:36:00
-Why do you say that, dear?
-l thought the people there were just horrid.
:36:04
There are an awful lot of Jews
in that neighborhood.
:36:07
-Mrs. MacGregor.
-Margaret.
:36:09
Margaret.
l must warn you, l'm a Jew.
:36:13
-You're not.
-l am.
:36:14
-No.
-Yes.
:36:16
-You're pulling my leg!
-No, l'm not pulling your leg, Margaret.
:36:21
l'm a Jew.
:36:24
l don't believe you.
:36:27
l know l shouldn't say this, but...
:36:30
...that was the one thing about which
l thought Hitler was absolutely right.
:36:33
Now, Margaret, the man has
just got through warning you.
:36:36
Because the Jews
in London were awful.
:36:41
They ran the black market.
And they didn't go into the army.
:36:45
And when they did,
they got themselves cushy jobs.
:36:49
Of course, there were upper-class Jews,
but l'm not talking about them.
:36:52
l'm talking about the kikes in Soho.
:36:55
-The foreigners.
-Margaret. Margaret.
:37:00
My grandparents were kikes.
My father and my mother were kikes.
:37:06
-And l'm a kike.
-That's right, dear.
:37:10
You're not going to tell me
that you're Jewish too?
:37:13
No. Absolutely not, because that would be
a lie, and l wouldn't want to lie to you ever.
:37:18
But l would like to tell you
a little story, though.
:37:21
l love stories.
:37:23
Well, you mustn't interrupt now, because
you're way too beautiful to interrupt people.
:37:27
When l was in London
in the early '40s...
:37:32
...l was dining one evening at the Savoy
with a rather select group of people...
:37:36
...and sitting next to me was
a very beautiful lady, much like yourself.
:37:41
-Now you're pulling my leg.
-Now, just listen, dear.
:37:45
Well, we were dining and the bombs were
falling, and we were all talking about Hitler...
:37:50
...and comparing him with Napoleon,
and we were all being really brilliant.
:37:55
And then, suddenly,
this beautiful lady...
:37:59
...she spoke up and said that was the thing
she didn't mind about Hitler...