:32:04
Well, if it isn't old Fagin himself.
:32:07
Gallagher and myself j ust came over
to do a little work on a story.
:32:11
Baloney.
:32:12
Joe, bring me a special.
:32:14
- Isn't it swell about Stew's marriage?
- Is it?
:32:21
Well, when are you quitting?
:32:23
Quitting?
I'm not thinking of quitting.
:32:26
I take it you don't have to work
for a living anymore, Mr. Schuyler.
:32:30
Now, get this, Conroy.
My name's Smith.
:32:32
Always was Smith.
Always gonna be Smith.
:32:36
- Is that so?
- That's so.
:32:38
Anne Schuyler's in the blue book.
You're not even in the phone book.
:32:41
Think that one over, sucker.
:32:43
That doesn't make any difference
if they love each other.
:32:46
He's like a giraffe
marrying a monkey.
:32:50
Listen, you'll never be anything
but j ust the reporter...
:32:53
...that married
the Schuylers' millions.
:32:56
Stew Smith is dead and buried.
:32:58
From now on, you'll be j ust
Anne Schuyler's husband.
:33:01
A rich wife's magnolia.
:33:03
If you can smoke that without
getting sick, you're welcome to it.
:33:06
- But that's perfectly ridiculous.
- Let me do the talking.
:33:09
Now, you get this, Conroy.
:33:10
Anne Schuyler
has a lot of dough, all right.
:33:13
I married her, all right.
:33:14
But her dough and me?
No connection.
:33:18
- Just a bird in a gilded cage.
- A what?
:33:21
You heard me.
A bird in a gilded cage.
:33:25
You've been reading
a lot of cheap tabloids.
:33:27
Anne and myself are gonna
move downtown in a nice little flat.
:33:30
We're gonna forget all about
this social stuff...
:33:33
...and be known as Mr. And Mrs. Stew
Smith. Now, how do you like that?
:33:36
- And live on your salary, I suppose?
- Live on my salary, yeah.
:33:40
That is, until I finish writing my play.
:33:42
- What play?
- My play.
:33:44
The one about
the Siberian bloodhound?
:33:46
Siberian bloodhound?
No, it's been all rewritten.
:33:50
- It's laid in Araby now.
- Araby?
:33:52
- Sure.
- Araby, my...
:33:56
Well, I'm sorry to see
a good reporter go blooey.