

"What Did I Have That I Don't Have?" – Daisy."Wait Till We're 65" - Warren and Daisy (cut before the film's release)."On a Clear Day" – Orchestra and Chorus.Irene Handl as Winnie Wainwhisle, Melinda's mother (a kitchen maid in the household of the Prince Regent).Roy Kinnear as The Prince Regent, later King George IV.Barbra Streisand as Daisy Gamble (Melinda, Lady Tentrees).

At the end of the film Daisy breaks up with Warren and it's implied that she connects with Tad. One day Tad is on the roof of Daisy's apartment building where she gardens and tells Warren that he thinks Daisy should marry him instead as he can make her happy and he's rich. It's clear to see that they have an easy rapport, contrasting with Warren who never asks or listens to her opinion and often tells her what to do, what to wear, and what to say. In Daisy's life her ex-step-brother Tad shows up and she's thrilled to see him. When she returns for a final meeting with him, she mentions fourteen additional lives, including her forthcoming birth as Laura and subsequent marriage to the therapist in the year 2038. While waiting for Chabot in his office, Daisy accidentally hears a tape recording of one of her sessions and when she discovers Chabot's interest is limited to Melinda, she storms out of the office. She eventually married nobleman Robert Tentrees during the period of the English Regency, then was tried for espionage and treason after he abandoned her.Īs their sessions progress, complications arise when Chabot begins to fall in love with Daisy's exotic former self and Daisy begins to fall for him, and his university colleagues demand he either give up his reincarnation research or resign his position with the school. She acquired the paternity records of the children housed in the orphanage where her mother had to send her and used the information to blackmail their wealthy fathers. While undergoing hypnosis, it is discovered she is the reincarnation of Lady Melinda Winifred Waine Tentrees, a seductive 19th century coquette who was born the illegitimate daughter of a kitchen maid. She becomes unintentionally hypnotized and manages to convince Chabot to attempt to cure her nicotine addiction with hypnotherapy. The songs feature lyrics by Lerner and music by Burton Lane.Īt the behest of her mainstream conservative fiancé Warren, scatterbrained five-pack-a-day chain smoker and clairvoyant Daisy Gamble attends a class taught by psychiatrist Marc Chabot for help in kicking her habit. The screenplay by Alan Jay Lerner is adapted from his book for the 1965 stage production of the same name. As Frank and those closest to him discover - or re-discover - reserves of love and compassion, he realizes that he is also swimming from one part of his life to another.On a Clear Day You Can See Forever is a 1970 American musical comedy-drama fantasy film starring Barbra Streisand and directed by Vincente Minnelli. Frank's family confronts him, and he realizes that he must repair his strained family ties. Frank is unable to confide in those closest to him, but as the big day and moment of truth draw near, there is a sea change. Prodded by stalwart fish-and-chips shop owner Chan, the men support Frank, train him - and keep their goal secret from his wife and son. As Frank plunges headlong into his new daily life, his astonished friends are swept along with him.

He will attempt the near impossible - swimming the English Channel. Already contemplating the state of his relationships with loving wife Joan and all-but-estranged son Rob, Frank is determined to shore up his own self-confidence. An offhand remark from Danny inspires Frank to challenge himself. His best mates - rascally Danny, timid Norman and cynical Eddie - are there for him, but Frank still feels desperately alone. For the first time in his life, he is without a job or a sense of direction, and he's too proud to ask for guidance.

Storyline: On a Clear Day (2005) After decades of laboring as a Glasgow shipbuilder, Frank Redmond, a no-nonsense 55-year-old working-class man, suddenly finds himself laid off.
