John Lund
(as Captain John Pringle)
Phoebe Frost:
How do you know so much about women's clothing?
Captain John Pringle: My mother wears women's clothing.
Captain John Pringle: My mother wears women's clothing.
Millard Mitchell
(as Col. Rufus J. Plummer)
Phoebe Frost:
Really, Colonel Plummer... you should have your brakes relined!
Col. Rufus J. Plummer: [as she leaves, he scratches his nose with the middle finger, apparently flipping her off. it WAS Billy Wilder, after all]
Col. Rufus J. Plummer: [as she leaves, he scratches his nose with the middle finger, apparently flipping her off. it WAS Billy Wilder, after all]
John Lund
(as Captain John Pringle)
Phoebe Frost:
There. Now we're getting someplace. I wonder what holds up that dress...
Captain John Pringle: Must be that German willpower.
Captain John Pringle: Must be that German willpower.
Jean Arthur
(as Phoebe Frost)
Phoebe Frost:
We'll go there right now!
Captain John Pringle: Where?
Phoebe Frost: To the files!
Captain John Pringle: In the middle of the night? Shouldn't we get permission?
Phoebe Frost: Did we get permission to land in Normandie? Let's go!
Captain John Pringle: Where?
Phoebe Frost: To the files!
Captain John Pringle: In the middle of the night? Shouldn't we get permission?
Phoebe Frost: Did we get permission to land in Normandie? Let's go!
Marlene Dietrich
(as Erika Von Schluetow)
Erika von Schluetow:
[singing] Want to buy some illusions? Slightly used, just like new. Such romantic illusions, and they're all about you. I sell them all for a penny, they make pretty souvenirs. Take my lovely illusions, some for laughs, some for tears.
Marlene Dietrich
(as Erika Von Schluetow)
Marlene Dietrich
(as Erika Von Schluetow)
Marlene Dietrich
(as Erika Von Schluetow)
Erika von Schluetow:
We've all become animals with exactly one instinct left. Self-preservation. Now take me, Miss Frost. Bombed out a dozen times, everything caved in and pulled out from under me. My country, my possessions, my beliefs... yet somehow I kept going. Months and months in air raid shelters, crammed in with five thousand other people. I kept going. What do you think it was like to be a woman in this town when the Russians first swept in? I kept going.