:09:02
	- Yes. She's got to meetyou.
- No, I'd be imposing on her.
:09:05
	I'd be just another tongue-tied fan.
:09:07
	There isn't another like you.
There couldn't be.
:09:11
	If I'd known... Some other time.
Looking like this.
:09:13
	You look just fine.
By the way, what's your name?
:09:17
	Eve. Eve Harrington.
:09:22
	- Good evening, Gus.
- Good evening, Mrs Richards.
:09:26
	- Good night.
- Good night, Gus.
:09:47
	You can breathe it, can'tyou?
:09:50
	Like some magic perfume.
:10:01
	Wait right here. Don't run away.
:10:03
	"If the South had won,
you could write plays about the North."
:10:06
	- Hi.
- Hello!
:10:08
	"I don't think
you can rightly say we lost the war."
:10:11
	"We was more starved out, you might say."
:10:14
	"I don't understand all these plays
about love-starved Southern women."
:10:18
	"Love is one thing we were
never starved for in the South."
:10:21
	Margo's interview with
a reporter from the South.
:10:24
	When it gets printed, they're
gonna fire on Gettysburg again.
:10:27
	- It was Fort Sumter they fired on.
- I never played Fort Sumter.
:10:32
	Honeychild had a point.
Lloyd, honey, be a playwright with guts.
:10:36
	Write me one about a nice, normal woman
who just shoots her husband.
:10:41
	- You need new girdles.
- Buy some.
:10:43
	- Same size?
- Of course.
:10:45
	I find these wisecracks
increasingly less funny.
:10:48
	- Aged in Woodhappens to be a fine play.
- That's my Ioyal little woman.
:10:52
	The critics thought so.
The audiences think so.
:10:55
	Packed houses, tickets
four months in advance.
:10:58
	I can't see that Lloyd's plays
have hurtyou any.