I Could Go on Singing
- NOT RATED
- Year:
- 1963
- 100 min
- 252 Views
I could go on singing
Till the cows come home
And the rooster
starts to crow
Crow, crow
When I see your eyes
I go all out
I must vocalize
till you shout
Enough already
I could go on singing
Till the moon turns pink
Anything from "Faust" to
Ink-a-dink-a-dink
Love does funny things
When it hits you this way
I must keep on singing
Like a lark,
going strong
With my heart
on the wings of a song
Singing day
Dr. Donne?
Please come in, Miss Bowman.
Mr. Donne's expecting you.
Thank you.
This way, please.
David.
Hello, Jenny.
Is this awfully inconvenient?
I don't think so.
Come on up.
I'll take your coat.
That's for social calls.
Well, you did say this
was business, didn't you?
Yes, Doctor.
Business.
Well, the business department
is in here.
Why do they call you Mister
if you're a doctor?
Surgeons are called Mister.
I see. You mean like a marquis
being called a lord?
That always mixes me up, too.
Secrets of the trade.
Won't you sit down?
- Yes. Thank you.
- Now, then, what is it?
Ear, nose, or throat?
Do you take care of
all three of those things?
Yes.
Which is it?
Were you surprised
to hear from me?
A little.
You sang this afternoon.
Charity concert, wasn't it?
Yes. How do you know?
It was in all the papers.
How did it go?
- It was ghastly.
- That means it was good.
No, it was terrible.
It was awful.
My throat was very raw,
and I couldn't...
I just sort of croaked out
the performance.
Tell me, am I keeping
this secretary person of yours?
No, no. She works here.
I know, but it's terribly late,
and it's Sunday, and I thought...
She's used to it.
Will you go on?
Well, I just...
I just got scared
I was going to lose my voice.
Since when?
Since when what?
Since when were you scared
that you were losing your voice?
Well, since I got to England.
And don't tell me
it's the climate...
because Tepaldi
and Callas sing here...
and they do very well.
Shall we take a look?
Would you come over here,
please?
Sit down.
How are your sinuses?
I don't know.
They're kind of...
- Any colds recently?
- No.
You used to have
a lot of colds.
Yes, but then they invented
paper handkerchiefs...
and that sort of
took the fun out of it.
Would you open
your mouth, please?
Wide.
Thank you.
All right. Say ahh.
Thank you.
Now I'm going to have a look
at your larynx.
I'm going to take
this piece of gauze...
Gauze, and you're going
to hold my tongue with it...
and you want me to relax
and breathe slowly in and out...
- and completely...
- Would you just do it?
- Yes, I will.
- Thank you.
Would you put out your tongue?
Yes, thank you.
You know,
I've been thinking...
Would you just sit there
for a moment?
Would you come back?
Excuse me.
I've been thinking
about Atlantic City.
Do you ever think about
Atlantic City, David?
Yes, I have done.
Does this hurt?
Would you swallow?
Thank you.
Well, am I going to lose
my voice, or what?
What do you think?
You mean there's
nothing wrong with me.
Your throat's a bit rough,
it's red, you've been singing...
and you've been smoking
too much.
When do you open in London?
Five days.
Look, do you mind
if I get out of...
I'm very sorry.
Of course, do.
I'll give you something
to ease the roughness.
Not that you'll take it.
But if you have got five days...
I strongly urge you
to take three of them off.
What would you advise,
a brisk walk through Hyde Park?
Sleep, rest, relaxation.
Where can I buy those?
Have a gargle
night and morning.
All right.
Well, why don't you
get me off on the right foot...
by offering me a drink?
You're going to get me in there
if it kills me, aren't you?
All right.
It's still scotch?
Still scotch.
No ice, I'm afraid.
That's all right.
Thank you.
You know, you've changed.
Well, I'd be scared
to hell if I hadn't.
And you've become so...
careful.
Have I?
Well, it comes, you know.
Care comes.
With gray hair and spectacles.
I heard about
your wife's death.
Janet was her name?
Yes. Janet.
- I read about your marriage.
- Which one?
Well, it doesn't
make any difference...
because neither one
was worth writing home about.
I should have married you,
David. I really should have.
And it would have worked.
Yes, it would.
No, you're wrong, Jenny.
- You're so sure?
- It's better as it is.
Tell me something... do you still
play that awful harmonica thing?
No. No, I gave that up.
I'm glad. You were terrible.
Do you still knit?
Oh, no. Nothing I knitted
ever fitted.
We must have had fun, David.
At least, that's the way
I remember it.
Is that the way
you remember it?
Yes.
Twist my arm and yes.
Salut.
Salut.
Why did you come?
I don't know. To tell you
the truth, I don't know.
Maybe it's just that I didn't
want to be alone...
first night
in a strange town.
You've a mass of friends
in town. You couldn't be alone.
Alone.
It's a most awful word.
And I know what it means.
Because I've been alone
since you, David.
You've been married twice.
Well, I was alone then, too.
Tell me, is this
when you were knighted?
The C.B.E. Or the...
- O.B.E.
- O.B.E.
That's good, isn't it?
Not quite, I'm afraid.
That's something.
Yes, it's something.
Why did you hide him from me?
- I didn't hide him.
- I saw you.
All right, I hid him.
Excuse me, Mr. Donne. Do you
require me for anything else?
No, thank you, Miss Plimpton.
I'll see Miss Bowman out.
- Good night, Miss Bowman.
- Good night.
Is he here?
No, he's at school.
He boards.
- I'd love to see him.
- I know.
David, please. I didn't
come here to ask that, I swear.
I came here to see you.
I admit that.
It's just that
now that I am here...
I must ask you. Please.
I'm sorry, Jenny.
You can't see him.
Well, why not?
What's the matter with me?
Have I some dread disease
or some kind of...
What are you so afraid of?
What is it, David?
- I want to see him!
- It's impossible.
Impossible isn't a word that
very many people use with me.
It must come as rather
a surprise to you now.
- I want to see him.
- You cannot see him, Jenny.
We made an agreement
a long time ago...
an agreement that you wanted...
never to see him ever again.
Do you remember?
Yes, I remember.
That was a long time ago.
It's the only good thing
I ever made in my life.
Now I can't...
Well, forget it.
Tell me, does he like school?
I mean, any more
than anyone does?
Yes, he likes it very much.
Is he clever?
He's average.
Better at Mozart than maths.
Is he musical?
A little odd if not.
Yes.
And the rest?
He's really pretty good.
I think you'd be proud of him.
- Let me see him.
- No.
- Just once.
- And then what?
Nothing. I go.
Look, Jenny, to see him now
would make it much harder...
for you, for me, for all of us.
And that's final?
Final.
enough of your time, David...
and I'd like to get out of here.
Where's my coat?
It's outside.
I'll call you a cab.
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"I Could Go on Singing" Scripts.com. STANDS4 LLC, 2024. Web. 22 Dec. 2024. <https://www.scripts.com/script/i_could_go_on_singing_10471>.
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