:26:02
Think of your mother.
It'll kill your mother.
:26:05
Yes, it would kill my mother.
:26:08
(Bogdanovich) I asked Hitchcock once.
I said, "She seems to love him,
:26:12
and yet she's the one
that brings him down."
:26:15
And he said, "It's because she
watches him more than anybody else."
:26:18
"She cares about him
more than anybody else."
:26:21
That's part of the irony of the piece.
:26:23
Hitch would then quote
Oscar Wilde, you know,
:26:26
"Each man kills the thing he loves."
:26:29
Graham thought you could
get your uncle to leave town now.
:26:33
(Charlie) I've got to, haven't I?
:26:36
I'll make him leave. I'll make him.
:26:40
They caught that other fella,
the Merry Widow Murderer.
:26:43
(Joe) They did, did they?
:26:49
(Graham) Here you were,
trying to get your uncle out of town.
:26:51
He must've thought you were crazy.
:26:54
(Wright) I was talking to Pat about
the scene I did with Macdonald Carey.
:26:58
I was worried about the gist of it,
:27:00
because it seemed to be awfully
boy-meets-girl kind of thing.
:27:05
Kind of kidding and so forth.
:27:08
And I said,
"Because of what she's going through,
:27:11
somewhere, there's got to be
this tension of what is happening
:27:15
that she can't tell him."
:27:17
And Pat agreed.
:27:19
So I went to Hitch
and I told him my feelings about it.
:27:23
I said, "Pat agrees."
And she is a very good writer.
:27:27
Wrote a lot of wondertul stories
for the New Yorker with humour.
:27:32
But she has a delicacy,
so she wrote the scene.
:27:35
It isn't that much different,
but it was just enough.
:27:38
And it was staged differently.
:27:40
Instead of ending in an embrace,
:27:42
we kind of played it
across from each other
:27:46
so there was something there.
:27:48
We both knew there was something
that had to be dealt with first.
:27:56
What's the matter?
:27:58
I was laughing.
It's been so long since I laughed.