High Society
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:22:01
Mother!
:22:04
George came early. l'll tell Edward
to set another place for lunch.

:22:09
-l'm pooped.
-No, dear, you're enervated.

:22:11
l'm pooped too.
:22:13
There is one thing
l want understood right now.

:22:16
No member of my family is to
invite Dexter-Haven into this house...

:22:21
...until after l am married and gone.
:22:23
l will not have my wedding
spoiled by intruders.

:22:27
-Tracy.
-Yes?

:22:29
l'm afraid we'll have to endure
a couple of intruders.

:22:34
l've just talked to Uncle Willie.
:22:36
Uncle Willie's an evil old man.
Did he invite a couple painted ladies?

:22:40
Please, Caroline. Run along, dear.
:22:44
And roll down your trousers.
:22:46
Your Uncle Willie wants us to
have a photographer and reporter...

:22:50
...from SPY magazine cover your wedding.
:22:54
ls he out of his mind?
:22:58
lntimate pictures of my wedding
in that barbershop magazine?

:23:03
He can't be serious.
:23:05
He's quite serious.
lf we don't allow them...

:23:07
...this magazine will publish a rather
unsavory article about your father.

:23:11
Good. l couldn't be happier.
lt serves him right.

:23:15
You mustn't be vindictive.
:23:16
As Uncle Willie points out,
you'll only make George suffer.

:23:19
You owe it to him to suppress
this if you possibly can.

:23:23
And l'm to be examined, undressed and
generally humiliated at 1 5 cents a copy?

:23:29
-No.
-Have some compassion, Tracy.

:23:32
But this is intolerable. The idea
of letting Father off scot-free.

:23:37
No, l won't do it. And in
our house, watching every move.

:23:42
Why, jotting down notes on how we sit
and talk and eat and move...

:23:45
...just to save Father's face, no.
:23:48
-Tracy--
-No!

:23:50
For me, please?
:23:53
Mother, l really think you're
sorry you ever let Father go.

:23:57
For George and for me, Tracy.

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