Where Do We Go from Here? is a 1945 romantic musical comedy - fantasy film directed by Gregory Ratoff and starring Fred MacMurray , Joan Leslie , June Haver , Gene Sheldon , Anthony Quinn and Fortunio Bonanova . It was produced by Twentieth Century-Fox . Joan Leslie's singing voice was dubbed by Sally Sweetland .
13-400: (Redirected from Where Do We Go From Here ) Where Do We Go from Here may refer to: Film and television [ edit ] Where Do We Go from Here? (1945 film) , an American film directed by Gregory Ratoff Where Do We Go from Here? (2015 film) , a Scottish film directed by John McPhail OWN Spotlight: Where Do We Go From Here? ,
26-697: A Genie , appears and offers to grant him three wishes. Without thinking, Bill says he wants to be in the US army. In a puff of smoke, Bill finds himself a foot soldier in George Washington 's Continental Army during the American Revolutionary War . After a run-in with some Hessian soldiers , Bill escapes by wishing himself into the Navy . Once again the Genie transfers him, but this time to
39-457: A 1938 Broadway play by Dwight Taylor "Where Do We Go from Here?", an essay by Willy Ley in SF '58: The Year's Greatest Science Fiction and Fantasy Music [ edit ] Albums [ edit ] Where Do We Go from Here? (Asking Alexandria album) , 2023 Where Do We Go from Here (album) , by Pillar, 2004 Where Do We Go from Here? (Kenny Wheeler & John Tayloralbum) or
52-475: A television special by Oprah Winfrey Literature [ edit ] Where Do We Go from Here? (novel) or Does Anyone Ever Listen? , a 1998 young-adult novel by Rosie Rushton Where Do We Go from Here: Chaos or Community? , a 1967 book by Martin Luther King, Jr. Where Do We Go from Here? (anthology) , a 1971 science fiction anthology edited by Isaac Asimov Where Do We Go from Here? ,
65-694: The Broadway shows Knickerbocker Holiday , Lady in the Dark , and One Touch of Venus had been drastically cut for their film adaptations. Although a few cuts were made in his proposed score for Where Do We Go from Here , most of his work with Ira Gershwin remains, including a lengthy mock-opera bouffé aboard Columbus' ship during which the crew threatens to mutiny. Co-stars June Haver and Fred MacMurray met while working on this film, and were later married. Where Do We Go from Here? has to date not been released on any traditional home video format. For years
78-640: The Land Of... Enchantment , 1979 "Where Do We Go from Here?", by Jamiroquai from Synkronized , 1999 "Where Do We Go from Here?", by the Partridge Family from Bulletin Board , 1973 "Where Do We Go from Here", by Svenstrup & Vendelboe from Svenstrup & Vendelboe , 2012 "Where Do We Go from Here?", by Yoko Ono from Rising , 1995 "Where Do We Go from Here?", from the TV series Buffy
91-539: The Vampire Slayer , in the episode " Once More, With Feeling ", 2001 "Where Do We Go from Here (Interlude)", by Tupac Shakur from R U Still Down? (Remember Me) , 1997 See also [ edit ] A sega nakade? , a 1988 Bulgarian film with the English title And Where Do We Go from Here? Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with
104-527: The crew of Christopher Columbus 's ship on his maiden voyage to the new world. Once on shore, he agrees to buy Manhattan Island from a local native. Bill next finds himself whisked forward in time to New Amsterdam in the mid-17th century. When he claims that he owns the Island, he is thrown in jail. Ali finally gets it right and Bill finds himself in the right time and place by the end of the film. Kurt Weill had not been well served by Hollywood. His scores for
117-635: The only release was a recording taken directly from the soundtrack of the film, issued on LP (Ariel KWH 10) and a set of rehearsal recordings performed by Kurt Weill and Ira Gershwin is currently available on the CD Tryout ( DRG Records ) including extended versions of the songs "Nina, the Pinta, the Santa Maria", "Song of the Rhineland", and "Manhattan (Indian Song)." A Manufactured-on-Demand -DVD
130-517: The title Where Do We Go from Here . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Where_Do_We_Go_from_Here&oldid=1213304559 " Category : Disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Where Do We Go from Here%3F (1945 film) The score
143-994: The title song, 2004 Where Do We Go from Here , by Michael Damian , 1989 Songs [ edit ] "Where Do We Go from Here?" (1917 song) , written by Howard Johnson and Percy Wenrich "Where Do We Go from Here?" (Agnetha Fältskog song) , 2023 "Where Do We Go from Here?" (Chicago song) , 1970 "Where Do We Go from Here" (Cliff Richard song) , 1982 "Where Do We Go from Here" (Deborah Cox song) , 1996 "Where Do We Go from Here" (Filter song) , 2002 "Where Do We Go from Here" (Hank Smith song) , 1971 "Where Do We Go from Here" (Stacy Lattisaw song) , 1989 "Where Do We Go from Here" (Vanessa Williams song) , 1996 "Where Do We Go from Here", by Alicia Keys from As I Am , 2007 "Where Do We Go from Here?", by The Band from Cahoots , 1971 "Where Do We Go from Here", by Charles Bradley from Victim of Love , 2013 "Where Do We Go from Here", by Chris Rene , 2011 "Where Do We Go from Here?", by Enchantment from Journey to
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#1732791149541156-404: Was composed by Kurt Weill with lyrics by Ira Gershwin . Gregory Ratoff directed and Morrie Ryskind wrote the screenplay from a story by Sig Herzig and Ryskind. The film is notable as Weill's only musical written directly for the screen and for its anachronistic blend of history and contemporary (1940s) slang. At the time, the mock-operatic sequence, "The Nina, the Pinta, the Santa Maria,"
169-424: Was one of the longest musical sequences ever created for a screen musical. Bill Morgan is a young American who is eager to join the military and fight for his country during World War II , but his 4F status prevents him from enlisting. Bill does his bit for the war effort by collecting scrap metal. Among the discarded junk he discovers a mysterious brass bottle which he rubs to clean off the grime. Suddenly, Ali,
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