:16:12
	- You're doing a play.
- Local drama group.
:16:16
	Northern Books.
:16:19
	No, it hasn't come in yet.
:16:20
	As soon as it does.
:16:23
	You too, Marge.
:16:27
	Small town. You have to
make your own fun.
:16:30
	If you don't make it yourself,
it ain't fun, it's entertainment.
:16:35
	See my point?
Northern Books.
:16:38
	What can I do for you?
:16:39
	I need a typewriter.
:16:41
	We got them.
:16:42
	No, Henry James was the novelist.
Frank James was a criminal.
:16:47
	Yeah, you came
to the right place.
:16:49
	Jessie James was the brother.
:16:52
	Of the novelist, that's right.
:16:55
	That's all right, Susie.
See you tomorrow, Susie.
:17:00
	- I'll rent this one.
- Why not buy it? Forty bucks.
:17:05
	I had one, but they lost it.
:17:08
	Buy this, I'll get it
spruced up good as new.
:17:11
	Better than new,
because it has history.
:17:13
	Other one had history too.
I wrote my play on it.
:17:16
	- What play is that?
- You never heard of it.
:17:18
	What's it called?
:17:20
	Anguish.
:17:22
	Anguish by Joseph Turner White?
:17:24
	You're Joseph Turner White?
:17:27
	- That's right.
- Afternoon, Annie.
:17:29
	Girls, this man wrote this play.
:17:33
	That a fact?
:17:34
	- Is it a good play?
- Yes, Maude. It is a very good play.
:17:37
	A very good play, indeed.
:17:41
	- What's he doing here?
- What're you doing here?
:17:43
	- Writing the movie.
- You're writing the movie?
:17:46
	- Yeah
- What's it about?
:17:48
	It's about the quest for purity.
:17:54
	Scene blah, blah, blah.
They meet.
:17:56
	'Sister, I've just come from a fire.
There're things I want to think out. '