Helen Ellswirth:
Do you mind if Paul takes me home?
Charles Wills: Paul who?
Helen Ellswirth: Paul anybody. Party like this, must be at least 7 Pauls.
Charles Wills: Paul who?
Helen Ellswirth: Paul anybody. Party like this, must be at least 7 Pauls.
Helen Ellswirth:
Don't ever phone if you can possibly come yourself. Don't ever leave if you can stay.
Helen Ellswirth:
I'm sick to death of death. I want to enjoy things, have fun, live every day like it's the last day. Wouldn't that be nice, a lifetime full of last days?
Helen Ellswirth:
I've been having a bad day for a year now, maybe it's time to grow up.
Charles Wills: It's too late to grow up.
Charles Wills: It's too late to grow up.
Charles Wills:
What kind of wife are you, dancing with other men?
Helen Ellswirth: The average kind.
Helen Ellswirth: The average kind.
James Ellswirth:
Helen tells me that you're a very serious-minded man, hard-working, industrious.
Charles Wills: Well I try to be sir.
James Ellswirth: I tell you frankly, these were not the qualities I'd hoped for in a son-in-law.
Charles Wills: Well I try to be sir.
James Ellswirth: I tell you frankly, these were not the qualities I'd hoped for in a son-in-law.