Marjorie
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Support Our WorkMarjorie was a classic electro-mechanical pinball machine released by D. Gottlieb & Co. during the golden age of mechanical pinball in the mid-1950s. The machine exemplified the elegant simplicity and artistic design that characterized pinball machines of this era, featuring hand-drawn artwork and mechanical gameplay elements that would become hallmarks of 1950s pinball design.
The playfield layout followed the standard configuration of the period, with pop bumpers, kickout holes, and scoring lanes arranged to create engaging gameplay while maintaining mechanical reliability. Like many Gottlieb machines of this era, Marjorie likely featured the company's distinctive scoring mechanism and chime sounds that created the signature audioscape of 1950s pinball.
While not as widely remembered as some other Gottlieb titles from the same period, Marjorie represents an important piece of pinball history as part of the broader lineup of games that helped establish Gottlieb's reputation for quality and reliability in the coin-operated amusement industry. The machine was produced during a time when pinball was reaching peak popularity in American culture, appearing in drugstores, diners, and arcades across the country.