Lawrence Gray credited as playing...
Frank Reynolds
- Michael Trevor: I suppose Paris means something different for everyone. For you, I imagine it means clothes. To Mr. Reynolds, uh, an interlude. Pause between business deals. To your uncle, I daresay it means, uh, change.
- Mary Kendall: And to you?
- Michael Trevor: I don't know. There was a time when it meant everything: gaiety, glamour, adventure. Now...
- Mary Kendall: And now?
- Michael Trevor: Now it's just a place to live - and eat onion soup at 1:00 in the morning. In America at this hour I suppose it would mean chop suey.
- Frank Reynolds: Give me chop suey every time.
- Michael Trevor: Years ago I used to be a - a reporter. After we put the paper to bed at night, we used to stop in at a little place on the corner for chop suey and, uh...
- Frank Reynolds: Foo young.
- Michael Trevor: Foo young. I hadn't thought of that for years.
- Mary Kendall: I suppose living in Paris makes up for not having a bowl of chop suey.
- Michael Trevor: I suppose so. It's not the chop suey you miss. It's what it stands for. Home. America. Friends. Fellows I used to know. Plain things without sauces.
- Frank Reynolds: I wish you'd blow a whistle from now on when you're fooling. I never can tell.
- Mary Kendall: I never want you to be able to tell.