Adolphe Menjou credited as playing...
Monsieur La Bessiere
- Amy Jolly: Every time a man has helped me, there has been a price. What's yours?
- La Bessiere: My price? A smile.
- Amy Jolly: I haven't got much more.
- La Bessiere: Good evening, officer.
- Ship's Deck Officer: Good evening.
- La Bessiere: [Referring to Amy Jolly] Do you know who that woman is?
- Ship's Deck Officer: [Indifferently] A vaudeville actress, probably.
- La Bessiere: Uh, just, uh, how do you know that?
- Ship's Deck Officer: Oh, we carry them every day. We call them 'suicide passengers.' One way ticket. They never return.
- La Bessiere: Sometimes they catch up with them, and sometimes they don't. And very often when they do, they find their men dead...
- Amy Jolly: [Bessiere has presented her with a very expensive-looking piece of jewelry] I can't accept this. It's worth a fortune.
- La Bessiere: Anything of less value would be unworthy of you.
- Amy Jolly: [a group of women with bundles over their shoulders are following the company of Legionnaires going on a mission] What are those women?
- La Bessiere: I'd call them the rear guard.
- Miss Marten: Aren't you the painter La Bessire?...
- La Bessiere: I paint when I find the time.
- Anna Dolores: He has all the time that he needs. He would be a great painter if he were not so rich.
- La Bessiere: Possibly I can help you.
- Amy Jolly: Every time a man has helped me there's been a price. What's yours?
- La Bessiere: My price? A smile?
- Amy Jolly: I haven't got much more.
- La Bessiere: What's wrong, Lo Tinto?
- Lo Tinto, Nightclub Owner: What's wrong? She's been drinking like a fish. And don't send her anymore flowers in pots! She threw the last one at me an hour ago!
- La Bessiere: Mademoiselle, may I have the honor of your company after the performance?
- Amy Jolly: I am sorry, I have disposed of the balance of the evening.
- La Bessiere: Some other time, perhaps?
- Amy Jolly: [Coyly] Of course.