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Ginger or Mary Ann?

Death is not an option!

  • Ginger

    Votes: 22 29.3%
  • Mary Ann

    Votes: 53 70.7%

  • Total voters
    75
I'd have to take urbandefault's side on this. Darrin drank the way he did because that's just what guys did back then, at least on T.V.

Bingo. I doubt that Darrin's alcohol consumption was supposed to be at all excessive when the show is produced. The show was just reflecting the era, when every well-equipped suburban home had its own bar and Madison Avenue types like Darrin drank that way as a matter of course.

Watch the original 1950s version of "Invasion of the Body Snatchers" and notice just how much casual drinking is going on in the early scenes when everything is still "normal." You apparently couldn't drop in on a neighbor without being offered a stiff drink and then another drink "for the road." All of which is taken for granted by movie and its characters. It was just part of everyday life.

Darrin Stevens would have felt right at home.

As would Don Draper and the other characters on Mad Men. That doesn't change the fact that Darin is a dick to his wife, and that she should leave him (I would if I were her.)
 
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Wow, I never thought about 99 versus Emma Peel. That's like an irresistible force meeting an irresistible force.

Yvonne Craig versus Julie Newmar is a tough one, too. I'd give the slight edge to Yvonne Craig there.
Now I'm imagining Marta the insane Orion dancer vs. Eleen, who just a very short time after giving birth, knocks McCoy out with a rock and climbs down a mountain...

Since somebody upthread introduced animated characters, how about Wilma vs. Betty?
 
Tony and Jeannie didn't get married until the last season of the show, so, no, Jeannie was, by and large, not a housewife.
 
Mary or Rhoda or Phyllis or Sue Ann?

I like them all and don't have a strong preference, but it used to bug me when I was younger how on the MTM Show everybody acted like Rhoda was such an undesirable schlub, because you could tell she was really pretty. When she got her own show they stopped trying to de-glamorize her and let Brenda be the schlub.
 
Wow, I never thought about 99 versus Emma Peel. That's like an irresistible force meeting an irresistible force.

So you couldn't say which one is more a-Peel-ing, then?

Since somebody upthread introduced animated characters, how about Wilma vs. Betty?

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I check spoonerisms now and then just 'cause I do.

"Minger or Gary-Anne?"

I'm not sure which is the least complementary name for a female.
 
Mary, but Dick Van Dyke-era Mary. GOD she was hot then!!

Oh, and, Wilma. Betty forever carries the stigma of Rosie O'Donnel in my mind.
 
Tony and Jeannie didn't get married until the last season of the show, so, no, Jeannie was, by and large, not a housewife.

Not strictly, no. But more or less that's the role she served in Tony's life.

I disagree. Jeannie was more of a live-in girlfriend, a distinction which was significant in the 1960s. I Dream was able to play some of its comedy off of the women's lib movement in ways that Bewitched never possibly could.
 
Mary, but Dick Van Dyke-era Mary. GOD she was hot then!!

I was tempted to reply to that question with "Laura Petrie" myself.


Tony and Jeannie didn't get married until the last season of the show, so, no, Jeannie was, by and large, not a housewife.

Not strictly, no. But more or less that's the role she served in Tony's life.

I disagree. Jeannie was more of a live-in girlfriend, a distinction which was significant in the 1960s. I Dream was able to play some of its comedy off of the women's lib movement in ways that Bewitched never possibly could.

Then there's Julie Newmar as Rhoda the robot in My Living Doll. There, the protagonist -- despite being a noted womanizer -- was panicked by what his neighbors would think of him having a gorgeous woman living with him out of wedlock, so he insisted that his sister move in with them as a chaperone. Although there was nothing remotely liberated about Rhoda; she was a completely passive, obedient mechanism, and it was clearly shown (insofar as it could be made clear with '60s TV censorship) that she had no nudity taboo and would unhesitatingly take off her clothes -- or do anything else -- if ordered to. From the episodes I've seen (only the first two or three, since it wasn't a very good show), it wasn't clear to me at all why the womanizing lead was so reluctant to take advantage of that, other than that broadcast standards required it.

But if we include Newmar's Rhoda in the competition, I don't think Jeannie or Samantha would fare very well.
 
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