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Flashback: Chicago s history is punctuated with devastating fires
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The Big Takeover: Peter Stampfel s 20th Century: A Roundered Lesson in (Mostly American) Musical History
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Movies on TV this week: My Fair Lady ; Marry Poppins
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Region: All
MSRP: $21.99
The Production: 4.5/5
Labor versus management in both business and pleasure clashes most delightfully in George Abbott and Stanley Donenâs
The Pajama Game, a sensational and most faithful cinematic transcription to the 1954 Broadway musical hit. With most of the Broadway company brought to Hollywood to reprise their stage performances on the screen abetted by the inspired casting of Doris Day in the leading role,
The Pajama Game is one of the most satisfying and entertaining screen musicals ever made.
New pajama factory superintendent Sid Sorokin (John Raitt) is eager to make good at his new job, but he clashes almost immediately with the head of the unionâs grievance committee Babe Williams (Doris Day). Though she fights their mutual attraction, she eventually gives in to love, only to find herself on opposite sides of a union struggle with her boy friend to add 7 ½ cents to employeesâ wages. Penny-pinching pajama company president
McMath was given the nickname Ginger, which was based on a cousin’s failed attempts to pronounce Virginia. Her parents divorced when she was still an infant, and she was raised by her mother, Lela Owens McMath. In 1920 Lela married John Rogers, and Ginger took his last name. She began her career, which was carefully orchestrated by her mother, performing in local shows in Texas while she was still a child. She then appeared with Eddie Foy’s vaudeville troupe before winning a Charleston contest at age 15. That success ultimately led her to the Broadway stage in 1929, when she performed in