Bibi Andersson credited as playing...
Liz Lindstrand
- TV Reporter: Could you tell us more precisely what it's about?
- Gunilla: Well, it's rather hard to explain. It's about how things stand... now.
- Liz Lindstrand: To be a bit more precise, it's about... women and war.
- Marianne: I thought it was about girls and boys.
- Liz Lindstrand: Is it at all possible to change one another and the world we live in? Can we? Can we change ourselves?
- Marianne: The play actually is a joke.
- Liz Lindstrand: But with a very serious message.
- Hugo: Yet no laughing matter.
- Liz Lindstrand: Maybe we can't manage much better than the men. But they're no good at honesty. They've proved that. This is our chance to act, so why don't we?
- Liz Lindstrand: Women. I'm starting to side with the men. They're right. We're ignorant, lazy, easily scared, and conservative. And scatterbrained, too. How will we ever be capable of improving the situation? What are we so scared of? We're just as responsible as the men for the world.
- Hugo: You were fantastic on TV, darling.
- Liz Lindstrand: I'm always fantastic.
- Carl: You should see her in bed! And in the kitchen.
- TV Reporter: Has the tour been a success?
- Gunilla: Yes, thank you. As usual, we've been out changing people's lives.
- TV Reporter: How?
- Liz Lindstrand: We've made them realize how blind, stupid, selfish, idiotic, hopeless, boring and uninvolved they are. How little they get out of life.
- Marianne: Yet they're still blind.
- Gunilla: Stupid.
- Liz Lindstrand: Uninvolved.
- Marianne: Silly.
- Gunilla: Boring.
- Liz Lindstrand: Bored.
- Marianne: Impossible.
- Gunilla: Irresponsible.
- Marianne: Selfish.
- Gunilla: Hopeless.
- Liz Lindstrand: But now at least they know it.