:28:01
- My teeth are still all right.
- You have to wear the glasses
when; when you have any trouble.
:28:05
You have to.
:28:07
[ Laughs ]
:28:09
And my hair will grow...
I hope. Here.
:28:20
[ David ]
You're dressed for battle; Edie.
:28:23
Mother's telling Marjorie how
spoiled I am, how terrible I am.
:28:27
And Marjorie knew my father
and my uncle and everybody.
:28:30
Mother's giving her
all this S-H-I-T,
:28:32
so I went and told her
some things about the family.
:28:36
But, you see,
in dealing with me...
:28:39
the relatives didn't know...
:28:42
that they were dealing
with a staunch character.
:28:46
And I tell you, if there's anything
worse than a staunch woman--
:28:50
S-T-A-U-N-C-H.
:28:54
There's nothing worse,
I'm telling you.
:28:57
[ Sighs ]
:28:59
They don't weaken... no matter what.
:29:05
But they didn't know that.
Well, how were they to know ?
:29:09
You know, my father had made up his mind
about what Farmington produced...
:29:14
and what the
Sacred Heart Convent produced.
:29:16
I don't think he was so down
on the Spence School,
:29:19
but he certainly was down
on Farmington.
:29:22
I don't know why.
Farmington was a junior college.
:29:25
You could choose
what you wanted to study.
:29:27
Perhaps that was what made
my father dislike it so--
:29:30
that I could choose.
:29:32
But I chose what I thought
he'd want me to choose--
:29:36
you know,
English literature and...
:29:39
Oriental philosophies and, uh...
:29:42
well, I always took French,
but nothing ever happened there.
:29:46
I can read and write in French,
but I can't speak it.
:29:50
I had years and years
and years of French.
:29:54
Terrible.
[ Laughs ]
:29:59
This was taken by Amy Dupont
my last year in Farmington.