1:13:05
This way gentlemen, please.
Kindly be seated.
1:13:15
Good afternoon. Is His Majesty in?
1:13:17
He just left.
1:13:19
I believe I'm addressing
the King's nephew, am I not?
1:13:25
I thought so.
That's what I just heard.
1:13:29
The King's nephew. Well, indeed!
1:13:32
This is an unexpected pleasure.
1:13:35
Have you any idea, Sir,
when His Majesty will return?
1:13:38
He said he was going to the bank
to get some plans.
1:13:41
Then we'll wait.
1:13:42
I'll leave you gentlemen
with His Royal Highness.
1:13:50
Your Highness,
1:13:51
is this your first visit
to our country?
1:13:54
Oh no, I've been here a long time.
Practically all my life.
1:13:57
Is that so?
1:13:59
Sounds like a real American boy,
don't he?
1:14:01
He sure does.
1:14:03
Do you go to school here?
1:14:05
Yeah, in Brooklyn.
1:14:07
Brooklyn! So your daddy wants you
to have an American education?
1:14:11
Well, you see,
1:14:13
my father don't believe
in this King business,
1:14:15
so he changed his name
and came to live in Brooklyn.
1:14:18
That's where he met my mother.
1:14:20
She didn't know he was a Prince.
1:14:22
She just thought he was
an ordinary emigrant,
1:14:25
but she loved him,
so she married him.
1:14:27
That's how I was born.
1:14:29
That's how the King
became my uncle.
1:14:31
But my uncle don't speak to my
father because they always quarrel.
1:14:35
One time
they were going to fight a duel.
1:14:38
That's why my father
came to America,
1:14:40
to give air and sunlight
to his thoughts.
1:14:42
The land of the free and the home
of the brave was his inspiration.
1:14:46
But today that freedom
is threatened.
1:14:48
Committees are searching men's
minds, controlling their thoughts.
1:14:52
And those who have the courage
to stand up are boycotted,
1:14:55
lose their jobs
and are left to starve.
1:14:58
Say, what the...?
1:14:59
They are condemned without trial.