- 2 days ago
First broadcast 3rd April 1973.
The wedding day dawns with Terry, now reinstated as best man, less than happy about it being on a Saturday when he could be watching sports.
James Bolam - Terry Collier
Rodney Bewes - Bob Ferris
Brigit Forsyth - Thelma
Sheila Fearn - Audrey Collier
Bill Owen - George Chambers
Joan Hickson - Mrs. Chambers
Anita Carey - Susan Chambers
Barbara Ogilvie - Mrs. Ferris
Daphne Heard - Aunt Beattie
Christopher Biggins - Usher
April Walker - Jutta (credit only)
The wedding day dawns with Terry, now reinstated as best man, less than happy about it being on a Saturday when he could be watching sports.
James Bolam - Terry Collier
Rodney Bewes - Bob Ferris
Brigit Forsyth - Thelma
Sheila Fearn - Audrey Collier
Bill Owen - George Chambers
Joan Hickson - Mrs. Chambers
Anita Carey - Susan Chambers
Barbara Ogilvie - Mrs. Ferris
Daphne Heard - Aunt Beattie
Christopher Biggins - Usher
April Walker - Jutta (credit only)
Category
📺
TVTranscript
00:00Oh, what happened to you, whatever happened to me, and what became of the people we used to be?
00:16Tomorrow's almost over, the day went by so fast, it's the only thing to look forward to, the past.
00:30I don't know, I don't know what to do about it.
00:37Oh, well, it suits you better, oh, I don't know.
00:42Oh, I thought you girls were going to have a lie-in this morning.
00:45Oh, heavens, Mum, I couldn't sleep a wink.
00:47No, me.
00:48Oh, watch those pins.
00:49Well, of course, I didn't close my eyes all night, and your father's been up since six.
00:53What on earth's he been doing?
00:54He's weeded the lawn, and he's given the car a 6,000-mile service.
01:00He won't eat any breakfast, he's looking terrible, all dark shadows, you know, all under there.
01:04Oh, it's probably axle grease.
01:06No, it's just pre-wedding excitement, Mum.
01:08It's the same with all of us, we're all in a state today.
01:11It'll be just the same in Bob's house.
01:13Well, I expect you're right, Pitt.
01:15Look, I brought you a little bit of toast to have a good tea.
01:18Well, I expect this is the last cup I shall ever bring you.
01:23Oh, not that.
01:32Oh, what's the matter, Mrs. Ferris?
01:34I've just taken him a pot of tea, and I was just thinking, it's the last one I've ever made for him.
01:39Oh, you'll probably want another cup by 11 o'clock.
01:42No, I meant in life.
01:46Oh, there, there, pet.
01:49Look, I've brought the telegrams in, and I've left the doilies on the sideboard.
01:53Oh, Audrey, you've been a tire of strength.
01:56It's so sweet of you to help me out with everything.
01:58You're not even family.
02:00Well, I feel I'm family.
02:01And with me brother as best man, one of the colliers have got to be here to keep their eye on him.
02:06Aunt Beatty means well, you know.
02:08Oh, she just gets in the way.
02:10I can't find me teeth.
02:15Teeth.
02:16Oh, Beatty.
02:17Well, where did you see them last?
02:19Well, in the glass by the bed.
02:21Well, I can't have walked through the night.
02:23Look, I'll go and see.
02:25Oh, I don't fear myself at all.
02:29I can't trust me own two legs.
02:31Shall I get myself a latterly pet?
02:33Oh, no, thank you, love.
02:35I expect it's just the excitement.
02:38Well, it's the same for all of us, the excitement.
02:41Aye.
02:47What time is it now?
02:49Twenty past nine.
02:51Five hours till we leave here.
02:54Really?
02:56In the time you were getting in the state,
02:58shouldn't you be pacing the floor and biting your nails and having second thoughts
03:01and wondering if she's going to show up?
03:04I don't know.
03:04Perhaps it was all those tranquilizers I took.
03:07Not getting enough proper sleep, you know, but I feel sort of...
03:10I feel sort of detached.
03:13Only half here.
03:14You mean semi-detached?
03:15I'm usually hopeless in a crisis, but I feel all calm and relaxed in this one.
03:22Oh, no, you've got your mother worried, sick.
03:25You know, I'm even a bit bored.
03:27I'm bored.
03:28Well, learn your speech or polish the ring.
03:33Can we go for a walk?
03:34Or have we game a snooker?
03:36Oh, I'm quite happy sitting here being bored.
03:38I'm quite happy sitting here and contemplating the real meaning of marriage in life.
03:45Have you two seen Aunt E. Beatty's teeth?
03:48Only when she laughs.
03:51Now be sensible, Bob.
03:53They're missing.
03:54At least that'll give us something to do.
03:56Hunt the dentures.
03:57Oh.
04:01You can use the bathroom first, if you like.
04:04I don't mind if you want the first bath, like.
04:06You can have the first bath, then me mum, then me Auntie Beatty, and then me.
04:12Or alternatively, I could go first and you could go last.
04:16I mean, I don't mind if you'd rather go first.
04:18Because in that case, I'll go last.
04:21Or alternatively, me mum and me Auntie Beatty could go first.
04:25And you and I could have our baths after them.
04:28I don't mind.
04:31I'm only glad we've generated some excitement working out the bath timetable.
04:34Well, I don't mind.
04:37I'm easy.
04:39What time is it?
04:40I don't mind.
04:46I don't mind.
04:46I don't mind.
05:17Excuse me, boys.
05:22No, please, disturb us anything.
05:28Mrs Batty on the corner made us these lovely dropscons.
05:32Ain't it kind?
05:34Done with real butter, you can see.
05:37I've ironed those other trousers you've got.
05:39In fact, I've ironed both suits again.
05:42Well, don't iron them any more, Mother.
05:43You'll burn right through the knees.
05:46Now get yourself upstairs, our Beatty.
05:48Have your bath. Water's hot.
05:50She's first. We'll have to reschedule.
05:53There's hours to go yet, Mother.
05:56I know, but we've all got to use that bathroom, haven't we, Pet?
05:59Beatty, use Bob's room.
06:00The boys can change down here in front of the fire.
06:03I'm going up.
06:04See, she found her teeth.
06:11They were in the dressing gown pocket all the time.
06:14I told her, put them in and keep them in.
06:16Oh, Mum, don't get yourself into a stake.
06:18Calm down.
06:20Go and iron your hat.
06:23She'll be off to the hairdresser soon, then we'll get some peace.
06:26No, no, no.
06:27I welcome these interruptions.
06:31What time is it now?
06:32It's 11.21.
06:34We'll leave here at 2.20 sharp.
06:36We don't have to leave then.
06:37The 2.30 from Chepstow's on the box.
06:40Well, I'm not being late and I'm not being early.
06:43On a Saturday this time of year, there's hundreds of weddings.
06:46If you don't time it exactly right, you could end up with the wrong bride.
06:50I'm missing a great grandstand.
06:52Racing, fight of the week, rugby league, Warrington versus St. Ellen's, then the teleprinter.
06:57How selfish and inconsiderate of me to get married on a Saturday.
07:02Well, I expect you had your reasons.
07:05Listen, what time is it?
07:06Oh, there's hours yet.
07:08I haven't got that rash coming back, have I?
07:10What rash?
07:10Oh, I get this rash in times of stress and tension.
07:14Like when Bob broke off our engagement.
07:16Or when Dad fell through the greenhouse roof.
07:19Oh, when Terry Collier came home again.
07:22Oh, you get far too neurotic about Terry.
07:25Even since you went out with him years ago.
07:27When I went out with Terry Collier, I was going through that stage that all young girls go through.
07:32Oh, yeah? And what stage is that?
07:34When they want to be mistreated by something coarse and vulgar.
07:40Well, I'm still into that stage.
07:42Oh.
07:42Only the other night, I dreamt that Oliver Reed, dressed as a miner, was ravaging me on white satin sheets.
07:48At least I think it was Oliver Reed.
07:51Couldn't you be sure?
07:52No.
07:53His lamp was shining straight in me eyes.
07:55You know, I can't imagine you're Bob ravaging anybody on white sheets in a miner's lamp.
08:03Sue, I wish you wouldn't think of Bob as a sexual novice.
08:07Did you do that for me?
08:08Yeah.
08:09Bob and I have known each other for ages.
08:11We know each other very well.
08:14Got no problems in that department, thank you.
08:16Well, don't tell Mum.
08:19That white dress cost her £50.
08:30Robert, is there anything you'd like to ask me?
08:35Any advice?
08:37Any advice I can give you at a time like this?
08:40Advice?
08:41Well, I am more experienced than you, having travelled, and I am a married man.
08:46Yes, well, put your trousers on first.
08:49I can't take you seriously with those legs.
08:52Yeah, well, don't forget, there's more to marriage than just getting at it in a chalet on the ski slopes, you know.
08:58Honeymoons can be a revelation.
09:01Sometimes a time of great joy, sometimes a time of great distress.
09:05Where do you get all this from?
09:08The woman's page this morning.
09:11She must have had a full and active life, that Marjorie Proops.
09:15What was your honeymoon like?
09:17A time of great distress.
09:19What did you do?
09:20We went down the Rhine on a barge.
09:23We went on a barge down the Rhine.
09:26Or up the Rhine, I forget which.
09:29I do know it was full of Germans, all wearing braces and playing the accordion.
09:33Let's face it, when you've seen one slosh, you've seen them all.
09:36And she had a sore throat, and she gave it to me.
09:39And it was peeing down, and we rammed a jetty.
09:44You really feel...
09:45You feel pretty bitter about your marriage, don't you, kid?
09:48Ah, well, it's all water down the Rhine now, isn't it?
09:50Well, it shows, you know.
09:52I mean, I'm not blind to it.
09:54And on a day like today, which is...
09:56Well, a day of great joy for me.
10:00I feel it even more.
10:03I had a letter from her this week.
10:05From your wife?
10:06Aye.
10:06It's ironic, isn't it?
10:07This week, of all times.
10:09What did she say?
10:10Yeah, she wants to see me, talk things over.
10:12Come over here and talk things over.
10:14That's great.
10:16Do you think there's any chance that...
10:17No chance.
10:18Oh, still.
10:21Must mean something, wasn't it?
10:22If she's willing to come all this way, like.
10:24Must mean there's something there, some kind of feeling.
10:26Don't you want to see her again?
10:27No.
10:28Don't you want to talk to her again?
10:29No, I don't.
10:31Oh.
10:32I understand.
10:33Too painful.
10:34Too expensive.
10:36Haven't sent her allowance for three months.
10:39Aye, well, then we'd better get off.
10:40How do we look?
10:41How's me collar?
10:42Grand.
10:42You look champion.
10:43Smashing.
10:43Great.
10:43Terry.
10:46Yeah?
10:47I want you to have this.
10:50What do you mean?
10:52I want you to have this.
10:55But that's your photograph, Alderman.
10:57That's your most treasured possession.
10:59Yes, I know, I know.
10:59But by rights, it should belong to both of us.
11:02There's two lives in here, and I'm just one of them.
11:04You've said that yourself often enough.
11:06Well, I know, but I...
11:07Look, Terry, it'd be very easy for me to go out and buy you a pen and pencil set or a monogrammed cufflink.
11:14But this, well, I just thought that it would mean more, that's all.
11:19Lost your tongue?
11:29Yes, well, I think, um...
11:32I think I'll just go and say goodbye to the cat.
11:34LAUGHTER
11:35What time is it?
12:01What time is your what, say?
12:03Quarter to three.
12:04It's quarter to three, then.
12:06We're early.
12:07Well, of course we're early.
12:09So we left home too early, and we drove here too quickly.
12:11We could have had another cup of tea and seen the 2.30 from Chepstow.
12:15I think those tranquilizers have worn off.
12:17I've lost that numb feeling.
12:19What sort of feeling have you got now?
12:21I think you'd describe it as...
12:23blind terror.
12:25That was an ever film, with Mia Farrow.
12:28That's right, she was a blind girl.
12:30Shut up.
12:31I saw another film about a blind girl.
12:32It was Audrey Hepburn this time.
12:34That's right, Audrey Hepburn, and it was called, um...
12:37I want to go to the lavatory.
12:41Wait until dark.
12:46Can't wait that long.
12:50Fool, that was the name of the film.
12:52Audrey Hepburn, and she was this blind girl.
12:55They're not our lavatories in churches, do they?
12:57You don't really want to go.
12:59It's all in the mind.
13:00No, it's not.
13:01It's all in the bladder.
13:05It's just...
13:06It's just tension, man.
13:07It's just nerves.
13:08Like in the First World War, in the trenches.
13:11You what?
13:11What are you on about?
13:12Pals of glory.
13:13Kirk Douglas, wasn't it?
13:14Look, will you shut up?
13:15Will you shut up about blind girls in trenches, please?
13:18I am getting married in...
13:19in 14 minutes.
13:22When did you put that plaster on your hand?
13:23Just after I said goodbye to the cat.
13:27I thought maybe you'd found Beatty's teeth.
13:30Do you know, six years ago,
13:32I locked that cat in my sock drawer, accidentally like.
13:36He's obviously harboured a grudge all these years.
13:39My cousin Martin was scratched by a cat,
13:41and his arms swelled up to twice its normal size.
13:44Apparently some cats carry this fatal infection.
13:48You should have had a tetanus injection on the way here.
13:51God knows we had time enough.
13:53Thelma should be leaving now.
13:55Oh, good.
13:56She'll know it when the 2.30 a chep's dead.
13:59Thelma hates horses.
14:01My cousin Martin's allergic to horses.
14:04He only has to hear a whinny,
14:05and he comes out in red blotches.
14:07They give him asthma.
14:09Like in that film with Lee Remick,
14:11where the killer had asthma.
14:12Grip of fear.
14:14And you could hear him in the shadows.
14:22Look, Terry, will you shut up?
14:23Will you just shut up, please?
14:25I can also do impersonations of well-known British birds.
14:28Would you like to hear them?
14:31First, the swallow.
14:32Look, Terry,
14:34just pack it in, will you?
14:37Just pack it in.
14:38People are coming in.
14:39The church is filling up.
14:41Why don't you go and perform one of your official duties?
14:43You're supposed to be in charge of the ushers, aren't you?
14:45So why don't you ush off?
14:46My duty is to stay by your side, Robert,
14:50to keep your mind off the horror that is about to follow.
14:54Who are all these people?
14:55I don't recognise any of them.
14:56Well, besides friends of the bride.
14:59No, it isn't.
14:59It's friend of the bridegroom,
15:00and I don't recognise any of them.
15:04My God,
15:04we're in the wrong church.
15:06Of course I am not.
15:07Pull yourself together.
15:10It's the hats.
15:11You don't recognise them under their mats.
15:12It's all right, it's all right.
15:13I can see me Auntie Elsie from Bishop Auckland.
15:16She gave us a salad bowl.
15:18She's wearing a salad bowl.
15:21And I can see me Auntie Edna, table mats.
15:26No sign of Thelma's mother yet.
15:29We haven't had the fanfare, have we?
15:31And people will be prostrating themselves in the aisles.
15:34Give us your Yankee, will you?
15:35What?
15:36What do you think, what for?
15:37I want to do conjuring tricks, that's what for?
15:40I want to blow my rotten nose.
15:41I think my hay fever's coming on.
15:43No, it isn't, man.
15:44It's all in the mind.
15:45No, it's not.
15:45It's all in me, no.
15:46So give us your Yankee.
15:47Oh, dear man.
15:49Oh, hang on, hang on.
15:55Charming.
15:57That is nice.
16:00Take your flower off.
16:01It's the pollen.
16:02That's not going to make any difference.
16:03The church is full of flowers.
16:05So is every woman's act.
16:06My eyes are screaming.
16:08It may be a symptom of the dreaded cat infection.
16:10Perhaps I've got an allergy.
16:18Well, you must be allergic to something in here.
16:20Perhaps it's the candles.
16:22Or the verger's aftershave.
16:24Or marriage.
16:25Hey, maybe you're allergic to marriage.
16:28And maybe you'll spend the rest of your married life
16:30snuffling and sneezing and snivelling.
16:32And the only cure will be divorce.
16:34You can get a really quick divorce in Mexico, you know.
16:39You only have to live there two weeks.
16:41Mind you, some countries, you only have to stay the weekend.
16:44I think in Guatemala, you just have to write a letter.
16:47Just drop them a line with a five-pound post-loader.
16:51Well, surely that only means you're divorced in Guatemala.
16:54Which can't help much if you're living on the Elm Lodge housing estate.
16:57What are they talking about, Beatty?
17:00Divorce.
17:00Of course, you could live there.
17:04Residents, they call it.
17:05That's not good for you, though, is it?
17:06What with your hay fever and your terror of spiders.
17:10Do they have nasty spiders in Guatemala?
17:13Terrifying.
17:14Apparently, they can devour a guinea pig in a minute.
17:20Why?
17:23I mean, why a guinea pig?
17:24Well, that's just the amount of time it takes them to get through a guinea pig.
17:30I mean, something else, like a fox terrier, would probably take a little longer.
17:36Yes, but why?
17:37I mean, why should they want to eat guinea pigs, of all things?
17:40Well, why do you want to eat toast and dripping?
17:44You've obviously got a taste for them.
17:47Anyhow, the spiders are that big.
17:49What are you two talking about?
17:51Guatemalan spiders.
17:52That big.
17:55Oh.
17:55What's he say, Abiti?
17:57Guatemalan spiders, that big.
17:59Doesn't surprise me.
18:02Apparently, in Colombia, beyond the far uncharted regions of the Amazon,
18:09lives the most deadly animal in the world.
18:12It's not a spider.
18:14And it's not a snake.
18:17It is the great venomous toad.
18:22An ounce of whose poison could wipe out the entire population of West Hartley Pooh.
18:30They've got enough trouble with their beard.
18:35Speaking of venomous toads, Thelma's mother's arrived.
18:38You know, she's wearing that smile of hers.
18:43What smile of hers?
18:44You know, she's about to unveil a new wing of an abattoir.
18:50What time is it?
18:52Nearly five to.
18:54She'll be on her way now.
18:55She'll be on her way.
18:56She'll be halfway between Marshall's Plastics and the pickle factory.
18:59It's a good house, though, but it's packed.
19:03Thelma's relatives don't look a barrel of laughs, though, do they?
19:05They gave us some lovely presidus.
19:08Oh, your power order has arrived.
19:10Fish knives and forks.
19:11My God, you're a mercenary.
19:13You look down the rows of pews and all you see is electric kettles and pop-up toasters.
19:19Pam and Ivor.
19:20Pardon?
19:21Pam and Ivor gave us a pop-up toaster.
19:24Well, your mother's got nothing to worry about.
19:26She's not losing her son.
19:27She's gaining her daughter in a department store.
19:29She's just arrived, Bob.
19:31She's early.
19:31She's early.
19:32Oh, that means she must have left before the 2.30 of Chepstow's son.
19:37Terry, what?
19:38I think I've lost the use of both my legs.
19:40Of course you have.
19:41But I have a half.
19:42Well, you're going to lose the use of one of them on this skiing honeymoon of yours anyway.
19:45This is serious, man.
19:47I think I'm paralytic from the waist down.
19:48Of course you're not, man.
19:49It's all in the mind.
19:50No, it isn't.
19:51It isn't.
19:52It's all in me knees.
19:53That's it.
19:56We're under orders.
19:58Come on.
19:58Let's go.
19:59I can't.
20:00I can't.
20:00Come on, Peter.
20:03Don't let go.
20:06It's like a paratrooper making his first jump.
20:08Like Alan Ladd in the Red Bury.
20:10Let's go, Geronimo.
20:14I don't know.
20:15Even on your wedding day, you've got to lean on me.
20:18Don't let go.
20:19Please, Bob, you'll confuse the vicar.
20:21Don't you think you're marrying me?
20:25God, what have I gone into?
20:27Never mind me.
20:29There's always Guatemala.
20:30Get in a bit, Thelma.
20:38Smile, then.
20:40Hold it.
20:40I like that one.
20:41Hold it.
20:41Hold it together.
20:42Come on.
20:44Get in a bit, Thelma.
20:51Come on.
20:52Come on.
20:53Get in a bit.
20:54That's nice.
20:55Great.
20:56And a lot of people said that it would never happen.
20:58And a lot of people said it should never happen.
21:00And someone not a million miles from where I'm standing said that he wouldn't let it happen.
21:06But it has happened.
21:07Right.
21:08It has happened.
21:09It has happened.
21:10And I'm very, very glad about it.
21:11Here we are.
21:12My wife and I would just like to say how knocked out we are by all the lovely presents and everyone's
21:35good wishes and kindness.
21:38And we'd like to say a special thank you to Mr. and Mrs. Chambers, to Thelma's mum and dad for laying on this lovely dome.
21:49It has been such a great day.
21:51And apart from worrying what Terry's going to say in his speech, a very, very happy one.
21:59Ladies and gentlemen, it is now my proud privilege and honour and duty to propose the health of the bridesmaids.
22:12Ladies and gentlemen, the bridesmaids.
22:15The bridesmaids.
22:16The bridesmaids.
22:18Give the lad a chance.
22:20A blemish on the whole proceeding.
22:22Will you give over?
22:24I tell you, you organising this has been the biggest threat to our marriage.
22:30Since your cousin Ethel got me down in the air raid shelter with a bottle of green chartreuse.
22:37There wasn't even an air raid.
22:38There wasn't even a war.
22:47Ladies and gentlemen, I've had a lot of instructions and a lot of advice on how to make this speech.
22:53Just a few minutes ago, Bob passed me a note on a napkin saying, don't mention Deirdre Birchwood.
23:00Really?
23:01So I won't.
23:03But, um...
23:06Bob gave me a book today, this one.
23:09It's a photograph album.
23:11And apart from his, uh, autographed picture of Rhonda Fleming, it's his most treasured possession.
23:16And if you flick through it, it tells you all about his past.
23:21And mine.
23:23Here we are.
23:24Guy Fawkes.
23:26Scout camp.
23:27School sports.
23:29Villa Parkville and Away Much.
23:30I think we even got as far as the third round that year.
23:33There we are, our first job.
23:36Oh, aye.
23:37And one cycling in the Pennines.
23:38That's Bob there, the one with the flashy water bottles.
23:42There.
23:43Oh, yes.
23:44And a classic.
23:45Our first time abroad.
23:47Costa Brava.
23:48Costa Fortune.
23:52And here's me on my...
23:56Here's me on my 21st, with Bob's present, a silver beer tankard.
24:01And there's Bob on his 21st, with my present.
24:04The silver beer tankard.
24:07But you know, um, this book is a summary of, uh, of somebody else as well.
24:12And, um, and that somebody else is, uh, is Thelma.
24:15She doesn't feature very much early on, but, um, well, later on she begins to appear more and more.
24:22I think she makes her first appearance at the school sports.
24:25Aye.
24:26Aye, there she is.
24:27There she is.
24:28See, she looks and all.
24:29In her singlet and button.
24:32But I reckon, you know, I reckon by the time you get those wedding photographs in here,
24:36you're gonna need a new album.
24:39Bob, I know how much this book means to you.
24:44And therefore I know how much it meant to you to give it to me.
24:49And I want to tell you that I appreciate that gesture more than I can say.
24:55But I can't take it, kidder.
24:58Because this book's not just about Bob and Terry.
25:01It's about Bob and Thelma.
25:04And only Bob and Thelma from now on.
25:08Bob and Thelma from now on.
25:11Bob Ferris, this is your life.
25:14I can't believe you're right.
25:15Bob and Thelma from now on.
25:16You're right.
25:17This is your life.
25:48Enjoy yourself.
25:57Right, all set then. Tickets, passports.
25:59Yep.
26:00You do-it-yourself splints.
26:02Oh, and have you got your booklet?
26:03Six ways to fight frostbite.
26:05Yes, we've got everything.
26:06Right, well, that's about it then.
26:08Oh, well, Terry, thanks for everything.
26:13You were a smashing best man.
26:15You were much better than...
26:17I mean...
26:19I know, I know.
26:21Anyway, thanks.
26:26Well, I've just got time to go and get a Nova.
26:29I did it.
26:33Right.
26:34I did it.
26:35Home and drive.
26:37Thanks.
26:38I didn't do anything?
26:39Right.
26:39Thanks for not doing anything.
26:42Listen, mate, you were out of time, didn't I?
26:46About this marriage.
26:48Putting it down and putting you off.
26:49Well, he wasn't taking any notice of me.
26:53What I'm trying to say is, well, you've done the right thing, getting right, and all the best, kidder.
27:01Cheers, Terry.
27:02Perhaps one day you and you two.
27:05May I have your attention, please?
27:06Will passengers on flight 638 for Oslo, please proceed through Channel B.
27:12I will.
27:13As you call.
27:14All right.
27:15It's funny.
27:16You and me, like.
27:17End of...
27:18Well...
27:20End of the line.
27:21End of an era.
27:22All right.
27:22We're different people now.
27:23Different scene.
27:24Old days and old ways.
27:26Gone forever.
27:27All in the past.
27:28Can't turn the clock back.
27:29Be wrong to try.
27:31End of an era.
27:32Nothing's going to be the same again.
27:34What day did you get back?
27:36Tuesday week.
27:37Tuesday?
27:38There's a dark match that night against the fat ox.
27:40Isn't that great?
27:41I'll pick you up at eight.
27:42Smash it.
27:43Bye, Terry.
27:49Cheers, Terry.
27:49Cheers, Terry.
28:19Cheers, Terry.
28:42Cheers, Terry.
28:46Cheers, Terry.
28:46Cheers.
28:48Cheers.
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