My Fair Lady
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:50:02
A year ago I 'adn't a relation in the world...
:50:05
...except one or two
who wouldn't speak to me.

:50:07
Now I've 50. Not a decent week's wages
amongst the lot of them.

:50:11
I have to live for others now,
not for meself. Middle-class morality.

:50:16
Come on, Alfie, in a few hours
we have to be at the church.

:50:20
- Church?
- Yeah, church.

:50:23
The deepest cut of all.
:50:25
Why do you think I'm dressed up
like a ruddy pallbearer?

:50:29
Your stepmother wants to marry me.
:50:31
Now I'm respectable,
she wants to be respectable.

:50:34
If that's the way you feel,
why don't you give the money back?

:50:37
That's the tragedy of it, Eliza.
:50:39
It's easy to say chuck it...
:50:42
...but I 'aven't the nerve.
:50:44
We're all intimidated.
That's what we are, intimidated.

:50:46
Bought up. Yeah. That's what I am.
:50:50
That's what your precious professor's
brought me to.

:50:52
Not my precious professor.
:50:55
Oh, sent you back, 'as he?
:50:58
First he shoves me in the middle-class,
then he chucks you out for me to support.

:51:04
That's all part of his plan...
:51:06
...but you double-cross him.
:51:09
Don't you come back home to me.
Don't you take tuppence from me.

:51:13
You stand on your own two feet.
You're a lady now, you can do it.

:51:17
Yeah, that's right, Eliza.
You're a lady now.

:51:20
It's getting awfully cold in that taxi.
:51:22
Here, Eliza, would you like to come
and see me turned off this morning?

:51:26
St. George's, Hanover Square, 10:00.
:51:29
I wouldn't advise it, but you're welcome.
:51:31
No, thank you, Dad.
:51:33
Are you all finished here, Eliza?
:51:36
Yes, Freddy, I'm all finished here.
:51:43
Good luck, Dad.
:51:44
Thank you, Eliza.

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