
Peak
10
Weeks
14
Score
1,973
Chart Year
1963
This was just the second Top 10 pop hit that was written and performed by the same woman, following "Gee Whiz (Look At His Eyes)" by Carla Thomas. Doris Troy, born Doris Higginson in New York City, was an R&B singer/songwriter who first recorded as Doris Payne. When she was 16 years old, she got a job at the famous Apollo Theater, which featured many legendary black performers. In a 1970 interview with Blues & Soul magazine, Troy explained: "I had the uniform and a flashlight and everything, and when I saw them stars up there performing I said to myself 'that's where I want to be someday,' and I started to spend my off-duty hours in this restaurant in New York where out-of-work artists and composers hung out. I'd written 'Just One Look' and needed to make a demo. Well the demo got made, and it was the demo that was released. I was performing at the time, but I'd never looked on myself as ready for making hit records. I'd had a previous release out on Everest under the name of Doris Payne, but it didn't mean a thing. We'd taken the demo to Atlantic to sell the song, and as soon as they heard it they flipped and said they'd rush release it at once. I was on the road at the time touring with Chuck Jackson who was big then, and since I had no time to go in the studio and re-record it they issued the record straight off the demo-dub I'd had made. Wasn't that a bitch? Well, the record took off so damn fast that it sold like crazy, and it was really lucky for me to be touring at the same time since Atlantic were able to arrange all sorts of promotional stints and interviews to tie in with the local radio stations where I was visiting." Troy wrote the song "How About That," which hit #33 for Dee Clark in 1960. She worked as a session singer, appearing on recordings by Solomon Burke, Ben E. King, Dee Dee Warwick and The Drifters. "Just One Look" was her only American hit, but "Whatcha Gonna Do About It" nicked the UK charts at #37 in 1964. She moved to England in 1969 and signed with The Beatles' Apple Records, where she release the Doris Troy album in 1970 before becoming a casualty of the rampant mismanagement at Apple. She resumed work as a session singer, and performed on The Rolling Stones' "You Can't Always Get What You Want" and also tracks by Tom Jones and Englebert Humperdinck. She also sang backup on the 1973 Pink Floyd album Dark Side of the Moon. Troy died in 2004 at age 67. In the UK, this was a #2 hit for The Hollies. It has also been covered by Lulu, and Linda Ronstadt, Mark Farner and Anne Murray. Troy's version of this song appeared in a popular Pepsi commercial starring supermodel Cindy Crawford. It also appeared in a spot for DirectTV. This appeared in the films Mermaids (1990), The Flamingo Kid (1984) and Buster (1988).
Just one look and I fell so hard In love with you, oh oh, oh oh I found out how good it feels To have your love, oh oh, oh oh Say you will, will be mine Forever and always, oh oh, oh oh Just one look and I knew That you were my only one Oh oh oh oh! I thought I was dreamin' But I was wrong, yeah, yeah, yeah Oh, but-a, I'm gonna keep on schemin' Till I can a-make you, make you my own! So you see, I really care Without you I'm nothin', oh oh, oh oh Just one look and I know I'll get you someday, oh oh, oh oh Just one look, that's all it took Just one look, that's all it took Just one look, that's all it took
| Week | Chart Date | Position | Points |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Jun 8, 1963 | 100 | 26 |
| 2 | Jun 15, 1963 | 72 | 54 |
| 3 | Jun 22, 1963 | 66 | 60 |
| 4 | Jun 29, 1963 | 49 | 77 |
| 5 | Jul 6, 1963 | 28 | 98 |
| 6 | Jul 13, 1963 | 20 | 106 |
| 7 | Jul 20, 1963 | 15 | 111 |
| 8 | Jul 27, 1963 | 10 | 116 |
| 9 | Aug 3, 1963 | 10 | 116 |
| 10 | Aug 10, 1963 | 12 | 114 |
| 11 | Aug 17, 1963 | 19 | 107 |
| 12 | Aug 24, 1963 | 36 | 90 |
| 13 | Aug 31, 1963 | 47 | 79 |
| 14 | Sep 7, 1963 | 58 | 68 |