:33:03
Boy, you sound really healthy.
:33:05
Yeah.
:33:07
- At least I got the apartment.
- That's what everybody says to me.
:33:11
But really, what's so hard about finding an
apartment? You read the obituary column.
:33:16
You find out who died, go to the building,
and then you tip the doorman.
:33:19
It'd be easier if they combined
obituaries with the real-estate section.
:33:24
Then you have "Mr Klein died,
leaving a wife, two children
:33:27
and a spacious three-bedroom
apartment with a wood-burning fireplace."
:33:34
The first time we met
I really didn't like you that much.
:33:37
- I didn't like you.
- Yeah, you did.
:33:39
You were just so uptight then.
You're much softer now.
:33:43
I hate that kind of remark. It sounds
like a compliment, but it's an insult.
:33:47
OK, you're still as hard as nails.
:33:49
I didn't wanna sleep with you
so you wrote it off as a character flaw,
:33:53
instead of dealing with the possibility
it might have something to do with you.
:33:58
What's the statute of limitations
on apologies?
:34:03
- Ten years.
- I can just get it in under the wire.
:34:11
Would you like to have
dinner with me sometime?
:34:15
Are we becoming friends now?
:34:19
Well...
:34:22
Yeah.
:34:25
Great! A woman friend.
:34:28
You may be the first attractive woman I've
not wanted to sleep with in my entire life.
:34:34
That's wonderful, Harry.
:34:37
- We were born in the same hospital,...
- ln 1921 .
:34:41
- ..seven days apart.
- ln the same hospital.
:34:43
- We both grew up one block apart.
- We lived in tenements.
:34:46
- On the Lower East Side.
- On Delancey Street.
:34:49
- I moved to the Bronx when I was ten.
- He lived on Fordham Road.
:34:53
- She moved when she was 1 1 .
- I lived on 183rd Street.
:34:56
- She worked on the 1 5th floor as a nurse.
- I worked for a prominent neurologist,...