Sabrina
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:55:04
Oh, you look lovely, Sabrina.
And very grown up.

:55:08
- I'll get back to the party.
- And leave me here?

:55:11
What did David say?
:55:12
I haven't seen him in such a state
:55:15
since he was kicked in the head
by a polo pony.

:55:18
- That's nice.
- Amnesia has definitely set in.

:55:21
He's completely forgotten
he's engaged. He wants you.

:55:25
And I want him. I've been in love
with him all my life.

:55:29
- There goes the engagement!
- You don't object?

:55:32
Object? To you? It's as though
a window had been thrown open

:55:36
and a lovely breeze swept through
this stuffy house.

:55:40
How could I object?
:55:41
Even though the breeze
comes from the garage?

:55:45
This is the 20th century, Sabrina.
:55:47
Thank you. Let's drink to that.
:55:50
Sorry it isn't David here instead
of me. But it's all in the family.

:55:57
When you walked in,
:55:59
I was sure you'd been sent
by the family to deal with me.

:56:03
- To deal with you?
- Like in a Viennese operetta.

:56:06
The young prince falls in love
with a waitress

:56:09
and the prime minister is sent
to buy her off.

:56:12
- Buy her off?
- Yes.

:56:14
He offers her 5,000 kronen.
"No", she says.

:56:17
"10,000?" "No."
:56:20
- 15,000 kronen?
- No.

:56:22
- 25,000 kronen?
- No.

:56:24
- 25,000 dollars?
- No. How did dollars get into this?

:56:28
25,000 dollars after taxes,
that's a lot of money.

:56:31
What are you saying?
:56:33
I'm making it worthwhile.
What's a krone these days?

:56:36
No self-respecting prime minister
would offer kronen.

:56:40
No self-respecting waitress
would take dollars.

:56:43
Good girl.
:56:44
Say, how does this operetta end?
What's the last act?

:56:49
I don't know. I guess they run away
to America on a zeppelin

:56:53
with everybody singing like mad.
:56:55
- They open a brewery in Milwaukee?
- Yes.

:56:58
- A love that made Milwaukee famous.
- Prosit.


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