:04:01
This is me, age 20.
:04:03
I don't know what I was wearing.
Terribly Chelsea, I thought I was.
:04:07
Really, I suppose I was
as square as an ice cube with it.
:04:15
- Try that one over there.
- Right you are.
:04:17
- Me, on the telly?
- It won't take a minute.
:04:20
How fascinating.
You must tell me what to do.
:04:22
Could you come this way?
:04:23
I hate convention. You can't breathe.
You have to break away.
:04:27
But isn't the breakaway of yesterday
the convention of today?
:04:31
Then you have to break away again.
:04:33
Just for the sake of it?
Isn't that conventional?
:04:35
The way young people live today...
:04:37
the way they dress, dance, talk...
:04:41
It's more conventional
than what they're trying to escape.
:04:44
Would you say
the way I dress was conventional?
:04:46
Your dress is in the height of fashion,
and your hair is...
:04:50
She's fine. We'll use that. Very good.
:04:57
How conventional are we
in matters of public taste?
:05:00
The London skyline is constantly altering,
and yet young architects...
:05:04
Thank you for letting me see
the finished product.
:05:06
- It's a very good program.
- You really think so?
:05:10
I thought I looked ghastly,
but it was a super program.
:05:12
I thought you looked super,
and the program looked ghastly.
:05:15
What's more, I'm right, too.
:05:17
No, I thought you looked
frightfully lean and intelligent.
:05:22
I am frightfully lean and intelligent,
not that it helps.
:05:26
- You must lead such an interesting life.
- Being a professional question mark?
:05:30
- It's better than being a professional bosom.
- What's that?
:05:34
You should try posing for Brides sometime.
:05:36
I did once. It was a disaster.
A complete disaster.
:05:42
Is this yours?
:05:45
Yes, as a matter of fact, it is.
:05:48
This one.
:05:50
What do you think I am? Go on, get in.
:05:56
There's so much junk in it,
though I keep on chucking things out.