Dodsworth (1936)
Mary Astor: Edith Cortright
Photos
Quotes
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Edith Cortright : I hadn't realized it was your birthday.
Fran Dodsworth : No? I wish I hadn't. No woman enjoys getting to be 35.
Edith Cortright : When you're my age, you'll look back on 35 as a most agreeable time of life, Mrs. Dodsworth.
Fran Dodsworth : I hope I look as young as you do - when I'm your age.
Edith Cortright : You're almost *sure* to, my dear.
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Edith Cortright : Would you like to enjoy life for a while?
Sam Dodsworth : Show me how.
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Edith Cortright : I suppose people travel to get away from themselves.
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Edith Cortright : I used to be a British subject by marriage. I don't know that one can be a British subject by divorce. I expect I'm just a woman who lives in Italy.
Sam Dodsworth : Oh, do people live in Italy?
Edith Cortright : There are countless Italians.
Sam Dodsworth : Oh, no, no, I mean, people like you.
Edith Cortright : I live in Italy by the thousands, Mr. Dodsworth.
Sam Dodsworth : Why?
Edith Cortright : It's cheap!
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Edith Cortright : [to Sam] You've shrivelled. I've seen you shrivel the same way every letter you've got from her.
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Edith Cortright : Break away from your hotel. Forget about Vienna. Move out here to me.
Sam Dodsworth : Out to you?
Edith Cortright : Yes. I can't make you as comfortable as your hotel does. When you want a bath, you'll have to choose between the tin tub and the Mediterranean. But, if you like swimming and fishing and a willing listener...
Sam Dodsworth : That's very kind of you, Mrs. Cortright, and mighty friendly; but, I don't see how I could?
Edith Cortright : Why not?
Sam Dodsworth : What'd your neighbors think?
Edith Cortright : Being Italians, they think a great deal.
Sam Dodsworth : Exactly.
Edith Cortright : Oh! But, that doesn't mean it would have to be so! Or, that I'd have it so even if you wanted it so.
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Sam Dodsworth : Setting up that motor's the first real fun I've had since I quit business, and it's got me raring to go all over again for the first time.
Edith Cortright : To go?
Sam Dodsworth : You bet!
Edith Cortright : Away from here?
Sam Dodsworth : Any place where I can get back in harness. Get in on something new, the way they did with automobiles when they began 30 years ago. Thought I might try my hand at aviation. The idea of a Moscow to Seattle airline kinda' strikes me.
Edith Cortright : [slightly incredulous] Moscow to Seattle?
Sam Dodsworth : Yeah, buy in on a transcontinental connection. Then, with these transcontinental flights coming on so well, say, I might be the first man with his first round-the-world system. The Soviet people seem agreeable.
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Edith Cortright : Drifting isn't nearly so pleasant as it looks.
Sam Dodsworth : If you don't like it, why don't you give it up?
Edith Cortright : One drifts for lack of a reason to do anything else.
Sam Dodsworth : Well, what do you want?
Edith Cortright : What do you suppose any Ione woman wants?
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Edith Cortright : You're busy...
Sam Dodsworth : I've got nothing to do but look at ruined temples. They'll keep. They've kept this long.
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Edith Cortright : Let's sit down, if you've got a moment.
Sam Dodsworth : Time is something I have nothing else but.
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Edith Cortright : We were just hopping off - where?
Sam Dodsworth : Siberia. Pick out landing fields. No ramifications. A line from Irkutsk to Tashkent and Samarkand. Swell name, Samarkand. Say, if those Soviet boys will let me...
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Fran Dodsworth : I hope I look as good as you do when I'm your age.
Edith Cortright : You're almost sure to, my dear.