Eileen Heckart credited as playing...
Mrs. Hortense Daigle
- Hortense Daigle: [drunkenly] I just want to have a talk with your little girl. She was one of the last to see my Claude alive.
- Christine Penmark: I know.
- Hortense Daigle: Where do you keep the perfect little lady who was the last to see Claude? I thought I'd hold her in my arms and we'd have a little talk where maybe she'd remember some little thing... any little thing.
- Christine Penmark: She's out playing, I think.
- Hortense Daigle: Well, I'm unfortunate, that's all. Drunk and unfortunate, ladies and gentlemen.
- Hortense Daigle: He was such a lovely, dear little boy. He used to say I was his sweetheart and he was going to marry me when he grew up. I would laugh so. "No you won't. You'll forget about me long before then. You'll find a prettier girl and marry her." And do you know what he said then? "No, I won't. 'Cause there isn't a prettier girl in the whole world than you are."
- Hortense Daigle: I always considered Christine a gentle name. Hortense sounds fat. That's me, Hortense. "My girl Hortense", they used to sing of me, "hasn't got much sense. Let's write her name on the privy fence!"
- [laughs]
- Hortense Daigle: Children can be nasty, don't you think?
- Henry Daigle: Come, Hortense. It's time to go home.
- Hortense Daigle: Oh, my god! My god! It's time to go home!