Since You Went Away
- APPROVED
- Year:
- 1944
- 177 min
- 348 Views
This is the moment I've dreaded...
coming back to our home...
alone.
Oh, Tim. Tim.
You've been gone only an hour,
and already the house
is empty without you.
Darling, forgive me.
I held myself together
through all our good-byes
and I've tried to understand,
but I still don't know why
you should risk your life...
you, the best-natured
and dearest person in the world.
I'll try to remember
what you said last night...
that years from now,
this will seem the greatest
adventure we ever had,
even though we had it separately.
But I have no courage, Tim.
You know I have no courage,
and I have no vision.
And already
I'm so very Ionely.
We've had at least today.
I'll try to keep all
the good things as they were.
I'll keep the past alive,
like a warm room for you
to come back to.
I promise.
I promise.
Mother!
Mother!
- Mother, where are you?
- Upstairs, dear.
Hello, Mother.
Hi, darlings.
Are you awfully wet?
Jane, such a nice, fresh cheek.
Better get your
wet things off, Brig.
Did Pop get off all right?
Was his train on time?
It was mean of Pop not to let us
go to the station with you.
Darling, you know
how much he loves you.
He didn't even want me there.
You know how he hates a fuss.
And Louisiana's not so far.
And he'll be home on leave
before he go...
and uniform, didn't he?
I'll bet the others were all jealous.
I'd hate a squinchy little father.
Pop looks like a parade
all by himself.
- Did he have my present with him?
- Right in his pocket, Brig.
I hope he keeps all his money
in it and everything.
I hope he buys
those generals a drink,
and maybe he'll be a major
by the time he gets home on leave.
He can be a major
anytime he wants to.
Anyhow, he'd probably rather do
something else with it anyway,
like sending Mother
a present or...
- Or what, honey?
- I don't know.
Buy some magazines
or books maybe.
I wasn't really thinking.
I have an idea.
How would you like to play
- Okay?
- Okay.
Let's not.
It won't be the same without Pop.
Not even gin rummy...
nothing!
Hello, Soda.
Brig, are you never going to get
out of this bathroom?
Go fly a kite. I wish you'd wait
till I get through!
If you don't get through soon,
you'll brush the enamel off your teeth.
You all stop that bickering.
It's time you girls
was getting to bed.
- Hi, Fidelia.
- Hello, Fidelia.
- Where have you been all day?
- Where's your mother?
I'm in here,
in Jane's room.
All right, princess,
the mirror's all yours now.
You can have a wonderful time
looking at yourself.
Evening, Miz Hilton.
Did Captain Hilton
get away all right this afternoon?
Yes, Fidelia. He said he'd send you
a postcard from New Orleans.
What about you?
How did things go?
I got that job this afternoon
with some lofty people uptown.
But I ain't gonna be contentment.
I ain't gonna be contentment like
I been right here all these years.
I'm afraid we're not going to be
very contentment either, Fidelia.
What's more, I don't know what
kind of housekeeper I'm going to make.
I can tell you something.
You ain't gonna be very good.
I've been figuring out this budget.
I don't see how we're going to make it.
I've already arranged
to sell the car.
I don't think the government
pays them officers enough.
I don't see why Mr. Hilton
ain't worth as much to Uncle Sam
as he was to that
advertising company.
You'll probably have
a much easier time
than you've had
taking care of all of us.
You're not leaving us?
Did we do something
to make you mad?
Honey, you couldn't do nothing
to make me mad, no matter what.
You're just like my own child.
Did I hear something
about Fidelia leaving?
Now, Jane, I'm just as unhappy
about it as you are.
We can't keep up the payments
on the house
just by cutting down
on your allowances.
Golly.
First Pop, and now Fidelia.
That's enough of that, Brig.
I don't want no mourning.
You say good night
to your sister and run along to bed.
You, too, Jane.
Tomorrow's a school day.
The Lord Himself will have to take
care of these calamities somehow.
You'll come to see us,
won't you, Fidelia?
Of course I will, child.
If you don't pick up your clothes,
you never will keep a husband.
Men don't fancy disorderment.
- Good night for now, Jane, honey.
- Good night, Fidelia.
Whee! I'm a commando!
This is all that's left
of Fidelia's last cake,
and I'm afraid it's pretty stale,
but cake is cake these days.
I don't care what they do
as long as they don't ration pickles.
Yes, I know.
You'll have chronic indigestion
by the time the war's over.
Hi, Gladys.
What on earth's
the matter with that child?
Gladys is afraid
of grownups, that's all.
I'd like to hear her say two words
just to be sure she can talk.
Who you talking about... Gladys?
I don't see how Brig can put up with it.
I don't think much of your friends.
They're all man-crazy just like you are.
It's too early
in the morning to argue.
Hurry up. You'll be late.
You tell Becky Anderson
the next time she tries to high-hat me...
- Good morning, Mr. Mahoney.
- Good morning, girls.
- Good morning.
- Good morning, Mrs. Hilton.
I thought I'd bring the groceries and see
if there was anything I could do.
That is nice of you. I think
I'll need all the help I can get.
I hope you won't mind
waiting on last month's bill.
I haven't received
and I'm not
a very good manager.
I know, everybody's
got problems these days.
Now, you take me,
for instance.
I'm trying to get enough
of everything for my customers.
Would you believe it, Mrs. Hilton...
one of them had the nerve
to ask me why I didn't
go into the black market.
- Me, with my boy in the service.
- You don't mean Johnny?
I wondered why
I haven't seen him lately.
Yes, ma'am,
and he's a mighty fine boy.
I've got a picture of him
in his uniform right here.
I'd love to see him.
You're very proud of him,
aren't you?
Yes, ma'am.
There are two things that Johnny
always wanted to be.
One of them
was to be an aviator.
And what is Johnny's
other ambition, Mr. Mahoney?
Well, you wouldn't
be believin' this maybe,
but it's advertising.
Advertising.
to be an advertising man.
Well, I'm sure he'll be
very successful at it.
You really think that,
do you, ma'am?
Yes, I do.
You do?
Well, I guess I'd better
be running along.
- Good-bye, Mrs. Hilton.
- Good-bye.
Mr. Mahoney.
I think Mr. Hilton
might like to help Johnny
get into the advertising business
when the war's over.
Now, that is an idea.
It wouldn't have occurred to me.
Mr. Hilton is in the advertising
business, isn't he?
And I'm sure he'd be delighted.
We've always thought Johnny
was a fine, intelligent boy.
That he is, ma'am.
That and a whole lot more.
something to look forward to...
me and Johnny and the missus.
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"Since You Went Away" Scripts.com. STANDS4 LLC, 2024. Web. 22 Dec. 2024. <https://www.scripts.com/script/since_you_went_away_18182>.
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