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Two guayaberas seen from the back, showing the alforza pleats and the Western-style yoke. The guayabera (/ ɡ w aɪ. ə ˈ b ɛr ə /), also known as camisa de Yucatán (Yucatán shirt) in Mexico, is a men's summer shirt, worn outside the trousers, distinguished by two columns of closely sewn pleats running the length of the front and back of the shirt.
The film was released on VHS by MCA/Universal Home Video in 1996. On November 24, 2009, Universal Pictures Home Entertainment released the film in made-on-demand DVD-R format as part of the Universal Vault Series. [12] In 2017, Universal released it for the first time on DVD. [13]
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They ran a Free Store, [17] [18] (where not only the goods, but the management roles were free), a Free Medical Clinic, and even a short-lived Free Bank. [16] The Diggers evolved into a group known as the Free Family, which established chains of communes around the Pacific Northwest and Southwest .
Gold Diggers of 1935 is an American Warner Bros. musical film directed and choreographed by Busby Berkeley, his directorial debut. It stars Dick Powell , Adolphe Menjou , Gloria Stuart , and Alice Brady , and features Hugh Herbert , Glenda Farrell , Frank McHugh , Joseph Cawthorn , Grant Mitchell , Dorothy Dare , and Winifred Shaw .
Diggers is a coming-of-age film directed by Katherine Dieckmann. [1] It portrays four working-class friends who work as clam diggers in West Islip, on the South Shore of Long Island, New York, in 1976. The movie was written by Ken Marino, who also stars. [2] His father worked as a clam digger, in Moriches, New York. [3]
Gold Diggers of 1933 was originally to be called High Life, and George Brent was an early casting idea for the role played by Warren William. Early drafts of the screenplay focused on the sensual elements of the story, and subsequent drafts gradually began adding more of the narrative taking place behind the scenes of the show.
"The Bromeliad" was used as the title for the collected trilogy in the US, as well as some UK editions. It refers to the story told by Grimma in Diggers that some species of small frogs live their entire lives inside the flowers of epiphytic bromeliad plants, which is a metaphor used for the Nomes