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Que Sera, Sera (Whatever Will Be, Will Be)

"Que Sera, Sera (Whatever Will Be, Will Be)"[a] is a song written by the team of Jay Livingston and Ray Evans that was first published in 1955.[4] Doris Day introduced it in the Alfred Hitchcock film The Man Who Knew Too Much (1956),[5] singing it as a cue to their onscreen kidnapped son.[4] The three verses of the song progress through the life of the narrator—from childhood, through young adulthood and falling in love, to parenthood—and each asks "What will I be?" or "What lies ahead?" The chorus repeats the answer: "What will be, will be."

"Que Sera Sera (Whatever Will Be, Will Be)"
Doris Day performing the song in the 1956 film The Man Who Knew Too Much.
Single by Doris Day
B-side"I've Gotta Sing Away These Blues"
ReleasedMay 21, 1956
Recorded1956
GenrePopular music
Length2:03
LabelColumbia
Composer(s)Jay Livingston
Lyricist(s)Ray Evans
Doris Day singles chronology
"We'll Love Again"
(1956)
"Que Sera Sera (Whatever Will Be, Will Be)"
(1956)
"Julie"
(1956)

Day's recording of the song for Columbia Records made it to number two on the Billboard Top 100 chart[6] and number one in the UK Singles Chart.[4] It came to be known as Day's signature song. The song in The Man Who Knew Too Much received the 1956 Academy Award for Best Original Song. It was the third Oscar in this category for Livingston and Evans, who previously won in 1948 and 1950.[4] In 2004 it finished at number 48 in AFI's 100 Years...100 Songs survey of top tunes in American cinema. In 2012, the 1956 recording by Doris Day on Columbia Records was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame.[7]

It was a number-one hit in Australia for pop singer Normie Rowe in September 1965.

The song popularized the title expression "que sera, sera" as an English-language phrase indicating "cheerful fatalism", though its use in English dates back to at least the 16th century. Contrary to popular perception, the phrase is not Spanish in origin (in Spanish it would be "lo que será, será"), and is ungrammatical in that language.[3] It was evidently formed by a word-for-word mistranslation of English "What will be will be".[8]

Title phrase edit

The popularity of the song has led to curiosity about the origins of the title saying, "que sera, sera", and the identity of its language. Both the Spanish-like spelling used by Livingston and Evans and an Italian-like form ("che sarà sarà") are first documented in the 16th century as an English heraldic motto.[9] The "Spanish" form appears on a brass plaque in the Church of St. Nicholas, Thames Ditton, Surrey, dated 1559.[10] The "Italian" form was first adopted as a family motto by either John Russell, 1st Earl of Bedford, or his son, Francis Russell, 2nd Earl of Bedford. It is said by some sources to have been adopted by the elder Russell after his experience at the Battle of Pavia (1525), and to be engraved on his tomb (1555 N.S.).[11][12] The 2nd Earl's adoption of the motto is commemorated in a manuscript dated 1582.[13] Their successors—Earls and, later, Dukes of Bedford ("Sixth Creation"), as well as other aristocratic families—continued to use the motto. Soon after its adoption as a heraldic motto, it appeared in Christopher Marlowe's play Doctor Faustus (written ca. 1590; published 1604), whose text[14] (Act 1, Scene 1) contains a line with the archaic Italian spelling "Che sera, sera / What will be, shall be".[15] Early in the 17th century the saying begins to appear in the speech and thoughts of fictional characters as a spontaneous expression of a fatalistic attitude. The phrase, in its English form, is used in the novel Hard Times by Charles Dickens, first published in 1854.[16] The saying is always in an English-speaking context, and it has no history in Spanish, Italian, or French; in fact, the saying is ungrammatical in all three of these Romance languages.[17] It is however grammatical in Portuguese in poetic contexts. It is composed of Spanish or Italian words superimposed on English syntax. It was evidently formed by a word-for-word mistranslation of English "What will be will be", merging the free relative pronoun what (= "that which") with the interrogative what?[8]

Livingston and Evans had some knowledge of Spanish, and early in their career they worked together as musicians on cruise ships to the Caribbean and South America. Composer Jay Livingston had seen the 1954 Hollywood film The Barefoot Contessa, in which a fictional Italian family has the motto "Che sarà sarà" carved in stone at their ancestral mansion. He immediately wrote it down as a possible song title, and he and lyricist Ray Evans later gave it a Spanish spelling "because there are so many Spanish-speaking people in the world".[18][19][20]

In modern times, thanks to the popularity of the song and its many translations, the phrase has been adopted in countries around the world to name a variety of entities, including books, movies, restaurants, vacation rentals, airplanes, and race horses.[21]

In film and television edit

The song originally appeared in the Alfred Hitchcock film The Man Who Knew Too Much, where it appears diegetically and serves an important role in the film's plot. In the film, Day plays a retired popular singer, Jo Conway McKenna, who, along with her husband (played by Jimmy Stewart) and son, becomes embroiled in a plot to assassinate a foreign prime minister. After foiling the assassination attempt, Jo and her husband are invited by the prime minister to the embassy, where they believe their young son is being held by the conspirators. Jo sits at a piano and plays "Que Sera, Sera", singing loudly in the hope of reaching her son. Upon hearing his mother play the familiar song, her son whistles along, allowing her husband to find and rescue him just before he was to be murdered by the conspirators to the assassination attempt.[22]

"Que Sera Sera" came to be considered Doris Day's signature song, and she went on to sing it in later films and TV appearances. In 1960's Please Don't Eat the Daisies, she sings a snippet of the song to her co-star, David Niven, who plays her husband.[23] In the 1966 film The Glass Bottom Boat she sings a snippet accompanied by Arthur Godfrey on ukulele. From 1968 to 1973, she sang a rerecorded version as the theme song for her sitcom The Doris Day Show.[24][25] The 1999 Studio Ghibli film My Neighbors the Yamadas features a Japanese cover of the song toward the end of the film. Director Isao Takahata wrote the translation for the lyrics, with an arrangement by Neko Saitou.[26]

Versions of the song have appeared on a number of film and television soundtracks, often juxtaposed with dark or disastrous events to create an effect of black comedy. For example, in The Simpsons episode "Bart's Comet", the song is sung by the citizens of Springfield in anticipation of an impending comet strike that will wipe out the town and kill them all. In an episode of The Muppet Show starring Vincent Price, Shakey Sanchez, a pink/purple red and purple haired Muppet sings the song after Behemoth eats him and sings "I've Got You Under My Skin". Previously, the song was featured over the opening and the ending credits of Heathers, a dark teen comedy dealing with murder and suicide. The version over the opening credits is performed by Syd Straw and the version over the ending credits is performed by Sly and the Family Stone. In Gilmore Girls, the song appeared in a Season 2 episode as a musical cue to juxtapose Lorelai falling through their termite-ridden porch. In 2009, the song appeared in a climactic scene in Mary and Max as Mary is about to commit suicide.

In 1956, the song was covered by The Lennon Sisters on The Lawrence Welk Show. Although it was just another number in the show at the time, during recent years, the song has since gained millions of views on YouTube and is now regarded as a very notable version of the song.

On December 21, 1996, it was covered by the Bina Vokalia Children's Choir under the direction of Pranadjaja on Dendang Buah Hati concert.[27] This song was mentioned in the 2008 Filipino movie My Only Ü.

The song also plays during the intro of the first and second season of the 2022 series From.

The song was used in several trailers and TV spots for Evil Dead Rise.

As football chant edit

"Que Sera, Sera" has been adapted as a popular celebratory football chant, especially in England,[28][failed verification] typically with the lyrics:

Que sera sera,
Whatever will be will be,
We're going to Wembley,
Que sera sera

This would be sung by fans following a victory that progresses their favoured team to the next round of a competition that will ultimately lead them to Wembley Stadium (typically the FA Cup, the finals of which have been held in Wembley since 1923).[29] Manchester United fans sang it before and during the 1976 FA Cup Final.[30] Although the song became more commonly used to associate a good cup run, Everton fans used it in 1963 to hail their soon to be crowned League Champions, using the phrase win the League instead of Wembley.

"Wembley" may be sung with either melisma on the first syllable, or a schwa epenthesis (often respelled "Wemberley"). Other venues than Wembley may be substituted as appropriate, as when Republic of Ireland fans sang "We're going to Italy" when qualifying for the 1990 World Cup,[31] or when fans of Millwall, about to exit the 2016–17 FA Cup, self-deprecatingly sang "We're going to Shrewsbury", their unglamorous next League One fixture.[32]

1964 version edit

"Whatever Will Be, Will Be (Que Sera, Sera)"
Song by Doris Day
from the album With a Smile and a Song
ReleasedOctober 19, 1964
RecordedJuly 1964
GenreChildren's music
LabelColumbia
Producer(s)Allen Stanton

In 1964, Day re-recorded the song for her 1964 children's album With a Smile and a Song. This version featured Jimmy Joyce and the Children's Chorus, recorded in July 1964, and issued by Columbia Records three months later as the eighth track on the album. This version was produced by Allen Stanton and was arranged and conducted by Allyn Ferguson.

Normie Rowe version edit

"Que Sera, Sera (Whatever Will Be, Will Be)"
 
Single by Normie Rowe and the Playboys
B-side"Shakin' All Over"
ReleasedSeptember 1965
GenrePop
LabelSunshine
Composer(s)Ray Evans
Lyricist(s)Jay Livingston
Producer(s)Pat Aulton
Normie Rowe and the Playboys singles chronology
"I Confess"
(1965)
"Que Sera, Sera (Whatever Will Be, Will Be)"
(1965)
"Tell Him I'm Not Home"
(1965)

Australian pop singer Normie Rowe's 1965 recording of "Que Sera, Sera", which was produced by Pat Aulton on the Sunshine Record label (Sunshine QK 1103), was the biggest hit of his career, "the biggest Australian rock 'n roll hit of 1965",[33] and is reputed to be the biggest-selling Australian single of the 1960s.[34] The song was "done in the style of "Louie, Louie" and the manner of "Hang On Sloopy",[33] and given a "Merseybeat" treatment (in the manner of The Beatles' "Twist & Shout"), and was backed by Rowe's band The Playboys.[clarification needed] It was paired with a version of the Johnny Kidd & The Pirates' classic "Shakin' All Over", and the single became a double-sided No. 1 hit in most capitals (#1 Sydney, #1 Melbourne, #1 Brisbane, #1 Adelaide, and Perth).[35][36] in September 1965, charting for 28 weeks and selling in unprecedented numbers, with Rock historian Ian McFarlane reporting sales of 80,000 copies,[34][37] while 1970s encyclopedist Noel McGrath claimed sales of 100,000.[38] Rowe scored another first in October 1965 when "Que Sera Sera" became his third hit single in the Melbourne Top 40 simultaneously. In 1965 Rowe received a gold record for "Que Sera, Sera" at Sydney's Chevron Hotel.[39] In December 1965 the master of Rowe's version was purchased by Jay-Gee Records for release in the United States.[40] In April 1966 Rowe received a second gold record for the sales of "Que Sera, Sera".[41] In August 1966 Rowe won Radio 5KA's annual best male vocal award for "Que Sera, Sera".[42] In 2006 Rowe released a newly recorded version, which was released by ABC via iTunes, and later adding "the whole digital mix with a radio mix and a dance mix".[43]

Other notable versions edit

In the decades since the song's original release, "Que Sera, Sera" has been covered by dozens of artists. A 1969 cover sung by Mary Hopkin and produced by Paul McCartney reached number 77 on the Billboard Hot 100, and number 7 on the Adult Contemporary chart.[44]

A live version by Shakin' Stevens was featured on The Shakin' Stevens EP which reached No. 2 in the UK Charts during the 1982 Christmas holidays. The studio version of the song is featured on his album Give Me Your Heart Tonight from the same year.

In 1989, a comedy version recorded by "Terence" (John Creedon) in aid of the RTÉ People in Need Telethon reached number 2 in the Irish Singles Chart.[45]

As a result of the song's immediate popularity following the release of The Man Who Knew Too Much, versions were soon written in other languages. An early example was a Dutch version by Jo Leemans which reached the Belgian charts in December 1956.[46] Versions of the song have also been recorded in Danish, French, Mandarin, Spanish, Japanese, and Swedish, among other languages. These in turn have led some non-English speakers to adopt the saying "que sera, sera".[3]

In 1965, Swedish rock band Lenne and the Lee Kings recorded the song.[47] Upon release as a single during the summer of that year, record label Gazell coupled it with the Titus Turner song "Sticks and Stones" on the B-side.[48] Although it failed to chart in native Sweden, it reached number 38 in Finland in August 1965.[49] Both sides of the single were included on their 1966 album Stop The Music.[50][51]

In India, the song was first adapted in the Tamil-language film Aaravalli (1957). Later in 1965, the original version was sung by Bhanumathi in the Telugu-language film Thodu Needa, with minor changes in the lyrics.[52]

A Japanese version is featured in the Ghibli Studio animation film My Neighbors the Yamadas, released in 1999.

In 2021, The Pixies recorded a new version of the song for the television horror series From. The song was played in a minor key, giving it a very different mood from other renditions.

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ "Que Sera, Sera (Whatever Will Be, Will Be)" is how the title is given in the song's official sheet music,[1] but it has been rendered in various ways in other sources. The order of the main title and parenthetical may be swapped, as when the song was nominated for the Academy Award as "Whatever Will Be, Will Be (Que Sera, Sera)".[2] It may also be referred to as simply "Que Sera, Sera", or "Whatever Will Be, Will Be". The title sequence of The Man Who Knew Too Much gives the title as "Whatever Will Be". Rarely, the title is rendered with diacritics as "Que Será, Será".[3]

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ . Archived from the original on November 16, 2018.
  2. ^ "The 29th Academy Awards | 1957". Oscars.org | Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.
  3. ^ a b c Hartman 2013.
  4. ^ a b c d Roberts (2006:135)
  5. ^ Leigh (2001)
  6. ^ Whitburn (1987)
  7. ^ "Grammy Hall Of Fame - Hall of Fame Artists". Grammy Awards. Retrieved December 5, 2023.
  8. ^ a b Hartman (2013:56-59)
  9. ^ The Italian-like and Spanish-like forms are preceded in history by a unique, French-like form, spelled "quy serra serra", which appears as a marginal gloss to—and contemporary with—a poem written shortly after the 1471 Battle of Barnet. Rare instances of the French-like spelling "qui sera sera" continue to appear up to the present (Hartman 2013: 67-68).
  10. ^ Hartman (2013:69)
  11. ^ Foster (1884:69)
  12. ^ Einstein (1902:98)
  13. ^ Hartman (2013:70–71)
  14. ^ The tragical history of dr. Faustus, Full books.
  15. ^ "Search results for "che sarà, sarà" - Wiktionary". En.wiktionary.org. Retrieved 28 April 2021.
  16. ^ Wright, Daniel. “Let Them Be: Dickens's Stupid Politics.” Dickens Studies Annual, vol. 46, 2015, pp. 339–356. JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/44372260. Accessed 4 July 2020.
  17. ^ Hartman (2013:51-52)
  18. ^ "Anecdotes" (n.d.)
  19. ^ Pomerance (2001)
  20. ^ Pomerance says "Written one night after they saw The Barefoot Contessa, in which [the character played by] Rossano Brazzi says near the end, 'Che sera sera' [sic]. Livingston jotted down the words in the dark and they 'knocked off the song' afterwards. Two weeks later the call from Hitchcock came through. [Conversation with Livingston, September 18, 1995.]"
  21. ^ Hartman (2013:79–80)
  22. ^ "Doris Day - Que Sera Sera "The Man Who Knew Too Much" | Hitchcock Presents". May 13, 2019. Archived from the original on 2021-11-17 – via YouTube.
  23. ^ Curly B (8 February 2014). "Que Sera Sera". YouTube. Archived from the original on 2021-11-17. Retrieved 27 October 2017.
  24. ^ "Que Será, Será (Whatever Will Be, Will Be) by Doris Day". SongFacts.com. Retrieved 12 October 2023.
  25. ^ "Que Será, Será lyrics". Octoberfest Songs. Retrieved 27 December 2017.
  26. ^ "Credits // My Neighbors the Yamadas // Nausicaa.net". Nausicaa.net. Retrieved 28 April 2021.
  27. ^ . Suara Pembaruan. December 15, 1996. Archived from the original on January 31, 1997.
  28. ^ Kelly, Jon (July 2, 2012). "How did football fans come to adopt Seven Nation Army?". BBC News.
  29. ^ Culpepper, Chuck (April 17, 2010). "After Portsmouth's Collapse, Fans Enjoy Final Surprise". The New York Times – via NYTimes.com.
  30. ^ The Listener vol.95 p.566
  31. ^ Myers, Kevin (5 June 1989). "Rome's the ticket as Irish win again". The Irish Times. p. 1. Retrieved 1 March 2021.
  32. ^ Hepworth, David (15 April 2017). "This week's best radio: Mark Radcliffe salutes football fan singalongs". The Guardian. Retrieved 1 March 2021.
  33. ^ a b Eder, Bruce, , VH1, archived from the original on October 22, 2012.
  34. ^ a b O'Donnell, Creswell & Mathieson (2010:228)
  35. ^ Feature Item, AU: Pop archives.
  36. ^ , AU: Pop archives, archived from the original on 2006-08-22, retrieved 2006-11-08.
  37. ^ McFarlane (1999)
  38. ^ McGrath (1978)
  39. ^ Griffen-Foley (2010:266)
  40. ^ "Jay-Gee Acquires" (1965)
  41. ^ Hilder (1966:266)
  42. ^ "Thorpe Gets Aussie Award" (1966)
  43. ^ Cashmere, Paul (16 November 2006), Normie Rowe Records New Don Walker Song, Undercover, retrieved 8 August 2012.
  44. ^ "Que Sera, Sera : Mary Hopkin", Billboard, pp. 62, 71, 27 June 1970.
  45. ^ "Search for "PEOPLE IN NEED CHARITY"". Irish Charts. Irish Recorded Music Association. Retrieved 9 March 2021.; Cunningham, Michael (14 October 1989). "Talking to Terence". The Irish Times. p. 31. Retrieved 1 March 2021.; "2422/066: Maxi, Terence and Gerry Ryan". RTÉ Archives. 5 July 2012. Retrieved 1 March 2021.
  46. ^ "Jo Leemans - Het Belgisch Pop & Rock Archief". Houbi.com. Retrieved 27 October 2017.
  47. ^ "The Lee Kings - Que Sera, Sera". www.svenskpophistoria.se. Retrieved 2022-07-13.
  48. ^ "Que Sera, Sera" (in Swedish). Svensk mediedatabas. Retrieved 17 July 2011.
  49. ^ Nyman, Jake (2005). Suomi soi 4: Suuri suomalainen listakirja (in Finnish) (1st ed.). Helsinki: Tammi. p. 156. ISBN 951-31-2503-3.
  50. ^ "The Lee Kings - Stop The Music (LP)". www.svenskpophistoria.se. Retrieved 2022-07-13.
  51. ^ "Stop The Music (LP)" (in Swedish). Svensk mediedatabas. Retrieved 17 July 2011.
  52. ^ V, Sriram (2019-05-15). "Doris Day sang 'Que Sera Sera' – and so did Telugu star Bhanumathi". Scroll.in. Retrieved 2020-10-11.

Bibliography edit

  • , Art Daily (Online), n.d., archived from the original on 2007-07-13
  • Einstein, Lewis (1902), The Italian Renaissance in England, New York: Burt Franklin
  • Foster, J. J. (1884), "The Founder of the Russell Family", The Antiquary, 10: 69–71
  • Griffen-Foley, Bridget (2010), Changing Stations: The Story of Australian Commercial Radio, Sydney: UNSW Press
  • Gunston, Bill, ed. (2001), Aviation Year by Year, London: Dorling Kindersley
  • Hartman, Lee (2013), "Que Sera Sera: The English Roots of a Pseudo-Spanish Proverb", Proverbium, 30: 51–104
  • Hilder, George (9 April 1966), "Sydney", Billboard, p. 52
  • "Hot 100", Billboard, p. 20, 14 September 1963
  • "Jay-Gee Acquires", Billboard, p. 4, 11 December 1965
  • Leigh, Spencer (19 October 2001), "Obituary: Jay Livingston", The Independent
  • McFarlane, Ian (1999), Encyclopedia of Australian Rock & Pop, Sydney: Allen & Unwin
  • McGrath, Noel (1978), Australian Encyclopedia of Rock, Coolah, NSW: Outback Press
  • O'Donnell, John; Creswell, Toby; Mathieson, Craig (2010), The 100 Best Australian Albums, Richmond, Victoria (Australia): Hardie Grant
  • Pomerance, Murray (2001), "The Future's Not Ours To See: Song, Singer, Labyrinth in Hitchcock's The Man Who Knew Too Much", in Wojcik, Pamela Robertson; Knight, Arthur (eds.), Soundtrack Available: Essays on Film and Popular Music, Durham, N.C.: Duke University Press, pp. 53–73
  • Roberts, David (2006), British Hit Singles & Albums (19th ed.), London: Guinness World Records, ISBN 1-904994-10-5
  • "Thorpe Gets Aussie Award", Billboard, p. 66, 13 August 1966
  • Whitburn, Joel (1987), The Billboard Book of Top 40 Hits (3rd ed.), New York: Billboard Publications, ISBN 0-8230-7520-6

External links edit

  • Day, Doris (1956), "Que Sera, Sera", The Man Who Knew Too Much, Youtube.
  • Rowe, Normie (1965), "Que Sera, Sera", Live TV performance of his covered version, Youtube.

sera, sera, whatever, will, will, sera, sera, redirects, here, other, uses, sera, song, written, team, livingston, evans, that, first, published, 1955, doris, introduced, alfred, hitchcock, film, knew, much, 1956, singing, their, onscreen, kidnapped, three, ve. Que Sera Sera redirects here For other uses see Que sera Que Sera Sera Whatever Will Be Will Be a is a song written by the team of Jay Livingston and Ray Evans that was first published in 1955 4 Doris Day introduced it in the Alfred Hitchcock film The Man Who Knew Too Much 1956 5 singing it as a cue to their onscreen kidnapped son 4 The three verses of the song progress through the life of the narrator from childhood through young adulthood and falling in love to parenthood and each asks What will I be or What lies ahead The chorus repeats the answer What will be will be Que Sera Sera Whatever Will Be Will Be Doris Day performing the song in the 1956 film The Man Who Knew Too Much Single by Doris DayB side I ve Gotta Sing Away These Blues ReleasedMay 21 1956Recorded1956GenrePopular musicLength2 03LabelColumbiaComposer s Jay LivingstonLyricist s Ray EvansDoris Day singles chronology We ll Love Again 1956 Que Sera Sera Whatever Will Be Will Be 1956 Julie 1956 Day s recording of the song for Columbia Records made it to number two on the Billboard Top 100 chart 6 and number one in the UK Singles Chart 4 It came to be known as Day s signature song The song in The Man Who Knew Too Much received the 1956 Academy Award for Best Original Song It was the third Oscar in this category for Livingston and Evans who previously won in 1948 and 1950 4 In 2004 it finished at number 48 in AFI s 100 Years 100 Songs survey of top tunes in American cinema In 2012 the 1956 recording by Doris Day on Columbia Records was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame 7 It was a number one hit in Australia for pop singer Normie Rowe in September 1965 The song popularized the title expression que sera sera as an English language phrase indicating cheerful fatalism though its use in English dates back to at least the 16th century Contrary to popular perception the phrase is not Spanish in origin in Spanish it would be lo que sera sera and is ungrammatical in that language 3 It was evidently formed by a word for word mistranslation of English What will be will be 8 Contents 1 Title phrase 2 In film and television 3 As football chant 4 1964 version 5 Normie Rowe version 6 Other notable versions 7 References 7 1 Notes 7 2 Footnotes 7 3 Bibliography 8 External linksTitle phrase editThe popularity of the song has led to curiosity about the origins of the title saying que sera sera and the identity of its language Both the Spanish like spelling used by Livingston and Evans and an Italian like form che sara sara are first documented in the 16th century as an English heraldic motto 9 The Spanish form appears on a brass plaque in the Church of St Nicholas Thames Ditton Surrey dated 1559 10 The Italian form was first adopted as a family motto by either John Russell 1st Earl of Bedford or his son Francis Russell 2nd Earl of Bedford It is said by some sources to have been adopted by the elder Russell after his experience at the Battle of Pavia 1525 and to be engraved on his tomb 1555 N S 11 12 The 2nd Earl s adoption of the motto is commemorated in a manuscript dated 1582 13 Their successors Earls and later Dukes of Bedford Sixth Creation as well as other aristocratic families continued to use the motto Soon after its adoption as a heraldic motto it appeared in Christopher Marlowe s play Doctor Faustus written ca 1590 published 1604 whose text 14 Act 1 Scene 1 contains a line with the archaic Italian spelling Che sera sera What will be shall be 15 Early in the 17th century the saying begins to appear in the speech and thoughts of fictional characters as a spontaneous expression of a fatalistic attitude The phrase in its English form is used in the novel Hard Times by Charles Dickens first published in 1854 16 The saying is always in an English speaking context and it has no history in Spanish Italian or French in fact the saying is ungrammatical in all three of these Romance languages 17 It is however grammatical in Portuguese in poetic contexts It is composed of Spanish or Italian words superimposed on English syntax It was evidently formed by a word for word mistranslation of English What will be will be merging the free relative pronoun what that which with the interrogative what 8 Livingston and Evans had some knowledge of Spanish and early in their career they worked together as musicians on cruise ships to the Caribbean and South America Composer Jay Livingston had seen the 1954 Hollywood film The Barefoot Contessa in which a fictional Italian family has the motto Che sara sara carved in stone at their ancestral mansion He immediately wrote it down as a possible song title and he and lyricist Ray Evans later gave it a Spanish spelling because there are so many Spanish speaking people in the world 18 19 20 In modern times thanks to the popularity of the song and its many translations the phrase has been adopted in countries around the world to name a variety of entities including books movies restaurants vacation rentals airplanes and race horses 21 In film and television editThe song originally appeared in the Alfred Hitchcock film The Man Who Knew Too Much where it appears diegetically and serves an important role in the film s plot In the film Day plays a retired popular singer Jo Conway McKenna who along with her husband played by Jimmy Stewart and son becomes embroiled in a plot to assassinate a foreign prime minister After foiling the assassination attempt Jo and her husband are invited by the prime minister to the embassy where they believe their young son is being held by the conspirators Jo sits at a piano and plays Que Sera Sera singing loudly in the hope of reaching her son Upon hearing his mother play the familiar song her son whistles along allowing her husband to find and rescue him just before he was to be murdered by the conspirators to the assassination attempt 22 Que Sera Sera came to be considered Doris Day s signature song and she went on to sing it in later films and TV appearances In 1960 s Please Don t Eat the Daisies she sings a snippet of the song to her co star David Niven who plays her husband 23 In the 1966 film The Glass Bottom Boat she sings a snippet accompanied by Arthur Godfrey on ukulele From 1968 to 1973 she sang a rerecorded version as the theme song for her sitcom The Doris Day Show 24 25 The 1999 Studio Ghibli film My Neighbors the Yamadas features a Japanese cover of the song toward the end of the film Director Isao Takahata wrote the translation for the lyrics with an arrangement by Neko Saitou 26 Versions of the song have appeared on a number of film and television soundtracks often juxtaposed with dark or disastrous events to create an effect of black comedy For example in The Simpsons episode Bart s Comet the song is sung by the citizens of Springfield in anticipation of an impending comet strike that will wipe out the town and kill them all In an episode of The Muppet Show starring Vincent Price Shakey Sanchez a pink purple red and purple haired Muppet sings the song after Behemoth eats him and sings I ve Got You Under My Skin Previously the song was featured over the opening and the ending credits of Heathers a dark teen comedy dealing with murder and suicide The version over the opening credits is performed by Syd Straw and the version over the ending credits is performed by Sly and the Family Stone In Gilmore Girls the song appeared in a Season 2 episode as a musical cue to juxtapose Lorelai falling through their termite ridden porch In 2009 the song appeared in a climactic scene in Mary and Max as Mary is about to commit suicide In 1956 the song was covered by The Lennon Sisters on The Lawrence Welk Show Although it was just another number in the show at the time during recent years the song has since gained millions of views on YouTube and is now regarded as a very notable version of the song On December 21 1996 it was covered by the Bina Vokalia Children s Choir under the direction of Pranadjaja on Dendang Buah Hati concert 27 This song was mentioned in the 2008 Filipino movie My Only U The song also plays during the intro of the first and second season of the 2022 series From The song was used in several trailers and TV spots for Evil Dead Rise As football chant edit Que Sera Sera has been adapted as a popular celebratory football chant especially in England 28 failed verification typically with the lyrics Que sera sera Whatever will be will be We re going to Wembley Que sera sera This would be sung by fans following a victory that progresses their favoured team to the next round of a competition that will ultimately lead them to Wembley Stadium typically the FA Cup the finals of which have been held in Wembley since 1923 29 Manchester United fans sang it before and during the 1976 FA Cup Final 30 Although the song became more commonly used to associate a good cup run Everton fans used it in 1963 to hail their soon to be crowned League Champions using the phrase win the League instead of Wembley Wembley may be sung with either melisma on the first syllable or a schwa epenthesis often respelled Wemberley Other venues than Wembley may be substituted as appropriate as when Republic of Ireland fans sang We re going to Italy when qualifying for the 1990 World Cup 31 or when fans of Millwall about to exit the 2016 17 FA Cup self deprecatingly sang We re going to Shrewsbury their unglamorous next League One fixture 32 1964 version edit Whatever Will Be Will Be Que Sera Sera Song by Doris Dayfrom the album With a Smile and a SongReleasedOctober 19 1964RecordedJuly 1964GenreChildren s musicLabelColumbiaProducer s Allen Stanton In 1964 Day re recorded the song for her 1964 children s album With a Smile and a Song This version featured Jimmy Joyce and the Children s Chorus recorded in July 1964 and issued by Columbia Records three months later as the eighth track on the album This version was produced by Allen Stanton and was arranged and conducted by Allyn Ferguson Normie Rowe version edit Que Sera Sera Whatever Will Be Will Be nbsp Single by Normie Rowe and the PlayboysB side Shakin All Over ReleasedSeptember 1965GenrePopLabelSunshineComposer s Ray EvansLyricist s Jay LivingstonProducer s Pat AultonNormie Rowe and the Playboys singles chronology I Confess 1965 Que Sera Sera Whatever Will Be Will Be 1965 Tell Him I m Not Home 1965 Australian pop singer Normie Rowe s 1965 recording of Que Sera Sera which was produced by Pat Aulton on the Sunshine Record label Sunshine QK 1103 was the biggest hit of his career the biggest Australian rock n roll hit of 1965 33 and is reputed to be the biggest selling Australian single of the 1960s 34 The song was done in the style of Louie Louie and the manner of Hang On Sloopy 33 and given a Merseybeat treatment in the manner of The Beatles Twist amp Shout and was backed by Rowe s band The Playboys clarification needed It was paired with a version of the Johnny Kidd amp The Pirates classic Shakin All Over and the single became a double sided No 1 hit in most capitals 1 Sydney 1 Melbourne 1 Brisbane 1 Adelaide and Perth 35 36 in September 1965 charting for 28 weeks and selling in unprecedented numbers with Rock historian Ian McFarlane reporting sales of 80 000 copies 34 37 while 1970s encyclopedist Noel McGrath claimed sales of 100 000 38 Rowe scored another first in October 1965 when Que Sera Sera became his third hit single in the Melbourne Top 40 simultaneously In 1965 Rowe received a gold record for Que Sera Sera at Sydney s Chevron Hotel 39 In December 1965 the master of Rowe s version was purchased by Jay Gee Records for release in the United States 40 In April 1966 Rowe received a second gold record for the sales of Que Sera Sera 41 In August 1966 Rowe won Radio 5KA s annual best male vocal award for Que Sera Sera 42 In 2006 Rowe released a newly recorded version which was released by ABC via iTunes and later adding the whole digital mix with a radio mix and a dance mix 43 Other notable versions editIn the decades since the song s original release Que Sera Sera has been covered by dozens of artists A 1969 cover sung by Mary Hopkin and produced by Paul McCartney reached number 77 on the Billboard Hot 100 and number 7 on the Adult Contemporary chart 44 A live version by Shakin Stevens was featured on The Shakin Stevens EP which reached No 2 in the UK Charts during the 1982 Christmas holidays The studio version of the song is featured on his album Give Me Your Heart Tonight from the same year In 1989 a comedy version recorded by Terence John Creedon in aid of the RTE People in Need Telethon reached number 2 in the Irish Singles Chart 45 As a result of the song s immediate popularity following the release of The Man Who Knew Too Much versions were soon written in other languages An early example was a Dutch version by Jo Leemans which reached the Belgian charts in December 1956 46 Versions of the song have also been recorded in Danish French Mandarin Spanish Japanese and Swedish among other languages These in turn have led some non English speakers to adopt the saying que sera sera 3 In 1965 Swedish rock band Lenne and the Lee Kings recorded the song 47 Upon release as a single during the summer of that year record label Gazell coupled it with the Titus Turner song Sticks and Stones on the B side 48 Although it failed to chart in native Sweden it reached number 38 in Finland in August 1965 49 Both sides of the single were included on their 1966 album Stop The Music 50 51 In India the song was first adapted in the Tamil language film Aaravalli 1957 Later in 1965 the original version was sung by Bhanumathi in the Telugu language film Thodu Needa with minor changes in the lyrics 52 A Japanese version is featured in the Ghibli Studio animation film My Neighbors the Yamadas released in 1999 In 2021 The Pixies recorded a new version of the song for the television horror series From The song was played in a minor key giving it a very different mood from other renditions References editNotes edit Que Sera Sera Whatever Will Be Will Be is how the title is given in the song s official sheet music 1 but it has been rendered in various ways in other sources The order of the main title and parenthetical may be swapped as when the song was nominated for the Academy Award as Whatever Will Be Will Be Que Sera Sera 2 It may also be referred to as simply Que Sera Sera or Whatever Will Be Will Be The title sequence of The Man Who Knew Too Much gives the title as Whatever Will Be Rarely the title is rendered with diacritics as Que Sera Sera 3 Footnotes edit Front cover of Livingston amp Evans sheet music Archived from the original on November 16 2018 The 29th Academy Awards 1957 Oscars org Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences a b c Hartman 2013 a b c d Roberts 2006 135 Leigh 2001 Whitburn 1987 Grammy Hall Of Fame Hall of Fame Artists Grammy Awards Retrieved December 5 2023 a b Hartman 2013 56 59 The Italian like and Spanish like forms are preceded in history by a unique French like form spelled quy serra serra which appears as a marginal gloss to and contemporary with a poem written shortly after the 1471 Battle of Barnet Rare instances of the French like spelling qui sera sera continue to appear up to the present Hartman 2013 67 68 Hartman 2013 69 Foster 1884 69 Einstein 1902 98 Hartman 2013 70 71 The tragical history of dr Faustus Full books Search results for che sara sara Wiktionary En wiktionary org Retrieved 28 April 2021 Wright Daniel Let Them Be Dickens s Stupid Politics Dickens Studies Annual vol 46 2015 pp 339 356 JSTOR www jstor org stable 44372260 Accessed 4 July 2020 Hartman 2013 51 52 Anecdotes n d Pomerance 2001 Pomerance says Written one night after they saw The Barefoot Contessa in which the character played by Rossano Brazzi says near the end Che sera sera sic Livingston jotted down the words in the dark and they knocked off the song afterwards Two weeks later the call from Hitchcock came through Conversation with Livingston September 18 1995 Hartman 2013 79 80 Doris Day Que Sera Sera The Man Who Knew Too Much Hitchcock Presents May 13 2019 Archived from the original on 2021 11 17 via YouTube Curly B 8 February 2014 Que Sera Sera YouTube Archived from the original on 2021 11 17 Retrieved 27 October 2017 Que Sera Sera Whatever Will Be Will Be by Doris Day SongFacts com Retrieved 12 October 2023 Que Sera Sera lyrics Octoberfest Songs Retrieved 27 December 2017 Credits My Neighbors the Yamadas Nausicaa net Nausicaa net Retrieved 28 April 2021 Paket Spesial Menyambut Hari Ibu Suara Pembaruan December 15 1996 Archived from the original on January 31 1997 Kelly Jon July 2 2012 How did football fans come to adopt Seven Nation Army BBC News Culpepper Chuck April 17 2010 After Portsmouth s Collapse Fans Enjoy Final Surprise The New York Times via NYTimes com The Listener vol 95 p 566 Myers Kevin 5 June 1989 Rome s the ticket as Irish win again The Irish Times p 1 Retrieved 1 March 2021 Hepworth David 15 April 2017 This week s best radio Mark Radcliffe salutes football fan singalongs The Guardian Retrieved 1 March 2021 a b Eder Bruce Normie Rowe VH1 archived from the original on October 22 2012 a b O Donnell Creswell amp Mathieson 2010 228 Feature Item AU Pop archives Normie Rowe amp the playboys Que Sera Sera AU Pop archives archived from the original on 2006 08 22 retrieved 2006 11 08 McFarlane 1999 McGrath 1978 Griffen Foley 2010 266 Jay Gee Acquires 1965 Hilder 1966 266 Thorpe Gets Aussie Award 1966 Cashmere Paul 16 November 2006 Normie Rowe Records New Don Walker Song Undercover retrieved 8 August 2012 Que Sera Sera Mary Hopkin Billboard pp 62 71 27 June 1970 Search for PEOPLE IN NEED CHARITY Irish Charts Irish Recorded Music Association Retrieved 9 March 2021 Cunningham Michael 14 October 1989 Talking to Terence The Irish Times p 31 Retrieved 1 March 2021 2422 066 Maxi Terence and Gerry Ryan RTE Archives 5 July 2012 Retrieved 1 March 2021 Jo Leemans Het Belgisch Pop amp Rock Archief Houbi com Retrieved 27 October 2017 The Lee Kings Que Sera Sera www svenskpophistoria se Retrieved 2022 07 13 Que Sera Sera in Swedish Svensk mediedatabas Retrieved 17 July 2011 Nyman Jake 2005 Suomi soi 4 Suuri suomalainen listakirja in Finnish 1st ed Helsinki Tammi p 156 ISBN 951 31 2503 3 The Lee Kings Stop The Music LP www svenskpophistoria se Retrieved 2022 07 13 Stop The Music LP in Swedish Svensk mediedatabas Retrieved 17 July 2011 V Sriram 2019 05 15 Doris Day sang Que Sera Sera and so did Telugu star Bhanumathi Scroll in Retrieved 2020 10 11 Bibliography edit Anecdotes Ray Evans 1915 2007 Art Daily Online n d archived from the original on 2007 07 13 Einstein Lewis 1902 The Italian Renaissance in England New York Burt Franklin Foster J J 1884 The Founder of the Russell Family The Antiquary 10 69 71 Griffen Foley Bridget 2010 Changing Stations The Story of Australian Commercial Radio Sydney UNSW Press Gunston Bill ed 2001 Aviation Year by Year London Dorling Kindersley Hartman Lee 2013 Que Sera Sera The English Roots of a Pseudo Spanish Proverb Proverbium 30 51 104 Hilder George 9 April 1966 Sydney Billboard p 52 Hot 100 Billboard p 20 14 September 1963 Jay Gee Acquires Billboard p 4 11 December 1965 Leigh Spencer 19 October 2001 Obituary Jay Livingston The Independent McFarlane Ian 1999 Encyclopedia of Australian Rock amp Pop Sydney Allen amp Unwin McGrath Noel 1978 Australian Encyclopedia of Rock Coolah NSW Outback Press O Donnell John Creswell Toby Mathieson Craig 2010 The 100 Best Australian Albums Richmond Victoria Australia Hardie Grant Pomerance Murray 2001 The Future s Not Ours To See Song Singer Labyrinth in Hitchcock s The Man Who Knew Too Much in Wojcik Pamela Robertson Knight Arthur eds Soundtrack Available Essays on Film and Popular Music Durham N C Duke University Press pp 53 73 Roberts David 2006 British Hit Singles amp Albums 19th ed London Guinness World Records ISBN 1 904994 10 5 Thorpe Gets Aussie Award Billboard p 66 13 August 1966 Whitburn Joel 1987 The Billboard Book of Top 40 Hits 3rd ed New York Billboard Publications ISBN 0 8230 7520 6External links editDay Doris 1956 Que Sera Sera The Man Who Knew Too Much Youtube Rowe Normie 1965 Que Sera Sera Live TV performance of his covered version Youtube Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Que Sera Sera Whatever Will Be Will Be amp oldid 1221223354, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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