Dr. Dudley White:
It's OK. He fell out of the window.
--Robert Benchley (as Dr. Dudley White) in I Married a Witch
--Robert Benchley (as Dr. Dudley White) in I Married a Witch
Dr. Dudley White:
Oh well, it's late, I've got to be getting into my strait jacket. I'll call a broom.
--Robert Benchley (as Dr. Dudley White) in I Married a Witch
--Robert Benchley (as Dr. Dudley White) in I Married a Witch
Lecturer:
Now the only way in which a polyp resembles other animals at all is that at certain periods of its growth, it does take a sentimental interest in polyps of the... oppositie sex. Now, this presents a very complicated situation as the polyp has no definite sex itself. That is... it's neither one thing or the other. By that I mean the same polyp may be either a boy or a girl according to what or how it happened to feel like being.
--Robert Benchley (as ) in The Sex Life of the Polyp
--Robert Benchley (as ) in The Sex Life of the Polyp
Lecturer:
We took one of the tiny creatures home with us to live. It was at the time a girl polyp, so we called her Mary after Ethel Barrymore. She was at first naturally shy but soon grew accustomed to our mannish ways and became more like a child of our own than a polyp - although she looked more like a polyp than a child of our own.
--Robert Benchley (as ) in The Sex Life of the Polyp
--Robert Benchley (as ) in The Sex Life of the Polyp
Martin Cortland:
Do anything so long as you make my wife believe I was telling the truth when I was lying to her!
--Robert Benchley (as Martin Cortland) in You'll Never Get Rich
--Robert Benchley (as Martin Cortland) in You'll Never Get Rich
Mr. Osborne:
Why don't you get out of that wet coat and into a dry martini?
--Robert Benchley (as Mr. Osborne) in The Major and the Minor
--Robert Benchley (as Mr. Osborne) in The Major and the Minor
Mr. Osborne:
You know what I told the mayor? That my only regret is that I have but one wife to give to my country.
--Robert Benchley (as Mr. Osborne) in The Major and the Minor
--Robert Benchley (as Mr. Osborne) in The Major and the Minor
Stebbins:
They love to cable from New York. It makes them think that you're working for them.
--Robert Benchley (as Stebbins) in Foreign Correspondent
--Robert Benchley (as Stebbins) in Foreign Correspondent
Treasurer:
I don't think it's generally known that most of our boys are between the age of fourteen.
--Robert Benchley (as ) in The Treasurer's Report
--Robert Benchley (as ) in The Treasurer's Report
Wilburforce Puddle, hotel manager:
A dead body in the hotel! What will the morticians think?
--Robert Benchley (as ) in Three Girls About Town
--Robert Benchley (as ) in Three Girls About Town