The Pajama Game: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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[[File:ThePajamaGame1954_6124.jpg|frame]]
[[File:ThePajamaGame1954_6124.jpg|frame]]


{{quote| ''The Pajama Game is the game I'm in,<br />
{{quote|''The Pajama Game is the game I'm in,
And I'm proud to be in The Pajama Game. I love it!<br />
And I'm proud to be in The Pajama Game. I love it!
I can hardly wait<br />
I can hardly wait
To wake and get to work at eight.<br />
To wake and get to work at eight.
Nothing's quite the same as The Pajama Game!'' }}
Nothing's quite the same as The Pajama Game!'' }}


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* [[Shirtless Scene]]: Sid gets one for the [[Fashion Show]].
* [[Shirtless Scene]]: Sid gets one for the [[Fashion Show]].
* [["Shut Up" Kiss]]: [[Invoked]] in "Small Talk".
* [["Shut Up" Kiss]]: [[Invoked]] in "Small Talk".
{{quote| Why don't you stop all this small talk?<br />
{{quote|Why don't you stop all this small talk?
I've got something better for your lips to do }}
I've got something better for your lips to do }}
* [[Solo Duet]]: "Hey There". Sid sings a duet with a recording of himself on a dictaphone.
* [[Solo Duet]]: "Hey There". Sid sings a duet with a recording of himself on a dictaphone.

Revision as of 22:19, 7 August 2014

The Pajama Game is the game I'm in,
And I'm proud to be in The Pajama Game. I love it!
I can hardly wait
To wake and get to work at eight.
Nothing's quite the same as The Pajama Game!

The Pajama Game is a Broadway Musical scored by Jerry Ross and Richard Adler and based on the novel 7½ Cents, by Richard Bissell. Workers at the Sleep-Tite pajama factory are demanding a seven-and-a-half cent salary increase. Caught in the middle of this labor/management dispute are Sid Sorokin and Katherine "Babe" Williams, Star-Crossed Lovers stuck on opposite sides of the conflict. Can their relationship survive the negotiations?

The original production ran from 1954-1956, winning three Tony Awards[1] and there have been two revivals since: one in 1973, and another in 2006 (which won another two Tony Awards[2] and was nominated for an additional seven). A film adaptation was released in 1957, starring all of the original Broadway cast except for Janis Paige (Babe), who was replaced by Doris Day.


The Pajama Game contains examples of:

Why don't you stop all this small talk?
I've got something better for your lips to do

  • Solo Duet: "Hey There". Sid sings a duet with a recording of himself on a dictaphone.
  • Star-Crossed Lovers: Sid is the factory's superintendent and Babe is the head of the union's Grievance Committee, placing the two sweethearts at opposite ends of the quickly-escalating conflict between labor and management.
  • Title Drop: Right in the opening. "The Pajama Game is the game I'm in, and I'm proud to be in The Pajama Game."
  • William Telling: Heinsy tries to do this in his knife-throwing act. While visibly drunk.
  • Writers Cannot Do Math: In "Seven And A Half Cents," the characters tally up how much money they'd earn off of their 7.5-cent raise in the long run. They get it wrong.
  1. Best Musical, Best Featured Actress in a Musical (Carol Haney), and Best Choreographer (Bob Fosse)
  2. Best Revival of a Musical and Best Choreography