Forsaking All Others (1934)
Robert Montgomery: Dillon 'Dill' Todd
Photos
Quotes
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Dillon 'Dill' : She came here for reasons you couldn't even spell.
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Dillon 'Dill' : I could make a fire by rubbing two boy scouts together.
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Dillon 'Dill' : Black and blue, green or yellow, you are a sucker to get married.
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Mary Clay : There'll never by anyone else, will there?
Dillon 'Dill' : Hah, how could there be? There's no room. There never was. There never will be.
Mary Clay : Ah, ah - there was Connie.
Dillon 'Dill' : [Mumbling] ... Connie. She didn't take up much of my time.
Mary Clay : Just six months in Paris. That's plenty.
Dillon 'Dill' : Oh, that was under the heading of growing up, Mary. All men go through that - the Connie's, Bonnie's, Susie's... well, you know, they don't mean anything. They're experience. You're love.
Mary Clay : Oh, my sweet, such a beautiful speech.
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Dillon 'Dill' : Connie, I need to speak to you.
Connie Barnes Todd : But darling, I'm learning to tap dance!
Dillon 'Dill' : This is more important than tap dancing!
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Dillon 'Dill' : How do I know you've stopped?
Connie Barnes Todd : Because, I'm licked.
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Jeffrey 'Jeff' : [Speaking to Dill's new wife, Connie] Yes, yes, but, please hear my story. You know, I started life in the service of Mary's grandfather, one Colonel Lionel Q. Clay, of the Confederate army.
Dillon 'Dill' : Union army.
Jeffrey 'Jeff' : Confederate.
Dillon 'Dill' : Union army.
Jeffrey 'Jeff' : Confederate.
Dillon 'Dill' : I beg your pardon, Union army.
Jeffrey 'Jeff' : I was, at that time, a colored slave and very anxious for the South to win, so I could collect my back pay. I'm still trying to collect.
Mary Clay : [Sarcastically] How dare you say that! We once paid you a dollar eighty on account.