Thank Your Lucky Stars
- APPROVED
- Year:
- 1943
- 127 min
- 62 Views
How's your love life?
It's doing fine
Keep your love life
Like I thank mine
Everybody's living on less and less
But you're okay
You're such a big success, oh, yes
You've got your love life
And that's the only thing
They won't be rationing
They don't know how
Right now
Thank your lucky stars right now
Such a talent.
We must get her for the benefit.
Positively.
- Lovely, Dinah, lovely.
- Thank you.
Have you met our guest for tonight?
- Oh, John Garfield?
- Yes.
- Oh, certainly. I've known Johnny for years.
- You have?
Uh-huh.
- Confidentially, I'm just a little bit worried.
- You are?
I've seen him in all those pictures,
but tell me, is he really that tough?
Tough? Oh, Don Wilson...
...John Garfield is the sweetest, mildest,
gentlest boy...
...you'd ever wanna meet
in the whole world.
Really?
Sure.
I'm warning you, Cantor.
Stop telling me what to do.
If we get out there and you cross me up,
I don't say that your way is wrong, only
if you'd stand on the right side of the mike...
- I'll stand where I stood.
- You'll be hiding my face.
Is that bad?
Now look, this is only a radio show.
You read your lines. I'll read mine.
- Don't fool around with that microphone.
- Fool around? Me? Cantor?
I never interfere with anything.
With me, it's strictly live and let live.
Now, get ready, John, because we go
right on. You know what I mean?
with his guest star...
...that bad boy of Burbank,
John Garfield.
Well, what are you gonna do
for the folks, John?
Nothing. I ain't talking, see?
Not till I get paid.
Let's not argue over money.
How much you want?
- Five thousand bucks.
- Let's argue.
Garfield, I'll admit
you're a great dramatic actor.
In radio, you're helpless.
You can't tell jokes, don't sing.
Sing? Now, wouldn't that be cute?
Garfield singing a song.
Why, I could just picture it. I'm in the
death house. Waiting for the hot seat.
The reporters want the story of my life.
I ain't got time. I tell them:
It all began way back when...
My mama done told me
When I was in knee pants
My mama done told me, John
my mama done told me.
Picked me up on her lap,
stroked my golden curls.
I was just 19 at the time and she said:
A woman's a two-face
A worrisome thing
Who'll leave you to sing
The blues in the night
Now the rain's a-fallin'
Now the train's a-callin'
A- hooey, da-hooey
It's a lot of hooey. I heard
a train whistle, see? So I blew town.
I met the rat
that started me on the road to crime.
Fish-eye Looey. I wanted to kill him.
I grabbed him by the throat.
I squeezed and squeezed.
I wanted to pay him
for making me an outlaw.
- Shunned by society. A stinker.
- John.
- Let go of me.
- But he got away.
From Natchez to Sing Sing
From Memphis to Alcatraz
Wherever the rock piles grow
Ha-ha.
I've been in the best jails
Why, sure, I've seen me the best frails
And just like my mama done told me,
I met a two-faced woman.
Two-Kisser Bessie was her name.
They was handy, those two faces.
look out for the cops at the same time.
She was nuts about me till she fell
for another guy, Fish-eye Looey.
I wanted to knock him off, see?
I went to his hideout.
I broke down the door.
He wasn't there. I waited. I nabbed him.
- I squeezed and squeezed.
- John.
I squeezed harder and harder.
Suddenly, I hear the sirens: Whoo!
The bulls. Somebody's tipped them off.
Somebody squealed to the cops.
My mama done told them.
My old lady, a stool pigeon.
I'm trapped. Trapped like a rat.
They're coming in on me.
They're getting closer, closer:
Oh, they got me.
Oh, Mama.
Mama, I gotta talk fast now.
You was right.
I've been in some big towns.
I heard me some big talk.
But there's one thing I know.
I can't die till I get even with Fish-eye.
Fish-eye.
A woman's a two-face
A worrisome thing
Who'll leave you to sing
The blues in the night
Good. Good. Good.
Thank you, John Garfield.
Thank you very much
and good night, John.
If you please, Cookie Fairchild.
Potatoes are cheaper
Tomatoes are cheaper
Now's the time to fall in love
Why, the butcher, the baker
The candlestick maker
Gave the price a downward shove...
Here we are. Step right in the bus, folks.
We're leaving in a minute for a glimpse...
...at the homes of Hollywood's
biggest movie stars.
It's the biggest 50-cent value
in Hollywood.
Don't miss this opportunity.
You can tell the folks...
...you saw Bette Davis picking flowers
in her own backyard.
There's a million thrills in Beverly Hills.
Take a glamorous trip
through the Sunset Strip.
Come on, driver. It's 25 after 5.
Just let me get two more suckers, will you?
I mean, customers. Just two more.
No waiting. No delay.
We leave in exactly...
Hey, Pete.
Will you please give me a break?
It's tough without trying
to out-shout that guy.
Okay. Okay.
- Hi, Pete.
How are you, Mr. Butler?
- Got a Sporting News?
- Yes.
- How's it, Pete?
- Haven't seen you in quite a while.
Olivia de Havilland, Alan Hale.
Step right this way...
- Are you going to the fights, Mark?
- Hello.
Oh, hello, Joe.
What's that for?
Have you given up acting?
No, but, well, a fella's gotta make
a living between pictures.
- Oh, I see.
- Say, you're directing a picture over...
...at Warner Bros.
- That's right, Joe.
You think there might be something there
that I can play?
Here's the man to ask, Joe.
This is my producer, Mark Hellinger.
- Joe Simpson.
- Hello, Joe.
Mr. Hellinger, you really ought to use me,
Mr. Hellinger.
- I've been reading your stories for years.
- Well, that makes two of us.
I'll tell you what you do.
Give me a ring at the studio.
Would 6:
00 be too early?I don't get in till 9.
I'll hold the wire.
- See you later, Joe.
- So long, Joe.
That's a funny guy. Clean him up
and he's a ringer for Eddie Cantor.
That's his trouble, Mark.
I had him play a small part
in a dramatic scene...
...and the audience died laughing.
I had to shoot the thing over without him.
That's why nobody wants to use him.
Pretty rough deal. Guy can't get a break
because he looks too much like a star.
Yeah. That's a new way
of becoming a failure.
- Hi, Pete.
Hi, Tommy.
- The Cantor show?
- Yeah.
- What time is it?
- Oh, about 5:
27.- What's all the excitement about?
- Something big, Pete. Big.
And when Tommy Randolph
says big, it's big.
Say, this is too much.
Hey, what's the idea, Joe?
Tommy, I thought you were a pal of mine.
I can't stand that popeyed baboon.
Why don't you relax?
Aren't you imposing a little?
Don't be impatient, folks.
How about it? Show the little lady
all the homes of the movie stars.
I'm sorry. I got an hour.
I gotta get back to my ship.
What better way can you spend
your last hour than a bus ride?
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"Thank Your Lucky Stars" Scripts.com. STANDS4 LLC, 2024. Web. 26 Dec. 2024. <https://www.scripts.com/script/thank_your_lucky_stars_19586>.
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