The Owl and the Pussycat
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1:10:01
- It's not that interesting.
- I'll be the judge of that.

1:10:04
This guy, you know,
some kind of businessman about...

1:10:07
...50 years old
with this big office on Madison Avenue...

1:10:10
...that's got this hallway
with a marble floor.

1:10:12
- And?
- Once in a while he'd give me $50...

1:10:15
...to sit in a chair
at the other end of the hall.

1:10:17
- Just to sit in a chair?
- In my raincoat.

1:10:22
You just sat there
in a chair in your raincoat?

1:10:24
Yes, with my hands tied behind me.
1:10:26
I see. What was he doing?
1:10:31
He was in his end of the hall
on his hands and knees in his smock.

1:10:35
And?
1:10:37
I'd just have to yell, "bombs away"
while he rolled hard-boiled eggs at me.

1:10:40
Say that again.
1:10:42
I said, "I had to yell, 'bombs away'
while he rolled hard-boiled eggs at me."

1:10:45
- He rolled eggs at you?
- Hard-boiled. I told you it wasn't much.

1:10:48
- Doris, that's disgusting.
- Why?

1:10:51
Because it's... I can't find the word. It's...
1:11:04
Where are we anyway?
1:11:15
Where are we?
1:11:19
Who lives here?
1:11:21
What is this place? Whose place is this?
1:11:24
This is the house
of Mr. And Mrs. Weyderhaus.

1:11:27
They are the father and mother
of Miss Ann Weyderhaus.

1:11:30
Miss Weyderhaus is a concert pianist.
1:11:33
She is also my fiancée.
1:11:37
- You're getting married?
- We went to school together.

1:11:40
We decided we'd be married
as soon as I sold my first novel.

1:11:45
When's that?
1:11:46
At the rate I'm going,
late in the next century.

1:11:49
Why do you say that?
1:11:50
Who am I to argue with every publisher
in New York?

1:11:53
- Felix, what do they know?
- Something I don't, apparently.

1:11:57
You're awful hot, you know that?
How do you feel?


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