An Unmarried Woman
prev.
play.
mark.
next.

:53:03
or me—with Erica?
:53:05
Did you fall out of love with Erica?
:53:07
Wait a minute. I didn't
fall out of love with you.

:53:09
L— I love you.
:53:11
I mean, all right,
it-it's different now, but l—

:53:15
I love you.
I can'tjust erase all those years.

:53:18
- I'll always love you.
- I was your hooker, Martin.

:53:21
I was a bright,
high-priced, classy hooker.

:53:26
Upper East Side
by way of Vassar hooker...

:53:29
but I was your hooker.
:53:32
You have a lousy shrink.
:53:35
How long do you think
Marcia's gonna last?

:53:39
Well, I'm gonna marry her.
:53:42
The awesome sanctity of marriage.
:53:45
Listen, if you want to sit up here with me
and have a conversation, that's great.

:53:48
But if you want to have an argument,
I think you'd better leave.

:53:51
- I want to have an argument!
- You're flippin'.

:53:57
Call Patti.
:54:20
I never had any self-esteem.
That was the trouble.

:54:21
I never had any self-esteem.
That was the trouble.

:54:23
I suppose I thought looks would do it.
:54:26
Well, I'll tell you.
It is a nice feeling to like yourself.

:54:29
Bette Davis
always had self-esteem.

:54:31
- Oh.
- So did Katharine Hepburn.

:54:33
- Mm-hmm.
- Terrific woman.

:54:35
- Look at this.
- Oh.

:54:38
- Beautiful.
- It's strange, isn't it?

:54:40
I mean, where are all the wonderful women
that were in the movies in the old days?

:54:44
Bette Davis, Katharine Hepburn,
Joan Crawford.

:54:48
- Where are all the women?
- Well, we've got, uh...

:54:51
- Jane Fonda, Barbra Streisand.
- Oh, please. It's not the same thing.

:54:55
I'd hate to see
Fonda and Streisand...

:54:57
- in a toe-to-toe with Hepburn and Davis.
- Right.

:54:59
- There's no contest.
- Different times.


prev.
next.