- 2 months ago
Outrageous Season 1 Episode 3- Sparks Light Fires - FULL
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00:00It has always intrigued me, coming from a family of seven children, all with the same
00:27upbringing, how we turned out to be so different.
00:35Some of my sisters wanted to change the world, while the rest of us took life less seriously.
00:49Unity was definitely the most determined of us.
00:54As a child, she'd been prone to developing obsessions which she pursued with great fervour.
01:01These fads didn't usually last long and were a terrific source of entertainment for the
01:06rest of us.
01:10It was only Deka who feared that this one was becoming a campaign that would define the rest
01:16of her life.
01:19Meanwhile, for me, despite the worry of our growing debts, the novelty of being a housewife
01:38had not yet worn off.
01:47You see?
01:50How impressive is this?
01:51I can now make tea, fry eggs, and light fires.
01:55Hugely impressive.
01:56That's the least I can do, really, is my poor husband trudges off to the city looking for
02:04a new job.
02:05Bless him.
02:06Oh, and I've even started work on a new novel.
02:09There you go.
02:10I'm making very good progress.
02:12No one's...
02:13I'm sorry.
02:15I have a favour to ask.
02:18Oh, God.
02:20What is it?
02:22I think I'm...
02:28Well, I'm certain, actually, that I'm...
02:41Doesn't get much better than that, does it?
02:43Oh, my Lord.
02:44I mean, I can't possibly have Mosley's child out of wedlock.
02:49No?
02:50No.
02:51No.
02:52I suppose...
02:53Well, what about in wedlock?
02:56No.
02:57Good God.
02:58His wife hasn't been dead a year.
03:00The papers would have a field day if he married me.
03:02It's the last thing he needs right now.
03:04And everything's going so well for the party.
03:06Membership is increasing.
03:07We've got a huge rally planned for June.
03:09The least whiff of a scandal could ruin all that.
03:12Oh, Nard.
03:13Not to mention, Marv and Parv.
03:16They're still getting over my divorce.
03:18So...
03:20What are you going to do?
03:23Well, there's only one thing I can do, isn't there?
03:27Jesus.
03:29Really?
03:31Of course I would dearly love to have his child, but...
03:35It's impossible.
03:38So...
03:39I found a clinic in the West End that will...
03:43Oblige.
03:44Lord, Nard, those...
03:46Those places, that's a risk, isn't it?
03:49It's a reputable place.
03:51Or expensive, anyway.
03:53Moseley will pay, of course.
03:55But he can't, for obvious reasons...
03:57Come with.
04:02I wonder...
04:04Could you bear to?
04:06You are making an awful lot of sacrifices, aren't you?
04:19No choice.
04:21Nancy had a year abroad.
04:22So did Pam.
04:23So did Diana.
04:24It seems only fair that I should, doesn't it?
04:26We offered to send you to Paris to learn French and you flatly refused.
04:41But the French are so affected and snobbish, aren't they?
04:44Whereas the Germans are so much friendlier.
04:46More like us.
04:47I want to learn German properly.
04:48You know, to have proper discussions.
04:50What the devil do you want to have discussions when it's in Germany?
04:51Well...
04:52Well, just everyone.
04:53And of course there is such a rich culture to discuss.
04:54Beethoven.
04:55Bach.
04:56Beethoven.
04:57Wagner.
04:58And this school in Munich has an awfully good thing.
05:00The only English that we pray is that you don't have a group of German.
05:02You don't put the people of German and the people of German...
05:03They are not good to be educated and snobbish, aren't they?
05:06Whereas the Germans are so much friendlier.
05:07More like us.
05:08I want to learn German properly.
05:09You know, to have proper discussions.
05:10What the devil do you want to have discussions when it's in Germany?
05:12Well, just everyone.
05:13And of course, there is such a rich culture to discuss.
05:16Beethoven.
05:17Bach.
05:20Wagner.
05:21And this school in Munich has an awfully good thing.
05:24has an awfully good reputation run by a baroness i thought you hated the idea of school well yes
05:32ordinary schools for children but this one is a finishing school for young ladies lucy heskett
05:38and her sister went there really you could talk to their mother if you like and because of the
05:42german exchange rate it's really unbelievably cheap less than my allowance and one less mouth
05:50to feed here all expenses are included well she does seem much improved since her trip to germany
06:01with diana last year and in fact for the first time since she was a small child she seems positive
06:08helpful happy because she's just trying to persuade us to let her go no i know i know but
06:15it is well it is a finishing school it might actually do her some good she might make some
06:20friends i've spoken to lady heskett and she says that munich is terribly clean and safe full of
06:29british students and she says that her daughter's loved it i suppose we can't actually forbid her
06:36from going now that she's of age exactly so i told her that we think about it
06:41and and by the way i've invited diana and her boys here for easter what yes yes and you're going
06:54to welcome her with open arms oh yeah am i now because i know you miss her just as much as we all do
07:04and we can't carry on punishing her can we no no no i i suppose not
07:14all well at the bank oh yes yes all in hand all in hand
07:20i didn't sleep last night of course but look nad this this this is a reputable place
07:39the surgeons are highly paid professionals real doctors with all the latest you know things
07:51not so much worried about the yacht but um the boys i haven't made a will oh don't be silly
08:02but you would look after them for me wouldn't you if anything were to go wrong of course
08:08i would spoil them rotten for the rest of their lives but you're going to be fine
08:11and it will all be over before you know it
08:24and i shall be right here waiting for you
08:26and i shall be right here
08:37oh god
08:43Oh, my God.
08:44Yes.
08:45Now, one, two, three, four, five, six, seven.
08:48Where are the others?
08:49No one needs to Sunday.
08:50It'll be Christmas.
08:51Ah.
08:52There she is.
08:53Where's Mum?
08:54Coming!
08:55Coming!
08:56Coming!
08:57Coming!
08:58Coming!
08:59Coming!
09:00Coming!
09:01Coming!
09:02Coming!
09:03Coming!
09:04Coming!
09:05Coming!
09:06Coming!
09:07Coming!
09:08Coming!
09:09Coming!
09:10Coming!
09:11Coming!
09:12Coming!
09:13Coming!
09:14Coming!
09:15It's me.
09:16It's me.
09:17It's me.
09:22Oh, it's me.
09:23Oh, it's been so many.
09:25Oh, it's been so maybe.
09:27Oh, it was so many.
09:28Can you say bye?
09:34He who would die and be,
09:39He instilled his master
09:43Let him in constancy
09:48Follow the master
09:52There's not this arrangement
09:57Shouting in my silence
10:02Is he all right?
10:04Still bleeding.
10:06I'm going to ask.
10:11Whose hope is taken now
10:16With his most stories
10:21Who had a chance on hell
10:25His faithful glories
10:30Though the Lord shall save his might
10:35Though the Lord shall save his might
10:39He will make buildings right
10:43To be a pilgrim
10:47To be a pilgrim
10:49To be a pilgrim
10:53To be a pilgrim
10:55Oh, no, he might be 40, 45.
10:58It's ancient.
11:02Come here.
11:04Darling, where are you going?
11:05I won't be a minute.
11:17Another shipyard closes.
11:19It's all doom, gloom, and more doom about the economy.
11:23It never ends.
11:24You should have bought it, shouldn't you?
11:25Oh, here, listen to this.
11:26Winston Churchill's nephew vanishes.
11:29Oh, yeah.
11:30What's this?
11:31What?
11:32Into thin air, like a magician's rabbit?
11:34Oh, that'll be Nellie's boy.
11:36He was always trouble.
11:37Esmond Romilly absconded from his school, Wellington College,
11:41yesterday at dawn and travelled to London,
11:42where he's believed to be under the influence
11:44of a group of communist agitators.
11:45Oh, nice.
11:47How wonderful.
11:48Oh, death.
11:48Isn't he a cousin of ours?
11:50Yes, second cousin.
11:51His mother said...
11:52He has caused us enormous anxiety
11:55and made us terribly angry.
11:57He is ruining his future.
11:59Well, he is ruining it.
12:01For it to be splashed all over the papers like that.
12:04Poor Nellie.
12:04The boy is obsessed with politics
12:05and thinks of nothing and nobody else.
12:08I wish a couple of sturdy fascists
12:10would pick him up,
12:11tuck him under their arms
12:12and keep him out of arms when all this trouble is over.
12:15Unity, sit down.
12:17That's enough.
12:18That is enough!
12:23It's not funny.
12:25He's an ungrateful boy.
12:27Appalling behaviour.
12:30I won't hear another word about it.
12:32Is that clear?
12:32Hmm?
12:33Hmm.
12:34What did you do?
12:51You should have stopped me.
12:55Come along.
13:04Give me a couple of scraps.
13:07This way is never...
13:08Did I tell you about my book?
13:30I'm calling it Wicks on the Green.
13:32The idea came to me when I saw Unity
13:34giving a full-on fascist salute
13:35to the poor woman in the village shop.
13:37I mean, it's insane.
13:38And I thought,
13:39this needs to be ridiculed.
13:40Showing up for the utter rubbish it is.
13:43What, the fascist movement?
13:44Yes, don't you think?
13:46Have you told Unity about this?
13:48Or Diana?
13:50Not yet, but of course I will.
13:54What?
13:56You know how seriously they take their politics.
13:59It's just a tease.
14:01No more than they deserve.
14:04Besides, my publishers are dead keen on it
14:05and have already paid me in advance, thank God.
14:08Because we're really on our up
14:09as prods still not found a job.
14:11Well, he's come close a few times
14:13but they all seem to slip away at the last moment.
14:19Right.
14:21Here she is.
14:23Allow me to introduce the new love of my life.
14:26Isn't she a beauty?
14:36Oh my word, yes.
14:38I brought her with my earnings from the farm.
14:41In the summer, we're going down through France,
14:44across the Alps,
14:45and over the Dolomites onto Venice.
14:47Fabulous.
14:48And who's we?
14:50Me and her.
14:51You're going across Europe alone?
14:55Yes, why not?
14:56Good God, Pam.
14:57How did you get to be so brave?
15:00I should think you're the brave one,
15:02writing that book.
15:04Spin!
15:06I mean, you don't think they'll really object.
15:09Do you, Diana and Unity?
15:10No, I shouldn't worry about that.
15:13Unity's on another planet, anyway.
15:15What do you mean?
15:16Well, she's not quite the full shilling, is she?
15:20It's not that.
15:21She's just different.
15:23She's not stupid.
15:24Her mind just works differently to most.
15:26She's not normal.
15:27Well, none of us are.
15:29Good God, if it's normal you want,
15:30you're in quite the wrong family.
15:32Anyway, I just don't want to upset her, or Diana.
15:36You're not making fun of them, are you?
15:38It's of the politics and the movement.
15:40It's satire, isn't it?
15:42Oh, you know what?
15:44We should actually go and hear Moseley speak,
15:45as research.
15:47Yes, satire has to be accurate to work.
15:50Anyway, we've spent your advance.
15:51There's no going back, is there?
15:54It'll be fine.
15:55I'm going.
16:15What?
16:16To Germany.
16:18Mav just told me.
16:19They've decided to let me go.
16:22To live there.
16:24No.
16:25Yes.
16:30Has she spoken to the school?
16:32It's all arranged.
16:33I'm going in a fortnight.
16:36I can't...
16:37I can't believe it.
16:41Blimey, Pauld.
16:43You...
16:44You...
16:45You wore them down.
16:47You...
16:47You broke their will.
16:49I'm going to Munich.
16:52City of filthy Nazis.
16:55The same city as him.
16:57Pauld, you're trembling.
17:04I feel my heart.
17:08Bloody hell.
17:12So you're leaving me, then?
17:17Sorry.
17:19No, you're not.
17:20You're not one bit sorry.
17:24It'll happen for you too, Pauld.
17:27One day...
17:29If you're going, just go.
17:34Just go.
17:35Just go.
17:50Come with me, Pauld.
17:59Yes.
18:00Bitte, kommen Sie rein.
18:13So, bitte schön.
18:16Ich lasse Ihren Koffer sofort nach oben bringen.
18:20Sorry, I beg your pardon.
18:28I shall have her trunk sent up immediately.
18:32Oh, thank you very much.
18:35Tea is taken at four o'clock,
18:38where you can meet the other girls.
18:42The timetable is posted here every Monday.
18:46Every Monday.
18:46Mm-hmm.
18:50I, myself, teach German.
18:57We also have lessons in literature,
19:01in history of art,
19:03and in piano.
19:06So, we will be here for the rest of the day.
19:10Darling.
19:10I shall bring refreshments.
19:13Ja?
19:13Thank you very much, yes.
19:16Well, everything seems very clean and well organized, doesn't it?
19:22And the girls seem quite nice, do they?
19:27Unity, while you're here, I want you to remember that you're representing the entire family.
19:31So, Unity, please, behave appropriately.
19:34Of course.
19:36And if you're unhappy in any way,
19:41you can always use the telephone,
19:43and your father and I will come and pick you up and take you home immediately, yes?
19:49Oh.
19:50Thank you for letting me come.
19:53Thank you so much.
19:54Anyway, it's just really a very good-natured tease, which I hope you'll find amusing.
20:09And, of course, you can read the manuscript before I send it off,
20:12and I will cut out anything too close to the bone, I promise.
20:17Promise noted.
20:17Actually, I think you're going to have such a marvellous time tonight.
20:23You'll be a total convert to the cause anyway.
20:26Obviously, I'm biased, but he is a truly magnificent speaker.
20:31I only wish I could come with you.
20:33Are you sure you can't?
20:35No.
20:36If the newspaper's got hold of it, well, it's not worth the risk.
20:40But you will telephone me when you get home.
20:43Tell me all about it.
20:44Yes, of course.
20:46There.
20:47How's that?
20:48Much better.
20:50Thanks.
20:54Now let's see what your husband thinks.
20:59Darling, what on earth are you doing?
21:01Well, I'm sure your sister doesn't mind, do you, Diana?
21:03Fine.
21:05I took the liberty while I was waiting, because before we go off,
21:09I thought we could at least toast our glorious leader.
21:12One for you, and one for you, Diana.
21:15To Moseley and the black shirts.
21:19This evening, at the Great Exhibition Hall in Olympia,
21:31Sir Oswald Moseley, leader of the British Union of Fascists,
21:35addressed a full house of his followers.
21:36The gathering quickly became contentious, as hecklers in the audience attempted to disrupt proceedings.
22:04Any red agitators, any foreign friends, you will be removed at once, and with force.
22:15Violence spilled out into the surrounding streets, where 2,000 communist and civilian protesters clashed with Moseley's black shirts in scenes unprecedented in British politics.
22:26Well, we were lucky to get out of there alive, bunch of absolute thugs.
22:35Never again am I wearing this thing.
22:37The naked ambition he has of destroying democracy and becoming a dictator.
22:40Setting himself up as the country's saviour.
22:43Whipping up the mob to feed the people.
22:44Yes, he was encouraging the violence.
22:46Oh, no.
22:53No, no, no, no, no, no.
22:54What on earth am I going to say to her?
23:06What?
23:07Now she knows we're here.
23:08She'll think I've done that on purpose.
23:09Oh, who cares, bloody fascist.
23:12Come on, she's my sister.
23:15She'll think it's a fault on the line.
23:18Anyway, tonight just proves your book is needed now more than ever.
23:21My book isn't going to stop this.
23:24I wish I could burn the book.
23:25Well, then you have to pay back the publishers, won't you?
23:27And with what?
23:28I mean, we owe money everywhere.
23:30I've drained my savings dry.
23:32I've sold every last bit of jewellery.
23:33Well, I'm out there every single day looking for work.
23:36I'm doing my level best.
23:37Are you?
23:39Am I?
23:51Sorry, what do you think I'm doing?
23:52Do you think I'm sitting around in bars?
23:55No, of course not.
23:56I just mean...
23:56Do you notice how I support your writing?
23:58How I encourage you and help you,
24:01yet when it comes to my work efforts,
24:02all I get is wild accusations of dishonesty?
24:04I'm not accusing you.
24:06I'm just worried because our debts are so huge
24:08Nick, you don't seem at all worried about how...
24:10I don't think you realise just what a mean-spirited
24:12and suspicious little wife you've become, Nancy.
24:15Here you are, more brain fodder.
24:43Oh, thanks, Dublow.
24:46You are a brick.
24:54Yes!
24:56It's Out of Bounds by Esmond and Charles Romilly.
25:02Look.
25:04Look.
25:05Esmond is handsome, isn't he?
25:06Do admit, most Communists are, you know.
25:11Is he the one that ran away?
25:12Yes.
25:13He's only 17 and he's written a whole book.
25:16Well, half of one.
25:19What is this about?
25:21How to change the status quo, I should think.
25:24Why do you feel that it has to change?
25:29I like it as it is.
25:30I mean, look at how lucky we are to live here.
25:34Nice house, acres of countryside, dogs, horses.
25:37That's just the problem.
25:39We have everything.
25:40Others have nothing.
25:41That's not our fault.
25:43No, but we can do something about it if we try.
25:47You've got to have a goal in life, Stubbs.
25:49What's yours?
25:50I'd like to live in a nice house in the country.
25:54I expect I'll fall in love one day with a rich, gorgeous man.
26:04That is absolutely pathetic.
26:06Well, not for me.
26:10Romance isn't the answer, Stubbs.
26:12Politics is.
26:13Hmm.
26:19Everything is so clean and pretty here, isn't it?
26:29You know how in London it's all so filthy and drab.
26:33Is it?
26:34I mean, Angela, we are so lucky to be right here, right now,
26:39at the most exciting time in Germany's entire history.
26:42Good morning.
26:43And the people.
26:46So welcoming.
26:47This is the place.
26:56It's where it all started.
26:58God.
27:05Do you think he's in there now?
27:07No.
27:07He only comes at lunchtime.
27:09And anyway, he's always surrounded by his men,
27:11so there's never any chance of getting close to him.
27:15How often does he come?
27:17I don't know.
27:18Once a week.
27:19Once a fortnight, so they say.
27:23What are you doing?
27:24What are you doing?
27:24What are you doing?
27:25I can't do it.
27:26What are you doing?
27:26And I'm doing that.
27:27I don't know.
27:35I can't do it.
27:41You can't do it.
27:42There's always something in between.
27:44There's always something in between.
27:46There's always something in between.
28:12Good morning, can I help you?
28:14Good morning.
28:16I'd like to have a table for dinner.
28:18Of course.
28:20One moment, please.
28:28A table for one person?
28:30Yes, of course.
28:32For which day?
28:34For every day, please.
28:36Every day.
28:40What are you doing?
28:44When were you going to tell me?
28:46What are you doing?
28:48When were you going to tell me?
28:50Or were you going to make another public announcement one day of breakfast so I'd be forced to support you?
29:04I didn't want to worry you.
29:06It's just a matter of bad luck on the stock market.
29:10It's a temporary thing.
29:14And if it isn't temporary, is there a plan in place?
29:18It's always temporary.
29:20Markets fall and rise.
29:24You've just got to sit it out.
29:28Do try and trust me.
29:30I'm going to...
29:31Don't just disappear.
29:32I am going to wash my hands.
29:44Hello?
29:46Hello, darling.
29:48Oh, what have you done with your husband?
29:50Oh, sorry.
29:52He sends his apologies.
29:53He's feeling a bit low-par.
29:54Really?
29:55Everything all right?
29:56Yes, yes.
29:57Nothing to worry about.
29:58Any sign of a job for him?
29:59Sadly not.
30:00No.
30:01I've been thinking.
30:03Might it be a good idea to have separate bank accounts?
30:16I gather some women do these days.
30:18There's nothing left to put in one month.
30:21We live in hope.
30:22Now, I'm starving.
30:23What's for lunch?
30:29Thank you, Shanon.
30:30He normally comes in at about two if he's coming and eat through there in the back room so he has
30:41to walk right past me and if I angle my stools slightly I can just about see where he sits I
30:50wonder what on earth the staff make of you so if the flag is flying at the brown house that means
30:55he's here in Munich but if it isn't it means he's either in Berlin or somewhere else in which case
31:01there's no point in me coming here at all so
31:25he looked did you see what I'm not sure it was you in particular he recognizes me I'm sure he does
31:40I always stand up and salute and I'm always at the same table he must recognize me
31:47he's he's built new roads he's roused Germany's national spirit and he's fixed the economy Tom
31:55he's crushed trade unions persecuted the intellectuals and the Marxists and the Jews
32:00had them all beaten up and thrown in jail or carted off to camp nonsense it's not true I
32:06certainly didn't see any persecutions when I was in Germany he shut down any newspaper or publication
32:11who dares to criticize his regime wait wait wait where are you getting all of this from from the
32:17brown book of Hitler terror it details all the violence and atrocities God that book has been
32:22completely discredited it's it's nonsense it's red propaganda unity's letters don't mention any
32:27atrocity she says it's lovely there you can't believe everything that you read I have been there
32:32love's been there it's nothing like that they wouldn't let Taurus see it would they you believe it
32:38don't you darling I haven't read the book I I don't know if it's communist propaganda or God's own
32:43truth you went to a Mosley rally you said they were all vicious thugs did you yes and they were
32:50and Mosley was the worst of the lot well you should read this book then because it shows you
32:56just where fascism leads especially if you're writing a novel about it well fascism not how you
33:01die no no well not exactly I mean there are one or two fascists in it but it's really just a light
33:07comic piece there's nothing funny about fascism please could we stop talking about politics at the
33:14table I agree and besides if any of those ghastly stories were true they'd be printed in the times
33:22exactly
33:23so have you finished it yes I cut out all the stuff about the leader changed black shirts to union jack
33:40shirts toned the whole thing right down and sent it off to diana for her comments
33:47so it's become a toothless tiger very much not my finest hour
33:52you don't think I should publish it at all do you I think
33:59Mosley and fascism it did seem laughable even just a few months ago
34:05and then suddenly the temperature changed and it now feels very chilling indeed
34:11he's gained a lot of followers frighteningly fast
34:15I never thought for a moment he would get this far I'm going to have to starve joss
34:20on the other hand and with respect your readership is not large mostly women of a certain type
34:30I don't think your novel is going to help or hinder Mosley's cause one jot
34:35and you do need to eat girl I reckon if diana's any kind of sister at all she'll understand that
34:42I simply don't understand how she could have done this
34:50take the thing the very thing most important to us
34:54and make it seem ridiculous
35:00I don't mind for myself of course for you darling I mean it would seem as if she set out deliberately
35:13to hurt you
35:14why would she do that
35:17well jealousy
35:21probably
35:22jealous
35:24of what
35:25because you've got a cause
35:27a purpose in life
35:30ideals that you
35:32fight for
35:34not to mention
35:36a rock
35:37solid man
35:40who
35:41utterly
35:42adores
35:44every
35:46delicious
35:47enjoy
35:48but sisters are supposed to support each other
35:53I agree
35:56no true sister
35:58would publish such a book
36:01I'd ask her to junk it
36:03junk the whole bloody thing
36:05I think she needs the money
36:08darling
36:09this is not about money
36:12it's loyalty
36:14isn't it
36:15it's plain to me
36:17you want to know
36:19what she loves the most
36:20you or the money
36:23then ask her to junk it
36:25Moseley's put years of work into getting this movement off the ground
36:39it's everything to him
36:41and this just
36:42poking fun at it
36:44I'm not poking fun, Nudd
36:46it's just a tease
36:47a piece of froth
36:48this is a crucial time for us
36:50the party's finally gaining momentum
36:52this is the last thing we need
36:54and coming from my own sister
36:56it's very hurtful
36:57God, I
36:58I don't want to hurt you
37:00never
37:00look, look
37:02tell me the bits
37:03that are hurtful
37:03and I will cut them out
37:04there is still time to do that
37:06just tell me
37:06just mark them up
37:07I would much rather
37:10you didn't publish it at all
37:11come on, Nudd
37:17you know what our finances are like
37:20we
37:20haven't the funds
37:21to pay the publishers back
37:22I can't
37:23just scrap it
37:25honestly I do think you are being a tiny bit oversensitive
37:33it really is just meaningless fun
37:35which a few hundred people will read at most
37:37it is not meaningless
37:38because I know how much you dislike Moseley
37:41but I've never said that
37:43not to me
37:44but to Jessica
37:45Tom
37:46and everybody else
37:48you can't have it always, Nancy
37:50you can't run him down behind my back
37:52and be nice about him to my face
37:54and hope I won't care
37:55because I do
37:55very deeply
37:57why are you always so
38:00slippery?
38:02why can't you just say what you think
38:04and stand by it?
38:12you're right
38:13I don't
38:16warm to him
38:18I'm sorry
38:21and I don't like his politics either
38:23his politics
38:25are my politics
38:27really Nudd?
38:28yes
38:29he's our only hope for a decent future
38:31but the violence at that meeting
38:33he encouraged it
38:35he has a right to free speech
38:36if communists and their allies
38:38come armed with knuckle dusters
38:40to try to shut him up
38:41well then
38:42his men have a right to defend themselves
38:44I support him
38:47one hundred percent
38:48I have total faith
38:51in his love
38:52and loyalty
38:54to me
38:54I wish I had faith in yours
39:03I wish I had faith in yours
39:33I wish I had faith in yours
39:47so sorry
39:47Entschuldigung
39:48keine Sorge
39:49bitte
39:50es tut mi
39:53srekle kinda
40:02Entschuldigen Sie, genetiges Frohlein, der Führer lässt seine Empfehlung ausrichten und bittet Sie an seinen Tisch.
40:16Good grief.
40:18If my parents could have foreseen the terrible consequences of Unity going to Germany, they would surely never have let her go.
40:26Two of my sisters were now lost to the fascist cause, and one of them, my dearest, closest sister, was no longer speaking to me.
40:51What on earth was happening to my family?
40:56How it is.
40:57I love you.
41:23We have been waiting for your very famous jokes all afternoon, and we've not got them.
41:35Oh, darling.
41:36Hello.
41:37Look who I bumped into on the way home.
41:38We're having a little impromptu game of cards.
41:40Yes, your brute ever husband is utterly fleecing us.
41:42Why don't you come and join us?
41:43Yes, yes, come on.
41:44I'll make you a drink.
41:45No.
41:46No, thanks, but I've got the most awful splitting head.
41:49I'll just go up if you don't mind.
41:52Right, well, who wants another martini?
42:09I couldn't let Diana simply walk out of my life.
42:13But how to build a bridge across the chasm that had opened up between us?
42:21I felt I was losing my sisters, one by one.
42:35And just when I thought things couldn't get any worse...
42:38...
42:39...
42:40...
42:41...
42:42...
42:43...
42:47...
43:13...
43:18...
43:19...
43:23That's the marvellous thing about life, isn't it?
43:26One simply never knows what's coming next.
43:29Yeah
43:31That was tiny I wasving for him to see the world around the world to have played with.
43:32Let's go!
43:34...
43:36...
43:38...
43:42We'll see you next time.
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