← Back to Podcast/Lux Radio Theatre - Ill Be Yours
Episode Transcript

Lux Radio Theatre - Ill Be Yours

Lux Radio Theatre - Ill Be Yours

Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/harold-s-old-time-radio--4206392/support.

Speaker 1: The Broadway Playhouse.

Speaker 2: Good evening and welcome to the Broadway Playhouse Tonight's starring

and Blythe, Robert Cummings and William Bendix in I'll Be

Yours and now here is our producer, mister William Keeley.

Speaker 3: If songs and romance and comedy are welcome in your

home tonight, our play is made to order for your enjoyment.

There isn't a social problem, a murder, or a psychiatrist

in it anywhere, just plain entertainment. The play is universal

international studios, delightful film. I'll Be Yours and there's a

three star cast and Blythe, Robert Cummings and William Bendix,

all of them talented players who rank high on your

list of favorites. Our stars are on stage and the

curtain rises on the first act of I'll Be Yours,

starring Robert Cummings as George and Blithe as Louise, and

William Bendix as Joe. In New York City, just off

Times Square, there's a small, somewhat shabby restaurant resided over

by a sober, unsmiling waiter named Joe Narsky.

Speaker 4: Well, young lady, what'd it be?

Speaker 5: I'll have the Hungarian gulash for forty five cents and

a glass of milk for five cents.

Speaker 4: Please, I'm sorry. The Hungarian gulash's all loud. Every time

we have gulash, she goes like hotcakes.

Speaker 5: Oh well, I'll have the hotcakes.

Speaker 4: Then that was even faster than the Hungarian gulash. How

about a nice turkey sandwich with Russian dressing.

Speaker 5: But the turkey sandwich is fifty five cents?

Speaker 4: Yeah, you know what it costs to raise a turkey today? No,

but take it for me. It costs a lot of money. First,

after you get the turkey, you gotta feed them. What

do you feed them?

Speaker 5: Well, I don't food, you feed them.

Speaker 4: And after you feed the turkey's got to be shipped.

That means all kinds of railroad shock.

Speaker 5: Yes I know, but I'm after he shipped.

Speaker 4: He's got to be knocked off, and then he's got

to be dressed. You know what, you gotta pay a

turkey plucker today, But that's just the cheapest part. Who

wants to eat a turkey until he's cooked? You know

what a cook gets even in a dump like this.

And what about the Russian dressing? I suppose you think

Stalin gives it away.

Speaker 5: I wouldn't know.

Speaker 4: Yet you got the nerve to complain because a turkey

sandwich with Russian dressing costs fifty five cents.

Speaker 5: Well, I'm awfully sorry, but I happen to live on

a budget, oh budget, and I can only afford sixty

cents for lunch including tip.

Speaker 4: But in that case, I would suggest a chopped chicken

liver sandwich for thirty five cents. Got just as many

vitamins as the turkey, maybe even more.

Speaker 5: Thank you, I'll have the chopped chicken liver sandwich.

Speaker 4: So why do you have to argue? One chop chicken

liver sandwich?

Speaker 5: Coming up?

Speaker 4: People come in here. They complain about the prices. They

complain about the ough mister Prescott. Good afternoon, Joe.

Speaker 1: I suppose you're busy.

Speaker 4: I'm who is busy. It's two thirty A fine time

to be eating lunch, young lady.

Speaker 5: If I were eating lunch, I'm waiting for the sandwich.

Speaker 4: Oh you see what I mean. They also complain about

the service.

Speaker 1: You got my income tax? Mister Prescott, you're here already

for your signature. Why do I owe the government at

twelve dollars and fifty two cents. You pay a quarterly

starting March fifteen, twelve dollars.

Speaker 4: And fifty two cents.

Speaker 1: Ain't that a little steep? Well that's only the first quarter.

Your total tax is fifty dollars and eight cents.

Speaker 4: Holy smoke, you took off that ten bucks I gave

the Salvation Army I did, and the withholding taxes.

Speaker 1: Believe me, I took all everything that I could.

Speaker 4: Look, I suppose we say that I gave fifteen dollars

to the Salvation Army.

Speaker 1: Now look, if you want to file a dishonest return,

you can get yourself another lawyer.

Speaker 4: You're right, all right, all right, don't get excited. I'll paid.

Speaker 5: I don't mean to interrupt, but if my sandwich is

ready in my life.

Speaker 4: I'll get it. I'll get it. What about the eight

books I lost at the race?

Speaker 1: Is mister prescoct not deductible? How do you like that?

Speaker 4: If I lose, it ain't deductible. But if I win,

you pay. Here's your sandwich, young lady, didn't help, Thank you?

Speaker 5: Only this is not chopped chicken liver.

Speaker 4: Can I help it? If we're out of chopped chicken liver?

This is the turkey sandwich with the Russian dressing like I.

Speaker 5: Told you, But it costs fifty five cents.

Speaker 4: Stop worrying about the cost. I'm carrying this fifty five

cent sandwich on the books like it was chopped chicken liver,

which we're out of.

Speaker 5: I do not want charity.

Speaker 4: So the boss ain't losing a cent on this. Confidentially,

the turkey sandwiches are made with chicken.

Speaker 5: Oh oh, well that's different, thank you.

Speaker 1: Illegally, this bounced the collusion.

Speaker 4: Nobody asked you, mister Prescott. Oh, I beg your pardon,

young lady. This is mister Prescott. He's a lawyer. I

do not believe I have the pleasure of knowing your name.

Speaker 5: Louise gingle Buscher.

Speaker 4: This is Louise, Louise Why gingle Buscher? Yes? Are you sure?

Well sure, I'm sure, mister George Prescott, I watch you

should meet Miss Louise?

Speaker 1: Was name gingle Buscher?

Speaker 6: How do you do?

Speaker 4: Gingle Busher? Sooner or lady, you're gonna have to change

that name legally, and in that case, you'd certainly wish

to consult with mister Prescott, wouldn't you.

Speaker 5: Well, yes, I suppose perhaps.

Speaker 1: I would well, I'd be delighted.

Speaker 4: Well, give her your card. How's she gonna away to

look you up?

Speaker 1: My card? Miss gingle Busher, Thank you, well, I'm very

glad to met you. Well, goodbye, Joe. Don't forget about

March fifteen.

Speaker 4: I was huh, there goes a real high class lawyer.

Speaker 5: Yes, he seems very nice. But why does he wear

that beard?

Speaker 4: Oh? Well, he claims that a beard makes him look

more distinguished.

Speaker 5: It certainly makes him look more something. He should stop

by a barber shop.

Speaker 4: Barbershops cost money?

Speaker 5: Oh does he have to stay on a budget too?

Speaker 4: For him, he don't make enough to afford a budget.

And do you know why why? Because he's so honest

that nobody hires him.

Speaker 5: But how does he eat?

Speaker 4: Well, he's my lawyer, that's how he eats. Besides, someday

I'll have my own restaurant. See notature, I'll have a

lot of lawsuits, So then he'll eat every day.

Speaker 5: Oh my goodness. Just look at the time.

Speaker 4: Yes, I am looking. I go off at three o'clock,

and at three o'clock I go on. Don't tell me

you're a waitress like me.

Speaker 5: Oh no, no, I'm a nusher at a movie theater.

I just got the job a few days ago. And

if I start off by me.

Speaker 4: So that's why you ain't gonna finish your sandwich.

Speaker 5: Oh I can't. I'll be late. Here's your mind.

Speaker 4: No no, no, wait a minute. You gotta pay for it,

and you gotta eat what you pay for. If people

stop eating, what happens?

Speaker 5: Please?

Speaker 4: I just everybody'll be dead. Besides, i'll be out of

a job. Here. Here's a beg now, and I'll take

the sandwich with you.

Speaker 5: Oh thanks, Say tell me something. If the turkey sandwich

is here are made out of chicken? What are the

chicken sandwich is made out of?

Speaker 4: Please that I gave my word of honor not to tell.

Speaker 5: Well. Thanks, just the same.

Speaker 6: Goodbye bye. I told you on timeline.

Speaker 4: Yes, sir Louise, you're doing fine.

Speaker 1: It's head usher.

Speaker 5: I have great confidence in your future. Thank you, mister McGill.

Good night.

Speaker 6: Oh break down, Willa.

Speaker 1: We're off duty, you know, baby, you're just my time.

Speaker 5: Oh please, mister McGill. I'd like to go home now, sure.

Speaker 4: Baby, Sure, but first we'll go somewhere.

Speaker 6: Huh.

Speaker 2: I have a couple of drinks and then maybe Oh.

Speaker 5: I don't think my husband would like that. Husband, he's

very fussy about such things.

Speaker 1: Do give me that. Where's your wedding ring?

Speaker 5: My husband had to pawn it?

Speaker 2: Again, let's his wife work while he pawns her wedding ring?

Speaker 5: Well, he only did it to buy milk for the babies. Babies, triplets. Oh, oh,

there he is now here, I am honey. Huh oh, darling,

how are the babies?

Speaker 1: Oh they're.

Speaker 6: Babies?

Speaker 4: What is this the badger game?

Speaker 5: Please? Please? If you'll just walk down to the corner

with me, then he won't bother me anymore. Him. H

good night, mister.

Speaker 4: McGill, Yeah, good night head.

Speaker 5: Well, I I guess I'm safe now, thanks very much.

How did you happen to be passing by?

Speaker 4: Can't I go to the movies? Is there any law

against that?

Speaker 6: Oh?

Speaker 5: No, I'm very glad you did, mister.

Speaker 4: Uh Winsky Joe Joe Winsky.

Speaker 5: Oh that's even worse than gingo.

Speaker 4: Butscher, Look, would you mind telling me what this is

all about?

Speaker 5: Well, he wanted me to go out with him, so

well I told him you will, my.

Speaker 7: Husband, Oh we got babies too, triplets, Poor schre Guinevere

and Lancelot.

Speaker 4: Why must they all be girls?

Speaker 5: Oh, Lancelot's a boy.

Speaker 4: Now, look, young lady, let's understand each other. If I

ever have a boy, he's gonna be called Joe.

Speaker 5: Oh, but Lancelot's so much more distinguished.

Speaker 4: Either that kid's name is Joe, or I'm going back

to that loafer and tell him we're getting a divorce.

Speaker 6: Right or right?

Speaker 5: It's Joe.

Speaker 4: Good in that case, May I have the pleasure of

walking home with you that day, as if it's not

too far.

Speaker 5: Thank you. I have a room in missus Stugo's boarding

house on forty seventh Street. Well, here it is, Joe,

Would you kid to sit on the steps for a what? Eh?

Speaker 4: What have I got to lose?

Speaker 5: Do you know? When I first got off the train,

I thought I'd never feel safe in New York. But

there really isn't much difference, is there? I mean in people.

They want to be kind here too, and help each other,

like well like you oo me, I.

Speaker 4: Ain't kind, practical yes, but kind no, And.

Speaker 5: Like mister Prescott helping you with your income tax and

you helping him from starving to death. Oh, I wonder

what he'd looked like without a beard.

Speaker 4: Oh, believe me no different. M guy's got no ambition,

or you wouldn't be so honest. Have uh ha, have

you an ambition?

Speaker 5: Oh? Not especially. I once thought I could sing. That's

why I came to New York. You wanna know something.

But I'm a much bigger success as an usher than

I am as a singer. Ah, do you have an ambition?

Speaker 4: Well, naturally, I'm not just a man who sells blue

plates and sits in the balcony at the movies. I

wanna have my own restaurant.

Speaker 5: Oh that's wonderful.

Speaker 4: Ah. You've never really seen me at my best until

you see me all dressed up in my evening clothes

serving breast of guinea hen under glass to a lady

in one of them new low cut gowns. Oh, believe me,

that's life.

Speaker 5: Oh uh uh.

Speaker 4: Tomorrow night, I'm serving it at a big social function

at the Savoy Ritz Hotel. Huh. You should see me

there at the joint where I work. A knife is

a knife and a fork as a fork. But when

you're serving a big banquet at the Savoy Ritz, they

have fish knives and solid forks and eight different kinds

of spoons. You wouldn't believe it. Did you ever have

a breast of guinea? Henader Glass?

Speaker 5: Oh no, never, No.

Speaker 4: Well, I'll tell you a watch. You'll be at the

Savoy Ritz at nine o'clock tomorrow night and I'll sneak in.

Speaker 5: Would you really think you could?

Speaker 4: Well, it's a cent. You just hang around the entrance

of the Bank banquet room and you watch for me.

Have you got an evening dress?

Speaker 8: Oh?

Speaker 5: I think I can borrow one.

Speaker 4: That's the spirit in this town. It don't make no

difference who owns a dress. That's what's in it. Well,

good night is king of Busher.

Speaker 5: Don't forget tomorrow night at nine o'clock. Good night, Joe.

Oh it worked, Joe, it worked. I gave the headweight

of the invitation you gave me, and he let me.

Speaker 1: Write in not so loud, you know.

Speaker 5: He called me madam.

Speaker 4: Well we'll call you something else if it's talking to me.

Don't forget. I'm just a waiter here.

Speaker 5: How do you like my dress? It's from one of

the stage shows at the theater.

Speaker 4: Oh it's very high class. Very Now, look you go

and mingle with the guests. Just don't tell him that

your name is Gingle Busher. A name like that ain't

gonna help the good neighbor policy. And don't notice me

too much. In society, you don't get very chummy with

the waiters.

Speaker 5: But how do I tell the waiters from the guests.

Speaker 4: Oh it's easy with the waiters. The evening clothes fit.

Now go on mingle.

Speaker 6: Well, well, good evening.

Speaker 5: Uh, oh, good evening.

Speaker 6: Are you enjoying yourself?

Speaker 4: Oh?

Speaker 5: Yes, yes, Oh I'm sorry, but you can't sit down here?

Speaker 6: Oh yes, I can please.

Speaker 5: The waiters aren't allowed to sit with the.

Speaker 6: Guess, waiter, Do I look like a waiter?

Speaker 5: I can tell by the way your clothes fit perfectly.

Speaker 6: Now look here, young lady. I'm J. Conrad Nelson. I'm

the man who's giving this party. I'm paying for the

whole thing. Waiter, waiter, come here, ye, yes, sir, yes, sir,

or der sir. Just tell her who I am.

Speaker 4: You don't know who you are?

Speaker 6: Of course I know, but she doesn't.

Speaker 4: Oh you are mister J. Conrad Nelson, president of the

Pan American meat Packing Corporation.

Speaker 6: And tell her who's giving the party.

Speaker 4: Well you are, and believe me, you know it when

you get the bill.

Speaker 6: Thank you run a lot? Yes, well, now, how about

telling me who you are? Well, she's one of the entertainers, sir,

an entertainer. Wonderful, what do you do? Damn sing? Sing?

Oh well, we're not waiting for it. Come on, come on.

Oh no, no, that's what you're here for, isn't it?

Speaker 5: Well no, not exactly.

Speaker 6: No, we have a fine ox still that play anything

you want?

Speaker 5: No, no, I don't want to sing.

Speaker 6: How much am I paying you for not singing? Oh?

Never mind? If you won't go to the archtra I'll

have the orcs to come to you. Alberta, Alberta. Now,

now what shall it be?

Speaker 5: Well, if you don't know midnight in Paris?

Speaker 6: Do you mid night in Paris? Oh yes, Senory, but

I know very well. Oh yeah, well then play it?

Play it just a minute time, ladies and gentlemen, Ladies

and gentlemen. This charming young lady. Whom shall I say, Louise?

Speaker 5: Oh just say.

Speaker 9: Anybody, This charming young lady is going to sing for us.

Speaker 10: Sweetest, don't you? Cheries?

Speaker 11: Fell with me?

Speaker 5: You long.

Speaker 12: Your a night of parse chrry?

Speaker 10: What's to be east?

Speaker 6: To be.

Speaker 8: Late?

Speaker 10: Won't you shall off with me?

Speaker 13: Most cold of my hardest worn a crowding voice within me.

Speaker 4: Pause, and I must.

Speaker 13: Obeyre midnight in hoarse strange delights deals through the night,

I hear the sweetest music handle what does it say?

Speaker 8: Midnight? And is the mob in a pase.

Speaker 10: To bell?

Speaker 6: You come with me? But never mind, Just let's get

out of here. Well, here we are, But what's this

in my apartment? Don't you like it? Find this apartment?

The savoy ry?

Speaker 5: Oh it's beautiful. But don't you think we're here?

Speaker 4: Now?

Speaker 6: How about telling me the truth? In the first place,

you crashed this party, didn't you? That's all right? And

j Conrad Nelson throws a party. Well, if I couldn't

get in any other way, I'd crash it myself.

Speaker 5: I'd better go, I mean no, oh no.

Speaker 6: In the second place, you've heard that that I was, well,

shall I say, susceptible good looking young women?

Speaker 5: Oh no, no, I didn't even know.

Speaker 6: I admit it. Everybody has this weakness. In the third place,

you happen to have a very nice voice.

Speaker 5: Thank you.

Speaker 6: So you thought you might be able to get me

to put you in a musical show or something, didn't you?

Speaker 5: Oh? No, you're wrong?

Speaker 6: Why I never thought come now a good woman, don't

give me that. Hello, this is mister Nelson. I'd like

room service. Please. We'll have a little drink and then

we'll go downstairs. You want a room service, sir? This

is amazing. I just picked up the phone, so hoary

ritz service, sir. Well two bottles of shabare thirty seven?

Speaker 4: Yes, sir and madam?

Speaker 5: Oh oh well I'll just have the same. Thank you good.

Speaker 6: That makes four bottles. Well what are you jerking your

head at her for me?

Speaker 4: Oh? I beg your pardon, sir. Just a nervous habit.

Speaker 6: You mean I make your nervous.

Speaker 4: Oh no, no, no, sir, not at all.

Speaker 6: No, sir. Well, then go down and get the champaign. Yes,

if you asked me that waiters off his rocker. Well

let's get back to business, shall we. Now, how would

you like to have an iice fat part in a

Broadway yus?

Speaker 5: But I don't want a nice fat part in anything.

I just I want to go home.

Speaker 6: I wish you'd stop running, young woman. This isn't the

track meet. You know. I'm very rich man, and I

like you, and I made up my mind to do something.

Speaker 5: There's nothing I want.

Speaker 6: Well, then why did you crash my party?

Speaker 5: Well, it wasn't my idea at all. Whose idea was

well it it was my husband's idea.

Speaker 6: Very nice, your husband. You're you're married?

Speaker 5: Oh yes, of course.

Speaker 6: Oh no, how awful.

Speaker 5: I'm terribly sorry.

Speaker 6: Oh no, no, it's too late now. Oh why did you

do it?

Speaker 5: I don't know. I just fell in love.

Speaker 6: That's what I was afraid of, popular hasty marriage. Well,

there's only one solution. You'll have to leave it.

Speaker 5: Oh no, oh no, he couldn't live without me.

Speaker 6: Oh, you're get used to it. Of course, we'll have

to be fair about it. After all, here's a young

man been supporting you to the best of his ability.

We'll have to make up for all. Well, I'll take

care of him. You have no idea how much easier

it is to endure unhappiness with money in the bank.

What does the poor fellow do?

Speaker 5: Do?

Speaker 6: Well? He does something, doesn't he? Or is he retired?

Speaker 8: Oh?

Speaker 6: No, no, Well, I'm giving you a chance to make

a success of this man, to make him rich.

Speaker 5: He's a lawyer.

Speaker 6: Good now, what's his name?

Speaker 5: His name? Oh no, just a minute, it's right here

in my purse.

Speaker 6: You mean you have to look up his name.

Speaker 5: No, no, of course not. I just want to give

you his card.

Speaker 6: Oh here George W. Prescott, attorney at the law. Well,

I can always use another lawyer. I'll give him a

job and then he can introduce you to me, and

then you'll get your divorce. Just leave everything to me,

the champagne, sir, I don't understand that the service was

never this good before.

Speaker 4: Just one thing. I think madame had better be leaving.

What's that I mean? I just saw the lady's husband

downstairs in bl My husband, he had a very sinister

look on his face.

Speaker 6: Oh that's terrible. How does he know you're here?

Speaker 5: Oh? He always follows me.

Speaker 6: Well, he can't find you here, Evan knows what he

might think. You keep out of this. You better go,

my dear. When will I see you again tomorrow night?

Speaker 5: Well, my husband's awfully jealously.

Speaker 6: Now, don't you worry. I'll take care of everything.

Speaker 5: Goodbye, missus Prescott, George W.

Speaker 14: Prescott, Goodbye, mister Nelson, goodbye, and the.

Speaker 2: Curvin falls on that one. The by will be Yours,

starring Anne Blythe Robert Pulvins, and William Bender. Do you

remember the old phrase I'm saving for a rainy day. Well,

that doesn't refer only to money. It may also refer

to many other things, include knowledge. Every time we undergo

a new experience, we're adding to our storehouse of knowledge

and know how. We may not need that information right away,

but there will come a time when we'll be able

to make good use of it and will be grateful

for being prepared. Better than relying on chance experience. To

increase our knowledge is to take advantage of systematic education.

This way we can learn efficiently and economically. The United

States Armed Forces Institute YUSAFI is the agency through which

servicemen and women all over the world may study and

gain high school credits or even a high school diploma.

Some of you may want to add to your college credits.

Why not do it the easy way, the USAFI way?

And now here is our producer, mister William.

Speaker 3: Keeley Act two of I'll Be Yours, starring and blythe

as Louise, Robert Cummings as George, and William Bandix as Joe. Well,

it's the following morning, and thoroughly smitten with Louise gingle Busher,

whom he believes is married, Mister j Conrad Nelson has

hastened to call upon George W. Prescott, a young lawyer

with a full beard and an empty purse.

Speaker 6: Good morning, Tell mister Prescott, I want to see him,

Jay Conrad Nelson.

Speaker 1: Well, how do you do?

Speaker 6: What do you mean? How do you do? Get mister Prescott?

Speaker 1: I'm mister Prescott. Is there anything I can do for you,

mister J.

Speaker 6: Conrad Nelson? Yes, as you bet, there's something you can

do for me. Prescott. You're just the man I've been

looking for. I don't know if my name means anything

to you, but no it doesn't. Well I'm the Pan

American Meatbacking Corporation and I'm here to point you are

legal represented.

Speaker 1: Well yeah, well I hardly know what say.

Speaker 6: Good good. I like a lawyer who thinks things through.

That's some dope of blurts out the first thing come

to his mind, Prescott. I wouldn't be surprised if you

ended up in the Supreme Court bench. You've even got

the whiskers for it, haven't you.

Speaker 1: And I wouldn't be surprised if you wound up in

a federal penitentiary.

Speaker 6: Now just a little minute there, do.

Speaker 1: You take me for a complete fool, mister Nelson. When

a firm doing millions of dollars worth of business a

year offers to engage an unknown lawyer, believe me, there's

something fishy about it. Sorry, mister Nelson, not interested.

Speaker 6: Well, obviously I made a mistake.

Speaker 1: You certainly have.

Speaker 6: I was looking for a lawyer with a sense of ethics.

Supreme Court, Bah, you ought to be out chasing ambulances.

Speaker 1: And what's wrong with my ethics?

Speaker 6: You accuse a man being dishonest and decide that he's

guilty without giving him a chance to defend himself. Good day,

mister Preston.

Speaker 1: Now wait a moment, you doubted my integrity?

Speaker 6: Well I like that. Didn't you accuse me of being crooked?

Speaker 1: Well maybe I have been hasty. All right, I apologize

and tell me your side of the story, and then

I'll kick you out.

Speaker 6: Well that's more like now then when I was a

young man.

Speaker 1: Look, I don't want to hear the story of your life,

only why you wanted to hire me.

Speaker 6: Yeah, in order to answer that, I've got to tell

you the story of my life. Now do you want

to hear it or not?

Speaker 1: Well, I said i'd listen, and I will, and.

Speaker 6: Then shut up and let me talk. Now, when I

was a young man, I was poor. I didn't get

to be ahead of a great industrial corporation except by fighting.

And I'm trying to admit that some of the things

I've done haven't been quite stainless, always unsound legal ground,

you understand. But a little chiseling here, a little trickery there,

you know. Well, as a man grows older, not that

I'm old, of course, but he wants to make amends.

I hope this personal confession doesn't bore you, mister Prescott.

Speaker 1: No, go on, go on as well.

Speaker 6: Now I want to change things, but ha, I can't

dismiss the lawyers who've been using these tactics. After all,

they've been working under my direction. If I fire them

after years of loyal service, I'd be a hypocrite. You

see my dilemma, Yes, And I sympathize with you, deeply, deeply,

Thank you. Well. I finally decided to hire an honest lawyer,

one who was poor because he was so honest. Let

him join my legal staff and show them the light.

And after months of search, I have decided upon you.

I came here this morning, and what do you say

to me?

Speaker 1: Mister Nelson, I'm ashamed of myself. I'd be proud, very

proud to work for a man like you.

Speaker 6: Good, good, good. Now, here's the contract I've gone up.

You can read it over if you want to, but

I give you my word.

Speaker 1: That's good enough for me.

Speaker 6: Yeah, well, and just sign here and a copy for me,

and then just find a bargain a check for five

thousand dollars.

Speaker 1: Well, that's great, five thousand dollars.

Speaker 6: Yes, your first month salary in advance. Incidentally, do you

have a car, mister Prescott?

Speaker 1: A car?

Speaker 6: No, well you better get one. You never know what

I'm liable to send you on a long automobile trip.

Speaker 1: Oh, yes, I'll get one right away, mister Nelson.

Speaker 6: Good good. And it's not that it's any of my business,

but I hope there's nothing wrong with you a private life,

my private life. The company is quite peculiar about that point.

I hate being discreet, but you you do look rather

strained and worried.

Speaker 1: Yes, well, I met times, have been trying.

Speaker 6: Yeah, it's always the same story. Domestic difficulties, no doubt.

Now make a clean, sharp break, mister Prescott, even if it.

Speaker 1: Hurts the domestic difficulties. You don'tunderstand.

Speaker 6: You don't have to make up your mind. Right now,

your hands will be pulling up with my board of directors. Incidentally,

you'll be meeting with them tomorrow night.

Speaker 1: Yeah, there's just one thing that puzzles me, mister Nelson.

Just what did I do that brought me to your attention?

Speaker 6: Why did you? And I let me see, there's a

case I remember from the from the newspaper. Now wait,

don't tell me, excuse me.

Speaker 1: I don't want to disillusion you. But the only case

that ever interested the newspapers was Bronson.

Speaker 6: Either the Bronson case, of course, brilliant, a great victory.

Speaker 1: But I lost that case.

Speaker 6: You lost? Oh yes, but the way you lost it,

mister Prescott magnificent. Well, good day. Well hello, not so loud.

It's some office your husband has living quarters in the

rear ruh. Oh yes, what are you doing here?

Speaker 5: Well? I was just going home?

Speaker 6: Naturally, Oh must you now, let's go somewhere.

Speaker 5: I can't he expects me.

Speaker 6: Oh you're afraid of him, aren't you, poor child?

Speaker 5: You didn't tell him.

Speaker 6: About us, no, of course not. He didn't mention your name.

I didn't either, Oh, thank you. Oh it must be

terrible to be married with such a stupid brute like that.

But you don't do worry anymore.

Speaker 5: Oh no, I won't.

Speaker 6: Then I'll see you tomorrow night.

Speaker 5: I just don't know. Please, I really must go in there.

Speaker 6: You promised me a day, and I'm not gonna unless

I get my date.

Speaker 5: All right?

Speaker 6: Then tomorrow night, Good nine o'clock in my apartment.

Speaker 5: Does it have to be at Europe?

Speaker 6: It certainly does.

Speaker 5: I'll be there now. Please go, mister Nelson.

Speaker 6: Good day, little lady.

Speaker 1: Oh, oh, good morning. Don't you come in? I was

just about to go out, But won't you come in?

Thank you? You'll have to excuse me if I appear

a little overwrought. Something very unusual just happened, very unusual.

I'm well. I never even dreamed that I need.

Speaker 5: If you're so busy, I can come back.

Speaker 1: You know where I was going to buy a pencil sharpener.

It's all my life. I wanted a pencil sharpener, my

very own, and at last now I can afford one.

Of course, i'll have a secretary now, but there's one

thing I'll always do for myself. Sharpen my own pencils.

Speaker 5: Are you well mister.

Speaker 1: Pell I'm delirious. Do you realize what just happened to me?

Speaker 5: Yes? I mean no?

Speaker 6: No?

Speaker 1: I Well you're talking to the legal representative of J.

Conrad Nelson. You see, it does pay to have ideals,

It does pay to be honest. And do you know

how much it pays?

Speaker 5: How much?

Speaker 1: I'm ashamed to tell you, But at least I didn't

get it by lying or chiseling or being related to

the boss.

Speaker 5: You've got it all figured out, haven't you.

Speaker 6: What?

Speaker 4: Oh?

Speaker 1: I'm sorry, I haven't paid any attention to you, have

I I'm excited. I hope you'll understand.

Speaker 5: Now.

Speaker 1: What did you come to see me about? Miss Oh? Yes,

of course that's it. Well, what did you decide on?

Speaker 5: Decide on?

Speaker 1: I'll tell you what we'll do. We'll take the telephone book,

open it at random and see what we find.

Speaker 5: What unearth are you doing?

Speaker 1: Well, I'm looking for a new name for you, but

I already have a name. Yes, I know, gingle something

wasn't that what you came to see me about. A

legal change of name is a very simple thing, and

it isn't expensive as a matter of fact. As a

matter of fact, from now on, I'm going to be

your legal advisor for nothing.

Speaker 5: Well that's very generous of you, but.

Speaker 1: Nothing, nothing at all. Really I feel like doing it,

Miss Ginglescher. Oh, this is the happiest day of my life.

An hour ago I had nothing, and now I have

money and position, and I'm going to have a car.

How does one buy a car?

Speaker 6: Have you ever? Oh?

Speaker 5: No, no, but I guess you just go shopping and

pick one out like a pencil shop.

Speaker 1: Miss gingle Busher, do me a favor, come with me? Oh,

you know that there's something wonderful about your coming in

just now? Don't you feel it? Don't you believe in faith?

Come on, miss gingle Busher, we're going shopping. Did you

hear that my horn's louder than his?

Speaker 5: You know you're not a lawyer. You're a small boy

with a new toe.

Speaker 1: Oh that's just what I want to be. You see,

I never really was a small boy.

Speaker 5: Were you born with that beard? Mister Prescott?

Speaker 1: Oh no, no, no, mister Prescott. Yeah, but we're friends.

You've got to call me George.

Speaker 5: Well, I try, but I can't. It's the beard.

Speaker 1: What's the matter with him?

Speaker 5: Oh? It's just lovely. But you can't call a beard

by its first name.

Speaker 1: You can't. You want me to shave it all?

Speaker 5: Oh? Not on my account. I just think it would

make you look younger.

Speaker 1: But I grew it to make me look older.

Speaker 5: Well it certainly accomplished its purpose, thank you. It makes

you look sixty sixty, at least sixty.

Speaker 1: I'll do it. I'll shave it off, but only on

one condition. Condition, Yes, that you wait for me. And

why do you have to be back to the theater.

Speaker 5: Oh I don't, it's my day off.

Speaker 1: But that's wonderful. Say you're sure that just a nice

little trim wouldn't do my beard? I mean off, nothing entirely,

not even a nice little goat tee all or nothing?

Well you win, miss giggle wisher. No, no, I just

can't do it. I'm a babba, but I just can't

do it. Cut it off.

Speaker 6: But it's such a beautiful beard.

Speaker 1: Why don't you just let me shampoo it and let

it go down. Look, I came into your shampoo and

maybe a little snip here and a little h No,

I'm sorry, it's got to go.

Speaker 6: I won't do it.

Speaker 1: Believe me, if I had to be like that, no

woman would ever make me lose it. No, sir, it's

not a woman's idea, it's my own. Well i'll bet

your daughter had something to do with it. My daughter,

that does it? The beard comes off?

Speaker 6: Yes, sir, Oh.

Speaker 5: I can't believe it. But it is you, isn't it?

Speaker 1: Yeah, it's me. Well how do I look?

Speaker 5: Why you're handsome? Now?

Speaker 1: Yeah, I'm cold too, and I'm not too sure that

it is mate.

Speaker 5: Oh, of course it's you. You've just been hiding behind

that beard for such a long time.

Speaker 1: Yeah, maybe you're right, you know, Louise, I'd say that

we make a very striking couple, wouldn't you?

Speaker 5: Average?

Speaker 1: Average? Nothing, we're way above average. Me and my new

face and you and your arcid arcid. Oh, I forgot

to give it to you here, it's for you for

making me do it. Oh no, I, well, what's the matter?

Speaker 5: I just never had an orchid before.

Speaker 1: Well that's nothing. I never bought one before, Louise. Let's uh,

let's leave the car in the parking lot if you'd like.

A central park isn't very far. Let's let's go to

the park.

Speaker 5: I think that's a fine idea, George, thank you.

Speaker 1: See it's funny and what's funny? Yeah, I don't know.

All my life, I've dreamed about owning a car. Finally

I've got one, and suddenly I discover how much fun

walking can be.

Speaker 5: Didn't you ever walk before?

Speaker 6: Oh?

Speaker 1: Sure, sure, but not under these circumstances. I'll bet even

riding in a subway would be fun with you?

Speaker 5: Oh not during rush hours.

Speaker 1: Or especially during rush hours. Huh yeah, I mean well,

I I really didn't mean anything. Say, would you like

to take a boat ride?

Speaker 5: Oh no, I'm not a bit tired.

Speaker 1: Oh I'm not tired either. I yes, look at 'em

out there on the lake. Practically everybody is kissing somebody.

Speaker 5: Silly, isn't it?

Speaker 1: Huh oh yeah, especially this time of day. I get Uh, Louise,

are you sure you wouldn't like to go canoeing?

Speaker 5: Well, as long as we're here, George, why don't we.

Speaker 1: You know something? We're back in Central Park again.

Speaker 5: However, it's different at night, isn't it even nicer?

Speaker 1: We could go canoeing again if you'd love.

Speaker 5: It's getting late, Georgia, let's just sit down for a while.

Where's the music coming from?

Speaker 1: I don't know the casino, I guess pretty.

Speaker 5: Huh, Oh, it's beautiful. Oh lovey.

Speaker 8: Lever night to me or cheese so Rod.

Speaker 11: Like to make you mesy because I love from her

to ballusy.

Speaker 12: Mousy, like to make your tasy.

Speaker 8: Because I love from her too tall musy.

Speaker 6: Love. Yeah.

Speaker 1: I didn't know you could sing like I don't make

a habit of but you should. You should. Why with

a voice like that you could get into gretch.

Speaker 6: I have to talk to you.

Speaker 1: I only hope you'll talk to me for the rest

of my life.

Speaker 5: Well, you don't know what you're saying.

Speaker 1: Well, I'm trying to say that that I'm fond of you,

extremely fond.

Speaker 5: But you've just met me. You don't know anything about me,

and frankly, George, I'm not perfect.

Speaker 1: Well that makes two of us.

Speaker 5: Maybe I'd better not talk to you now after all

or tomorrow then well, I'll be on duty at the

theater all day tomorrow and tomorrow night.

Speaker 1: Mister Nelson's Board of Directors meeting tomorrow night, my first meeting.

You know, I couldn't very well call that off, but

I can meet you afterwards. Where will you be, yes,

say nine o'clock.

Speaker 5: Well, George, I have a date tomorrow night. Oh, it's nothing. Really,

he doesn't mean anything to me, but I can't break

the date.

Speaker 1: It's nothing, but you can't break it.

Speaker 5: Oh, I really can. I'll explain everything later.

Speaker 1: Now you don't have to explain anything. After all, we've

just just met. We hardly know each other.

Speaker 5: Do we. Please don't talk like that. I didn't mean

to hurt you.

Speaker 1: Oh I wish it would difference as a matter of fact,

so do I. Well, we had a wonderful day, and

since it's over, I better take you home.

Speaker 5: Yes, yes, I think you'd better.

Speaker 1: All right, then let's go.

Speaker 5: Come in.

Speaker 4: Believe me, Joe, I'm well, Hello, don't give me that female. Hello?

What did you do with my lawyer?

Speaker 5: You'll have to forgive me, Joe. I'm just going out.

Speaker 4: At almost nine o'clock at night?

Speaker 5: Oh all right, what's the matter with your lawyer?

Speaker 4: What's the matter with him? He comes into the restaurant

today for lunch, he orders eighty five cents worth of food.

I know he shouldn't spend more than thirty cents. And

after lunch he gives me a check for sixty five

fifteen cents covering everything he owes my boss, And what

do you think the check is good?

Speaker 5: Didn't he tell you anything?

Speaker 4: No, he won't talk. He just sits there looking unhappy.

Not only that, what happened to his beard? Young lady?

What did George W. Prescott ever do to you?

Speaker 10: Nothing?

Speaker 5: Nothing? I just wanted to do something for him, honestly, get.

Speaker 4: You an invitation to a swell party. You get yourself

picked up by an a number one, no good millionaire

who has a reputation for being a loafer in North America,

South America, and for all I know is Central America.

At the top of all, you're making a crook out

of the nicest guy I know.

Speaker 5: I'm not making a crook out of him. If anybody's

a crook in this, it's it's me.

Speaker 4: You're going to explain that, miss gingle bus shure if

I've got to.

Speaker 5: Get away from that door, I'm in a hurry.

Speaker 1: I have a date.

Speaker 4: Oh you have a date?

Speaker 1: Eh?

Speaker 5: Yes, And I'm going to keep it just on account

of him. Oh with if I may be so bold,

with an a number one no good millionaire.

Speaker 2: Good night, And so the curtain falls an act too

of I'll Be Yours, starring Ann Blyth, Robert Cummins and

William Dundys. You'll be amazed how many different courses are

offered by YUSAFI. See your Information and Education officer tomorrow

and sign up with YUSAFI and begin to learn the

easy USAFI way. And now, once again, here is our director,

mister William Keeley.

Speaker 3: The curtain rises on the third act of I'll Be Yours,

starring Robert Cummings as George and Blythe as Louise and

William Bendix as Joe.

Speaker 6: Well, it's nine o'clock and in this.

Speaker 3: Apartment in the Savoy Ritz Hotel, mister j Conrad Nelson,

who should know better, as a guest Louise Ginglebusher.

Speaker 6: Well, this time, little lady, we're not going to be

disturbed by some idiotic waiting. I got the champagne already.

Speaker 5: Oh but I don't want any champagne, mister Nelson. I'm

not used to it.

Speaker 6: Oh you don't know what you're missing? How's it are?

And try it well later? Maybe you know you're so

strange tonight you keep bouncing all around the room.

Speaker 5: I think i'd better tell you something, mister Nelson.

Speaker 6: My dear little girl, you're not afraid of me? Are you.

I'm not a wolf, you know anyway? You're not read

riding hood? Nah? How did everything go with your husband?

Speaker 5: Well, that's just what I want to speak to you.

Speaker 6: Why did you ever marry a man old enough to

be your daddy?

Speaker 5: But he isn't anywhere near as old as you are?

Speaker 6: Why that's ridiculous? Why would that beaver he wears?

Speaker 5: Did you ever see him without his beard?

Speaker 6: No? No, And I don't intend to see too much

of him either.

Speaker 5: But you made him your legal representative.

Speaker 6: I let him intend the board a director's meeting too,

And that doesn't mean I have to look at him.

Speaker 5: I don't understand.

Speaker 6: Oh, you'll have a fine time tonight. I told him

to read him the annual reports for the last twelve

years dollars dishwater. But they'll keep him there.

Speaker 5: That contract you gave him, it's real, isn't it.

Speaker 6: Are you implying that I'm a heel? If your husband

has the slightest doubt about that?

Speaker 5: He hasn't.

Speaker 6: And he's not my husband, he's not what.

Speaker 5: I'm not married to him? Oh?

Speaker 6: What have I done?

Speaker 5: Yes? What have I done? You? See? I met him

and he's very poor and well. I liked him, and

I felt sorry for him. I mean, you said you

wanted to make my husband rich, and I thought, if

I are you mad at me?

Speaker 6: This whole thing just another plot against me?

Speaker 5: Oh, it's all my fault. He didn't have anything to.

Speaker 6: Do with it. I'll bet I ought to go to

a noggin doctor and have my head overhauled.

Speaker 5: If he knew what I've done it it would break

his heart.

Speaker 6: Break his heart. I'd like to break every bone in

his body. That bearded phony, I bet. I mean his

whiskers are false. They are not.

Speaker 5: He shaved them off yesterday.

Speaker 4: Uh huh, just as I thought, I who are you?

I'm not going to stand for this any longer. You

come along, Miss kingle Busher, Can you let go? You're

coming with me right now? Or something terrible it's going

to happen.

Speaker 6: What's gonna happen? I'm talking to her just a minute.

Speaker 1: You.

Speaker 6: I've seen that ugly face of years before. You're the

waiter room service. Of of course, it's a plot for.

Speaker 4: Your information, Miss Gingle Bushy. Your husband has found out

all about you. No, no, yes, yes, he's on his

way here now.

Speaker 6: I can't be He's at my board of directors. He well,

maybe he is here. Why don't you have him come in?

Speaker 4: Well, like, huh, you want him to come in here

and bring him in?

Speaker 5: There is somebody at the door. I can hear him.

Speaker 6: Will come in, Come in, Come in? What do you want? Oh?

How do you do?

Speaker 1: Mister Nelson?

Speaker 6: Who are you?

Speaker 1: Who am I?

Speaker 6: Oh?

Speaker 1: You probably don't recognize me without my beard Prescott, good

old George w Yes, yes, you're you're legal representative. You

hired me yesterday if you remember.

Speaker 6: Yeah, this is very interesting.

Speaker 1: Well, I'm sorry to bother you, mister Nelson, but I

felt my duty to talk to you immediately about Joe.

Well what are you doing here?

Speaker 4: Hello?

Speaker 6: With a young woman? I wanted to what happened to her?

Where'd she go?

Speaker 4: Where did who go?

Speaker 6: This is all an outrageous conspiracy, But I'm going to

get to the bottom of it. You come right back

in here. Young women work quite on us.

Speaker 4: Fellas. Just go out some wear and have a drink.

Speaker 5: We could hello.

Speaker 6: Louise.

Speaker 4: Now, no, not conselate. Let's not jump to any conclusions.

Speaker 5: I told you i'd explain everything.

Speaker 1: You mean he was your date? J Conrad Nelson? Yes,

but I had no idea. You knew each other, knew

each other.

Speaker 6: I thought you two were married. That's how you got

your job.

Speaker 1: Would you mind repeating that?

Speaker 5: No, No, don't listen to him, George. He doesn't know

what he's talking about.

Speaker 1: Well, this is very funny, isn't it.

Speaker 6: What was it?

Speaker 1: I told you just stick to your ideals, be honest,

never tell a lie.

Speaker 4: Mister Prescott. Why don't you talk this over with Well?

Speaker 6: Skip it, Joe.

Speaker 1: If you'll excuse me, miss, let me go with you.

Speaker 4: Let him go. Haven't you done enough?

Speaker 5: George? Please?

Speaker 1: We have nothing to say to each other. Mis Jingle Bush.

Speaker 5: Yes, I know, but you're all upset now. I didn't

mean to hurt you. I only wanted to.

Speaker 1: Help you, and thank you very much. Good night all.

Speaker 5: I'm the landlady here. All right, now, what do you want?

Speaker 6: I told you I want to see mister Prescott. I

know he's in there because I saw him through the window.

But he won't answer the doorbell and he won't pick

up his telephone. I'm worried.

Speaker 13: Oh, yes, sir, I know, I know who's been like

this for two weeks and more.

Speaker 5: You're he's father, huh?

Speaker 6: I am not. I'm his uncle. If you have a key,

open up that door.

Speaker 4: Well, I just hope it's all right with him.

Speaker 5: Is it just me, mister Presbook?

Speaker 1: I thought I told you I don't want to see any.

Speaker 6: Mister Nelson. Oh no, you didn't start that again? What again?

The chin whist? There's the shrubbery, mister Nelson.

Speaker 1: Will you kindly get out of here.

Speaker 6: I will not tolerate a beard on my legal staff.

Speaker 1: I am not on your legal staff.

Speaker 6: Oh, you most certainly are. And I have no intention

of breaking our contract.

Speaker 1: Well then i'll break it.

Speaker 6: Oh but you can iron fired fool proof.

Speaker 1: Would throwing you out the window break our contract?

Speaker 6: Well, it would surely break my neck, and that, in

turn would result in a certain unpleasant complications for you.

You're a lawyer. You should know. I don't care, well

others do. And may I sit down?

Speaker 1: You know, mister Nelson, when I first met you, I

had the healthy impulse of throwing you out. Why didn't

I do it?

Speaker 6: Then? Because you're not a man to follow the first impulse.

That's what I like about you, George, and that's why

I'm here.

Speaker 1: I don't know if you enjoy hearing yourself talk, mister Nelson.

Speaker 6: You may as well be by yourself, as I was

about to say, the fact that you walked out of

my board of director's meeting.

Speaker 1: I walked out because I refuse to approve the last

annual report.

Speaker 6: Yeah, exactly. The others couldn't approve it without of legal advice.

And what happened. I find it saved me the pretty

little figure of two hundred and eighty five thousand dollars.

It's quite a nice record. George Beard or no Beard?

Speaker 1: What are you talking about, you old fraud.

Speaker 6: You haven't read the newspapers, you'd know. I fired five

out of six of my directors. I kept the sixth

one only because he's well, he's my brother in law.

Speaker 1: Well that's very interesting.

Speaker 6: Therefore, I'd like to keep our contract and forget about

certain incidents that may have been connected with it. What

do you say?

Speaker 1: Are you telling me the truth?

Speaker 6: Of course, I'm telling you the truth. I'll get in

there in shade. Besides, you have a date, my friend.

Speaker 1: I'm not your friend. I'm your lawyer.

Speaker 6: What day with that waiter fellow Joe Narsky. He's been

worried about you, he and some other persons.

Speaker 1: I will accept your offer, mister Nelson, but I will

not keep any dates that you've made for me.

Speaker 6: Well, I think you should. You see, when Osky and

I became quite well acquainted, there was some champagne left

which helped quite a bit. And anyway, as a result,

I decided to back him. He's opening his own restaurant tonight,

and I figured that you and I could go there together.

Speaker 1: So Joe finally has his own restaurant. Well, I'm very

happy for him.

Speaker 6: Yeah, so am I. You're selling my lamb jobs exclusively.

Now go get yourself shaved and I'll wait for it.

Speaker 5: It's just beautiful, Joe, as beautiful as the savoy.

Speaker 4: It's high class. Hu, come on, I'll take you to

your table. Remember the time I sold you the turkey

sandwich for the price of a chopped chicken liver. Well,

this restaurant is a kind of a joint where you

can sell chicken liver for the.

Speaker 6: Price of a turkey.

Speaker 5: You still want me to sing?

Speaker 4: Still want you to sing at the orchestra? Mean rehearsing

all afternoon, young lady. I'm depending on it. I'm having

a spotlight hit you right over the head.

Speaker 5: I don't feel very much like singing, Joe.

Speaker 4: Well you better be good because I got a big

surprise for you, Joe. I'm not telling what it is,

but you're gonna like it.

Speaker 5: You mean George is going to be here?

Speaker 1: You like that?

Speaker 4: Huh? Well that's it right. My partner, Jay Conrad is

bringing him.

Speaker 5: But isn't that mister Nelson?

Speaker 6: Now?

Speaker 4: Huh?

Speaker 5: He's alone?

Speaker 4: Well, you wait here at the table. I'll be right back.

A fine partner, you are. I sent you to get

George W. Prescott.

Speaker 6: And where is he? He's not coming. He wanted to

shave and he wouldn't come out.

Speaker 4: Well that's impossible. He can't do that to me. Then

she is sitting over there in a brand new evening

gown paid for by this rest, paid for out of

my own expense account, ready to give out with the notes.

And he's got the nerves.

Speaker 6: Well, little lady, how nice you love?

Speaker 4: So George just got here? Her partner?

Speaker 5: But he's here? Where is he?

Speaker 4: Oh he's somewhere around, isn't he? Jay Conray?

Speaker 6: You just left him, man? Yeah, yeah, just left him.

Speaker 5: I don't see him anywhere.

Speaker 4: This is a big joint opening night, big crowds. It's

hard to find anybody.

Speaker 5: Does he know I'm here? Yeah?

Speaker 6: Yes, and he wants to see me.

Speaker 4: Well, what do you think he came here for? Look?

Why didn't you go up there and sing your song?

It's the right moment. People are in the mood.

Speaker 5: I'd rather wait, Joe, Why wait?

Speaker 4: As soon as the music starts, everybody's gonna settle down

and look at you, And that'll make it much easier

for him to find you. Am I right right?

Speaker 5: I hope I don't let you down, Joe.

Speaker 4: No, as for you, j Conrad Nelson, Yes, call him up,

do something, find him, Ladies and gentlemen, Ladies and gentlemen.

Joe and Oski's French Cuisine is happy to present the

singing chants. I know you're all going to, uh you, Hey, hey.

Speaker 6: Where is she? I don't know, just ran out there

to the terrace. You know that girl's got the makings

of a mighty fine sprinter.

Speaker 4: Well, well come on, let's get him back here.

Speaker 1: You see what a weak character I have, Louise, I

couldn't stay away.

Speaker 8: George.

Speaker 5: You wanted to see me, you you do care?

Speaker 6: Well?

Speaker 1: I wanted to see Joe too, of course, Hey, counselor Joe. Well, congratulations.

Speaker 4: You wanted to see me? Where you see me? Now

bring her in here.

Speaker 1: Oh you were just going to sing, weren't you? I interrupted?

Speaker 5: Oh I can sing any time, not.

Speaker 1: Before an audience. Go in, Louise. I want them to

hear you. I want them to see you.

Speaker 5: Is that all you have to say to me? Oh?

Speaker 1: No, No, there's more, a very important matter I want

to discuss with you later.

Speaker 5: You'll wait here. You won't go away.

Speaker 4: He'll be there if I've got a nail, his shoes

to the floor.

Speaker 6: Now get in here, you so o.

Speaker 12: Tar, it's not wants squami is the shore.

Speaker 8: Will my way to know?

Speaker 5: I've seen really my dream.

Speaker 10: See dream.

Speaker 1: Call Louise. Oh that's the nicest song I ever heard.

Speaker 5: You said there was a very important natty you.

Speaker 1: Wanted to Oh yes, yes, Uh do you realize your

name is still Gingle Busher well, and that you came

to me to get it changed, that I neglected to

do anything about it? Oh well, now, don't you think

I've forgotten about it? How would how would Prescott do?

Louise Gingle Bush or Prescott?

Speaker 5: It has sort of a ring to it, hasn't it?

Speaker 1: Yes, has sort of a wedding ring.

Speaker 5: Oh yes, George, it's a beautiful name. Thank you, my darling.

Speaker 2: The curtain falls on the final act of I'll Be

Yours tonight's presentation by the Broadway Playhouse. Our thanks to

Ann Blythe, Robert Cummings, and William Bendix for their outstanding

performances this evening. Others in the cast included Tom McKee,

Willard Waterman, and Eddie Mahr. Join us again next week

at the same time when stars of Broadway in Hollywood

will again appear in the Broadway Playhouse. This is the

United States Armed Forces Radio Service, the voice of information

and education.

This transcript was automatically generated by the podcast creator and may contain errors. Aggregated via the PodcastIndex API.