1965)”Secretly“ (1965) |
Weekly charts
Chart (1960) Peak position Canada (CHUM Hit Parade) 4 New Zealand (Lever Hit Parade) 2 UK Singles (OCC) 2 U.S. Billboard Hot 1001 | Year-end charts Chart (1960) Position US Billboard Hot 1001 All-time charts Chart (1958–2018) Position US Billboard Hot 100 23 |
Other notable cover versions
“Theme from A Summer Place” has been covered by a number of artists in addition to Percy Faith, in both non-vocal instrumental versions, and with one or more vocalists either singing the Discant lyrics or a wordless melody line. The theme has also been referenced, sampled, or otherwise adapted into several other songs.
Instrumental versions
- In 1960, Billy Vaughn included an instrumental orchestral arrangement of the theme as the title cut to his album Theme From A Summer Place released on Dot Records, which peaked at number one on the Billboard LP chart.
- In 1961, Mantovani recorded an orchestral rendition of the theme for his album Mantovani Plays Music From ‘Exodus’ and Other Great Themes; the album reached the Top Ten on the UK charts.
Vocal versions
Most vocal versions of the theme have featured the Discant lyrics. However, some featured wordless vocals by singers who voiced the melody line.
- In 1960, British producer, bandleader and arranger Norrie Paramor released his arrangement of the theme as a single on Columbia Records, featuring wordless vocals by soprano Patricia Clarke and credited to “Norrie Paramor & His Orchestra”. The single reached number 36 on the UK chart.
- In 1962, Andy Williams covered the theme for his gold-certified album Moon River and Other Great Movie Themes.
- In 1965, the male vocal group The Lettermen had a hit with their harmony arrangement of the theme, released as a single on Capitol Records; it reached number 16 on the Billboard Hot 100, and was included on their album The Hit Sounds of the Lettermen.
- Lolita – Theme From A Summer Place – Wenn der Sommer kommt
- Hollywood Strings – A Summer Place
In popular culture
“Theme from A Summer Place” is frequently used as period background or soundtrack music in films and television programs set between 1959 and the mid-1960s. The theme has also become a ubiquitous representation of “peaceful music” and has been employed frequently in films, television shows and other popular culture to suggest peacefulness or in situations where inoffensive music is common (e.g. as stereotypical “elevator music“). It is also used for intentionally stereotypical comic effect when a show cuts away from a scene deemed to be too violent to display and shows peaceful images instead. The theme from Mario Kart: Super Circuit‘s Shy Guy Beach racetrack uses the same melody as “Theme from “A Summer Place.”
A parody version of “Theme from A Summer Place” appears in The Simpsons episode “Homer’s Barbershop Quartet” The character Jasper Beardley sings the tune in his audition for Homer’s quartet The Be Sharps using the title of the theme itself as the lyrics.
The song is also heard in Stephen King’s mini television series Rose Red
and the 1978 film Animal House in the cafeteria scene with John Belushi at food line, over stuffing his plate with food.
A Summer Place (film)
A Summer Place | |
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Film poster | |
Directed by | Delmer Daves |
Screenplay by | Delmer Daves |
Based on | A Summer Place 1958 novel by Sloan Wilson |
Starring | Richard Egan Dorothy McGuire Troy Donahue Sandra Dee |
Cinematography | Harry Stradling |
Edited by | Owen Marks |
Music by | Max Steiner |
Distributed by | Warner Bros. Pictures |
Release date | November 18, 1959 (United States) |
Running time | 130 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
A Summer Place is a 1959 American romantic drama film based on Sloan Wilson‘s 1958 novel of the same name, about teenage lovers from different social classes who get back together 20 years later, and then must deal with the passionate love affair of their own teenage children by previous marriages. Delmer Daves directed the movie, which stars Richard Egan and Dorothy McGuire as the middle-aged lovers, and Sandra Dee and Troy Donahue as their respective children. The film contains a memorable instrumental theme composed by Max Steiner, which spent nine weeks at number one on the Billboard Hot 100 singles chart in 1960.
Plot
Alcoholic Bart Hunter (Arthur Kennedy), his long-suffering wife Sylvia (Dorothy McGuire), and their teenage son Johnny (Troy Donahue) operate a crumbling inn on Pine Island off the Maine coast. The inn was previously Bart’s elegant family mansion in an exclusive resort, but as his family fortunes have dwindled, the Hunters are forced to rent rooms to paying guests. Bart receives a reservation request from an old acquaintance, Ken Jorgenson (Egan), who was a lowly lifeguard on the island 20 years ago, but is now a successful research chemist and millionaire. Ken wants to bring his wife and daughter to the island for the summer. Bart suggests that Ken is just coming to lord his new wealth over Bart, who is no longer rich. Bart wants to refuse the reservation, but Sylvia insists that he accept because they badly need the money, even going so far as to move themselves into the small guest house so their own master bedroom suite can be rented to Ken and his family.
Ken arrives with his wife Helen (Constance Ford) and teenage daughter Molly (Sandra Dee). Helen and Ken have an unhappy marriage, sleep in separate bedrooms, and frequently argue, including over proper behavior standards for their daughter. Helen is a prude who disapproves of Molly’s developing figure and interest in boys, particularly Johnny Hunter, who is also attracted to Molly. Ken is much more relaxed and permissive, and tells his daughter that her lustful desires are not shameful. Helen also tries, unsuccessfully, to put on airs and impress the upper-class residents of the island, while Ken is not interested in pretense and is even happy to talk with older people who remember him from when he worked as a lifeguard.
As it turns out, Ken and Sylvia were lovers 20 years ago, when they were teenagers. It soon becomes apparent that they still love each other and have missed each other for many years, and that Ken returned to Pine Island in hopes of seeing Sylvia again. They had broken up because Ken was a poor college student, while Bart was the son of a rich, established family, so Sylvia married Bart, and Ken, after seeing Sylvia’s wedding announcement in the newspaper, married Helen. Both marriages were unhappy, but Ken and Sylvia stayed in them because of their love for their respective children, Molly and Johnny. Ken and Sylvia find themselves drawn to each other again and begin secretly meeting every night. They are soon spotted by the island’s night watchman, who informs Helen. Helen initially keeps quiet, on her mother’s advice, planning to catch them in the act to ensure a large divorce settlement.
Ken goes on a business trip for a weekend, during which time Molly and Johnny, with Ken’s permission, go sailing around the island. Their boat capsizes in rough water, stranding them on the beach overnight. The Coast Guard rescues them the next day, but Helen is suspicious that the teenagers had sex on the beach, although they deny it. Helen sends for a doctor to forcibly examine Molly to make sure she is still a virgin, finding she is. Horrified, Molly runs away and sees Johnny, who threatens to kill Helen if she hurts Molly ever again. Helen contacts law enforcement, and then in a fit of anger, reveals Sylvia and Ken’s affair in front of Bart, Ken, Sylvia, and Johnny. Bart reveals he has long known about Sylvia’s love for Ken and offers to forgive her, but she cannot go back. The Hunters and Jorgensons each go through an acrimonious public divorce and Molly and Johnny are sent to boarding schools several states apart. Molly and Johnny are angry at Ken and Sylvia and stop speaking to them, becoming increasingly dependent on each other for emotional support, despite Helen’s constant interference and criticism of Molly’s morals.
Ken and Sylvia eventually marry and move into a Frank Lloyd Wright beach house. They talk Molly and Johnny into visiting them there, to which the teenagers agree largely because it will give them a chance to be together away from Helen, who is unable to prevent the visit due to a court order. During their visit, Molly and Johnny have sex. Ken and Sylvia suspect that the teenagers are sleeping together and are concerned about the possible ill effects, but in view of their own past teen history, feel they cannot order Molly and Johnny to stop. Soon after, Molly discovers she is pregnant and Johnny and she run away together planning to get married. They seek Bart’s blessing, but he is about to be admitted to the veterans’ hospital to treat ulcers due to his drinking, and drunkenly tries to talk them out of marriage, later calling Helen to let her know what happened. The local justice of the peace sees they are under legal age to marry, and turns them down. In desperation, Molly and Johnny go to the house of Ken and Sylvia, who are supportive. In the end, happy Johnny and Molly, just married, return to Pine Island for their honeymoon.
Cast
- Richard Egan as Ken Jorgenson
- Dorothy McGuire as Sylvia Hunter
- Sandra Dee as Molly Jorgenson
- Arthur Kennedy as Bart Hunter
- Troy Donahue as Johnny Hunter
- Constance Ford as Helen Jorgenson
- Beulah Bondi as Mrs. Emily Hamilton Hamble
- Jack Richardson as Claude Andrews
- Martin Eric as Todd Harper
Production
The film was shot in Pacific Grove and around the Monterey Peninsula.
Sloan Wilson wrote the first screenplay, which covered the 22-year span of the novel. Delmer Daves focused the new draft on one year. Daves said:
I have two kids who are just about the same age of these two in A Summer Place and I know how difficult communication between generations can be. And while this may sound corny, it can be assisted by love and understanding. Amid some rather tempestuous social activities, this is what we are trying to demonstrate. That there are two affairs may sound sensational, but that’s not the point. We have received the approval of the Johnstone office, because the intent of the picture is a moral one. Frankness and impatience will help pull the cork on a situation blocked by intolerance. What we are trying to do is dramatise that pulling of the cork.
Some exterior and interior scenes involving Ken and Sylvia’s beach house were filmed at Frank Lloyd Wright‘s Mrs. Clinton Walker House, built in 1948. In the film, Sylvia tells Molly that Wright designed the house, ostensibly located on the East Coast near the movie’s “Pine Island” location (since Molly and Johnny drive from Pine Island to the house after being sent away by the justice of the peace). In reality, Walker House is located on the beach side of Scenic Road on Carmel Bay in Carmel-by-the-Sea, California. The real house has only one level, although in the movie, the house is depicted as if it has a lower level at the same level as the beach. Additional scenes were filmed at the Honeymoon Cottage located at Mission Ranch in Carmel.
Release and reception
The movie became popular after its release, but had a mixed critical reception. Harrison’s Reports, an industry newsletter for independent movie theater owners, thought it “money in the bank at the box office”, “a well-made bit of entertainment” and “sleek and svelte in the best tradition of popular films…” but warned exhibitors the film was “devoted almost exclusively” to sex. Howard Thompson of The New York Times called it “one of the most laboriously and garishly sex-scented movies in years” with “Max Steiner’s music hammering away at each sexual nuance like a pile driver”. On Rotten Tomatoes, A Summer Place holds an approval rating of 83% based on six reviews, with an average rating of 6.00/10.
“Theme from A Summer Place“
The 1960 instrumental hit “Theme from A Summer Place“, composed by Max Steiner, was used in the film as a secondary musical theme (not the main title theme) for scenes featuring Molly and Johnny. The version used in the film was recorded by Hugo Winterhalter.
It was later arranged and recorded by Percy Faith and performed by his orchestra. In 1960, the Percy Faith version reached number one on the Billboard Hot 100 chart for nine consecutive weeks, a record at that time. The theme has been covered in instrumental or vocal versions by numerous other artists, including The Lettermen, Andy Williams, The Chordettes,
and The Ventures, and has been featured in many other films and television programs.
Percy Faith would re-record the piece twice; first in 1969 and later in 1976 prior to his death.
- Dave Monk – Theme From A Summer Place
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- The Lennon Sisters – Theme From A Summer Place
- The Musicalia – A Summer Place (Spanish Version)
- Chet Atkins – Theme From A Summer Place
- James Last – Theme From A Summer Place
- Ernie Heckscher & His Fairmont Orchestra – Theme from a Summer Place
- Rudi Schuricke, Alfred Hause & Sein Tango-Orchester – Theme from A Summer Place
- Dennis Hayward and His Orchestra – Theme From A Summer Place
- Bobby Vinton – Theme From A Summer Place
- Paul Mauriat – Theme From A Summer Place
In popular culture
Troy Donahue co-starred in The Crowded Sky, another Warner Brothers film released about ten months after A Summer Place. In a restaurant scene between Donahue’s character and co-star Efrem Zimbalist Jr., the popular “Theme from A Summer Place” is heard on the restaurant sound system.
In the 1971 film The Omega Man, the lead character Robert Neville played by Charlton Heston, listens to the film soundtrack main theme in his car on an 8-track tape cartridge during the precredit opening sequence.
The lyrics of the song “Look At Me, I’m Sandra Dee” from the musical Grease are in part specifically about the events in this movie.
The film is part of a plot point in the Barry Levinson 1982 film Diner. Set in 1959, the character “Boogie” and several of his friends attend a movie theater showing of A Summer Place, where Boogie plays a sexual prank on his date as Molly and Johnny kiss onscreen.
The 1985 Canadian film My American Cousin, set in 1959, plays the song a number of times.
The ‘I washed my hair for you scene’ can be seen on the 1990s show Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman in the first-season episode: “Honeymoon in Metropolis”. Lois is spending the weekend at the Lexor hotel in town for relaxation but is getting bored with the love stories being shown on television.
The 1997 thriller-comedy Con Air features the song during a scene in which a character played by Dave Chappelle is thrown out of an airplane.
The 2001 version of Ocean’s Eleven contains the theme from A Summer Place during the initial scene between Daniel Ocean (George Clooney) and Tess (Julia Roberts).
The theme song is used in a comedic scene of two separate seductions in National Lampoon’s 1978 blockbuster comedy, “Animal House”.
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