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00:05Welcome to the Henry Manor.
00:08A gilded age tale of mystery and murder.
00:13But first...
00:15You're lucky.
00:16Power's on the dining room again.
00:17But trying to hoard it while I'm talking.
00:23Mr. Henry made his fortune as a junk man.
00:27Something he was quite proud of, actually.
00:30But it wasn't until a chance encounter with Mr. Thomas Edison
00:35that he became truly revelant.
01:16This should be good.
01:19Oh, shit.
01:22At this exact spot is where Thomas Edison
01:27accidentally slipped on a rug,
01:29hitting his head right here on this second step.
01:58And as we all know,
02:00Mr. Henry is widely credited with saving his life.
02:06It is the dawn of...
02:08The hobbyist.
02:09One day, I'm going to be an inventor.
02:21Dear reader,
02:23this is not a story in the conventional sense.
02:27You see, nothing is neat and tidy.
02:31Nor is it laid out with ease for a dim-witted pony.
02:34Which I hope you are not, for both our sakes.
02:39No, this story in particular is a cautionary tale.
02:47My husband is dead.
02:50Killed in the dead.
02:51Anything to sabotage a deal with Thomas Edison.
02:54Looking back now, I can admit I was rooting for her.
02:57His fate could be sealed for a portrait of poodles.
03:05When I was a child,
03:07I had foolish dreams of what I might become.
03:10I saw the world differently.
03:24I don't get it.
03:25What does it do?
03:26It's not about that.
03:28What do you mean?
03:29It's not about the trap.
03:31If the entire contraption is used to cage poor Beatrice here...
03:34But look what I built.
03:36Look at all the intricacies of it.
03:40It's interesting.
03:42One day, I'm going to be an inventor.
03:46I wanted to invent something that might have saved our mother from her untimely fate.
03:50Do you both understand why God created you to reside together on this earth?
03:56She would say that her destiny was written, but ours was not.
04:00Slightly ironic sitting here now, right into you.
04:04Before our mother died, she would instill a sense of connection that would bond us to our core.
04:17We had promised our mother that we would come together on this day each year.
04:22No matter where life might take us, we would find each other.
04:26Again.
04:26When you become one, together, you see the world for what it truly could be.
04:43And today, the day that Norman died, would be the day that I see clearly again.
04:54All right.
05:23I'm not Ericsson.
05:30Let's go.
06:09Someone gets around.
06:29While Norman and I had become infatuated with one another all over again, the rest of our world, so it
06:37seemed, was at a standstill.
06:41That's the funny thing about love. It's quite indulgent.
06:47What have you done, Lily?
06:49I've done nothing.
06:51He has not called on you, not in days.
06:56I don't care.
06:59Read between the lines, this isn't good.
07:03Maybe we should leave.
07:04Huh. Leave where?
07:08Lilith.
07:10Leave to go where?
07:14I didn't see it then, but we had become frozen in time with no money.
07:19Fuck!
07:20No way out.
07:27You go on Tuesdays, but it's Wednesday.
07:31And like any caged elf, you become fidgety.
07:34I say, old maid.
07:36Who are you calling an old maid?
07:39She's gonna make that joke until she's dead.
07:41I was afraid to reveal the truth about Edison to my husband.
07:45Afraid of what it might do to us.
07:51Afraid yet again.
07:55And as our world grew more insular by the day,
08:00I grew more tepid.
08:02Cars!
08:04You're just such a cheese, always.
08:07How are we supposed to hold this?
08:10She's so perfect, the head, me.
08:12Oh my God!
08:13What are you all doing?
08:14Are we playing cards or are we not?
08:16I could not shake the feeling that something was not right between us.
08:20Can't we just play?
08:21And it was all a charade.
08:23Every single time.
08:29And then, like clockwork, she arrived.
08:37Right on schedule to break us free from this insanity.
08:59Okay.
09:01I'm not sure we was expecting you.
09:06Were the Henrys expecting you?
09:14Lovely to see you're still kicking, Gretch.
09:20Deal.
09:26Ah, the stench of rotting paper bills.
09:30How I have missed you.
09:40Gretchen, can you be lighter underfoot?
09:43I've been saying that for many years.
09:45It's as if you're a direct descendant of Napoleon himself.
09:48A choleric.
09:50Stomp, stomp, stomp.
09:52Yes, Gretchen, I do know the word choleric.
09:54Thank you very much.
09:55Mr. Henry.
09:55She has me reading now.
09:57Mr. Henry.
09:58Yes.
09:58We have a visitor.
10:02Is he coming for me?
10:04Now?
10:04You're not going to lie.
10:05Damn it, woman!
10:06Rosie!
10:08Rosie!
10:09Rosie Morsh!
10:14Oh, no.
10:17Did she die?
10:19Not yet, sir.
10:22She's here.
10:25How the fuck does she find us?
10:28How the fuck does she always find us?
10:36Will you be greeting her?
10:38Relax, Norman.
10:39I do believe you should.
10:41She is your sister.
10:42She is, yes.
10:43Yes, she is your sister.
10:45Yes, yes.
10:45It's a terrible time to entertain company, though.
10:49She isn't company.
10:51She is my sister.
10:52It's just not a good time for us right now.
10:53We've got an artist wandering the halls.
10:54He's asking for money everywhere he goes.
10:56It's fine.
10:56It's fine.
10:57It's fine.
10:57It's fine.
10:58All right?
10:59It's fine.
10:59It would not be fine.
11:01My sister had a way of making Norman feel exposed.
11:05I'll have the chef cook the remainder of the pheasant.
11:08This pheasant's old.
11:09Oh, I knew that pheasant wasn't old.
11:13I knew it.
11:16When Norman got nervous, he would laugh uncontrollably.
11:20Get out.
11:20Get out.
11:21The doctors called it manic hysteria, previously only diagnosed in women.
11:30He was unable to form cohesive thoughts.
11:33Tonight we'll be hosting Marion's sister.
11:35That means our finest linens and our holiday china, please.
11:40Lily, I shall need you to dance this evening.
11:42No, you do not.
11:42Yes, I do.
11:43I do.
11:43I said I will not.
11:44Cebu, play.
11:45Cebu, play.
11:46I will not.
11:46Oh, please.
11:48How much of that pheasant do we have left?
11:51It's not left.
11:52Oh, please.
11:52No.
11:53That's impossible.
11:55Chickens.
11:56Do a chicken or a hen.
11:57She's a sculptor.
11:58She won't know the fucking difference.
12:00Where are you going?
12:02This is for the mess in the great room.
12:04What's this for?
12:05Where's the ice?
12:06We don't have ice.
12:08No ice.
12:12We need to ration our supplies appropriately.
12:17We need to do a much better job rationing our supplies appropriately.
12:20You hear me?
12:22Goes for every single one of you.
12:26What are you standing there for?
12:27Why is there anybody working?
12:28Oh, oh.
12:30Huh?
12:30Yes, sir.
12:31Yes, sir.
12:31What do you mean, yes, sir?
12:32Nobody's working?
12:33No, no, sir.
12:33I meant yes, sir to the other.
12:35Give me some fucking ice.
12:36Yes, sir.
12:36Chip it off the rocks.
12:37I don't care.
12:38You leave her parched.
12:40You leave her parched until you get a coffer full of fucking ice.
12:44Fuck her.
12:45How you doing, sweetheart?
12:46I can't wait to taste it.
12:49I cannot wait to have your lovely, horrible fucking food.
12:58Rosie.
13:00Marion, my darling.
13:02What?
13:03You look gaunt.
13:05As if the wrath of judgment day hath pummeled you across a cliff's edge.
13:10Oh, how I've missed you.
13:13Oh, I've missed you.
13:14Mwah, mwah.
13:15For sake.
13:15Well, sit down.
13:16Sit down.
13:20Are you remodeling?
13:22What?
13:22It appears as if you're remodeling in this room specifically.
13:25What?
13:26No.
13:27You're missing art.
13:28Oh.
13:29Uh.
13:30No, you know, it's just a room in our house.
13:33You haven't responded to my letters.
13:35I thought you were dead.
13:37Every day I'd wait and wait with a renewed sense of dread.
13:41It's a bit dramatic, isn't it?
13:46I've been holding a tenancy in a small boarding house in the city while I prepared my new show,
13:50which you'd have been to if you cared about art anymore.
13:53Anyway.
13:54I wandered over to you brownstone by the park.
13:57You know, I'd never come uptown unless I felt the need of some suffocating masochism.
14:02Yes!
14:03Oh, my God.
14:03But as I knocked down the door, an entirely different rich old drab man answered,
14:08not Norman, a different one.
14:11He said you sold the house and moved up to the country on some sort of exclusive basis?
14:14No, that's not exactly what happened.
14:16Mary, I think it's fabulous!
14:17Finally away from the druthers of status and free to think, think, think, and tinker.
14:22A free tinker, thinker again, at last!
14:25That rhymes.
14:26It does.
14:30Oh, so is it difficult to finally leave Norman?
14:35I have a current work entitled The Menstruation of the Lonesome Mistress.
14:39I thought of you.
14:41Oh, yeah.
14:41I have not left Norman.
14:45Oh, I'm sorry about that.
14:49No, in actual fact, we are experiencing a sort of renaissance.
14:53I think you'd be quite surprised by Norman.
14:54A renaissance are you creating?
14:56You must be creating something meaningful to declare a renaissance.
14:59No, no, that's not what I'm...
15:00Otherwise, you're just blissful.
15:01Well, then we're blissful.
15:02We're just fucking blissful, okay?
15:05Blissful with a tinge of defensiveness, I see.
15:09Still your sissy here, Mary.
15:13You give this note directly to Nora Baez.
15:16You tell her she can have whatever she wants.
15:18You heard that directly from me, yes?
15:20Yes?
15:21Yes, sir.
15:218 p.m. sharp.
15:23Tell her, 8 p.m. sharp.
15:24I don't think Nora Baez's winter's in the country, sir.
15:27She's having an affair with the gardener next door.
15:29She's having an affair with more than just the gardener.
15:32See, she's having an affair with all sorts of people.
15:34Good for Nora Baez, huh?
15:36Great for us tonight.
15:39Sir, I have but a single working appendage at the moment.
15:42Oh, my God.
15:43Oh, Ferdinand, you shouldn't worry about me.
15:44I'm not entirely sure I'll make the walk from this Baez's residence in time for 8 p.m.
15:48Ferdinand, please.
15:49Sir?
15:49Put it away, Ferdinand.
15:50I'm begging you, please, put it away.
15:52Put it away.
15:53Okay.
15:54I don't bite you.
16:02It's pond water.
16:03It's fucking pond water.
16:05Pond ice tripped from the rocks.
16:07Oh, my God.
16:10I don't have a panic attack.
16:15I don't think I'm having a panic attack.
16:17Stop it.
16:18Stop it.
16:19Stop it.
16:21Please.
16:22Please, please.
16:24Somebody get my wife.
16:25Please get my wife.
16:27She's with her sister.
16:28I'll go fetch her.
16:28No, no, no, no, no, no.
16:30No, no, no, no.
16:31No, she's with her fucking sister.
16:34Please, please, please help me.
16:37Please, please.
16:38Help me, please.
16:39Please, please, help me.
16:41Oh, no, no, no, no.
16:43Okay.
16:43Where are you going?
16:44Uh, nowhere.
16:45I'm just going to...
16:46Let me come with you.
16:47No, no, no, no.
16:47You stay here.
16:48I'll have them bring you some refreshment, you know.
16:51I can fetch my own glass of water, Mary.
16:53I'm a single woman living in the village.
16:54I know, I know.
16:55But not here.
16:56Go, sit down.
16:56I hate this room.
16:58Shut up.
17:03One more.
17:08All right.
17:14My chest feels like my chest is cold, doctor.
17:20Please help me.
17:21Help me.
17:22Please.
17:22I'm so sorry.
17:23It's not a heart attack.
17:24We're having a heart attack.
17:26Marichal Cronzo.
17:26You call doctor?
17:27A bucket.
17:28I don't want to die.
17:30I don't want to die.
17:31Please.
17:31Oh, wait.
17:32I don't want to die.
17:33Oh, wait.
17:36Oh, my God.
17:42I'm so sorry.
17:46I'm so sorry.
17:49I'm so sorry.
17:50I can't do it.
17:51I can't do it.
17:52I'm so sorry.
17:53I'm so sorry.
17:55I'm sort of...
17:56I'm sorry, please.
18:02Oh, my God.
18:05You seem to be in a bit of a state.
18:08Oh, Lord.
18:09Is that your, um, your professional assessment?
18:16I worry for you.
18:18Are you lurking in the halls now?
18:20I said I worry for you.
18:21Yes, yes, I heard you, but then instead of answering your question, I sort of pivoted to one of my
18:26own.
18:26I do not lurk.
18:28You're scaring us.
18:31Because I feel things.
18:33Because I'm a man who stinks with his heart.
18:37A man who will devote every second of every day to setting you free.
18:42Oh, God, you're an imbecile.
18:45Stop, stop.
18:47Stop.
18:49My Marianne.
18:50No, no, no.
18:52Mrs. Henry.
18:54Dammit, Edgar, come on.
18:55It's Mrs. Henry.
18:57Please.
18:58Let me approach you a few steps.
19:00So that I may make out your figure in the night.
19:04Yes.
19:06I will say this once.
19:09And then I shall leave.
19:11Yes, yes.
19:11You need to leave.
19:13Edgar, you need to leave.
19:14Look, I will arrange a promissory note.
19:17That's, you know, it's as good as cash on the Henry name.
19:20But you must leave.
19:21You really, you must leave.
19:23Please.
19:23Hear me.
19:25Oh, I hear you, my girl.
19:26I do.
19:27I hear you.
19:29Please hear me.
19:31I have never, ever felt my heart.
19:35Soon so.
19:37Never, ever.
19:39In my life.
19:42It is quite concerning.
19:45My passion has always come from the control of my stroke.
19:51I have always been in control of my stroke.
19:56My Marianne.
19:57Yes, thank you.
19:58Edgar.
19:59Yes.
20:00Yes.
20:00Halt.
20:01Halt.
20:02No.
20:02Halt.
20:03Halt.
20:06I suddenly realized that the Buddhas are a metaphor for my life.
20:14I am but a trained halt.
20:18In the hand of their master.
20:21I am not your master.
20:24I do not love you.
20:25I do not have secrets that only you can decipher.
20:28I, I, I, I, you've created this narrative of delusion.
20:31And that's what artists do.
20:33Right?
20:33So congratulations, Freethought.
20:35But I am a married woman.
20:37And, you know, we, I mean, we, we, we shared a moment in, in, in a, uh, you know, a
20:42bedroom where you were as blind as a band.
20:44You couldn't even make out the contours of my fucking cheekbones.
20:47So it's over.
20:49All right?
20:49It's over.
20:53Stop.
20:55I will not accept a promissory note.
20:58I explained to your husband that I will not say ah.
21:01Halt.
21:01Halt.
21:02Please hear me.
21:03Halt.
21:03Do you hear me?
21:04Come.
21:06Yes.
21:06I will not accept it.
21:09I'll be right back.
21:10Would you be just go away?
21:12It appears as if you're being chased by a gardener.
21:15No, no, no.
21:16It's, it's just the help.
21:18It's.
21:18Or a murderer.
21:21You shall have me cast you as a wicked witch.
21:25En contraire.
21:26En contraire.
21:27Will you leave us alone?
21:30I'd rather be a widow than you set us free.
21:34A widow did you say?
21:42I trust it, you free.
21:48We're very sorry for your loss, but golly, it's the winter months, and the ground's frozen solid.
21:53What do you do?
21:54Introducing the new temporary receiving vault system.
21:57This state-of-the-art design allows your local cemetery to store up to five bodies with limited decomposition, just
22:03until the ground thaws.
22:04No more burning pyres or formaldehyde.
22:07The receiving vault system, coming to a cemetery near you.
22:21Norman, Norman, Norman, wake up.
22:25It is time to go to your body.
22:28Norman!
22:30Norman!
22:32Norman!
22:35Norman!
22:39Norman!
22:44You have your body.
22:53Norman!
23:00Service!
23:03Service!
23:06Service!
23:10I'm tired.
23:11Fake it.
23:13Oh, my God.
23:15Which is what they don't tell you about.
23:17I'm too hot.
23:20Cowboy.
23:21Positively orgasmic.
23:23Do you remember the bathhouse?
23:25No, you don't.
23:27No, you shut your mouth.
23:30May I produce Mr. Norman Henry?
23:36Normie.
23:38Normie.
23:39You look positively tempestuous.
23:42Look at this one.
23:43Tempestuous, am I right?
23:44Very good.
23:44Hello, Rosie.
23:45Hello.
23:46Loosen up.
23:48Do you know what your problem is?
23:49Do you meditate?
23:50No.
23:51You need to loosen up.
23:52It'll bring back that old Henry charisma.
24:00May I present the one, the only, fresh-off-her-world tour?
24:06Who is Brooklyn?
24:06Brooklyn.
24:08Hello.
24:09Hello, hello.
24:10Hello.
24:13It's Nora Baez.
24:14Yeah, she's fabulous.
24:16She has fabulous tits, am I right?
24:18Rosie.
24:18Straight off a world tour.
24:20I've heard, Norman.
24:22Your geriatric maid just told me.
24:25She told everyone here in this room.
24:31Shall I begin?
24:32Oh, Lord have mercy.
24:34Yes, yes, begin.
24:40This is art.
24:42Don't let anybody tell you otherwise.
24:47I see clearly.
24:50Tonight, I will set her free.
24:54Come dia vuole.
24:56One day, we will all be free.
24:58Tonight?
25:00Tonight is her night.
25:08There was a certain lawyer in a certain town.
25:12You're flat.
25:13You're flat.
25:14I'm always snooping round.
25:16Higher.
25:17He was the most peculiar man I'd ever seen.
25:21Have a note higher.
25:22Higher.
25:25Oh, there it is.
25:27Right, you are, girl.
25:27Would you shut up and let her sing?
25:30Well, if you're going to spend money on an act,
25:32might as well have her put the diaphragm into it.
25:34Rosie, it's no appliance.
25:36Are you having a stroke?
25:37Do you even know what a diaphragm is?
25:39What is it?
25:39Oh, that's a diaphragm.
25:42What is wrong with you?
25:46I'm so fortunate because I've had enough of this.
25:52Oh, my God.
25:53Dizzy.
25:54Dizzy.
25:54I'm dizzy.
25:55Did you get him some ice?
25:56No, no, no, no, no ice for me.
25:58No ice for me.
25:58Don't be so silly.
25:59Suddenly a man of the people.
26:00Rosie, would you please just simmer?
26:02He has anxiety.
26:03I'm not anxious.
26:04I don't suffer from anxiety.
26:05He's right open, darling.
26:07Let's just call it what it is.
26:08He's stressed about money.
26:09Norman.
26:10Rosie, Rosie, don't do this.
26:12Clearly this is a fucking charade.
26:17Rosie, right fucking here.
26:32You're to have me believe that you willfully moved up to the country to hear Nora Baye sing
26:37bedtime stories.
26:37We have not moved up to the country.
26:55You are broke, Norman.
26:57Rosie, don't do this.
27:00You just bend over and take it.
27:02You always have.
27:03I do not bend over.
27:03You don't talk to my wife that way.
27:05I do not bend over and take it.
27:06I do not speak to my wife that way.
27:08Come on.
27:08What was I supposed to do?
27:09It's not what they expected you to do.
27:11It's what you expected of yourself, Mary.
27:13We are not broke.
27:15Yes, we are, Norman.
27:17Will I be paid?
27:18You'll be paid.
27:18Probably not.
27:19We are Henry's.
27:20I can assure you, you will be paid, my darling.
27:23You know she was a genius.
27:25She built things, contraptions.
27:27Did you know that?
27:29Your stupid name means nothing compared to what she could have been.
27:36I've worked very hard for my stupid name, Rosie.
27:40A junk man.
27:42I've built my fortune through diligence and hard work.
27:46I have built it out of absolutely nothing.
27:50And you still have nothing.
27:52You're a middleman with nothing.
27:54No skills, no talent.
27:56Nothing.
27:59Nothing.
28:00Well, that's not what Thomas Edison said.
28:02Oh, really?
28:04Thomas Edison?
28:05Oh, really?
28:07Yes, Thomas Edison and I are changing the world.
28:11Because I mean something.
28:13You understand?
28:15I mean something.
28:18Wow.
28:18I don't know what I said.
28:19What did you say?
28:19I don't know what I said.
28:20I made a deal.
28:23I made a brilliant deal.
28:28A brilliant, brilliant deal.
28:46Marian.
28:48Marian.
28:51Marian, please.
28:54Please, Marian, let me.
28:55Can you please?
28:57Can you just let me explain?
29:04You're...
29:16Well, it seems my work here is done.
29:30That's how you take a bow, honey.
29:33Gretchen!
29:34Gretchen!
29:36Gretchen!
29:38Get my valise, my hat box, my easel, my luggage, and call my carriage.
29:45Yes, ma'am.
29:48Marriott, Marriott, Marriott.
29:50It's all about Spike.
29:52Spike, Marriott.
29:55It's all about Spike.
30:01I'm sorry.
30:04I'm sorry.
30:08I'm sorry.
30:12Oh, God.
30:15You don't have any.
30:20Will you let me explain?
30:21Please, will you let me explain?
30:27I wouldn't do this to you!
30:30I don't know what to say.
30:39I forgave you.
30:42I've forgiven you our whole life.
30:47Nothing's equal.
30:50How could I have been so stupid?
30:53Not fair!
30:56The cast aside all inhibitions and believe that something might have changed within my husband.
31:02He left Marriott.
31:05He can quit the charade.
31:06He's gone about his business.
31:07There'll be other deals, I promise.
31:09No.
31:10He still saw me as a pawn.
31:14That was eventful.
31:16Always is.
31:18So, are you ready to make more money than God?
31:21A chess piece that he could simply move aside for the betterment of the Henry name, of course.
31:27Oh, my God.
31:29I prayed for you, Marian.
31:31I prayed for this deal.
31:33I prayed for this deal every day.
31:35I don't think I made a mistake, Marian.
31:38You just have to trust me, for God's sake.
31:53I'll wait you out, girl.
31:57I'll wait you out.
32:27I'm standing there trying to make a meal.
32:50It's going.
33:00Marianne, I'll leave you alone if you just come in here.
33:04Marianne, talk to me, Marianne, please.
33:06You just have to trust me, for God's sake.
33:09Shut up! Shut up!
33:13Like with the painting.
33:15You stop feeling sorry for yourself.
33:16You are not the fucking victim.
33:19Just because you had an onslaught of guilt
33:22doesn't mean that you get to, you know,
33:24make this moment about you.
33:26Darling, take your time. Take your time.
33:27Norman, this is not about that.
33:30Whatever this is, it's not that.
33:31And I am not forgiving you.
33:32Could you just, your robe, Norman?
33:34Oh.
33:35Please, could you have a...
33:38That was unintentional.
33:39Tell you something.
33:39Of course it was unintentional.
33:41Everything you do is unintentional, Norman.
33:43That's not true, Marianne.
33:43That's the problem.
33:45That's not true.
33:45Just because, you know, you've, you know, you...
33:47Take your time.
33:48Yes!
33:49Ah!
33:50Ah!
33:52Ah!
33:54Ah!
33:54Ah!
33:55Of all the nights you could have snuck your whore
33:57into your bedroom!
33:59Oh, my God, I...
34:00Ah!
34:01Ah!
34:04Ah!
34:04Ah!
34:05Ah!
34:06Ah!
34:08Ah!
34:13Ah!
34:17Ah!
34:19Ah!
34:21I think I need to...
34:23Call on the doctor.
34:24It doesn't look.
34:25Look...
34:26Doctor!
34:28Gretchen!
34:29Gretchen!
34:31Gretchen!
34:32What's your question?
34:34The doctor!
34:36Get the doctor!
34:38Get the doctor!
34:40Take your hands off now!
34:41You co-sucker!
34:47Get out, mate!
34:50Wrench on!
34:53Wrench the doctor!
34:55Wrench on!
34:57Wrench on!
34:57Wrench the doctor!
34:59Help.
35:01The crats.
35:04And you...
35:04Put your fucking hands on my husband's cock!
35:07Oh, la la!
35:08Put that cock down, you fucking...
35:09Get out!
35:11Put bad and sweet!
35:13America's a mess!
35:15Get out, get out!
35:16What is this?
35:17Fuck's sake!
35:17Help.
35:18Wrench the doctor!
35:22It wasn't love.
35:23It wasn't love at all.
35:26It was simply...
35:28a sweet...
35:30a choice.
35:31Fucking dammit, Norman!
35:33Why couldn't you keep your underwear on just this one night?
35:35He wasn't saying he was me.
35:36Shut the fuck up!
35:37Oh, I'm sorry, I'm sorry.
35:40I...
35:41I can't feel my legs.
35:42Fuck's sake, don't you fucking die on me.
35:44Don't you dare.
35:45Norman, don't you dare die on me.
35:47I...
35:47You were a coward.
35:48Don't you dare!
35:50You know...
35:51No, no, no, no, no.
35:52You know, I am...
35:54I'm gonna speak my...
35:55The truth, Norman, if it is the last thing that I ever say to you.
35:58I am gonna say this to you.
36:00Yes, I am.
36:01Norman Harry.
36:04I am your wife, and I invented the...
36:09I do see you.
36:13I do.
36:18Is he fucking dead?
36:20Did you fucking die?
36:22Did he die on me?
36:23Did he...
36:24Norman, you fucking louse!
36:26How could you die on me right then?
36:29You...
36:29Fucking hell!
36:30I just...
36:32This...
36:33This...
36:33This right here...
36:35This...
36:36Is worse than...
36:37Edison, you know that?
36:38You...
36:39You had the last laugh, didn't you, Norman?
36:42You...
36:44You just...
36:45Oh, Norman.
36:52Oh...
36:54Oh, Norman.
36:58Oh...
37:03Oh, Norman.
37:08Oh...
37:15Oh, Norman.
37:17and you can't.
37:30Do you ever imagine your life
37:34a hundred years from now?
37:36Of course.
37:39What young lady doesn't?
37:42Well, you're different than most young ladies.
37:49Oh, because I'm educated?
37:51No.
37:53Because you're different than most young ladies.
38:11A cantankerous painter once said that the bones of an artist would live on forever.
38:20Once the brick of a rich man like you shall fade to dust.
38:38The day Norman Henry died, it was frigid.
38:43The ground was frozen solid, too frozen to dig even the shallowest of graves.
38:50And so I would sit and contemplate what was to become of my husband after he would fade to dust.
38:57And in turn, what would become of me.
39:18As I told you on the first page of this journal.
39:23This was never a story of murder.
39:26It was always a cautionary tale.
39:44You see, if you're lucky enough to have ideas and passions, you must embrace them at all costs.
39:55Because it is these ideas and passions that push the world around.
40:00You see, there's a big tall tightrope, right?
40:03And I'm at a circus.
40:05And I'm...
40:07I'm wobbly up there in the sky.
40:09I know I'm gonna fall.
40:11And on one side of the tightrope, there is a beautiful life as a mother.
40:17And on the other side of the rope, a career.
40:25Both very hard.
40:29In different ways, I imagine?
40:31Exactly.
40:37I, for one, I don't believe in compromise.
40:43Yes, well...
40:46You're not a woman.
40:53Now, I'll have you know that while I am indeed a woman, I will no longer be compromising.
41:04You see, I am a woman of invention.
41:09I always have been.
41:11And I always will be.
41:14Hi, uh, I'm looking for the records of a student you had here in 1867.
41:20This would be it.
41:21It's very delicate works.
41:25This would be nice and stunning.
41:34Ok I us now know that.
41:35We know that this idea.
41:35Who was the word
41:35You know she?
41:35Who was the devil?
41:40I'm happy.
41:47For one little bit
41:48No one except that says,
41:51you can carriers.
41:51So, you know what?
41:59What I have learned, dear reader, is that against all odds, you must stay true to who
42:05you are, or risk fading to dust.
42:35For a moment in time, I have forgotten my very name, and like all those around me, the artists,
42:49the craftsmen, the creators.
42:59While sometimes we might lose our way, we will never, ever lose our sense of purpose.
43:10I am Marian Worsh, college graduate, loyal wife, and the one and only inventor of the lightbulb.
43:41Now perhaps, take a moment and imagine what I might do next.
44:14I am Marian Worsh.
44:36I am Marian Worsh.
44:46I am Marian Worsh.
44:46I am Marian Worsh.
45:11I am Marian Worsh.
45:39Oh, my God.
45:41Come on.
45:44Come on.
45:45Come on.
45:46Come on.
46:00Janice.
46:01Janice, look at this.
46:04Oh.
46:05Oh.
46:07Oh.
46:08Those look like your poodles.
46:09Oh, Lord.
46:10It's for you.
46:11Rest in peace.
46:12Oh, God.
46:13Too soon.
46:14Hey, you should get this.
46:17Can you see that?
46:19It says Degas.
46:23Degas.
46:24What a sense of humor you all have.
46:25But we're not paying five dollars for this.
46:28Okay.
46:28What you want to do?
46:31I have three dollars left on me.
46:34Will you take that?
46:35Three bucks?
46:37It's a picture of poodles.
46:38This is not a Degas, honey.
46:41I'm an art history professor.
46:42It's not a Degas.
46:48Three bucks.
46:48Yeah, three bucks.
46:49Whatever.
46:51Enjoy.
46:52Thanks.
46:54So cute.
47:23Bye.
47:26Bye.
47:54Bye.
48:27Bye.
48:56Bye.
49:22Bye.
49:24Bye.
49:57Bye.
50:22Bye.
50:23Bye.
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