Grizel Dane:
[very curious] Proutie, who was Lark?
Proutie: She was old Mr. Dane's ward, miss.
Grizel Dane: Uncle Rollo's ward?
Proutie: Oh, dear, no, Miss Lark was Mr. Rollo's father's ward, miss. She grew up with Mr. Rollo and all the Dane children.
Grizel Dane: And you were here even then?
Proutie: Oh, yes, miss. My old auntie was in service with Mr. Rollo's father. I remember Miss Lark well. One doesn't forget Miss Lark.
[changing the subject]
Proutie: Dinner will be served at 7.00 miss. The General likes to dress.
Grizel Dane: Good. It'll be a pleasant change, we're allowed to be feminine off-duty. Proutie, you haven't told me what happened to Lark.
Proutie: Nothing happened to her, miss.
--Leo G. Carroll (as Proutie) in Enchantment
Proutie: She was old Mr. Dane's ward, miss.
Grizel Dane: Uncle Rollo's ward?
Proutie: Oh, dear, no, Miss Lark was Mr. Rollo's father's ward, miss. She grew up with Mr. Rollo and all the Dane children.
Grizel Dane: And you were here even then?
Proutie: Oh, yes, miss. My old auntie was in service with Mr. Rollo's father. I remember Miss Lark well. One doesn't forget Miss Lark.
[changing the subject]
Proutie: Dinner will be served at 7.00 miss. The General likes to dress.
Grizel Dane: Good. It'll be a pleasant change, we're allowed to be feminine off-duty. Proutie, you haven't told me what happened to Lark.
Proutie: Nothing happened to her, miss.
--Leo G. Carroll (as Proutie) in Enchantment
Felix Ducotel:
[to his wife] You know how miserable I get when I'm unhappy.
--Leo G. Carroll (as Felix Ducotel) in We're No Angels
--Leo G. Carroll (as Felix Ducotel) in We're No Angels
Felix Ducotel:
Don't misunderstand me. It's true that I never liked my cousin, only because he was not likable. He had a number of good points, I'm sure. I just can't think of any.
--Leo G. Carroll (as Felix Ducotel) in We're No Angels
--Leo G. Carroll (as Felix Ducotel) in We're No Angels
Felix Ducotel:
I'll say one thing for crooks - they give you an honest day's work.
--Leo G. Carroll (as Felix Ducotel) in We're No Angels
--Leo G. Carroll (as Felix Ducotel) in We're No Angels
Prof. Gerald Deemer:
The disease of hunger, like most diseases, well, it spreads. There are 2 billion people in the world today. In 1975 there'll be 3 billion. In the year 2000, there'll be 3,625,000,000. The world may not be able to produce enough food to feed all these people. Now perhaps you'll understand what an inexpensive nutrient will mean.
Dr. Matt Hastings: Well, not many of us look that far in the future, sir.
Prof. Gerald Deemer: Our business is the future. No man can do it on his own, of course. You don't pull it out of your hat like a magician's rabbit. You - well, you build on what hundreds of others have learned before you.
--Leo G. Carroll (as Prof. Gerald Deemer) in Tarantula
Dr. Matt Hastings: Well, not many of us look that far in the future, sir.
Prof. Gerald Deemer: Our business is the future. No man can do it on his own, of course. You don't pull it out of your hat like a magician's rabbit. You - well, you build on what hundreds of others have learned before you.
--Leo G. Carroll (as Prof. Gerald Deemer) in Tarantula
Prof. Gerald Deemer:
The history of medicine is the history of the unusual;
--Leo G. Carroll (as Prof. Gerald Deemer) in Tarantula
--Leo G. Carroll (as Prof. Gerald Deemer) in Tarantula
Uncle Bill:
A man should never lose his hand at hunting.
--Leo G. Carroll (as Uncle Bill) in The Snows of Kilimanjaro
--Leo G. Carroll (as Uncle Bill) in The Snows of Kilimanjaro
Dr. Matt Hastings:
But what if circumstances magnified one of them in size and strength, took it out of its primitive world, and turned it loose in ours?
Prof. Townsend: Then expect something that's fiercer, more cruel and deadly than anything that ever walked on earth!
--Leo G. Carroll (as Prof. Gerald Deemer) in Tarantula
Prof. Townsend: Then expect something that's fiercer, more cruel and deadly than anything that ever walked on earth!
--Leo G. Carroll (as Prof. Gerald Deemer) in Tarantula
Dr. Murchison:
[with his revolver pointed at Constance] You're an excellent analyst, Dr. Peterson, but a rather stupid woman.
--Leo G. Carroll (as Dr. Murchison) in Spellbound
--Leo G. Carroll (as Dr. Murchison) in Spellbound
Dr. Murchison:
The old must make way for the new, especially when the old is suspected of senility.
--Leo G. Carroll (as Dr. Murchison) in Spellbound
--Leo G. Carroll (as Dr. Murchison) in Spellbound