Made In Dagenham File

In the hot summer of 1968, 187 women machinists at Ford's Dagenham plant did something unimaginable. They didn't just walk out—they took on the largest corporation in the world, the male-dominated unions, and the British government.

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When the company, Ford Motors, refused to upgrade their status to "skilled" (Grade C), the machinists stopped their machines, sparked a strike, and quickly elevated their goal to a broader societal demand: . Why Made in Dagenham Still Matters In the hot summer of 1968, 187 women

Made in Dagenham: The Feisty Tale of the Women Who Changed History When the company, Ford Motors, refused to upgrade

With incredible performances from a stellar cast—including Miranda Richardson as the witty Barbara Castle and Bob Hoskins as the supportive union man Albert—it is a film that pulls out all the stops to entertain while educating, proving that well-behaved women rarely make history.

While the film is a charming, often funny, and uplifting "feel-good" movie, it carries a heavy, relevant message that resonates today.

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