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"The Bachelor Party" is a 1953 television play by Paddy Chayefsky which was adapted by Chayefsky for a 1957 film. The play premiered to critical acclaim. The play premiered to critical acclaim. [ 3 ]
His TV play The Bachelor Party was bought by United Artists and The Catered Affair was acquired by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Gore Vidal was hired to write the screenplay by MGM, while Chayefsky wrote the Bachelor Party. Catered Affair did well in Europe but poorly in U.S. theaters, and was not a success. [29]
The Bachelor Party; G. Gideon (play) L. The Latent Heterosexual; M. Marty (The Philco Television Playhouse) P. The Passion of Josef D. T. The Tenth Man (Chayefsky play)
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The office plays host to a bridal shower for Phyllis Lapin while Bob Vance's bachelor party is held in the warehouse. Though Michael Scott is aware that the company's sexual harassment policy forbids strippers in the workplace, Todd Packer convinces him that it is okay to hire a stripper for the bachelor party if he also gets a male stripper for the bridal shower.
Warning: This article contains major spoilers for "Bridget Jones: Mad About The Boy." The fourth and final Bridget Jones film is an adaptation of the 2013 novel of the same name.
A man invited to a bachelor party says he plans to ignore the groom's request to not drink "in solidarity" with him because he wants to "let loose."
Three were made without Lancaster, all of which lost money: The Bachelor Party (1957), from another TV play by Chayefsky, and directed by Delbert Mann; Take a Giant Step (1959), about a black student; and Summer of the Seventeenth Doll (1960), from an Australian play, shot on location in Australia and Britain.