Since the death of her husband, Abby McClure (Doris Day) has had to be mother, father and breadwinner to her three sons, including taking over the operation of the family lumber store business.
Her sister, Maxine Scott (Pat Carroll), has tried to be a matchmaker for Abby, much to her exasperation as Abby sees most eligible men as those with whom she would rather not associate.
Abby changes her mind when Maxine reminds her of a casual acquaintance, widowed chemical engineer Jake Iverson (Brian Keith), who she has not seen or thought about in six or seven years.
Abby and Jake’s new-found relationship does not start off well, but when a serious courtship does begin, their respective children – most specifically Abby’s oldest, late teen Flip McClure (John Findlater), and Jake’s only offspring, late teen Stacey Iverson (Barbara Hershey) – are their biggest obstacles as Flip and Stacey don’t want their role of the male and female head of their respective household replaced.
When Abby and Jake eventually get married, one other pressure is how they will live while both their too-small houses wait to be sold.
Alice Ghostley appears as Abby’s housekeeper and Elaine Devry as Jake’s shapely next-door neighbour.
The similarities to Yours, Mine and Ours are many, but there are many laughs here, and this was the best comedy Doris Day starred in for a long time.
Abby McClure
Doris Day
Jake Iverson
Brian Keith
Maxine Scott
Pat Carroll
Stacey Iverson
Barbara Hershey
Herbie Fleck
George Carlin
Molly
Alice Ghostley
Flip McClure
John Findlater
Cleo
Elaine Devry
Harry Scott
Herb Voland
Jo Jo
Jamie Farr
Bud Young
Milton Frome
Jason McClure
Richard Steele
Mitch McClure
Jimmy Bracken
Director
Howard Morris