"[ Drumroll ]" "[ Fanfare ]" "[ Woman ] Do you have any water?" "[ Man ] Sure, we can get you some water." "Can we have some water up here please?" "Watch your step." "And, uh, Charles Goodman, Linda voss." "Pleasure to meet you." "Nice to meet you." "Where should I sit?" "Here will be fine." "There you go." "There's some water." "If you need anything else, I'll get it for you." "I'm not really sure that I'll be able to do this." "Just relax and sit opposite me and answer my questions." "That's all." "I've never done this before." "It'll be easy." "I promise." "[ Chuckles ] How are you today?" "Fine, thank you." "[ Man ♪2 ] Can we get a sound check, please?" "Can we just have a few words, just for the sound man?" "What should I say?" "Say anything." "[ Both chuckle ]" "I have a..." "I've had such a big mouth all my life, and now I don't know what to say." "[ Sound man ] A little more, please." "[ Clears throat ]" "To tell you the truth, I don't know if I should be doing this." "Everyone told me that I should." "They said, "it's the BBC, and they'll do it right."" "[ Goodman ] We will do it right." "I promise." "[ Sound man ] That's fine." "[ Bell ringing ] Just relax." "Are we ready?" "This is a BBC production." "Interview with Linda..." "oh, you wanted the scrapbook?" "We'll do it later." "We'll get the photographs." "We'll have film clips and photographs." "I see." "Uh, if we could just finish getting the slate, please." "Sorry." "Hitler's Germany, s"part... um, what... what film clips?" "You'll see it when it's finished." "I promise." "Okay?" "Sorry." "Hitler's Germany, "part five:" "Women in the war." Mark." "So just relax." "You've got all the time in the world." "Do I start?" "Tell me about the war." "When do you first become interested in it?" "Um, the movies." "¶¶ [ Orchestra:" "Dramatic ] There they are." "¶¶ [ Continues ]" "We'll head 'em off." "[ Linda narrating ] War movies... anything set in Germany." "Didn't matter if it was the first world war or the second." "[ Gunfire ]" " I especially loved anything set in Berlin." " They're over the border." "¶¶ [ Romantic ]" "From the time I was a child, my grandmother and my father..." "Told me stories about their beloved city." "[ Goodman ] You spoke German in your household?" "To my mother I spoke English." "She was Irish, born in Brooklyn." "To my father I spoke German." "But he warned me to keep this language a secret, because outside of our neighborhood in queens, New York, if people heard me speak German, they would either think that I was a Nazi sympathizer..." "Or they would know I was a Jew." " [ Man speaking in German ] - ¶¶ [ Piano:" "Classical ]" "[ Continues in German ] ¶¶ [ Continues ]" "[ Footsteps approaching ]" "In English, please, for us poor Irish trash." "Thank you." ""We are no longer allowed to use a public toilet," ""nor can Hannah, sofi or I go to a beauty parlor, because Hitler says the hair of a Jew is infectious."" ""We hear rumors everywhere..." ""That Jews are being rounded up and sent away." ""We don't know where." ""We have been invited by friends..." "To hide with them somewhere in Berlin."" "[ Linda narrating ] I guess it was then that the fantasy began." "I dreamed of parachuting into Germany and rescuing them:" "My father's two sisters, Hannah and liesel, and Hannah's daughter, sofi, who played the flute and was just a year younger than I." "I dreamed of seeing sofi on the concert stage in New York City..." "Playing her flute just for me." "¶¶ [ Orchestra:" "Dramatic ]" "[ Announcer ] The doomed city of warsaw." "Pounded by Hitler's guns..." "[ Goodman ] So you contacted the war department..." "About becoming a spy." "[ Chuckles ] Um," "I wouldn't have known who to contact about becoming a spy." "¶¶ [ Big band:" "Fast swing ]" "[ Linda narrating ] In 1940, when all of Europe was struggling against Hitler," "I was just a young girl struggling to get out of queens." "I remember how intimidating the city was, and I remember the first sight of the man who would change my life." "'cause it's not our war!" "It's not our problem." "If any blood is gonna be shed keeping' Hitler out of england, let it be English blood, not American, 'cause it's not our war." "It's not our problem." "And anyone who says America should get involved in this war..." "Is a Jew-loving commie..." "Franklin delano "Rosenberg" included." "[ Man ] Why don't you go home?" "Why don't you go home?" "[ Man ♪2 ] Watch your mouth, buddy." "Oh, we got another one here." "[ Distant ] Get out of here right now." "[ Continues indistinct ]" "I am sure your typing skills are superior, miss voss, but..." "A degree from queens clerical college is a bit beneath our standards." "Our legal secretaries come directly from vassar." "I'm sure you understand." "Oh, I understand." "So unless you have something to add to change my mind, I..." "I'm afraid I really couldn't... lower your standards?" "Listen, I wouldn't want you to." "You might have to work with someone who's had to get her hands dirty, and I'm sure that would be very uncomfortable for you and the girls from vassar." "I went to vassar, by the way." "My Uncle's car broke down right at the front gate, and I had to pick him up." "Place looked like a real shithole to me." "Thank you very much." "[ Women gasp, scream ]" "[ Others chattering ] [ Woman speaking in German ]" "[ German ]" "[ Woman sobbing, speaking German ]" "Miss voss, you failed to mention that you speak a second language." "[ Typewriters clacking ] [ Linda speaking German ]" ""Since all demands for payment have gone unanswered..." ""such as the billing in September of this year..." "[ German ]" ""We have no choice..." "[ German ]" ""But to impound the shipment of cement wagons..." "[ German ]" "Until proper reparations are made."" "[ German ]" ""Laster" is "truck." I said "wagon."" "You said "cement wagon." "Laster" is correct." "You are certain of yourself, which is good." "You'll have to be." "Bitte." "We run an international practice here, and we're trying to disentangle..." "Certain companies from their affairs in Germany." "Unfortunately, one of our senior partners has a tin ear for languages, which leaves him somewhat handicapped." "Graduated cum laude from Harvard, but flunked right out of berlitz." "He also has a lousy disposition..." "And runs through secretaries like a bowling ball through tenpins." "Incidentally, we call him "the pallbearer"..." "Because he rarely cracks a smile." "[ Man ] Come in." "He also dislikes women who wear hats, by the way." "Oh." "Hi." "I saw you on the street this morning." "With that speaker?" "Oh." "What did you say to him?" "I just suggested he might be more comfortable speaking somewhere else." "You were great." "Reminded me of Jimmy Stewart in the mortal storm." "Did you ever see it?" "Uh, no." "It's a great film." "What's with the blackout?" "You expecting Hitler to bomb us tonight?" "Sometimes I think better in the dark." "Ed leland, Linda voss." "Ninety words a minute, bilingual dictation, works the mimeograph, speaks German with the accent of a Berlin butcher's wife." "How's that for a last-minute save?" "Berlin butcher's wife." "Home-taught by her grandmother who's from Berlin." "But she wasn't married to a butcher." "[ Chuckles ]" "My grandfather owned a button factory..." "Till it burned down." "[ No audible dialogue ]" "Your, uh... your grandmother, did she insist you speak, uh..." "German?" "She doesn't speak English." "She's..." "she's lived here for..." " my sixth grade teacher used to do that." " Beg your pardon?" "You know, start a question and not finish it, like, "the capital of Indiana is"... she's been in this country for 18 years." "Yes." "Well, my question is, if she's lived here for 18 years, why doesn't she speak, um..." "English." "She prefers German." "Does she prefer Germany?" "She's Jewish." " You're Jewish?" " Half." "Is that a problem in this company?" "[ Chuckles ] Oh, no." "It just means we're half sure you're not a Nazi spy." "[ German ]" "She'll be fine." "Would you stand up and turn around, please?" "Why should I do that?" " [ Man ] Because you want the job." " And I asked you to." "It's a test I like to give." "Well, I'll take it sitting down." "What I was gonna ask you to do is stand up, turn around, and close your eyes and tell me everything you see in the room." "It's an observation test." "Now, do you really have a problem with that?" "[ Clears throat ]" "Pictures of sailboats and polo ponies, fancy books and diplomas, stuffed fish on the wall, calendar set to the wrong date, bookcases that need dusting, carpets that need cleaning..." "And a couple of guys from Harvard who are surprised..." "That a girl who needs a job won't be treated like a slave." "Are you always like this?" "Forgot to tell you, my other half's Irish." "Lethal combination." "Mmm." "[ Linda narrating ] It didn't take me long..." "To sense there was more to ed leland than met the eye." "[ Women chattering ] In February of 1940, one of the switchboard girls accidentally tapped into his private line..." "And heard a voice that she swore was Franklin delano Roosevelt's." "In march, Jimmy in the mail room caught sight of a sealed document on Ed's desk..." "Addressed to j." "Edgar hoover." "Hi, Jimmy." "In April, Ed's staff started interviewing..." "Recently arrived German refugees..." "Um, frau chernick?" "To get details about life in Hitler's Germany." "[ Both speaking German ]" "And by fall of that year, ed leland's whereabouts... [ elevator chimes ] Were completely unpredictable." "He'd vanish for weeks at a time, my office, please?" "Returning as abruptly as he left..." "[ German ] To dictate letters that made no sense at all." "Naturally, it set a girl's mind to wondering." "Please to report that my wife, sunflower and I..." "And her..." "her new dog, rover..." "Just returned from the seashore..." "Where we saw..." "A flock of birds..." "seabirds... a flock of 14 seabirds diving for fish." "Excuse me." "Are those pelicans?" "You said they were diving." "I've asked you not to interrupt me." "I'm sorry, Mr. leland, but the German language is very specific." "You wouldn't say "seabirds." You would say "pelicans."" "Unless, of course, this is all just some kind of code, in which case you should just tell me..." "So that I would stop bothering you." "[ Chuckles ] Now, why would you say something like that?" "No." "I'm..." "I'm curious." "Why?" "Well, your wife's name is not sunflower." "You don't even have a wife..." "I mean, not one that I know of anyway." "Therefore, you, uh..." "you assume that this is all a code." "I don't have to stand up and turn around to see that your overnight bag is full..." "Of woolen sweaters and heavy socks." "Not exactly the kind of thing you take to the seashore... at least not a vacation-type seashore." "More like the English channel, I'd say." "Anything else?" "No." "Okay." "Where were we?" "Except that the code is a dead giveaway." "I mean, 14 birds "diving for fish"?" "It's obviously a fleet of 14 submarines." "You're gonna get caught with a code like this." "The Germans aren't stupid, Mr. leland." "My God, they do it better in the movies." "Did you see espionage agent with Brenda Marshall?" "No." "Well, in it, when she talked about submarines, she talked about her "rose garden."" "Her rose garden." "Yeah, so that there would be no connection." "And for airplanes, she talked about "figs and dates."" " Figs and dates." " Mm-hmm." ""Figs" for fokkers and "dates"..." "I can't remember what "dates" were." "Well, I guess I better go to the movies..." "[ Drawer rattles ]" "To see how they do this." "My wife, Susan, who I call sunflower." "This photograph was taken a year before I put her in a sanitarium in Switzerland... a mental institution which I visit often, and which I'm afraid that she'll never leave." "You understand why it's easier for me to let people think..." "That I've never been married." "I'm sorry." "[ Sighs ]" "God, I feel so stupid." "No, it's..." "it's all right." "I feel so stupid that..." "I don't understand why I can't make carbon copies of your letters, or why I have to turn in my steno pad for a new one each time I've finished, or why I type endless letters, but never envelopes," "so that I don't know where they're going to." "Last time I was in Switzerland, I asked a psychiatrist the same thing." "Why is it that I don't trust anybody?" "He thinks it has something to do with my upbringing." "You're a spy, Mr. leland." "And you've seen too many movies, miss voss." "Enough to know a spy when I see one." "And about this photo." "The woman's name is Jennifer krimm, a model you were never married to but only dated..." "Before you met kiki avondale, that is... a vassar graduate who you were engaged to for six months before you got cold feet." "Oh, this is outrageous." "This is... this is..." "I don't have to listen to this anymore." "This is simply and totally..." "[ Sighs ]" "How do you know all these things?" "I might be a better spy than you are." " ¶¶ [ Big band:" "Fast swing ] - [ Crowd chattering ]" "[ Women cheering ]" "¶¶ [ Continues ]" "[ Linda narrating ] By late October of '41," "London was reeling under a hailstorm of German bombs called the "blitz,"" "and life in America was energized with the knowledge of what was inevitable." "Young men were disappearing late at night and signing up for the draft." "Glenn Miller was pumping out dance music while there was still time to dance, and ed leland had cast his eyes in my direction." "[ Linda giggling, chattering ] For us, like the war... [ leland, indistinct ] It was just a matter of time." "[ Linda snorts, giggles ]" "[ Both speaking in German, laughing ]" "I can't..." "I can't speak German." "I can't get the accent." "¶¶ [ Slow swing, faint ] At least I made you laugh." "Yes, you do do that." "Is that a hard thing to do, make you laugh?" "Well, serious times, Linda." "Mmm." "All the more reason." "Charlie chaplin says a day without laughter is a day wasted." "You believe that?" "Yeah." "I try to laugh once a day, just in case." "Do you like Charlie chaplin?" "To be quite honest, I've never seen him." "You're kidding." "No." "Well, what are you doing tonight?" "Tonight?" "Tonight I have tickets for the opera." "Hmm." "Really." "[ In English accent ] I've never been to the opera." "Oh?" "What's it like?" "Ah, it's not for everybody." "It's... well, see, that's the thing about chaplin." "He is." "You really like chaplin." "Mr. leland..." "why don't you call me ed." "Ed." "¶¶ [ Ends ]" "[ Thunder rumbling, distant ]" "[ Thunder continues ]" "[ Moans quietly ]" "[ Vehicle horns honking, distant ]" "[ Man speaking in German ]" "[ Man ♪2 translating ] There are six railroad good yards..." "Und three main line stations..." "[ German ]" "Uh, right near a large..." " how would you say, "schornstein"?" " Linda." "Me?" "I don't speak German." "Ja. "Church steeple."" "Can we take a break for a moment?" ""Schornstein"sis "smokestack," not "church steeple."" "Translator's been lying." "Linda, the man has been working as a translator in this office for years." "Hmm." "Yeah." "Well, he started out by making little mistakes, and when nobody noticed, then the mistakes started getting bigger." "Making mistakes does not make the man a liar." "He tripled the number of railroad lines coming into the city." "One sentence involving a munitions plant..." "he left that one out altogether." "Ja." "What is he, a double agent?" "Right here in this office?" "What'll you do to him?" "Stop using him as a translator." "Oh." "How'd you know to stay quiet?" "The fighting 69th with Brenda Marshall and Cary grant." " I see." " They cut out his tongue." "¶¶ [ Orchestra:" "Classical waltz on speaker ]" "¶¶ [ Continues ] [ Linda narrating ] By day we worked together, by night we were lovers..." "secret lovers... until a Sunday morning in December when we lay listening to a symphony on the radio." "I said I'd never been to a concert and would love to go with him someday." "¶¶ [ Stops ] [ Announcer ] We interrupt this program..." "To bring you a special news bulletin." "The Japanese have attacked pearl harbor, Hawaii by air, president Roosevelt has just announced." "The air raid is still on." "[ Machine gunfire, faint ]" "The antiaircraft fire can be heard in a steady drone..." "As the attacking planes come in." "We will continue to receive reports which will tell very shortly... [ sniffling ] The story of what is to happen in the months that are to come." "¶¶ [ Resumes ]" "[ Linda narrating ] For me there would be no symphonies with ed, just the sound of drums as America went to war." "¶¶ [ Fast swing ] ¶ good-bye, dear I'll be back in a year ¶" "¶ 'cause I'm in the army now ¶" "¶ they took my number out of a hat ¶" "¶ and there's nothing a guy can do about that ¶¶" "[ Linda narrating ] What pearl harbor also did..." "¶¶ [ Continues ]" "Was bring ed leland's uniform and his true identity out of the closet... that of a full-ranking military colonel working for the o.S.S. In Washington." "His job, to coordinate information coming from behind enemy lines." "[ Goodman ] So, you accompanied him to Washington?" "To the Washington airport." "But our journey together ended there." "I want you to set up an office for Andy." "It came as a complete surprise to me." "I want you to keep it..." "Totally secure." "Everything he said that night came as a complete surprise." "I'll be in touch with you." "I'm... continuing on." "Continuing on?" "To where?" "I don't know." "Well," "I can't say." "What does that mean?" "It means..." "Things change." "It's not the right time for us." "I don't want you to be waiting." "I don't want to be..." "either of us... worrying." "But ed, what's a war for, if not to hold on to what we love?" "[ Man ] Colonel!" "[ Sobs ]" "Hey, colonel!" "Good-bye." "[ Linda narrating ] He said he'd be in touch with me, but he never was." "And no one ever knew I loved him." "[ Engine whining ]" "[ Plane departing ]" "While America went to war, ed disappeared in Europe, and I disappeared into the information center of the war department... a basement where hundreds of women toiled... sorting, filing and distributing information about Germany..." "Linda, "trooper."" "And where I secretly searched for clues about ed leland... clues in words such as "trooper,"" "which I found out was Ed's code name, and "camp Brady," which meant "behind enemy lines."" "I knew he was traveling and into dangerous places." "I also knew I didn't want to care." "¶¶ [ Band:" "Slow swing ]" "¶¶ [ Continues ] [ Crowd chattering ]" "¶ I'll be seeing you ¶" "¶ in all the old ¶" "¶ familiar places ¶ six months into the war, Europe still belonged..." "¶¶ [ Continues ]" "To Hitler and mussolini." "American boys were being lost by the thousands..." "On pacific islands with names like corregidor and batann, and a man named ed leland had disappeared from the face of the earth." "When spring came to Washington, he was all I thought about, because I believed that wherever he was, the sheer force of my love for him would keep him safe, keep him alive." "Excuse me." "I noticed you lookin' a bit lonely." "Would you like to dance?" "No, thanks." "You sure?" "I will." "Okay." "Come on." "[ Woman ] ¶ in everything that's light and gay ¶" "¶ I'll always think of you that way ¶" "¶ I'll find you in the morning sun ¶" "¶ and when the night is new ¶" "¶ I'll be looking at the moon ¶" "¶ but I'll be seeing ¶" "¶ yo-o-ou ¶" "[ laughs ] ¶ and I'll ¶" "¶ be seeing you ¶" "¶ in every lovely summer's day ¶" "¶ in everything that's light and gay ¶" "¶ I'll always think of you that way ¶ [ no audible dialogue ] ¶ I'll find you in the morning sun ¶" "¶ and when the night is new ¶" "¶ I'll be looking at the moon ¶" "¶ but I'll be seeing ¶" "¶ yo-o-ou ¶¶" "¶¶ [ band continues ]" "At ease, gentlemen." "Good evening." "Good evening, sir." " Hello, Linda." " Hello, ed." "What brings you to town?" "Well, I had to come in for something." "I'm gonna be here for a while." "That's great." "Would you like to dance?" "Nah." "You're busy." "Come on." "I don't wanna dance." "Would you all excuse us for a couple of minutes, please?" "Yes, sir." "We'll be over there, okay?" "How you been?" "Not great." "No?" "No." "When did you start smoking?" "I don't know." "Kind of a silly thing to do, isn't it?" "I'm a silly girl, ed." "I think you're living proof of that." "I'm sorry to hear you got shuffled into the basement." "It wouldn't have happened if I was here." "I spoke with Andy, and..." "He's gonna keep his eyes out for a better job." "I told him I'm quitting if he doesn't." "You can come work for me while I'm here." "I can always use a good secretary." "[ Chuckles ] This is all so civilized, Edward." "That's what you like, isn't it, civilized people?" "Polite ladies with pedigrees who look good at the opera..." "And never make you laugh too hard and never make you feel too much." "I've had a lot of time to think about this, and don't tell me it's the war..." "When I've been waiting for six months to hear whether you're dead or alive, and you waltz into a nightclub." " Linda, I came in last night." "I was gonna call you." " Oh, go to hell." "Careful, ed." "You might have to admit that you know me." " Linda, it is the war." " Oh, you're so noble, ed." "Did I promise you something?" "If I did, I'd like to know." "Excuse me, sir?" "I thought the young lady might like to dance." "The lady is busy." "I'd love to dance." "I'm cutting in." "Don't let him." "Excuse me, sir." "I don't think the young lady wants to dance." "Don't try it." "I'll leave here with your Adam's apple in my pocket." "[ Sobs ]" "What do you want from me?" "I want you to stop feeling sorry for yourself." "¶¶ [ Ends ]" "No." "You want me to stop feeling, like you." "[ Applause ]" "¶¶ [ Band resumes ]" "[ Sobs ] [ Woman ] ¶ good night ¶" "¶ sweetheart ¶" "¶ all my prayers are ¶" "¶ for you ¶ [ Sobs ]" "¶ Good night, sweetheart ¶" "¶ I'll be watching for you ¶ you did love me, didn't you?" "I couldn't have been wrong." "¶¶ [ Continues ]" "You weren't." "Well, then how do you stop?" "I want to." "[ Sobs ]" "¶ So I'll say good night ¶" "¶ sweetheart ¶" "¶ sleep will banish sorrow ¶ [ Sobs, sniffling ]" "¶ Good night, sweetheart ¶" "¶ till we meet tomorrow ¶" "¶ dreams enfold you ¶" "¶ in my dreams ¶" "¶ I'll hold you ¶" "¶ good night, sweetheart ¶" "¶ good night ¶¶" "¶¶ [ ends ]" "[ Leland ] His name was Albert eckert... you know his file by the code name "zipper"..." "a society dress designer, popular with the wives of high-ranking s.S. Officials in Berlin, that is, until last Wednesday at 1400 hours..." "When he was last seen by our senior operative, sunflower, buying roses at a marketplace." "This photo was taken one hour later, 1500 hours." "Maybe somebody didn't like his latest dress design." "[ All chuckling ]" "That man put his life on the line, which is more than anybody in this room's about to do." "[ Man ] And you're looking to replace him?" "Immediately, yes." "And it's not gonna be easy." "His access to information was his close relationship to hedda drescher, wife of Horst drescher, a social climbing young Nazi..." "Who ingratiates himself to his superiors..." "By hosting elegant dinner parties in his beautiful home... a home which was appropriated from one of the finest Jewish families in Berlin." "The simple genius of eckert's method..." "Was to bring hedda a new gown for each of these social occasions..." "And help her get dressed in the upstairs study, where he was allowed to linger for a glass of port when the party began, at which time he'd lock the door, and microfilm certain documents..." "That drescher was in the habit of bringing back from the war office... documents like this..." "And this..." "And this." "Documents which lead us to believe..." "That somewhere in Germany scientists are developing a bomb..." "That can fly by itself." "So I think you all can see the urgency of this situation." "Lights, please." "We need someone to get back into drescher's study and do it fast, find out where this work is being done and stop it before it goes any further." " So, do I have any suggestions?" " What about that cabinetmaker, meyerhoff?" "The guy from leipzig?" "If you want to get into this study... that makes a lot of sense." "They'd let him pull apart their secret cabinets." "What about Eric erdmann, the language Professor from tufts?" "He came from Munich." "That they were both born in Germany, so they'll be instant best friends?" " Linda." " It took eckert years to gain their confidence." "You think somebody can just move right in and be given run of the house?" " She's right about that." " That is what you need, though." "Someone who can literally move in and live there." "Someone with a low-class Berlin accent who could work as a domestic." "Someone with the accent of a Berlin butcher's wife." "Gentlemen, let's break for dinner." "I know the codes." "I know the network." "I know the whole operation." "I could pass for a berliner." "[ Slams papers ] Linda?" "Because you are a secretary." "You are not a spy." "Because I'm a secretary?" "You are not suited to it, Linda." "You have no formal training whatsoever." "I'm not suited to it?" "You can't even speak German." "And you can't hold your tongue." "I saw it first time I met you." "Everything on your mind spills out of your mouth." "It makes you very dangerous." "It's more my war than yours." "That is a ridiculous thing to say." "I'm a Jew." "You know what Hitler's doing to Jews?" "Even half Jews?" "Of course I do." "I have relatives still hiding there." "I doubt it." "That they're still hiding?" "That you know what's happening." "Meaning?" "Meaning I am not gonna let you commit suicide." "I will quit, if you don't let me go." "I'll miss you." "I will, goddamn it!" "I quit!" "[ Door buzzer ringing ]" "[ Knocking ]" "Linda..." "ed, I want you to taste my strudel... the way my grandmother taught me to make it..." "and my apple kompott." "She taught me to cook German style, the way my grandfather likes it." "And I could cook for 50 if I had to... five courses, the way they do it in Berlin." "And on nights when they didn't have people over," "I could bring tea and strudel up to the dreschers' study, and put a little schnapps in the tea so that Horst and hedda would get tired..." "And could retire early, and I could be left alone in the study to clean up." "This is not about you and me, goddamn it." "I wanna do something important with my life." "Here, taste." "Taste it." "You know what you're getting yourself into, Linda?" "Yeah." "The war." "[ Linda narrating ] He agreed to send me for two weeks only, we'll be arriving soon." "Insisting that whether I succeeded or not," "I'd come out of Berlin in exactly 14 days." "Thanks." "Untrained in survival skills," "I was given a quick course in the use of a microfilm camera..." "And a purse that made up in function for what it lacked in fashion." "Beyond that, it was all guts." "Accompanying me as far as Switzerland, ed would turn me over to the legendary sunflower... a German working for the Americans..." "Who would take me on my final journey into Berlin." "[ Train whistle blowing ]" "I'll meet you in two weeks, right on this platform, two weeks from today." "I look all right?" "You look perfect." "This is it." "Still wanna go through with it?" "Where is he?" "Right in front of you." "There?" "Not there." "[ Leland ] There." "Take care of yourself, Linda." "See you in two weeks." "Eyes down, say nothing and try not to look like a spy." "[ Door closes ]" "Are you mute?" "You said not to speak." "[ Speaking German ]" "[ Goodman ] Uh, excuse me." "Uh, might I interrupt?" "Are you aware that you're speaking in German?" "Sorry." "I remember it in German." "Could you remember it in English, please?" "Sure." "What's wrong with my accent?" "It's from the gutter." "But it's supposed to be." "I'm a cook." "But not one that drescher would accept." "Don't you know he's a man of great pretensions?" "With that vulgar sound he won't let you in at the door." "[ Engine starts ] My God, what have they sent me?" "[ Linda narrating ] I guess I couldn't blame him." "Konrad friedrichs, known as "sunflower,"" "had become a spy by my calculations around the year I was born." "A veteran of two wars, he was now partnered with me, whose only qualification..." "as he was quick to point out... was that I was born to some low-class individuals from Berlin." "It was my hope that some of these individuals were still in safe hiding... that my Jewish relatives had escaped Hitler's dreaded storm troopers..." "And were somehow, somewhere still alive." "[ Train whistle, distant ] [ Train approaching ]" "[ Dog barking ]" "[ Barking continues ]" "[ Men shouting commands in German ]" "[ Men coughing, moaning ]" "[ Goodman ] Your first sight of Berlin... any impression?" "[ Linda narrating ] Pitch darkness." "I was surrounded by it." "The city was blacked out, prepared for the night raids which hadn't yet begun." "Leave the luggage." "Not yours." "Follow me." "Toilet, washbasin." "You'll stay in here until I decide what to do." "Komm." "Komm." "[ Vehicle horns honking, distant ] [ Knocking ]" "[ Door shuts, distant ] [ Footsteps approaching ]" "[ Woman ] Uncle pootzie!" "[ Lock rattling ]" "[ Laughs ]" "Komm." "Komm." "He said if your cooking was anything like your accent, it was strictly for the beer halls." "So I'm taking a week off work at the war department..." "To teach you some grammar and some high German cuisine." "And believe me, you're going to need it." "We're putting you into drescher's house one week from today..." "To cook for a party which is most important to him." "His temper is legendary when things go wrong." "My Uncle didn't tell you I was coming." "I just arrived last night, frãulein." "I'm margrete Von eberstien..." "Of the Klaus Von eberstiens." "My father, the baron, is an actual friend of Hitler." "Der führer has been to my house." "To tell you the truth, it's my mother he likes." "She's a famous concert pianist, and der führer, like Horst drescher, is a man of great pretensions." "Would you like to meet der führer lina?" "Um... ed leland says to tell you hello." "[ Linda narrating ] Margrete Von eberstien was no one I was prepared for." "And now, you must tell me all about Clark gable." "Is he really married to vivien Leigh?" "[ Giggles ] [ Linda narrating ] But we were sisters from the start." "Our first job was to contact my courier, a fishmonger who would export any documents, microfilm, or written messages..." "Inside cartons of frozen fish to Norway." "That's him?" "Ja." "[ Linda ] How does it work?" "I just go over?" "[ Margrete ] Again, use the signal so he'll know who you are." "Pass a message for practice." "[ Thunder rumbles, distant ]" "What message?" "Anything you like." "[ Linda narrating ] For practice, I wrote a message..." "Indicating I was looking for my relatives, Hannah, liesel and sofi weiss." "What is that?" "My family." "[ Tears off notepaper ] We heard they're hiding in Berlin." "You're Jewish?" "Half." "Mein gott, you've got guts." "My father calls it chutzpah." "What is this?" "American spy stuff." "[ Linda narrating ] There was a password." "Ready?" "Yeah." "Something about fish." "Codfish." ""Is fresh COD in season?" "Is fresh COD in season?"" ""Is fresh COD in season?"" "Is COD in fresh s-season?" "We are closed." "I meant, is fresh COD in season?" "[ Siren blaring, approaching ]" "[ Siren continues ]" "[ Siren stops ]" "[ Car door opens, closes ]" "[ Men shouting in German ]" "[ Toilet flushes ]" " Heil Hitler." " Heil Hitler." "Papers?" "[ Thunder rumbling ]" "You got this at the tauschmarkt?" " Yes." " My wife did too." " What did you pay for it?" " Um, 40 marks." "You overpaid." "Good for hiding money." " Heil Hitler." " Heil Hitler." " Heil Hitler." "[ Gasps ]" "[ Siren wailing ]" "[ Trolley bell clanging ]" "[ Whimpering ] Oh, God!" "I thought they got you." "The damn purse flew open." "You're such a dope." "[ Cries, laughs ]" "[ Laughing ] You're another." "My friendship with margrete Von eberstien..." "Was the closest that I'd ever known." "[ Goodman ] Did you wish to stop?" "Something happened to her?" "She was killed?" "We-we can stop for a bit." "It's important to tell you that, um, she introduced me to her mother." "¶¶ [ Piano:" "Classical ]" "But, margrete, what if she suspects something?" "She'll suspect nothing." "All she thinks about is herself." "But, what if she asks..." "what if?" "What if?" "You'll never see this woman again." "Tomorrow you're going into the home of a total barbarian." "There's not a chance you will ever see my mother again." "And you?" "Will I see you again?" "¶¶ [ Continues ] Come." "Meet Hitler's favorite piano player." "You'll say I'm your cook?" "I want to see her kiss a Jew." "Well, if it isn't my pretty girl." "How nice to see you." "Where have you been for so long?" "Oh, mother." "This is my friend from university." " Lina Von klopper." " Von klopper?" "Her father is the baron Von klopper of pluhn." "You know, the big castle of pluhn?" "Oh." "That Von klopper." "How nice to meet you, my dear." "Mmm. [ Loud kiss ]" "[ Chuckling ]" "[ Linda narrating ] A week after my arrival, Horst drescher was to give a dinner party..." "That his chef would be unable to attend." "With just hours left before the party, herr drescher would forego the required security checks..." "Into the girl sent to replace him." "The idea being that I would so impress him with my cooking skills, that he'd decide he couldn't live without me." "[ Linda ] No, no, no." "That's enough basting." "These have to go into the oven right now." "Oh, my God." "Um, you don't need to do the stock anymore." "Get those... help her with those doves in the oven, please." "Let me taste the soup." "Excuse me." "May I ask you where the first course is?" "We have been seated for 15 minutes." "I'm sorry, herr drescher." "The soup is ready right now." "It's supposed to be cold cucumber soup." "Um, we serve it hot in Dusseldorf." "[ Nervous laugh ]" "The doves aren't cooked yet?" "The doves we serve cold." "[ Guests chattering ]" "[ Woman ] It's like they knew we were coming." "Everything was here." "Even toys for the children." "There were linens and towels and, can you believe, their initials were h.D.?" "Like ours?" "It was perfect." "Yes, it was perfect, and so is the food tonight." "For my honored guest franze-Otto Dietrich, a specialty from Dusseldorf." "Hot cucumber soup." "[ Murmuring ]" "So, how are the children enjoying potsdam?" "Not much, I'm afraid." "They miss their friends in Munich." " Potsdam is so far away." " You should have moved into Berlin." "There's a nice Hitler youth corps in potsdam." "They will make new friends." "They will." "We saw you on the news films at berchtesgarten, herr Dietrich." "Yes." "Hitler was looking well." "I'm so sorry, herr Dietrich." "Clumsy girl." "Forgive me, mein herr." "No matter." "No matter." "It should come out." "[ Woman ] It's only soup." "The color suits me." "It's all right." " You know, there's a house available in my neighborhood." " Yes?" "Perfect for you and the children." "The schools are much better in Berlin." "So I believe." "My apologies." "She just came today." "Really?" "Where from?" "Uh, Dusseldorf." "I assume she has been through a security check?" "But of course, herr Dietrich." "With you here, I can assure you, no one would come into this house... just asking." "Highly recommended." "Good." "[ Woman clears throat ]" "[ Loud swallow ] Delicious." "[ Forced chuckle ] Makes me feel like a wolf." "[ Laughs ]" "[ German ]" "What are you doing out here?" "Don't you know it's dangerous?" "Wait." "Wait." "It's me." "The soup?" "He dismissed you?" "Yes." " The doves were raw." " [ Dog barking ]" "I had no time." "I arrived at 6:00." "And you'll be home by 10:00." "Can I drop you?" "[ Barking continues ] [ Siren wailing in distance ]" " Yes." " Come." "So, where to?" "Just, um, straight on this street." "[ Clears throat ] [ Papers crinkling ]" "You're a foreigner." "Fresh from Dusseldorf, yes?" "Yes." "You're not really a cook, are you?" "The agencies have done that to me as well." "Sent me two nannies who knew nothing about children." "Not that mine are easy." "They're mother died two years ago." "They are, naturally, upset." " How many?" " Two." "That's not so many." "My father took care of eight." "With my help, of course." "I was the oldest." "You have an education?" "Apparently not enough to cook doves." "[ Laughs ]" "He ate the whole thing to prove it was edible." "[ Laughs ]" "[ Laughs ] You should've seen him." "Pompous little ass." "Eating a raw bird." "You know, it's hard to find suitable girls..." "Who've already been through a complete gestapo check." "I hate to let one get away." "[ Linda narrating ] I vanished that night without a trace." "Unable to let anyone know what had happened..." "Or why I'd been whisked away." "But having spotted the documents in franze Dietrich's briefcase," "I had to break my promise to ed leland and stay." "Isolated in a small town outside the city," "I was cut off from all contact now, biding my time as a humble German domestic from Dusseldorf..." "In a privileged German world." "Look, pappi." " [ Girl ] Bye-bye." " Come on." "[ Linda narrating ] As far as I was concerned, it couldn't have been planned better." "In one quick jump, I'd landed in the upstairs chambers..." "Of one of the third reich's elite." "A house where names like göring, speer and Von stauffenberg..." "Topped the guest list." "And where, I had no doubt, that information critical to the German war effort..." "Was being held." "But no matter how hard I searched, I could find nothing." "Not the briefcase, nor anything..." "Even resembling an official document." "Whatever he brought home from the office was being hidden..." " And I had no idea where." " [ Switch clicks ]" "[ Cheering ]" "[ Cheering continues ]" "Look there." "Dieter." "Dieter." "[ Franze ] Dieter." "Be careful now." "Hi." "[ Giggles ]" "Franze." "Franze." "Hello." "Stafson." "What a surprise." "Yes, what a surprise." "Well, hello." "Hello." "You know miss Albrecht?" "Stafson Von neest." "You know captain Von haefler at the foreign office?" "Von haefler, nice to meet you again." "Of course." "You're the one who served the raw ducks." "I was at drescher's." "Your old employer wants you back." "You can tell drescher he's too late." "No, no." "It's her employer before that who wants her back." " From Dusseldorf?" " No, no." "Friedrichs at the foreign office." "The old gentleman?" "He was all upset." "He thought drescher had done away with her." "Said she'd been working with him for years." "What was his name from the foreign office?" "Konrad friedrichs." "He's the old gentleman." "[ Crowd chanting "sig heil" ]" "[ Announcer in German ]" "[ Woman translating ] Where the happy citizens of Berlin..." "Are treated to the sight of the führer, taking time out for the heroes' day parade." "Where, in a ceremony at the sports palace, he will watch new recruits being inducted... stop the film." "Stop the film!" "Ed." "Will." "We got it." "His name's franze-Otto Dietrich." "Right up there in the wehrmact." "Spent last Christmas with Hitler and eva at berchtesgarten." "Look, they are definitely together." "She's got her hand on him." "When was this film taken?" "They came out last week through Lisbon." "When?" "When were they taken?" "They're recent." "The parade was just two weeks ago." "[ Door buzzes ] All right." "Contact sunflower." "Get me into Switzerland." "What's the plan?" "Get her the hell out of there." "[ Goodman ] And had you any idea they'd located you?" "No." "None." "Nor did I know that, um, franze Dietrich had become suspicious of me." "I did sense, however, that time was running out." "In mid-October, a single British aircraft made a daring night raid, shattering the illusion that Berlin was immune to harm." "Still empty-handed after five weeks," "I risked returning to the fishmonger with a note requesting instructions..." "And sending a signal homeward that I was still alive." "[ Bell tolls ]" "But Berlin was changing now." "The night raid fueling panic that more bombs were soon to fall." "[ Boy ] All this way for a fish." "You'll like the fish from Berlin." "I promise." "I hate fish." "[ Girl ] I wanted to go to the zoo." "I know that." "You can buy a fish, but I won't eat it." "All right, all right." "Here we go." "Give me your hands." "I mean it." "I'll throw it away." "Okay." "I heard you." "Careful." "[ Man speaking German ]" "Excuse me." "Can I help you?" "Is fresh COD in season?" "Barely." "I'd given up on you." "I thought you didn't like our fish." "She loves your fish." "We're on the bus two hours to get here." "She'd rather come here than go to the zoo." "It's like this in all the stores today." "People stocking up." "Salting the fish." "Everyone's afraid." "Come on." "Ooh, look." "Eels." "See that one." "Stay right here, okay?" "[ Girl ] Ooh, look at that one." "You were looking for something in particular?" "Um, just something fresh." "I mean, last time I saw you, you were looking for something in particular." "You found them." "It's not so easy to find just a few fish in such a big sea." "They have amazing fight though, these fish." "Twice the net swept over them, twice they escaped." "With this kind of luck, maybe they are still fresh." "Um... [ deep breath ] There's a... a kind of fish over here that I think..." "You might wanna take a look at." "There you are, 2.10." "No, no!" "That's my fish." "No." "No." "[ Screams ]" "[ Girl ] Lina." "[ Whimpering ]" "[ Yells ] Enough." "Out." "Come on, kids." "Let's go." "Out." "[ Girl ] What happened to the fish?" "[ Boy ] Lina?" "What is it?" "Go." "Go." "What happened?" "Was there a fight?" "She fights over fish." "She's in love with fish." "What happened?" "Nothing." "Nothing." "I'm sorry." "[ Linda narrating ] Inside the fish was a note that gave the address... 99 kinderstrasse, where my relatives were hiding in a basement on the outskirts of Berlin." "And suddenly, it was no longer a fantasy." "An address had made them real." "Hannah, liesel and my beautiful cousin sofi, who played the flute and whose photo I carried..." "And had now been forced into hiding somewhere in the darkness nearby." "I wondered if she were in a bed like I was." "Or curled up on a cold cellar floor." "If she was alone and frightened, or if she could sense that the moment of our meeting was near." "In the morning after dropping the children at school," "I'd have just enough time to make it back and forth to the city." "Berlin?" "Ja." "Oblivious to any danger, I was overwhelmed with excitement." "After a lifetime of dreaming this, I was finally on my way." "Destination?" "[ Continues in German ]" "[ German ]" "[ Leland ] A letter from your sister in Dusseldorf..." "Saying your father is dying, you should come home immediately." "A ticket for tonight's train to Dusseldorf, which you will not take." "I'll meet you at the train for Switzerland where I'll give you a new identification." "Can I interrupt for a second?" "When you tell Dietrich you're leaving," "I want you to tell him about this couple you met at the market." "A cook and chauffeur..." "he has a chauffeur." "Not for long he doesn't." "Ed, I'm not ready to go." "Not tonight." "I didn't hear you right, did I?" "I found my cousins." " Your cousins?" " You found them?" " Somebody help me out here." " There are no Jews left in the city." "Alexanderplatz." "99 kinderstrasse." " You've seen them?" " Not yet." "Linda, you can't help them." "There is nothing that you can do." "No, but you can." "Papers." "Passports." "Tickets to Switzerland." "What the hell you think, I got a printing press here?" "Lina, friedrichs was picked up yesterday and questioned by Dietrich." " Your boss." " Franze?" "Yeah." "Li-Linda, we are on thin ice here." "We are all on thin ice." "Just one more day." " To do what?" " To give them hope." "To let them know that I'll try to help them." "I won't leave here without doing this." "This ticket, it's good for 24 hours." "So are my papers." "They expire tomorrow at 6:00." "I'll wait till then, but not a minute longer." "If you find out they're alive and you come to the train, back to where there are printing presses and contact with partisans, we can do something about getting them out." "But whether you find them or not, Linda, 1800 tomorrow night, I want you on that train." "Thank you." "6:00, Linda." "If you're not there, I have to leave without you." "I'm sorry, ed." "It's not your fault." "I should never have let you go." "But I had to do this." "That's not what I mean." "I should never have let you go." "Come out, Linda." "Please." "I can't come out now." "Don't stand me up tomorrow night." "[ Linda narrating ] I know it was on a Friday that ed and I said good-bye..." "Because the next day was Saturday, and I had nowhere to leave the children." "[ Boy ] What do you want to see?" "I want to see every animal." " I'd like to see a lion." " I want to see the bears." "When do we get there?" "[ Conductor ] Alexanderplatz." "Here we go." "Come on." "I don't see it." "It's the wrong place." "I thought we'd just walk a few blocks." " What are we doing?" " This isn't the zoo." "[ Door closes, lock clicks ] Excuse me." "We're looking for the zoo." "Five blocks." "99 kinderstrasse?" "It's the one on the corner." "[ Pigeons fluttering, cooing ] This is scary." "What are we doing?" "You kids wait here." "Where are you going?" "[ Water dripping ]" "[ Soft gasp ]" "[ Crying ]" "[ Sobbing ]" "God." "[ Sniffles ]" "[ Shaky breath ]" "[ Air raid siren wailing ]" "[ Bell tolling ]" "Help!" "Lina!" "Lina!" "Lina!" "Quick!" "Lina!" "Lina!" "Help, lina!" "It's all right." "Lina!" "Help!" "[ Screams ]" "Get out." "Get out!" "[ Siren continues ]" "[ Bomb whistling, faint ]" " [ Gasps ] - [ Screaming ]" "[ Man shouting ]" "Are you all right?" "Are you okay?" "[ Crying ]" "We've got to go home." "In the cellar." "I know a place to hide." "Look!" "The zoo!" "[ Crying ]" "[ Woman crying ] [ Man shouting ]" "Pappi." "Pappi." "Pappi." "Pappi." "Pappi." "Pappi, are you all right?" "Did they bomb you too?" "Where have you been?" "They bombed us." "A whole building exploded." "You should've seen it." "Shh-shh-shh." "You went in Berlin?" "We went to the zoo." "You should've asked me." "Sorry." "Never leave potsdam again without asking, please." "Come." "If they come again, we'll go down to your secret room." "Yes." "Yes." "All right?" "In the cellar." "You said it was safe down there." "You said nobody knew about it." "[ Girl ] Can we sleep there?" "[ Franze ] They won't bomb again." "They won't come near us." "It was awful, pappi." "I think some people were killed." "You're safe." "That's the important thing." "[ Door closes ] [ Girl giggles ]" "[ Franze ] Geisella?" "Children?" "[ Train whistle blows ] [ Man on p.A., German ]" "[ Man on p.A. Continues ]" "[ Whistles ]" "[ Door creaks ]" "Lina." "You weren't in your room." "I was afraid you might've left us." "Why would I?" "Perhaps you'd learned enough." "That's what you are doing, isn't it?" "For herr himmler and his friends." "For the gestapo?" " The gestapo?" " Infiltrating my house to find out if I am soft..." "On the principles of the reich?" "If I can be drawn into confiding my secrets?" "On my life, I am not gestapo." "It's not right that such a beautiful woman should labor." "I have no choice." "Do you have a dress for evening?" "No." "Von karajan is playing Wagner." "A celebration of our courage." "You will wear a dress of my wife's..." "And sit beside me tomorrow night." "¶¶ [ Classical ]" "My God." "That's Olga leiner." "Do you know her?" "Who?" "Olga leiner." "Look." "Yes." "She's waving at you." "She must mistake me for someone." "¶¶ [ Opera ]" "¶¶ [ Continues ]" "¶¶ [ Ends ]" "Lina." "Lina, right?" "Oh." "[ Loud kiss ]" "So nice to see a familiar face." "Seems like no one I know is left in the city." "[ Clears throat ]" "Frãulina." "I'm franze Dietrich, a great admirer." "Oh." "You know miss Albrecht?" "Yes." "She went to university with my daughter." "You must come up to the apartment again sometime, and bring your charming friend." "And if you see my pretty girl... [ Kisses ] Tell her to call me." "I'm sorry." "I couldn't get them to their beds." "They wanted to wait for you." "Thank you." "Good night." "Good night." "Good night." "Good night." "[ Door opens, closes ]" "I'll take them upstairs." "Herr Dietrich." "It's late, lina." "Too late for talking." "[ Franze ] Lina." "[ Girl ] Lina." "[ Franze ] Lina?" "Lina?" "[ Doorbell buzzes ]" "[ Banging on door ]" "[ Panting ] Go away." "I was already called by the gestapo." "They're coming here." "Go to margrete's." "Hide for the night..." " Or you'll kill us all." " [ Light clicks off ]" "[ Sets brake ]" "[ Ringing ]" "Hello?" "Yeah." "My God, where are you?" "They're combing the whole city for you." "Look out your front window." "Come up." "[ Coin box rattling ]" "Come, quickly." "[ Whimpers ]" "Are you all right?" "Yeah." "[ Crying ] It's okay." "You're blue." "I'm cold." "Come." "You don't know how worried I've been." "Friedrichs called me." "He turned me away." "He had no choice." "They were watching him." "Here, what I want you to do is get out of those clothes, run some hot bathwater, take a hot bath while we think of what to do with you." "Margrete..." "maybe change your looks." "Cut your hair." "Margrete..." "you need papers." "Margrete." "I got the information." "On microfilm." "The location of the factory." "It's in peenemünde." "Good." "[ Exhales ] Very good." "And where is the microfilm?" "I hid it." "I wanted to make sure you were alone." " Where?" " Outside." "The phone booth." "The coin box is loose." "One right here?" "Yeah." "Good." "I'll get it." "Run a hot bath, cut your hair." "There are scissors." "[ Door closes ] [ Gasps ]" "[ Footsteps ascending stairs ]" "Lina, I pretended to make a call..." "So no one would be suspicious of my being out there." "[ Water running ]" "[ Groans ] Oh, God." "Forgive me." "I'm sorry." "I'm sorry." "Forgive me." "[ Crying ]" "They'll be here soon." "I'll make sure they take care of you." "[ Groans ] Oh, lina." "A bad way for us to end." "Why now?" "Why didn't you turn me in before?" "We've been watching Dietrich." "When you blundered into his house, we thought we could use you to feed me information." "If he was loyal." "Oh." "My cousins." "[ Sobbing ]" "I'm sorry." "I work for the reich." "And I confess, except for you," "I have no use for Jews." "[ Yelling ]" "[ Panting, crying ] [ Sirens wailing ]" "[ Crying ]" "[ Shouting orders, German ]" "[ Men shouting ] [ Grunts ]" "[ Panting ]" "[ Panting, whimpering ]" "[ Speaking German ]" "[ Friedrichs ] She's got to be in the building." "She wouldn't have lasted this long on the street." "Look at this." "How do we get into the basement?" "[ Lina groans ]" "[ Groans ] Sorry." "Easy." "Easy." "Easy." "Okay." "This is for the pain." "You have to forget about the pain." "I need you to do the talking for me." "Okay?" "Put your arm on my shoulder." "Okay?" "Let's go." "[ Bell tolling ]" "[ Brakes squealing ]" "Can't go any further." "They'd recognize me before they do her." "Good luck." "[ Train whistle blares ]" "[ Man on p.A., indistinct ]" "Hi." "Hi." "Am I dying?" "Forget about dying." "You're not allowed to die." "I've never seen you look scared before." "I don't wanna lose you." "I wanna be with you... always." "Oh, God." "You wouldn't say that unless you were sure I was gonna die." "[ Chuckles ]" "I love you." "[ Conductor ]" "Linda." "Linda." "Linda!" "[ Banging ] [ Conductor ]" "Okay." "Let's go." "Halt!" "[ Linda narrating ] It surprised no one that ed was too stubborn to die." "With one bullet that shattered his knee..." "And another that punctured his lung, he was conscious enough to hear news reports of the bombing of peenemünde..." "Just 14 days later." "So you did get the microfilm out?" "Yes." "It was discovered clutched in my hand..." "When I was brought to the hospital in Switzerland." "I'd hidden it in my glove..." "Knowing that it would be removed if I were examined by a doctor..." "And overlooked if I were searched by an enemy." "Very clever." "How-how did you know that?" "Did you ever see a movie called victory at dawn?" "[ Laughs ] I should've known." "[ Clapping ]" "[ Laughing ]" "Those are my sons." "Can I get them on TV?" "Of course." "We'd be delighted." "There's my husband." "[ Giggles ]" "Ed." "Come." "Come here." "[ Applause continues, whistles ] Help me." "Mr. leland." "Thank you both very, very much." "¶¶ [ Big band ]" "[ Woman ] ¶ I'll be seeing you ¶" "¶ in all the old familiar places ¶" "¶ that this heart of mine embraces ¶" "¶ all day through ¶" "¶ in a small café ¶" "¶ the park along the way ¶" "¶ the children's carousel ¶" "¶ the Chestnut tree the wishing well ¶" "¶ and I'll be seeing you ¶" "¶ in every lovely summer's day ¶" "¶ in everything that's light and gay ¶" "¶ I'll always think of you that way ¶" "¶ I'll find you in the morning sun ¶" "¶ and when the night is new ¶" "¶ I'll be looking at the moon but I'll be seeing you ¶" "¶¶ [ band ]" "¶ In a small café ¶" "¶ the park along the way ¶" "¶ the children's carousel ¶" "¶ the Chestnut tree the wishing well ¶" "¶ and I'll be seeing you ¶" "¶ in every lovely summer's day ¶" "¶ in everything that's light and gay ¶" "¶ I'll always think of you that way ¶" "¶ I'll find you in the morning sun ¶" "¶ and when the night is new ¶" "¶ I'll be looking at the moon ¶" "¶ but I'll be seeing you ¶¶"