The Pleasure Garden (1925, European TV broadcast) - titles and intertitles
Titles and intertitles from an European TV broadcast of The Pleasure Garden (1925).
Alternative intertitles are also available for Rohauer Collection version of the film.
Opening Titles
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Michael Balcon presents The Pleasure Garden Adapted by Eliot Stannard from the book by Oliver Sandys |
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An EMELKA Production COPYRIGHT 1925 MÜNCHNER LICHTSPIELKUNST A.G. |
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Photographed by Baron Ventimiglia Assistant Director Alma Reville |
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Directed by Alfred J. Hitchcock |
Intertitles and Captions
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Oscar Hamilton, Manager of the Pleasure Garden Theatre. George Snell |
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"Your chorus, Mr. Hamilton, is certainly most tempting." |
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"This is Miss Patsy Brand." Virginia Valli. |
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"I've fallen in love with that charming kiss curl of yours." |
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"Then I hope you'll be very happy together!" |
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"Your love wasn't very lasting, was it?" |
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"My name is Jill Cheyne, I have a letter to the manager." Carmelita Geraghty. |
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". . . and now I can't pay for my cab, and I've nowhere to sleep even!" |
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"You'd better stay with me to-night, and see Hamilton in the morning." |
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"That's the boy I'm engaged to." |
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"So I wasn't going to spend all my life being companion to a sick old lady in the country." |
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". . . and on reaching London I went straight to Mr. Hamilton before bothering about an hotel." |
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"Did you think he'd be waiting on the mat with a contract?" |
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"I'm sure he'd have given me a part if I hand't lost that letter of introduction." |
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"It's lucku for you, O Village Maiden, that you fell into the poor but honest hands of Patsy Brand." |
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CALL. -------- "PASSION FLOWERS" THE ENTIRE COMPANY TO BE ON STAGE FOR FULL REHEARSAL TOMORROW, WEDNESDAY JUNE 5TH, AT 11.a.m. SHARP. Stage Manager. |
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". . . anyway, I can dance much better than that." |
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"Oh, no, I've never been on the stage before!" |
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"Ladies and gentlemen, a great genius, who has never been on the stage, has called to teach us our business." |
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"I can dance equally well to any tune." |
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"Would you like to work for me . . . I'll pay you five pounds a week." |
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"No — twenty!" |
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What every chorus girl knows. |
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"Miss Jill's fiasco is 'ere." |
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"You're Miss Patsy Brand, I suppose — Jill has written me about you — I'm Hugh Fielding, her fiance." John Stuart |
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"Jill's getting along fine . . . and to-day she's gone to try on her new stage costume." |
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The "Try-on". |
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"You shouldn't talk like that . . ." |
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". . . until I'm in a flat of my own." |
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"After two years in the East, I'll be rich enough to come home and marry . . and Jill's promised to wait for me, bless her!" |
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"I hope you don't mind, but I asked Mr. Levet to call here for me." Miles Mander. |
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"Mr. Levet follows me to the East in a couple of months, and will be my only friend out there." |
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"And for two years, Miss Brand, we shall be removed from everything that makes life worth living." |
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"Love is a wonderful thing, isn't it?" |
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"She's next!" |
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"Isn't she marvellous?" |
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"Here's wishing Jill something greater than fame — happiness!" |
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"Prince Ivan wishes to congratulate you on your success to-night." |
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"I shall often give myself the pleasure of seeing you dance." |
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"Don't worry, I'll guard her against every danger whilst you're away." |
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"Poor Hugh seems scared that some 'Pleasure Garden' libertine may take his tender flower." |
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"Hugh reaches his destination determined to succeed for Jill's sake." |
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End Titles
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The End |