:48:00
The result of maintaining
a minority opinion...
:48:03
is a resounding success
for psychiatry.
:48:05
Who says women
are just good for sewing?
:48:09
Now it's on to City Hall...
:48:10
where the town's
newest celebrities...
:48:12
are given the key to the city.
:48:14
We're honored to present...
:48:16
this key
to New York City to you.
:48:21
Jimmy Walker
did want to be here...
:48:24
and sing "Leonard the Lizard,"
but he was just too busy.
:48:32
After city hall,
Eudora Fletcher...
:48:34
the beautiful genius
who cured Zelig...
:48:36
of his science-defying
condition...
:48:38
is honored by fellow scientists
at New York's Waldorf-Astoria.
:48:42
Present are luminaries
from all over the world...
:48:45
not just in the field
of psychiatry...
:48:48
but physics, biology,
mathematics, and you name it.
:48:51
Here she is exchanging theories
with Nils Andersen...
:48:54
the father
of modern blood disease.
:48:57
Later in the week,
Dr. Fletcher is again honored...
:48:59
as she gets to christen
her first ship.
:49:02
Quite a success story
for a little girl...
:49:05
from the backwoods.
:49:11
I'm speaking to you...
:49:12
from the home of
Mrs. Catherine Fletcher.
:49:15
She's the mother
of Dr. Eudora Fletcher...
:49:18
the famous psychiatrist
in the news these days.
:49:21
I'll be asking Mrs. Fletcher--
to begin with...
:49:25
to tell us something
about what it's like...
:49:28
to raise a medical genius.
:49:31
I might ask you about
the many sacrifices...
:49:34
You've made to put your daughter
through medical school.
:49:37
Speak right into
the microphones, please.
:49:40
Sacrifices, we had none.
:49:42
John was a stockbroker.
We had plenty of money...
:49:45
and I came from a wealthy
Philadelphia family.
:49:48
I'm sure that your daughter
always wanted to be a doctor...
:49:52
ever since she could remember.
:49:54
I don't think so.
:49:56
I always thought she
wanted to be a flier...
:49:59
Iike her sister Meryl,
and raise a family...