The Pajama Party (1931) Poster

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8/10
The Japanese Pagoda
krorie12 June 2006
This is one of several (at least l7) Hal Roach comedy shorts from 1931-1932 featuring two of the brightest and funniest comediennes ever to grace the silver screen, Thelma Todd and Zasu Pitts. Hal Roach had a gift for finding the best and a skill for making them shine on the big screen. Thelma Todd and Zasu Pitts worked well together with Zasu playing the dipstick with almost as many humorous mannerisms as Stan Laurel. Todd at times played it straight for Zasu but more often she was Zasu's equal in the comedy department. Todd was also a beautiful blond, never a dumb one, always clever and crafty. Like the later Lucille Ball, Thelma Todd combined beauty with being a clown.

"The Pajama Party" features music of the early 30's, sort of a holdover still from the Jazz Age. The short also highlights the antics of two of Hal Roach's most creative support players, Billy Gilbert as the polite and correct Butler--can anyone imagine Billy Gilbert as being restrained?--and Charlie Hall as an inebriated pest who attempts to latch on to Zasu. Both often appeared in Hal Roach's Laurel and Hardy series.

Thelma and Zasu have boyfriends who are part of a jazz band that plays on radio and at private affairs. The boys have a booking for an all-night party for the idle rich in Long Beach. The girls decide to drive down, do some relaxing, then hook up with the boyfriends the next day for some swimming. Thelma at the wheel tries to avoid an oncoming car, ending up in a lake. The lady that ran them off the road invites them to come to her house across the road and dry off. The lady asks,"Please tell me you're not hurt." Thelma replies, "Who says we're not hurt? I can't find one of my legs." All sorts of fun is in store for the viewer once Thelma and Zasu get inside the mansion where a party is just beginning. Thelma makes the mistake of telling Zasu to do as the other guests do leading to all kinds of shenanigans. One of the most hilarious routines occurs when Thelma and Zasu confront the French Maid, especially when the French maid begins to undress Zasu for her bath. Zasu exclaims, "Well, I always took my own clothes off in Joplin."

Most of the humor is as fresh today as it was in 1931 with a few exceptions. Putting a turtle down Zasu's dress is sophomoric by today's standards, though it must have been a laugh riot back then. Popular music has changed tremendously since 1931, but those who still love Jazz Age band music with matching vocal harmony will enjoy it. All in all, a pleasing Hal Roach short. Though not up to Laurel and Hardy standards, it is still well above most of the comedy shorts of the period.

Postscript: The pickup line used in the short,"Would you like to see the Japanese pagoda?" didn't work then; so be hesitant about using it today.
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Decent Zasu/Todd Short
Michael_Elliott20 February 2011
Pajama Party, The (1931)

** 1/2 (out of 4)

Decent Zasu/Todd short has the girls driving out to the country where they're going to meet their boyfriends the next day but a society woman accidentally drives them off the road. Feeling bad the woman invites the friends back out to her place where she's throwing a party and of course chaos breaks out. This certainly isn't the greatest Hal Roach short out there but there are enough decent laughs to make it worth sitting through if you're a fan of the series. The majority of the comedy comes from Zasu not knowing how to act around rich people and Todd taking several falls. One of the highlights is when Todd goes to get into the shower but when she walks in she ends up falling down because it's actually a bath. Todd gets a couple good moments but for the most part this film belongs to Zasu as most of the comedy centers around her. This includes a funny bit where her boyfriend puts a baby turtle in her shirt, which makes her do some funny stuff including pushing people into a pool. Another nice gag has her seeing a "game" where one man bends over why everyone comes up and kicks him. Zasu then starts doing this to whoever she sees bending over.
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4/10
Thelma and Zasu crash high society
planktonrules13 July 2020
Zasu and Thelma (Zasu Pitts and Thelma Todd) are going to meet their boyfriends and go swimming after the boys are done at work. However, on the way to the lake, a rich lady runs their car off the road and into the lake. She doesn't just leave them there but invites the two to her house to shower and dry themselves. After this, they join her for a swanky party and Zasu ends up making a fool of herself. And, they meet the boyfriends at this party.

Like too many of the Pitts/Todd films, there isn't a ton of plot here and the situations the ladies find themselves in are mundane. No big laughs and a film that is easy to skip.
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5/10
Zasu gets a kick out of society.
mark.waltz28 January 2016
Warning: Spoilers
What happens when two working class girls (Zasu Pitts and Thelma Todd) are invited to a high society shindig brings on chaos in this amusing, if rather tame, Hal Roach comedy short. Obviously, they don't fit in, but because some society dame accidentally ran them off the road, they get a last-minute invitation to join the party which is filled with its share of snobs, eccentrics and just plain weirdos. To make matters worse, their boyfriends are there, playing in the band, and aghast of seeing them there on the arms of other men as they were to join them the next day for a private date. The feisty Thelma gets little to do here as Zasu's flibberty character gets the one big gag after seeing one of the guests getting their birthday spankings. Unsure of how to act at a society party, she reminds herself to do what the others do. So every time Zasu sees one of the guests or butlers bending over, what does she do? Kick them in the tush, of course! There's little conflict and only a few good lines, culminating in them being asked to leave the party where Zasu ends up accidentally pushing most of the guests fully dressed into the pool. Another funny scene has Zasu encountering a French speaking maid who sputters at her in French then laughs at her for the silly undergarment she's wearing. Zasu's reaction and response is worth the 20 minutes as are a couple of the victim's reactions to her sudden kicks. But ultimately, nothing really goes on, making this feel rushed together rather than fully plotted in the normal way Hal Roach put these comedy shorts together.
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