"Spring is just a song that sings of days to be to say that you'll be coming home with roses dipped in moonlight" "When the spring has filled the world with melody my heart goes dancing in the summer moonlight." "I heard a robbing call today" "I saw a little child at play" "I watched a daisy gently sway and knew that spring was far away..." "Teach me how to sing music with a modern rhythm, let me swing" "Mister Mendelssohn, swing" "S'Music is a thing that's no good without that rhythm sweet and hot, fast and slow" "So get yourself a little dash of holy ho, and swing it, Mr Mendelssohn, swing it high" "Hey, swing it low" "and swing it, Mr Mendelssohn, swing." "and swing it, Mr. Mendelssohn, swing it Mr Felix Mendelssohn, a rodie doc a rodie doc a rodie da, In my singin school," "I am one of many." "Oh, its just so cool." "Mr. Mendelssohn's had his day, Benny Goodman's here to stay." "... roses dipped in moonlight." "And when the spring has filled the world with melody my heart goes dancing in the summer moonlight." "Judy Bellaire, you've corrupted this school for the last time." "But I can't help it, Miss Colvin." "Honestly, I can't." "I don't know why, but when I hear music it does something to me." "And when I sing it comes out ta-ta-ta-ta..." "That will do." "I'm sorry, Judy, but you will have to go." "Oh, no, Miss Colvin, please, I'll be good..." "No!" "I've made up my mind." "You must pack your things and catch the 4 o'clock train." "Well, here we are again, Miss." "Olga do this, Olga do that, how many hands they think I got?" "Well..." "Hello, Olga." "I'm home." "Suspended again?" "Not suspended, expelled." "Good, you got a diploma?" "No, you don't understand." "They threw me out." "I'm home to stay." "Oh." "Look, toots, what about this $2.85?" "I gotta get going." "I've been here twenty minutes already." "Oh, just a minute..." "You been here 20 minutes?" "I been here 11 years." "I stopped yelling' for my money ten years ago." "That's your hard luck." "I want my dough." "Now fork it over or I'll make trouble for you." "You'll make trouble for me?" "How do you like that?" "In Russia I was beaten by a wolfhound." "My mother was lost in a snowstorm." "My father was sent to Siberia." "Your mother and father are yelling their heads off." "Your sister's taking her singing lessons." "I got exactly four squabs and I can't find out how many's for dinner." "And you're gonna make trouble for me?" "Where's mother?" "In there." "Hey, what about the..." "Here, here, how much is it?" "$2.85." "Here's $3.00." "Keep the change." "Your cap's on crooked." "Hm, smarty." "Darling..." "This is what I've been waiting for all these years." "We're utterly mad, you know." "Oh, but it's a lovely madness." "But you're forgetting your husband, your children." "They don't matter, nothing matters, I'm going to be happy." "I lost everything in life because..." "Could I speak to you for just a minute, please?" "Oh, hello, darling." "Having a holiday?" "How lovely." "All my life I've been a slave, fettered, bound by convention." "Afraid to really live..." "This will only take a minute..." "Shhh." "But you're not afraid now." "No, you've set me free." "I'll never be afraid again." "I think you better take me in your arms and kiss me." "No, Daddy doesn't want him to." "Look, see?" "He's written the Duchess leads Sir Jeffrey to the davenport and sits down beside him." "There's no kiss there." "The child's right." "Oh, don't you remember that you have a monkey bite you on the davenport?" "Here, Mommy, this will only take a minute, please." "Oh, darling, I do wish you'd stop growing." "Look at your hair." "Poor little ugly duckling." "Well, well, Mother loves you anyway." "Oh, Jerrold, you haven't met my baby." "Judy, this is Mr Hope, my new leading man." "How do you do." "Your mother has been my lucky star, Judy." "Oh, Jerrold, now really..." "Run along, darling, we're rehearsing." "I think we better take it from..." ""I've lost everything in life..."" "and, Jerrold, do try to be a little more... vital." "Oh, dear." "But you see, it needs fire, volatility, depths..." "Yes." "You've set me free." "I'll never be afraid again." "Maybe we are mad, but it's a lovely madness." "Oh, Mommy, please listen for just a minute, please..." "How many is for dinner?" "I wish you wouldn't always try to pin me down." "Just ask 'round, ask 'round..." "Well, I'm afraid I can't stay." "I have a date with my tailor." "Good, we only have four squabs." "Mommy, please listen..." "Darling, run along, run along... and bother your father." "Olga, I must see how this scene looks." "Sit in there with Jerrold and try those lines, you know..." ""You've set me free..." Go on, try it." "Go on, Jerrold, please." "All my life I been a slave." "fettered... bound by conwentions, afraid to really live." "But you're not afraid now." "Not exactly." "You've set me free." "I'll never be afraid again." "Ugh..." "Olga, this isn't what I want." "I said strawberry jam." "You said blackberry, but I gave you the raspberry." "Olga!" "Your cap is on crooked." "Daddy!" "Daddy!" "Get out!" "Get out!" "All righty, so I'm fired again." "Well, that doesn't impress me." "I've been fired so many times it's second nature to me." "Can't you do anything right?" "You don't even listen, your mind's a million miles away." "You break up every train of thought." "I dictate "Here at the pool I grow violets and daphnes"" "and what do you write?" ""Here at the pool I grow violently daffy"!" "Well, that's what you are, daffy!" "The whole house is daffy." "Hello, Daddy, dear." "Hello." "Judy!" "Why, what are you doing at home?" "Well... that's just what I wanted to tell you." "Well, not just now, dear, not just now." "Oh, please, Daddy, it's very important." "I'm worried." "Worried, you?" "Ha!" "You can't have any worries because your old Dad's got them all." "I can't get a last scene for your mother's play." "I can't get actors who know how to act." "I can't even find a secretary who understands English." "Now look at that." "I can't even find a whole handkerchief." "But, Daddy, if you'll just let me tell you." "I've got to tell somebody and Mommy won't listen." "All right, bunch of sweetness, get it off your chest." "Well..." "Well..." "Well, it's this way..." "Hello, Hillary." "Hello, Jack." "Come right up." "Been waiting for you." "I left as soon as I could get away." "Hello, youngster." "Listen, Hillary, this play of yours is going to break me." "Oh, you've been saying that for 15 years." "Psst." "Psst." "No!" "Why?" "Olga!" "My bicarbonate of soda." "Coming up." "Daddy, now may I tell you something?" "Jack, about that second act act cut..." "But, Daddy, aren't you gonna listen to me?" "Have a heart, baby, go and tell it to your sister." "After you." "You know, I find that when I start to write..." "The one I love..." "Breathe deep." "is coming along some day..." "Throw the chest out more." "And do not wiggle the tongue." "And I'll have none..." "Stop!" "Oh, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, but for weeks I have been listening from the kitchen" "I can stand it no longer." "Ricky, what do you mean?" "Madam, if you'll pardon me, the fault lies with your teaching." "What?" "A chef criticizing my teaching?" "Me, an artist who has sung for all the world." "I know, and you were wonderful, but you make her sing a love song like a little toy doll all wound up and full of sawdust." "I do the best I can." "Is it my fault if she has no fire, no feeling?" "Yes, she has fire and feeling but you don't know how to bring it out." "What rudeness!" "Ricky, I..." "Just a minute." "Let me show you, Madam." "Would you please, that's it, thank you very much." "Now, look." "You should sing a love song from the heart, shouldn't you?" "And sing it as if you really meant it." "Like this, see." "The one I love is coming along someday" "But I'll have none except the one I love..." "You see?" "Now, take a deep breath." "No, no, a deep breath, like this." "La..." "No, no, no." "Let that diaphragm out." "That's it." "Now, "oh", as in love..." "Oh, oh, oh..." "Oh, no, let's try it again." "Now, open the mouth, curl the lips, that's it..." "Oh, oh, oh..." "There, Jerrold, that's what I meant." "See the way he grabbed and kissed her?" "Not afraid as if he were afraid she'd bite him, not at all." "Why, Richard." "Come, come, come, come." "You can't be kissing people all over the place." "What ever does this mean?" "I was only trying to teach her how to sing a love song." "Well, goodness knows she needs it." "But don't let it hold up dinner." "Mrs Bellaire." "Pardon if I seem inquisitive, but I can't set the table until I know how many to set for." "Oh, yes, put on a fifth place." "Mr Hope is staying, after all." "What about the quails?" "Oh, that's quite all right." "He adores quails , don't you, Jerrold?" "And I'm sure you do too, Madame." "Oh, mais certainment." "Make it six places." "Oh, no, I forgot to count Mr Fleming." "Make it seven." "And, your cap..." "Four squabs into seven people." "Olga, she loves me, she loves me!" "Wonderful, I'm a new man, I can perform miracles." "You can, eh?" "Well, see if you can divide 4 squabs into seven people." "Oh, squabs, people." "Why don't you think of love?" "What am I?" "Iron?" "Who don't think about love?" "Morning, noon and night." "Especially night." "I can remember..." "Well, it was summer... the moon, the river..." "Boris was teaching me how to act." "He said I had to learn all about life and love." "Boy, did I learn." "He was strong..." "He was tender." "He had big brown eyes." "And big strong arms." "Ay, ay, ay, he had everything." "Ricky." "Judy." "Judy, darling." "What's the matter, sweetheart?" "Sweetheart, darling, what's the matter?" "I tried to tell Mommy, and Daddy and Susan but they wouldn't listen to me." "You and Olga are the only ones who care what happens to me." "Sure we do..." "You bet your life, darling." "We're all ears, now sit down here and tell us all about it." "Well, I've been expelled again." "What?" "Expelled?" "Yes, and Miss Colvin said that if I kept on the way I was going I'd come to a bad end." "Don't you worry, darling, that's what they said about me." "What did you do to make the old hen so mad?" "Yes, what?" "What did I do?" "Yes." "Well..." "Look, I'll show you what I did." "And I turned around and there was..." "More trouble." "Ay, ay, ay, ay." "Quiet, quiet, is this a madhouse?" "Yes, sir." "I mean, no, sir." "After all, it's my money that's backing this show at least you should listen to what I have to say." "Of course we should, Jack, darling." "Everyone's being very rude." "Go on, tell us what you think is wrong with Hillary's play." "Well, to begin with, take the love scene." "Olga, where are the quails?" "Oh, there weren't enough to go around, so I made spaghetti out of them." "Oh, how nice." "Go on, darling, we're listening." "All my life I've been a slave." "Fettered, bound by convention." "Tripe!" "It's not tripe." "It's the way he plays it." "He plays it beautifully." "Anyway, the trouble isn't with the acting." "It's where Sylvia steals Jerrold away from me." "The audience won't believe it." "Nor for a moment." "And why?" "Because you insisted upon Hillary's making Sylvia your sister instead of your daughter." "He had to make her my sister." "I couldn't have a daughter that old." "But she is your daughter, isn't she?" "Oh, don't evade the question." "What I think is that Miss Sylvia's song is all wrong." "It should be: "The one I love is..."" "Eat your spaghetti." "What a household." "Servants butting in, telling you how things should be done..." "Well, after all, they represent the masses." "Do you know what I mean by the masses?" "People who aren't actors." "There are dozens of them and they come in very handy at the box office." "Strangely enough, if they don't like a show... the show closes." "Molière, if you remember, used to ask the advice of his cook." "Olga." "Yes, sir." "What do you think of Mr Bellaire's play?" "Well, it depends on how I feel." "Sometimes I feel it ain't so bad." "And sometimes I feel it ain't so good." "But I don't like to say." "Speak up." "What's wrong with it." "Well, since you ask me..." "He goes to her and he says:" "Darling, we're utterly mad, you know." "Then she says:" "All my life I've been a slave." "Fettered, bound by conwentions" "Conwentions?" "Who knows what that means, anyway?" "It's ridiculous." "In the first place, people don't talk like that." "And in the second place... people don't talk like that..." "conwentions?" "Olga!" "All right, all right." "I know, my cap's on crooked." "Good heavens, what next?" "Meatballs." "Well, I hope you're satisfied." "Now, what do you want?" "I want $18.35." "The milk collector's outside." "I've only $6.50 on me." "That's all right." "I'll lend you the rest." "Let's see, now." "6.50 from 18.35..." "That makes $42.36 you owe me now." "Mrs Bellaire, Miss Colvin is on the phone." "Colvin..." "Colvin?" "Oh, that must be Armand's new milliner." "They say she's absolutely inspired." "Excuse me." "Oh, Mommy, it's not really." "Wait a minute, Mommy, please." "Just a minute." "Mommy!" "Mommy, it won't take but a minute..." "Mommy, this doesn't have anything to do with hats." "Hello, Miss Colvin, did Armand tell you that I want that new ice bag model?" "What?" "You're not?" "Then who..." "Expelled?" "Expelled?" "The idea, Judy never said a word about it." "Mommy, I tried and tried..." "and now you go and blame me." "Judy, what's the matter?" "I've been expelled from school again." "You know what I mean, canned." "What for?" "For absolutely nothing." "All I did was go..." "Teach me how to sing, music that..." "Judy!" "Oh, Daddy." "Oh, Miss Colvin, I'm humiliated." "My daughter canned." "The ignominy, the disgrace, that this should happen to me." "After the sacrifices I've made..." "The things that I've given up for my children." "All my life I've been a slave." "Fettered, bound by conwentions... conventions..." "Afraid to really live." "But you're not afraid now." "No, you've set me free." "You see, Hillary, that's where it goes wrong." "Right you are." "It's wrong." "When I want criticism from you I'll ask for it!" "Hang on to yourself, Hillary." "How can I with that Picadilly piccolo wrecking my play?" "Of course, if I'm wrecking your play, I'll withdraw at once." "Oh, you'll do nothing of the sort." "I can't play with a man who is not simpatico." "If he goes, I go." "Where are you going?" "Just out." "Darlings, I've been going through this for 15 years." "I'm not as strong as I used to be." "Old age with these tremors is creeping on me." "My face is toward the setting sun." "I find myself of late awakening in the middle of the night... and making guttural little howls." "Try it sometime." "You won't like it either." "It means just one thing." "You better get a new backer." "A young, strong man." "Big through here." "Warm through here." "And gigantic here." "Heaven help him." "Why, I really think he means it." "You think?" "Of course he means it." "We have you to thank for this." "There you go blaming Jerrold..." "You're so unreasonable." "Unreasonable?" "Stuck with 18 ham actors yelling for their guarantee?" "We're broke, we're sunk." "We're headed for the poor house." "But, Daddy, Miss Colvin!" "You go to bed and stay there!" "Olga!" "Bicarbonate of soda." "Well, but I must play." "Oh, dear somebody left the phone off the hook." "Miss me, sis?" "You know, I've been thinking about Mommy and Daddy." "So have I." "Oh, Sylvia, this family is in an awful mess, isn't it?" "What do you mean by that, Judy?" "I mean, Daddy hasn't got any money and he's cranky so he quarrels with mother and..." "Oh, Sylvia, I wish there was some way I could help out." "Don't worry your little head about that, Judy." "Who is it?" "What's going on?" "I saw you sneak up here." "Come on." "Come on, no monkey business." "Come on." "Come on." "But, Olga, I can't sleep." "You can't sleep, she can't sleep." "Your father can't sleep, I can't sleep" "I been lying in bed with my shoes in one hand and a can of bicarbonate in the other." "Just in case." "Oh, Olga, what's gonna become of us all?" "I don't know." "Gee, I wish I could do something to help." "Wish I could make some money." "Money isn't the only problem in this family." "You said it, and I can tell you his name." "Come on, back to your own room." "No, I can sleep better here." "No, you can sleep better in your own room." "Come on." "And you better get some sleep." "Somebody's gotta get some sleep in this house." "Come on, come on, come on." "I know the way to start the day just right." "Here's how to meet and greet the morning light." "No matter what occurred the day before" "I'll vow to never worry anymore." "The first thing in the morning, I brush my pearly teeth" "I slip my curly locks and smile." "My window's open wide to let the sun inside" "For I don't want to hide a smile" "The first thing in the morning I sing a happy song" "I know I can't go wrong." "Hello, my little chickadee, good morning." "What's good about it, my little chickadee?" "Why don't you get here on time so I don't have to do your work, too?" "Oh, Olga, carissima, don't be angry with Ricky." "That's better." "Olga, bicarbonate of soda." "Yessa, coming up." "He's kept me awake all night long," "I'm doing nothing but walking in my sleep..." "Olga, I'll have my breakfast upstairs." "Breakfast upstairs, yes, Miss Sylvia, right away." "Soon as I get that upstairs, someone'll want something else." "Enough to drive you mad." "What a coincidence." "Only last week I dreamed I was in a big golden bed eating caviar." "And Boris was pouring me tea." "There we were..." "Just the four of us." "Lemon and tea, Boris and me." "Ay, ay, ay..." "Ay." "Coming up." "All right, all right." "Good morning, Miss Sylvia." "I hope you slept well." "Thanks, Ricky, but I didn't sleep at all." "See?" "For you." "Thanks, but all I want is some coffee." "You must eat, you'll feel better." "You look so sad this morning." "I'm afraid I look the way I feel." "On a beautiful morning like this..." "Why, look, the sun is shining just for you." "And listen to that bird." "Maybe he has troubles in his family too, but he still sings." "And look at those hotcakes." "Even they look happy." "You win." "That's better." "You've been awfullt sweet to us." "Waiting for your salary and... lending us money." "Oh, that's nothing, I make plenty of money." "Nonsense, I know exactly what you get a month." "I mean, that you don't get." "Oh, what he don't get here don't count." "It's what he gets at the Café Nappo." "Café Nappo?" "Judy!" "Oh... he told me not to tell you, but..." "But I did." "And from now on it's a secret." "Well, now that the cat is out of the bag I might as well tell you." "You see, every night, when I finish work here I sing at the Café Nappo." "You do?" "You'll come down and hear me sometime?" "But, Ricky, I don't understand." "Why do you work here?" "He told me that, too, he tells me everything..." "Judy!" "Judy, eat your wheat cakes." "All right." "May I have some coffee, too?" "Yes." "I've been up all night rehearsing my second encore." "Second encore?" "When are you gonna sing your first?" "Oh, I haven't decided yet." "That's right, laugh, belittle me like all the rest of them." "I don't get any help, I don't get any encouragement, I don't get anything." "She's just a baby." "Yeah, well, somebody's got to save this family." "Jerrold, Jerrold, Jerrold!" "All you talk about is Jerrold!" "I don't care how he helped you in the part." "You had no right to give him those pearls." "We have to sell everything we've got." "You're a brute waking me up when I haven't closed my eyes all night." "Besides, the pearls were off color, anyway." "I've given you everything a wife could give a husband and now you do this to me." "It's too much, it's too much." "I'd like that speech better if I hadn't written it myself." "I can't stand it, our family's just going to pieces." "Listen, Ricky, are all families as crazy as ours?" "No." "Some are even worse." "Take mine, for instance." "My mother went to Italy to sing at La Scala." "She was beautiful, famous." "And what did she do?" "She married an Italian cook." "Oh, but what a cook." "Here." "Take this to your mother." "And look at me." "Four years in a conservatory of music, and what am I doing?" "Scrambling eggs for your family." "You see?" "Everybody's cuckoo." "Thanks, Ricky." "Thanks for everything." "I'm sure I don't know what's come over your father." "Mmm, coffee, smells delicious." "He's getting more unreasonable every minute." "He's been worried all night about raising money, poor darling." "Mother, don't you think you ought to get someone else to play Jerrold's part?" "Someone else, why?" "Oh, he's a rotten actor, Mommy." "Uncle Jack thinks so, too." "Judy!" "We're utterly mad, you know." "Forgetting your husband, your children." "Judy, stop that this minute." "You've been listening to your father." "Hello." "Oh, hello, Jerrold, dear." "Oh, perfectly splendid." "Run along, children." "You're looking very pretty this morning." "Both of you." "Even Judy." "So pretty." "No, no, Jerrold, I wasn't talking to you." "Jerrold!" "All right, I'll pick you up for rehearsal." "Tonight, at 8:15." "All right." "You know, Sylvia, this is very exciting." "And quite unexpected." "I'm highly honored you invited me on this little expedition." "As a matter of fact, I'm a bit breathless." "Were you surprised when I called you?" "Yes." "Frankly, I was, but then almost anything can happen in my life." "Tell me, why did you?" "Well, Jerrold, I..." "Well, I..." "Well, you know, you're a very attractive man, Jerrold..." "Oh, well..." "That's a reason, coming as it does from a beautiful woman." "I bet you say that to all the girls." "Come, Sylvia, you're not ribbing, are you?" "After all, I'm missing a rehearsal under the pretense of having a heavy cold." "And you know, your mother takes her rehearsals very seriously." "Every little bambina learns it the very first day" "Every sweet Signorina says it the very same way" "Cosi, cosa" "Cosi, cosa Cosi, cosa" "Does it mean Yes?" "No!" "Does it mean No?" "Well, yes." "And no." "Tra-la-la-la-la-la-la Cosi, cosa" "So try today and learn to say cosi, cosa." "Cosi..." "Cosa." "I'll say, that's the cook, isn't it?" "Yes, hm-hm." "Hm-hm." "You like him?" "Yes!" "Now, Enrico he'll have a surprise for you." "Oh, a big surprise." "A prima donna." "A real prima donna." "Madame..." "Why, it's Judy." "Why, so it is." "What a coincidence." "Or is this part of the plot?" "I'm tired of the noise and hurly-burly that fills the city late and early." "I long to hear the music of the used-to-be that mother nature made for me." "I want to wander where the skies are blue." "where birds are singing all the long day through the music that I love to listen to down on melody farm." "The cow bells tinkle in the early morn the bees are buzzing 'round a field of corn to tell me that another song is born down on melody farm." "The lazy river is drifting along while daffodils dance on a hill and while it's drifting composes a song to a water lily." "The morning sings a golden melody the evening brings a moonlight symphony for all the world is wrapped in harmony down on melody farm." "I'm gonna pack my bag" "I'm gonna clear my brain." "and then I'm gonna buy a one-way ticket on the fastest choo-choo train" "I'm gonna try to find a little peace of mind" "I wanna leave the noise of rivets and the horns of taxis way behind." "I want to run through the fields of the new-mown hay" "And at the close of day, let me stray where I hear the organ playing just a song at twilight when the lights are low." "I wanna go" "I wanna go, I wanna be a little country girl in calico" "The morning sings a golden melody the evening brings a moonlight symphony for all the world is wrapped in harmony down on melody farm." "Miss Sylvia!" "Wasn't she swell, aren't you proud of her?" "Yes, but how did she get here?" "Didn't you know?" "No, of course not." "Well, I'll tell you." "Judy's out here to save the family." "When Judy starts out to do anything, boy, she does it." "Chinatown, Chinatown, please." "This way, Chinatown." "Chinatown!" "Let's go to Chinatown." "We ought to go home." "Well, why not, it's a great idea." "You come, too." "No, thank you very much." "I've got business." "Bambina, you sing for me tomorrow night." "You sing for me every night." "All right." "Everybody loves you." "Thank you, Mr Vittorino." "I won't forget." "Goodbye." "Good night." "Have a good time." "Good night." "Have a good time." "I want to wander where the skies are blue." "Skies are blue." "Where birds are singing all the long day through" "All day through the music that I love to listen to" "Down on melody farm, oh, oh..." "The cow bells tinkle in the early morn" "Tling, tling the bees are buzzing 'round the field of corn" "Buzz, buzz." "To tell me that another song is born" "Down on melody farm, oh, oh..." "I'll take the fastest plane, or maybe just a train" "Perhaps I should explain that I may trust my rusty Ford" "You." "I know that life is always full of charm." "You said it, kid." "Away, way down..." "Down..." "Down..." "Down..." "Down on melody farm." "I never sang in Rigoletto, Traviatta or Lucia..." "No, and still she never, at least hardly ever" "I never sang a single thing that was anything but swing..." "Oh, she sang a new note but it was a blue note..." "It was so new..." "She has a voice for opera grand" "But still her choice is Mr Ben-ny-Good-man" "The grandest band in Dixieland" "Swing it, Jerrold." "I know that life is always full of charm..." "So full of charm..." "Away, way down..." "Down... down... down..." "D-O-W-N, down" "Not up?" "No, down." "Not high?" "No, down." "Not here?" "No, down." "What do you mean, down?" "I mean down, down, down, down" "Down, down, down, down..." "Down on melody... farm." "Oh, I beg your pardon." "I'm sorry." "Go right ahead." "There you are, Judy, than heavens you're safe." "What is the meaning of this?" "Daddy, I was a riot." "I'm pleased to present, America's Queen of Rhythm." "I thought you had a cold." "I was curing it." "Never mind him." "Where have you all been?" "For heaven's sake, Hillary, how you do bellow." "They're all here now, aren't they?" "Have you tried chamomile and a hot lemonade?" "Well, as a matter of fact, it turned out..." "Shut up!" "I ask where have you all been?" "Oh, Daddy, pretty soon you won't have to worry about anything." "I'm gonna make oodles of money." "She'll make a fortune." "Won't she, Miss Sylvia?" "Dad, she was wonderful." "Wonderful, now isn't that nice?" "What are you all talking about?" "Judy sang tonight at the Café Nappo and she made a terrific hit." "Have you lost your mind?" "Café?" "Taking a child that age to sing in a dive?" "You ought to be arrested." "But it's not a dive." "I sing there myself." "You sing there?" "Preposterous!" "Ricky was only trying to help." "Nobody asked..." "I don't agree with you at all..." "She was a sensation." "Oh, Jerrold, this is terrible." "It makes me feel as if I have failed as a mother." "Quiet, I'm handling this." "Never in my life!" "A chef trying to run my affairs." "How much do I owe you?" "No, never mind now, I'll send you a check." "Pack up your things and get out." "You're fired." "And go out by the back door." "But, Daddy..." "I'll go." "And I'll go out through the back door." "But some day I'll come back through the front door." "And as a guest." "Oh, you will?" "As a guest?" "Well, upon my word!" "All right." "Well, Hillary, I hope you're pleased with yourself, you've lost us another cook." "Daddy, there was no reason to fire him." "We were all of us only trying to help." "Sylvia, why don't you tell him how I took ten bows?" "Judy, don't be a ham." "I'm not a ham." "And I guess if Caruso started out as a plumber, I've got a chance, too." "You can't hold me down." "I'm going up, up, up!" "You bet you're going up!" "Up, up to your room and stay there." "Do you know what's going to happen to you, young lady?" "You're going to be sent to a place where there isn't any jazz." "To, to, to..." "Where isn't there any jazz?" "I'm sure I don't know, dear." "Anyway, you're going there now." "Up, up to your room." "Well, just the same, I was a riot." "Hey, where did the..." "Oh, there you are." "Well, hows about my money?" "It's 3:00 and I gotta go to sleep." "I was just leaving." "Ahhh!" "What's the matter?" "What's the matter?" "It's him!" "It's Boris!" "Diana." "Diana." "Sorry to wake you, dear." "I wasn't asleep, I was just resting my eyes." "I've tossed and tossed ever since I went to bed." "Couldn't you sleep either, darling?" "No." "Diana, something must be done about Judy." "Judy?" "Expelled from four schools." "Singing in a café." "No." "No." "Something's got to be done." "I'm going to scrape up enough money and send her away." "Away?" "Oh, where?" "Away from all this." "Oh, no." "To Europe, with Miss Jacqueline." "She's going on a tour with eight children." "She's a responsible, highly reputable woman." "Judy." "Darling." "What are you doing up?" "I couldn't sleep." "What's the matter?" "Come here, darling." "Daddy wants to send you away." "All over Europe." "Oh, Daddy, I'm not as bad as all that." "And besides, I want to..." "Listen, baby, I'm not punishing you." "I know you thought you were doing it to help us." "But it isn't really necessary and we can't have our little girl singing in a nightclub." "It's because we love you, darling." "I know, but I know it is necessary and... and I want to stay and help you..." "You're not going to argue." "You want to keep your daddy from worrying, don't you?" "You'll have a lovely time, you'll see." "Picture galleries, carhedrals..." "I've already seen a cathedral." "Stop that sniffling." "Oh, Mommy, Daddy, I can't go away now." "Please, I'd miss you all so much." "Now don't you start." "There's nothing to cry about, absolutely nothing." "You'll only be gone a little while." "You'll be back..." "Give me the handkerchief." "Remember, Judy, Miss Jacqueline is in charge of the tour and don't speak to strangers." "Here, put your passport in your pocket." "Oh, Daddy, I don't want to go to Europe." "Judy, there you are." "Why don't you hurry, Hillary?" "No use keeping the child up there." "You can only make it, but only just." "There, you hear?" "We can't make it." "Hillary, Sylvia." "Run for it, hurry." "Yes, but what if I don't make it?" "Nonsense, you must make it." "Why do you stand there, Hillary." "Darling, you must write to us everyday, postcards and letters." "Jerrold, I still think you've been taking the second act too slowly." "Please hurry, if you take my advice, you'll hurry." "Yes, we must leave." "Judy, darling, if you should go to Russia..." "Baby, darling." "Stop it, Olga." "Stop crying." "There's nothing to cry about." "We won't make it, I know." "Quite right, this way we'll never make it." "After you!" "Thanks very much." "Now, please, please be very careful." "I've copied all the descriptions from the guide books so be sure you mail them from the right places." "I will, honest I will, Judy." "Even if it is larceny." "Yeah, and here's the money for the stamps." "Now, listen, you won't forget to tell Miss Jacqueline just the way I rehearsed you." "You saw mother get hysterical and take me off the boat." "I won't." "But, Judy, aren't you scared to death?" "Me, scared?" "Oh, pooh." "Goodbye." "Goodbye." "I don't see Judy." "Oh, perhaps she's made friends with the Captain." "Oh, somebody I don't know, anyway." "Goodbye." "Have a nice time." "That's fine." "Now, leave your name and address." "Next, please." "Stop!" "Stop!" "Rico, my head is split, I go home, I feel sick." "Wait, wait, Vittorino, we've got to have talent, you must have patience." "You know you have to look through 1.000 oysters to find one pearl?" "Fine, but I am not a pearl diver, I'm a restaurant man." "Vittorino, sit down, sit down." "Next, please!" "Swing low sweet chariot comin' for to carry me home" "Swing low sweet chariot" "comin' for to carry me home." "Oh, I come from the South from way down South where the corn and the taters used to grow there's great big elegant picture shows and my old Kentucky home is a French château way down South in Dixie, swing low" "Rico, I think we got something there." "I'll say we have." "...carry me home." "Oh, I come from the South from the deep, deep South where the fields of cotton just die with blight and my pappy reads Esquire with delight while my Alabama mammy plays bridge all night way down South in Dixie." "Swing low... sweet chariot" "Come on, come on, come on, carry me home." "Oh, I come from the South" "Got the South in my mouth" "Uncle Tom's cabin's got a new routine" "Elisa crossed the ice in the limousine while Simon Legree shakes his tambourine way down South in Dixie, swing low sweet chariot swing low sweet chariot" "Listen here, you won't let me speak don't you know Swanee River is a dried up creek?" "Come on and carry me home." "La-la, La-la" "Oh-oh, oh-oh Ta-la-la-la-la-la-la-la." "Brava, brava." "Enrico, that's good stuff." "Yeah." "Come here, young lady." "Where are you from?" "I..." "I hitchhiked from Memphis, sir." "See, I bobbed up my thumb." "You did, eh?" "What's your name?" "Oh, P..." "Pearl Washington." "And I'm one of twins." "Yeah, Emma Ruby passed on, but my mammy didn't mind so much 'cause we got twelve others." "All twins." "Is that so?" "My mammy's from Alabama, and my pappy's from Louisianna." "They are, are they?" "Well, miss, you're going back to your mammy and your pappy and the twelve twins." "Rico, what are you doing?" "Can't you see it's Judy?" "Miss Judy!" "Oh, Ricky, aren't you glad to see me?" "Hey, I thought your father sent you to Europe." "He did, he did, but I changed his mind for him." "Only he doesn't know it yet." "He doesn't?" "I'm gonna phone him before you get me into more trouble." "Wait, Ricky, if you tell them I'm here they'll just send me off again." "I wanna stay and be in your show." "Oh, no." "If they find you here, they'll blame me." "I fixed it all up so they won't." "You're going home and pronto." "Please don't make me." "I can't go home." "I just gotta stay." "Please." "I made good for you once, didn't I?" "Rico, the bambina talk sense." "See, Mr Vittorino wants me to stay." "No, Judy, I've gotta send you home." "You must think of your folks." "But Ricky, who do you think I'm thinking of?" "I can't let you do it." "Oh, Ricky." "If you liked us you wouldn't say that." "Liked us?" "What do you mean, Judy?" "I mean, if you really liked us." "You'd let me stay." "You don't know what it means, Ricky." "I don't care about me." "I don't care whether I sing or not, honest, but... it's Mommy and Daddy and Sylvia and all of us." "I'm the only one that can help." "Don't you see how important it is?" "Please, Ricky, you've gotta let me sing, please." "No, Judy, you must go home." "Now." "Please?" "I can't..." "Judy." "Come back." "Ricky, thank you!" "My pen will not write what is in my heart, Sylvia." "So I've put it into this song." "which I sing just for you." "The one I love is coming along some day and I'll have none except the one I love." "She may be near or ever so far away but I'll have none except the one I love." "And though our meeting is left to chance" "Until our meeting" "I still will have my dream romance" "And through the night" "I pray that the moon above will please be kind and find the one" "I love." "Sylvia." "Are you listening?" "I love you." "I love you." "I love you." "I love you." "I love you." "I love you." "I love you." "I love you." "I love you." "Sylvia!" "Sylvia!" "Coming, Mother." "Ricky." "Psst." "Ricky." "I love you, I love you, I love you...." "I still will have my dream romance." "And through the night" "I pray that the moon above will please be kind" "and find the one" "I love" "Wait, what are you doing?" "Hillary, you're not going to let them." "Take it away, go on." "No, it's my piano." "Diana, do I have to remind you again... that we haven't got Fleming to back us?" "We need $3.000 more before we can open tonight." "Mr Bellaire, the monkey men are here." "The monkey men?" "What the devil do we want with monkey men?" "We need another monkey." "The one we rehearsed with last night bit poor, dear Jerrold." "Good, I'll give the monkey a run of the play contract." "Send the monkeys away." "Yes, sir." "If there's one thing we don't need in this house, it's more monkeys." "Mr Bellaire, I warn you." "If you don't take that monkey out of the scene, I won't go on tonight." "Now you're talking." "I've been rehearsing Philip Moran on the side for two weeks." "I don't want Moran." "I can't play with Moran." "He doesn't give me anything." "He's not simpatico." "Either I play with Jerrold, or I don't play at all." "Do you mean that, Diana?" "You won't change your mind?" "Of course not." "Very well, you know what you want." "I certainly do." "You know, I think that mouse trap model looks best on me." "Certainly, Madame." "I don't like the way Hillary said..." ""Very well."" "I don't like it at all." "Sylvia, send my mail to the Player's Club." "Daddy, darling, please." "He's been running this house, now he's running my play and my family." "I resent your whole attitude and I feel I have an apology coming to me." "You have something coming to you, all right, and here it is." "Hillary!" "This is ridiculous jealousy." "He's so unreasonable." "Who does he think he is?" "I'd have knocked him down if he wasn't an old man." "Don't you dare call him an old man." "Hillary, listen!" "I don't care anything for Jerrold." "Darling, don't go to pieces, father will come back." "Oh, Hillary..." "No, no, he'll never come back." "When he says "very well" like that..." "He can't go, I'd die." "I'd simply die." "Don't say that, Mother, darling." "Run along, Mother, I'll be right up." "Wait, Jerrold, don't go." "Why not?" "I've been thrown out." "Everybody in this house hates me." "Your mother hates me, your father hates me..." "Not everybody, Jerry." "Oh, Jerrold, darling, can't you see that I..." "Oh, Jerrold, please." "Please, don't make me say it." "Sylvia." "Sylvia!" "Jerrold!" "How lovely, how perfectly lovely." "It's just what I've always wanted and now it's happened." "Oh, look at his jaw." "I never knew your father had it in him." "Oh, bless you, my children, bless you." "This will make everything all right, and on our opening night, too." "I'll telephone the Excelsior Press Service immediately." "Hey, where are you going?" "Could I deliver..." "No, you couldn't." "Nobody's allowed." "Mr Saboni's orders." "But I gotta give him this letter." "No, you gotta get out." "Come on!" "And when we take the Indian in, we'll be through." "Olga!" "Judy!" "You're in Europe, ain't you?" "Well, not exactly." "Look, Olga, I want to talk to you for a minute." "Olga, don't tell them I'm here, because if you do they won't let me go on tonight." "You're coming home with me right now..." "Wait a minute, Olga." "You'll spoil everything." "This is the chance I've been waiting for all my life." "Oh, all right." "Listen to her." "All your life you haven't lived yet." "Wait, please." "Olga, listen, please." "Olga, remember all those things you used to do in Russia?" "What things?" "You know, all the wonderful acting Boris taught you." "Oh, that." "Ricky, don't we need another specialty or something in the show?" "You want me to go in the show?" "Yes, of course we do, sure!" "Nothing doing, come on." "All right, Judy, it doesn't matter." "After all, she may have been a sensation in the old country but, you know, things are different here." "Oh..." "Is that so." "So I'm not good enough for America?" "Me, who could have been the idol of Moscow if Boris didn't disappear." "How do you like that?" "Well, well, well." "So I'm not good enough." "I'll show you." "Get me some costumes." "Get me slippers." "Get me something, get... get..." "Hurry up, I want you to get her some costumes..." "Olga, are you ready?" "Hurry up!" "Yeah, I'm ready." "And I'm dying." "Oh, Ricky, I'm afraid we're in for it." "I should have lived in the days of yore" "Hi-ho, hi-ho" "Sometimes I think that I lived before." "Maybe I came back again." "From the thing that I was then." "Modern times is not for me" "I like sweet antiquity" "The tinkle of a music box is music to my ear" "I'm delicate and fragile like a crystal chandelier" "Though I'm a perfect picture in my new lavender and lace my quaintiness and daintiness it's getting me no place." "Quainty, dainty me" "I float like a butterfly so daintily" "But somehow no one ever floated after me for quainty, dainty me" "Gentle as can be" "I'm even shy whenever I express myself." "I'm so demure I blush when I undress myself." "Poor quainty, dainty me." "I sing like the birds" "Smart." "When I trip, trip, trip, I don't shake my hip like the dancers do today." "My dancing is so classical not for grand jackassicals" "I'm light like the petals from a rose" "That's why they call me twinkle toes." "Quainty, dainty me" "That's why they call me twinke toes." "Brava!" "Eccelente, straordinaria!" "It's not me, boys, I had a great teacher." "That reminds me of something." "What?" "I can't remember." "Oh, Olga." "I know, I got a letter for you." "For me?" "From Miss Sylvia?" "Miss Sylvia?" "Well, give it to me." "Well, where is it?" "Didn't I give it to you?" "No." "No, I didn't." "Well, find it." "If it's from Sylvia, it's important." "You know what was in it?" "I didn't read it." "All I know is she said I had to get it to you before the newspapers get out." "Newspapers!" "Newspapers..." "Gee..." "I guess that's what the letter was about." "Sure..." "That's what she wanted to tell me." "Well, I guess she just wanted to let me down easy." "Ricky, wait." "Well, my conscience is clear." "Now he knows what was in the letter." "Ricky..." "I'm sorry." "You're gonna sing tonight, aren't you?" "Sing?" "Don't you suppose Caruso had to sing when things went wrong?" "And Lincoln." "Lincoln had to chop wood when he didn't feel like chopping." "And look at me." "When Daddy sent me to Europe, I didn't go, did I?" "Besides... they're not married yet." "They're only engaged." "And tonight you can go in the front door like you said you would and you can drag her away from Jerrold, just like a caveman." "You're right, Judy." "Oh, why isn't Hillary here?" "How can we open?" "What have I done?" "I know he'll never come back." "Never, never." "In 20 years I haven't gone on the stage for an opening without his kissing me and wishing me luck." "Not once." "Diana." "Oh, Hillary, you've come." "I knew you would." "Have you seen the papers?" "Papers!" "Listen, Diana..." "Isn't it wonderful our Sylvia engaged to dear Jerrold?" "Dear Jerrold be hanged." "Listen to this cable." "Cable?" "It's from Miss Jacqueline." "She's in Venice." "Puzzled by your letters." "Judy taken off boat before sailing." "Judy taken..." "Judy's kidnapped!" "Oh, she may be murdered..." "Daddy, what does it mean?" "Mean?" "Mean?" "It means that she's missing." "She's not with Miss Jacqueline." "She's not here with us." "I know." "Ricky!" "Oh, no." "Ricky?" "Oh, it's all your fault." "You screamed and yelled and sent her away." "You threw her out of my home." "Oh, you're a... you're a..." "Ohhh." "All right, it's my fault." "Go on, go on." "This helps a lot." "Ready for the first act." "First act?" "Hillary, what will we do?" "There will be no first act, or second act or third act." "Hold up the pay." "Give them their money back." "Tell them to go home." "We're going to the police." "My baby!" "It's your turn now." "Enrico, show business is pretty good." "Lots of people out there." "It's a good house and now it's got to be a great show." "Great?" "It's gonna be colossal." "Bambina, you bring us lots of luck." "Grazie." "Hey, mister, any flowers come for me yet?" "I don't know." "What's the name?" "Olga Chekaloff." "Is it the big basket?" "It's the biggest I could get for $2.50." "I want you should cast it over the footlights so I can be surprised." "Here it is." "Look, I'm a success already." "Yeah." "What can I do for you?" "Who do you wanna see?" "I understand you got a girl here under 15 playing without a permit." "Her name is Judy Bellaire." "There ain't no Judy Bellaire here." "I happen to know there is." "I'm from the Gary society." "Oh, a society man." "Of course there's a Judy Bellaire here." "I'll get her for you." "Judy!" "Yes?" "Come here." "Are all your society friends out front?" "Did you want me, Olga?" "Yes, darling, I want you should meet a big society man." "Yeah, he's from the 400." "Yeah, from the Gary Society." "I want to see your father and mother." "You can't..." "They're in Europe." "Yes, they're traveling..." "All over the country." "Well, you're going traveling, too." "You can't play until one of them signs a permit." "Oh, but she got to play tonight." "We got a nice little playroom down at the Gary Society." "Oh, no, Olga..." "I can't go." "I gotta sing tonight." "Now, you numbskull, see what you've done?" "Come along, come along." "Holler for help." "What?" "Holler for help." "What do you mean?" "Holler for help, do what I tell you..." "Help, help." "Help!" "Help!" "Help!" "Help!" "Wait a minute, my name's Smith." "I'm from the Gary Society." "I don't care what your name is or where you're from." "We're gonna make an example of you kidnappers." "Kidnapper?" "Why, I tell you..." "You're telling us nothing." "Come on." "You'd better come along too and press the charge." "Yeah, yeah, we'll follow you." "Come on." "You don't know who I am." "Ladies and gentlemen." "I hope I do not bore you." "I lay my case before you." "Craving your attention while I mention the problem of the player through the ages and on these stages" "We must have eyes to see us" "We must have ears to hear us hands to applaud voices to cheer us" "But, whatever be our circumstances we must take our chances" "And while the fiddler plays sing our songs" "do our dances" "The show must go on the show must go on" "You're feeling low and you haven't got the heart" "But the curtain's going up and you've got to play your part" "Don't mind the wind or weather better pull yourself together or you're gone." "The show must go on." "Line up for the big parade, we have got to make the grade" "The show must go on" "You're feeling low and you haven't got the heart" "But the curtain's going up and you got to play your part" "The show must go on The show must go on" "Just stay there if you want a song and dance" "You will feel the thrill if you give yourself a chance" "We know that you proclaim us and tomorrow we'll be famous." "We'll go on" "The show must go on" "Go on, the show must go on." "And now, with your permission we'll print the first edition of a play" "The stage is set" "The music starts" "Ready... take it away." "Yoo-hoo." "Yoo-hoo." "Yoo-hoo." "Yoo-hoo." "What are you doing, Snooks?" "I've been reading books." "Well, put your books away and let's go out and play." "Why?" "Because." "Why?" "Because." "I don't wanna." "Well, you oughta." "Let's play cops and crooks." "I wanna read my books." "Don't be a baby, Snooks." "Snooks, you mustn't cry." "You're too big to cry." "Why?" "Because." "Why?" "Because big girls never cry." "I saw Mommy cry." "You did?" "Hm-hmm." "The time my mommy saw my daddy kiss the nurse goodbye." "Snooks..." "What?" "Can you do a sum?" "Nicey taught me some." "Snooks, how much is two and two?" "Two and two is two and two." "Two and two are four." "Why?" "Because." "Why?" "Because." "One and one are two." "So two and two are more." "Snooks..." "You mustn't weep." "You're too big to weep." "Why?" "Because." "Why?" "Because." "Grown-ups never weep." "I saw Daddy weep." "You did?" "Hm-hmm." "The night my mommy caught my daddy walking in his sleep." "Are you a girl or a boy?" "I'm known as Little Lord Fauntleroy." "Oh." "What's a Little Lord Fauntleroy?" "Little Lord Fauntleroy is a little boy." "Oh." "Why?" "Because." "Why?" "Because." "A girl's a girl and a boy's a boy." "Then what's a Little Lord Fauntleroy?" "I told you twice." "You told me once." "I told you twice." "You told me once." "Snooks, go back and read your books." "Cause you're an awful dunce." "Where is my baby..." "I'm sorry, darling." "Why doesn't that silly man do something instead of sitting up there trying to look important?" "Officer, have you never been a mother?" "If you had..." "Diana, please, please control yourself." "Madame, I told you, my men are out and doing everything they can." "No one understands." "Only a woman suffers as a woman can." "Quietly, deeply, bravely." "And I wrote those lines, too." "Come on, come on..." "Lieutenant." "We just picked up this guy trying to snatch a kid down at the 43rd Street Theater." "This is an outrage." "I'm from the Gary Society." "I tried to show these dumbbells my badge but they ganged up on me." "That's what he says, but they can't fool me with those phony buttons." "Lieutenant, General, Major, whatever you are..." "Why are you listening to this silly chatter?" "Why don't you find my baby?" "That won't do any good..." "Shut up!" "Shut up, all of you!" "Now, go on." "It's very simple." "I was sent to the 43rd Street Theatre to pick up a kid by the name of Judy Bellaire." "Judy!" "Oh, you fiend, where's my baby?" "Diana, allow me..." "What have you done with her?" "Quiet!" "Quiet!" "Where is this kid?" "I just told you." "I picked her up at the 43rd Street Theater." "43rd Street Theater?" "What was she doing there?" "Appearing in a show without a permit." "With a guy named Saboni." "Saboni?" "why, why, why..." "That's, that's, that's..." "That's Ricky." "I knew it all the time." "That scoundrel." "Oh, that sheep in wolf's clothing." "I told you you should do something." "My baby may be in the hands of bandits, cutthroats..." "It may be too late." "Yes, call the police..." "Get the riot squad." "Yes, get the riot squad." "The riot squad, yes, the riot squad, that's what we want..." "All right, boys, get going." "Let's get going." "Come on..." "Lights, curtain, up, come on." "Ever since the world began we wonder and ponder and try to find the answer to the questions shall we, or shan't we or should we?" "Shall I sing a melody of birds on the wing?" "Shall I sing of love and spring or shall I sing of swing?" "Hey, swing, oh, swing." "Shall I dance a polka or a stately court gavotte?" "Should I do a Suzie Q and make it good at heart?" "So hot!" "Too hot!" "Should I do what Mother tells me to and be a slightly dull but model little daughter?" "Or should I merge with this terrific urge to get right up and do my stuff?" "Not too gay, but gay enough, Hey..." "Oh-oh...." "Teacher says I shouldn't sing those Tin Pan Alley songs" "I should sing of love and spring" "Like, "Lo, hear the gentle, la, ha, ha, ha"" ""Lo, hear the gentle, la, ha, ha, ha"" "But I will not sing of love and spring" "But when I sing, I'm gonna sing" "I wanna sing" "I gotta sing of swing." "I wanna hear a horn a-tootin' against the beat" "I wanna feel the muddy waters 'round my feet" "I wanna kill myself a-dancin' down the street" "I wanna stand right up and swing." "Shhh!" "Miss Sylvia!" "I want to talk to Ricky, where is he?" "Miss Sylvia, before I forget, I lost your letter." "Oh, my God, the police are here..." "Shhhh!" "The police?" "Sylvia!" "Shhh!" "Sylvia, the show is a hit!" "It's wonderful it's marvelous." "Hello." "Looking for Mr Saboni, ain't you?" "Yeah, that's right." "Where is he?" "There he is." "The fellow with the overcoat and the little mustache." "He's expecting you." "Go on, go on, go on." "Stop jostling me." "If you insist on being difficult I've merely to communicate with Scotland Yard." "Quick, get him!" "Olga!" "Where is she?" "What have you done with Judy?" "Diana, please, I'll handle this." "What have you done with her?" "What have I done with her?" "Look there on the stage, that's what." "Shhh." "Don't you shush me, you fat little..." "Wait a minute, boys." "You're looking for Saboni?" "Yeah." "He went that way with a lot of policemen." "Wait, you cops..." "The show is on." "My Judy." "Your Judy?" "Our Judy." "Oh, isn't she wonderful?" "Richard, Richard, how could you?" "Look, Hillary, that's the kind of collar and tie." "Collar and tie, my eye." "Now, what have you to say?" "Richard, where are you going?" "It's Ricky's show, Mother." "Where's Jerrold?" "I don't know." "Oh... how nice." "You see, darling, it's Richard' show... and Richard and Sylvia... oh..." "Darling, isn't it wonderful?" "And I only hope that you'll be singing" "For if you're singing" "You won't forget us..." "Should old acquaintance be forgot..." "The one I love is coming along some day" "So please be kind and find the one I love" "Quainty, dainty me" "One night I danced the dying swan and lost my fan" "He left me for a girl who dances with a fan" "Poor quainty..." "dainty dainty..." "dainty... me." "I want to wander 'round the river's bend where everyone you meet will be your friend that's what it takes to make a happy ending down on melody farm." "Judy, my baby, my precious." "Boriska, Boris!" "Subtitles:" "Luís Filipe Bernardes"