:26:00
l want a laugh too. Tell me the story.
:26:04
l'll tell you. You've probably heard
it before. lt's as old as Prudence.
:26:08
-What's that about my being old?
-l said that the story was as old as you are.
:26:12
l'm 36.
:26:16
Drink your wine, Armand.
He's as sad as a drinking song.
:26:20
What's the matter? Are you shocked?
:26:24
No, certainly not.
Only, l know all Gaston's jokes.
:26:27
ln fact, l told him most of them.
:26:30
l'd sooner they weren't repeated
at your table.
:26:33
Oh, come, come.
:26:35
You must remember, l'm not a colonel's
daughter just out of the convent.
:26:45
Bravo! Bravo!
:26:54
l do this better than anybody.
Nobody can do it as well as l can.
:26:59
-Slower, Charles, you're going too fast.
-You're getting tired.
:27:02
lf you don't stop playing,
Olympe will drop dead.
:27:05
She can't keep that up forever,
she's not so young.
:27:09
Faster, l'm just getting into the mood.
:27:12
You'll drop, dear.
:27:16
Well, go ahead and drop. l don't care.
:27:22
-Sit beside me, dear.
-l'm not tired.
:27:28
l appreciate you. l love you.
:27:31
l love you.
:27:33
Now, don't go away. l adore you.
:27:38
-Play a waltz, Charles.
-l don't want to. l want to play a polka.
:27:42
Very well, play a polka.
:27:44
Dance with me, Gaston.
Dance, everybody.