1:02:01
You have paid my,
what do you call him, my manager
1:02:05
1 00 dollars an hour for me?
1:02:08
Yep. Two solid hours.
And l plan to use every minute of it.
1:02:11
Monsieur, l think there
has been a terrible error.
1:02:14
Oh, no. What's the matter?
1:02:15
Are you sore because
we're just gonna sit and talk?
1:02:18
- Talk?
- Yeah, l thought he explained it to you.
1:02:21
Oh, monsieur has been
injured in this football?
1:02:26
l don't think so.
Come on, sit down.
1:02:29
l'm just a newspaper man looking for
a good story, and the name is Steve.
1:02:32
Yours?
1:02:34
- Mimi.
- Well, of course.
1:02:36
- ''That funny-looking, round-heeled--''
- No, no, no.
1:02:40
''That funny, little,
good-for-nothing Mimi.''
1:02:42
You got into this business because
the man you love betrayed you.
1:02:45
No, monsieur. l just like it.
1:02:50
Mimi, we're gonna get along very well.
But that accent, now, what is that?
1:02:55
- What does it sound like?
- Oh, l don't know.
1:02:58
Hungarian, Romanian.
Flatbush Avenue.
1:03:02
Perhaps someday
l shall tell you. Just wait.
1:03:05
Holy-- l'm late.
1:03:08
l didn't know we were
gonna have this little conversation,
1:03:10
so l made arrangements to cover this
game. We can continue our talk there.
1:03:15
- Come on.
- Monsieur--
1:03:16
Look, Madame Bovary, l'm late.
1:03:18
l don't want any arguments.
1:03:21
Come on. You still owe me
an hour and 50 minutes.
1:03:23
Let's keep the meter running.
1:03:27
Taxi.
1:03:28
Come on, baby, we're in a hurry.
1:03:50
On the way in to the stadium,
Mimi told me how she'd gotten
1:03:53
into her present interesting occupation.
Since she was a little girl, she said,
1:03:57
she always wanted
to be just like mama.