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Philo & Gunge
11-04-2005, 10:04 PM
I have been seeking a transcript of the "Someday it'll all be ours, Pidge" speech from "Lady & The Tramp" (I've never seen the movie, sad isn't it? :( ). So could anyone who has a good copy of the movie make a transcript of the whole speech for me?

Ray Pointer
11-10-2005, 12:06 PM
I have been seeking a transcript of the "Someday it'll all be ours, Pidge" speech from "Lady & The Tramp" (I've never seen the movie, sad isn't it? :( ). So could anyone who has a good copy of the movie make a transcript of the whole speech for me?

The dialogue occurs the morning after Lady and Tramp's first outing, and they stand on a hill overlooking the town. Interestingly, you can buy and even rent LADY AND THE TRAMP from your local BLOCKBUSTER or any similar video outlet right now. Also, LADY AND THE TRAMP turns up on television during holiday periods. It could be due sometime in the next month. The curious thing is that you reference the dialog without ever having seen the film? How did you even know about this line? Another curiousity is why do you need a "transcript?"

Philo & Gunge
11-10-2005, 07:07 PM
The curious thing is that you reference the dialog without ever having seen the film? How did you even know about this line? Another curiousity is why do you need a "transcript?"
J. B. Warner told me. I need the transcript because all I have is that one line and want the rest, it wouldn't be a homage to "Lady & The Tramp" without the whole speech.

A. Leal
11-10-2005, 10:41 PM
Not to stretch this out further or seem offensive, but M. Pointer has a point. If it's for an homage, and given that you are in the states, why not try to see the actual film first? Apart from being an easier way to obtain the dialogue you want (and while a nice scene, it certainly never struck me as the most definitive moment of the film in terms of overall impact or recognition, byt maybe that's the point of your project), I'm sure you'll find it worth it, from the character animation to the voices (Stan Freberg's beaver obviously inspired Gopher in the Winnie the Pooh shorts) to the songs. The film was my introduction to the wonderful Peggy Lee, and still one of her finest moments. If absolutely unable to rent, borrow, buy, or find a TV airing, I do have the tape and would be willing to type it out, but transcripts for someone else with an unclear purpose are a bit of work, and all in all, I think you'd find it more satisfying to see the film (which ranks alongside Dumbo, Bambi, and Jungle Book amongst my own personal favorite Disney films).