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Danny Kaye, Louis Armstrong, Charlie Barnet, Tommy Dorsey, Benny Goodman, Lionel Hampton, Virginia Mayo, and Mel Powell in A Song Is Born (1948)

Quotes

A Song Is Born

Edit
  • Honey Swanson: [about Frisbee] Yes, I love him. I love those hick shirts he wears with the boiled collars and the way he always has his coat buttoned wrong. It looks like a giraffe, and I love him. I love him because he's the sort of a guy that gets drunk on a glass of buttermilk. And I love the way he blushes right up over his ears. I love him because he... he doesn't know how to kiss, the jerk.
  • Professor Magenbruch: Is this the music here?
  • Mel Powell: Oh, no. We don't use any music.
  • Lionel Hampton: We haven't got anything written down, Professor.
  • Professor Magenbruch: Well, we can't play without music.
  • Lionel Hampton: Well, Benny Goodman used to.
  • Professor Magenbruch: Benny Goodman? I never - Frisbee, did you ever hear of him?
  • Professor Hobart Frisbee: No, no, I haven't.
  • Professor Hobart Frisbee: Yes, what is it?
  • Miss Bragg: The taxi is here.
  • Professor Hobart Frisbee: Taxi? What taxi?
  • Miss Bragg: Miss Swanson's or mine?
  • Professor Hobart Frisbee: It's all yours, Crabapple Annie!
  • Professor Hobart Frisbee: What are you gonna do?
  • Honey Swanson: I'm going to show you what yum-yum is. Here's yum.
  • [kisses him]
  • Honey Swanson: And here's the other yum.
  • [kisses him again]
  • Honey Swanson: And here's yumyum.
  • [gives a long kiss that knocks him backwards onto a chair]
  • Honey Swanson: Oh, you're cute. Just a little sunlight in my hair and you had to water your neck.
  • Professor Traumer: Wonderful thing: research.
  • Professor Oddly: It is the searchlight of truth.
  • Dr. Elfini: Without research, people would still think the earth was flat.
  • Professor Hobart Frisbee: Oh, that's ridiculous.
  • Dr. Elfini: And they would still look upon the tomato - as a poisonous fruit.
  • Honey Swanson: There, you see! And I want you to look at me, Professor Frisbee, as another tomato.
  • Professor Hobart Frisbee: What?
  • Honey Swanson: Just another tomato.
  • [turns around, sashays up the stairs]
  • Professor Hobart Frisbee: The Germans, of course, use the letter H for our B natural, meaning B flat when they say B.
  • Professor Traumer: Has this boogie-woogie been going on for some time?
  • Bubbles: Man alive!
  • Dr. Elfini: And are there any other forms of this new folk music besides that?
  • Buck: Sure. There's Swing, Jive, Jump...
  • Bubbles: Blues, Two-Beat Dixie, Rebop
  • Professor Hobart Frisbee: If you'll just stand here, Miss Totten, and when I give you the mating call...
  • Miss Totten: Yes!
  • Professor Hobart Frisbee: You - give it right back to me.
  • Honey Swanson: [singing] Do you hear me, Daddy-O? I'm gonna teach you some blues, However you wanted it, I sang your song, Whenever you wanted me, I tagged along, But that lipstick on your shirt isn't mine, So I'm gettin' off, it's the end of the line, Do you hear me, Daddy-O? I'm gonna teach you some blues...
  • Joe: We gotta get you out of here before they slap a subpoeni on you.
  • Professor Hobart Frisbee: I actually heard Rimsky-Korsakov played on a washboard...
  • Professor Gerkikoff: A washboard?
  • Professor Hobart Frisbee: A bicycle pump...
  • Professor Traumer: Bicycle pump?
  • Professor Hobart Frisbee: A plunger of some sort and pots and pans.
  • Joe: You gotta beat it.
  • Monte: Tony's as innocent as the new mown hay.
  • Dr. Elfini: I once went backstage to see Pavlova.
  • Professor Gerkikoff: Imagine ballerinas and all that.
  • Professor Twingle: In tights, I suppose.
  • Professor Gerkikoff: Naturally in tights.
  • Professor Oddly: And that ineffable smell of rice powder.
  • Professor Gerkikoff: On bare shoulders.
  • Honey Swanson: Oh, foo, Professor, let's get ourselves a couple of drinks. You light the fire maybe, and you could start working on me right away.
  • Honey Swanson: I'm fine. Except, I've got a run in this stocking. Well, when do we start, Professor? What's your method?
  • Honey Swanson: Music has done a lot for me. And well, here was a chance to do something for music.
  • Honey Swanson: Okay, where do I sleep?
  • Professor Hobart Frisbee: I beg your pardon.
  • Honey Swanson: Where do I sleep?
  • Professor Hobart Frisbee: I don't know. Where do you usually sleep?
  • Honey Swanson: I'm usually in Brooklyn, but tonight I'm going to sleep here.
  • Professor Hobart Frisbee: What are you reading here, Magenbruch?
  • Professor Magenbruch: That's one of the books I procured this afternoon.
  • Professor Hobart Frisbee: "Jazz: Hot and Hybrid". That's very interesting. I should like to read it after you're through with it.
  • Professor Magenbruch: Yeah. I particularly like the chapter on hot rhythm. Holds strange fascination for me.
  • Dr. Elfini: Even Beethoven seems nice and gay this morning.
  • Professor Hobart Frisbee: That's good. Now that we're all agreed, in the vernacular I heard last night, let's start on the down beat and take off. Is that the correct way of phrasing it?
  • Louis Armstrong: That's a good deal.
  • Professor Hobart Frisbee: Miss Honey, may I present Miss Bragg, our housekeeper.
  • Honey Swanson: Hi. This must be your apron I'm wearing.
  • Professor Hobart Frisbee: Oh, this suitcase came for you with a message.
  • Honey Swanson: Yeah? What message?
  • Professor Hobart Frisbee: I don't know.
  • Miss Bragg: The message was it's getting hotter and hotter and stay in the icebox like a good little salad.
  • Honey Swanson: What are you talking about? This is research, isn't it?
  • Professor Hobart Frisbee: Is it?
  • Honey Swanson: Sure and I'm the guinea pig.
  • Tommy Dorsey: It could have been Mel Powell or Hamp.
  • Lionel Hampton: Yeah, they're experts at that jive.
  • Professor Hobart Frisbee: Well, then perhaps you gentlemen could help me.
  • Lionel Hampton: Oh, sure. Mel and I used to play a lot of that stuff with Benny Goodman.
  • Honey Swanson: [singing] Satchmo, get on that horn, Let's hear, let's hear, Let's hear how jazz was born
  • Louis Armstrong: One, two, three, four.
  • [singing]
  • Louis Armstrong: They took a reet jungle beat, Brought it to Basin Street, And that's how jazz was born, And then someone played a waiI, All up and down the scale, And that's how jazz was born...
  • The Golden Gate Quartette: [singing] Mockingbird, Sang at morn, And a song was born...
  • Monte: Only the other day he said to me, "I get a bigger bang out of that Honey than any dame I ever knew. "
  • Tommy Dorsey: Can anyone here blow a clarinet?
  • Professor Hobart Frisbee: That's quite simple. Our Professor Magenbruch plays the clarinet.
  • Charlie Barnet: Well, does he, Professor? I hardly think...
  • Tommy Dorsey: He's apt to be a little too square.
  • Professor Hobart Frisbee: He's quite proficient. I assure you.
  • Monte: You're hotter than a firecracker!
  • Honey Swanson: What about your work? It isn't even finished. There are a lot of things we haven't even touched on.
  • Professor Hobart Frisbee: Well, make no mistake, Miss Honey, I shall regret deeply the absence of your keen mind. But, unfortunately, it's inseparable from an extremely disturbing body.
  • Professor Hobart Frisbee: I'm afraid I must ask you to leave.
  • Honey Swanson: Leave here? Why?
  • Professor Hobart Frisbee: I want you to look at this project, this history of music, as a voyage, a long, hard tedious voyage. And when the Foundation first launched its vessel, it wisely followed an old rule of the sea. No women aboard. Consequently, they chose a crew of single men with nothing to distract them from the course they were about to sail.
  • Honey Swanson: Say, Junior, you couldn't stop walking up and down here?
  • Professor Hobart Frisbee: For the last four days, Miss Honey, we have been doing nothing but just drifting. The needle of the compass no longer points to the magnetic pole. It points, if I may say so, to your ankles.
  • Honey Swanson: Oh, come now, Admiral, a bunch of grown men. They've all seen a pair of ankles before.
  • Professor Hobart Frisbee: Not in nine years, they haven't. Except for the singularly uninspired underpinnings of Miss Bragg.
  • Honey Swanson: Well, if you think I'm bothering them, I'll sit on my legs.
  • Professor Hobart Frisbee: I, too, have been acutely aware of your presence.
  • Honey Swanson: You have?
  • Professor Hobart Frisbee: But fortunately, I'm strong enough to be able to resist its demoralizing effects.
  • Honey Swanson: Oh, really?
  • Professor Hobart Frisbee: I admit at times it was quite a struggle, but...
  • Honey Swanson: Like when?
  • Professor Hobart Frisbee: Well, twice to be exact. The first time when you leaned over my shoulder to explain the meaning of the word riff.
  • Honey Swanson: And the second time?
  • Professor Hobart Frisbee: I'm not finished with the first time. You leaned over my shoulder, and I felt your breath on my ear.
  • Honey Swanson: And?
  • Professor Hobart Frisbee: And the second time, you were standing up against the window with the sunlight in your hair.
  • Honey Swanson: But you didn't do anything about it.
  • Professor Hobart Frisbee: Yes, I did. I left the room.
  • Professor Hobart Frisbee: Very interesting gentlemen, but our whole project seems to be suffering from some sort of vibration.
  • Dr. Elfini: What do you mean?
  • Professor Hobart Frisbee: I'd like to talk to Miss Honey alone.
  • Miss Bragg: Professor Frisbee, either that woman leaves this house, or I do.
  • Professor Hobart Frisbee: Are you speaking of Miss Honey?
  • Miss Bragg: I am. Ever since that woman crossed this threshold, a prairie fire of orgiastic events has swept through this house.
  • Professor Hobart Frisbee: I'm a perfectly normal man with perfectly normal instincts.
  • Honey Swanson: An awful high boiling point.
  • Honey Swanson: I don't give a whoop if the others went for me. It's you I'm wacky about. Just plain wacky!
  • Professor Hobart Frisbee: Miss Honey, I - it will probably be a long time and I thought perhaps - well, that is - I - would you yum me just once more?
  • Miss Bragg: If I were the cream for that woman's coffee, I'd curdle.
  • Honey Swanson: Maybe it sounds crazy, but to me, you're a regular yumyum type.
  • Professor Hobart Frisbee: A yumyum?
  • Tony Crow: One of these old dodos has got a yen for Honey.
  • Professor Hobart Frisbee: I always thought I was married to my music. I thought the only thing could stir me was Piatigorsky on the cello, Heifetz on the violin, Toscanini conducting a symphony. And then - then you.
  • Professor Oddly: Tenderness. That is what I advocate. Tenderness and patience.
  • Honey Swanson: A man is a goof to marry any woman.
  • Professor Hobart Frisbee: [pouring coffee in a cup] How do you take it?
  • Miss Bragg: Just jav, no cow.
  • Professor Hobart Frisbee: Just what?
  • Miss Bragg: Black.
  • Professor Hobart Frisbee: Oh. Sugar?
  • Miss Bragg: Straight.
  • Tony Crow: Baby, you've been floating around on a pink cloud. I want you to take a good look at your friend Frizzy, then maybe you'll come back down to Earth.
  • Professor Hobart Frisbee: Now, our hope is, in the words of Mr. Armstrong, that this particular music might send you out of this world.
  • Tony Crow: Where'd you get all the people? I thought there were only seven of them.
  • Joe: They wandered in. Said they was musicians.
  • Tony Crow: Yeah, I recognize them. What are hepcats doing in a place like this?
  • Professor Hobart Frisbee: You've given us a fine course in the theory and practice of being a sucker.
  • Tony Crow: Professor, you thought she was going to marry you, with your 3,000, what is it, a year? She spends that much having her toenails painted. She sulks if she has to wear last year's ermine.

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