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Re: new

Posted: September 2nd, 2009, 3:27 pm
by feaito
MissGoddess wrote:
Birdy wrote:Miss Goddess -
That was a good one - I can hear it not!
Send out another one and we'll give it a try.
B


Ha! :D Thanks, Birdy. I thought Fernando had offered one but now it's gone...Feo??? Que paso? I know what movie his line was from, too, but I won't give it away. Someone else have a try.
Hi April,

Yes I had posted something, but I realized aftewards that it had been already used.....and by none else than myself! It seems that it's the only line that I remember!!! Ha Ha Ha :lol: ....So, I edited the post and deleted it.

Re: new

Posted: September 2nd, 2009, 3:44 pm
by MissGoddess
You are too funny, Feo. That sounds like something I would do! :D

Okay, I'll throw one out there and hopefully it's easier:

"Was you ever bit by a dead bee?"

Re: new

Posted: September 2nd, 2009, 5:44 pm
by ChiO
I believe that Grandpa McCoy said that in TO HAVE AND HAVE NOT.

Re: new

Posted: September 2nd, 2009, 5:55 pm
by Dewey1960
I believe that Grandpa McCoy said that...
Yes!!!!! Yes he did!!!

Re: new

Posted: September 2nd, 2009, 7:26 pm
by MissGoddess
ChiO wrote:I believe that Grandpa McCoy said that in TO HAVE AND HAVE NOT.


OK, WellesMasterChio, ball's in your park.

Re: new

Posted: September 2nd, 2009, 8:14 pm
by ChiO
Words for the Ages:

You can stop me, but you're never gonna stop rock & roll!

Re: new

Posted: September 3rd, 2009, 1:50 pm
by Birdy
Oh, I'll just guess the obvious: Elvis!

Re: new

Posted: September 3rd, 2009, 2:11 pm
by ChiO
Good guess -- but it was neither Presley nor Costello, although the character who said it was also heard on the radio.

Re: new

Posted: September 3rd, 2009, 8:45 pm
by CharlieT
It was Tim McIntyre as Alan Freed in American Hot Wax.

Re: new

Posted: September 3rd, 2009, 10:18 pm
by ChiO
Absolutely. Mr. Dewey's avatar. The Moondog. Portrayed by (allegedly) Orson Welles' son.

Take it away, CharlieT.

Re: new

Posted: September 5th, 2009, 5:46 am
by CharlieT
I'll be out of internet range for the rest of the weekend, so if anyone else would like to jump in, feel free. If it's still open when I get back, I'll try to come up with something interesting, yet slightly challenging.

Re: new

Posted: September 5th, 2009, 2:10 pm
by charliechaplinfan
I'll try to step into the breech CharlieT, where is this line from?

Men, are you over 40? When you wake up in the morning, do you feel tired and rundown? Do you have that listless feeling

Re: new

Posted: September 8th, 2009, 7:12 pm
by Birdy
George Washington Slept Here?

(I have no idea why that comes to mind!)

Re: new

Posted: September 8th, 2009, 7:43 pm
by klondike
ChiO wrote:Absolutely. Mr. Dewey's avatar. The Moondog. Portrayed by (allegedly) Orson Welles' son.
Just posting in to point out (at the risk of having missed some wicked-sharp inside joke), that the Tim McIntire who portrayed the unsuppressible Mr. Freed in American Hot Wax, was in fact the son of actor John McIntire and his spouse/frequent co-star Jeanette Nolan, and sadly, preceded them both in death.
I'm sure you'd do the same, ChiO, should someone ever doubt that Jim Carrey is in fact Timothy Carey's nephew (spelling notwithstanding).

P.S: Not to brag or nothin', but I had the privilege of projecting American Hot Wax at the Latchis Theatre in Keene, NH, on an antique, dual-iron-lung-type carbon arc projection unit back in 1978 . . little did I know at the time what a classic I was showing . . !

Re: new

Posted: September 8th, 2009, 9:03 pm
by Lzcutter
P.S: Not to brag or nothin', but I had the privilege of projecting American Hot Wax at the Latchis Theatre in Keene, NH, on an antique, dual-iron-lung-type sodium arc projection unit back in 1978 . . little did I know at the time what a classic I was showing . . !
Klondike,

You brought memories rushing back with that paragraph. We had an old carbon arc projection system in Bovard Hall at USC and though everyone treated the running of the projectors with disdain (they were so much work), the projectionist crew treated the one guy who could run them like a rock star.

The films looked beautiful on those babies, too.