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The misadventures of a British Royal Artillery Concert Party unit stationed in based in Deolali in British India and the fictional village of Tin Min in Burma during the last few months of the Second World War.
Transcript
00:00Meet the gang, cos the boys are here, the boys to entertain you.
00:09With music and laughter to help you on your way, to raising the rambles with a hey, hey, hey.
00:15With songs and sketches and jokes old and new, with us about you and Phil Blue.
00:21So meet the gang, cos the boys are here, the boys to entertain you.
00:26B-O-B-O-Y-S, boys, to entertain you.
00:44Right, my lovely boys, move yourselves. I want this camp looking smart, smart, smart.
00:49But, Sergeant Major, the war's over. We won't be here much longer.
00:53Yes, it's also pointless, Sergeant Major.
00:56It's also pointless, Sergeant Major.
00:59Let me tell you, Mr Lardy-Dark and Graham, the only difference between the British Army and all that other military rabble is whitewash.
01:08It keeps you busy, and it keeps your quarters hygienic.
01:13Quarters? I can understand.
01:14But why do we have to whitewash the trees outside?
01:16Because, by the nature of things, jungles is untidy.
01:23And like everything else in the British Army, they have to be made to toe the line.
01:29I always remember a picture we had at home.
01:32It was the Duke of Wellington winning the Battle of Waterloo.
01:35There was them British troops, covered in pipe clay, which is what they used before they had modern inventions like whitewash.
01:43And them French troops, cowering, looking scruffy, and smelling of garlic.
01:49If it was a picture, how could you tell they were smelling of garlic?
01:59Because the Duke had an expression on his face, like there was a nasty smell of his nose.
02:05Which is precisely what you was giving me at this moment, Gareth Southam.
02:08So keep whitening that palm tree.
02:11Where do you want their rock, Sergeant Major?
02:13What's the matter with you two?
02:15Well, we've just carried this lot half a mile from the river.
02:19Tip them out, tip them out.
02:25They're not round enough. Take them back, get some more.
02:30Just a minute.
02:33Who did this?
02:35I did it, Sergeant Major.
02:37Well, can't you see it's not level?
02:39Another inch, Sagdon.
02:45Your fingers are all white.
02:47Get out of it!
02:49You all ready, Sergeant Major?
02:51Ready in a moment, sir.
02:56Why are you wearing shorts, Ashwood?
02:57The brigadier always takes the mickey out of your knobbly knees.
03:01You know how it upsets you?
03:02I don't care. I shall be ready for him this time.
03:04If he calls me Sparrow Legs,
03:06I shall call him Winnie the Pooh Tum.
03:10Have you packed your pyjamas?
03:12No, why?
03:12Well, after that remark, you could end up under close arrest.
03:16I've never thought of that. I'd better go and change.
03:17No, no, no. There isn't time.
03:19All right, sir.
03:21Now, hear this.
03:22We will be back from GHQ at 1400 hours.
03:24While we is gone, you will spend the time weeding.
03:28How do we know which is flowers and which is weeds, Sergeant Major?
03:32Everything in the jungle is weeds.
03:35All right.
03:36Carry on, chaps.
03:37Yes, carry on.
03:38Right, move those stones.
03:39Get those brushes going.
03:40I know where it's placed. Gleaming, gleaming, gleaming.
03:42Come on, love.
03:43You give it plenty. All right.
03:44Over there.
03:45Come on, then.
03:45Gloria.
03:46Gloria.
03:47They've gone.
03:48Relax, everybody.
03:49Tea break.
03:51Hurry up, Mohamed.
03:53Coming, love.
03:54I have a special treat today.
03:57Victory cake.
03:58This is appalling.
04:04They're very nice bun, sir.
04:06Hmm?
04:07No, no, no, no.
04:07I was talking about the Sergeant Major.
04:09All right.
04:10I thought things would be easier now the war's over.
04:12But old shut up has no stop once.
04:15Double guards, kit layouts, PT, pickets.
04:18It's understandable, I suppose.
04:19His whole world's collapsed.
04:21Now the war's over.
04:21It's all he's got left to cling to.
04:23It's the last twitchings of a dying beast.
04:27How long do you think it'll be before we get our D-Mob?
04:29Well, I've heard they're going to release up to group 10 immediately.
04:34What group are you?
04:35I'm group 35.
04:38I think we're all about the same.
04:40Well, I'm in no hurry to go home.
04:43I hear the meat rations are only one of tough ones a week.
04:45And two ounces of butter and four ounces of sugar.
04:49Well, don't you want to get back to see your loved one?
04:51Not if she's got nothing to cook.
04:54What I miss most is me mum's roast potatoes.
04:58If I see another sweet potato, I'm going to scream.
05:00Aye.
05:01I'll miss my mother's tatty scones.
05:04The best thing my mum cooks is Yorkshire pudding.
05:06Yeah, we have it first up our way, don't we, Lofty?
05:09Of course.
05:10First?
05:11What do you mean, instead of melon or hors d'oeuvre?
05:15I'm extraordinary.
05:17If times are hard, my mum serves it first instead of anything else.
05:19What's the matter, Petal?
05:24I haven't got it, Mum.
05:27Well, I expect you miss fish and chips, eh?
05:30Oh, yeah, I miss fish and chips.
05:32When I get home, I'm going to buy myself two six-penny pieces of cod
05:36and three whole pennies of chips all to myself.
05:38Yeah, and a bottle of limeade to wash it down.
05:41Weren't that rather quarrel with the vinegar?
05:43Subs, what am I going to do when you have all gone home?
05:49You'll go back to India, won't you?
05:51But who's going to buy my tea?
05:52Well, there's bound to be someone around here to sell your tea to.
05:56Oh, shut up, Wongo.
05:57He loves it out here.
05:58Yes, they'll probably have special camps full of sergeant majors
06:01who'll go around shouting at each other all day long
06:03or whitewashing thing.
06:05Excuse me, sir.
06:07Some of these people want to see men in charge.
06:10Ask them what they want, Mohammed.
06:12Oh, dear, Gloria.
06:13Uh, teswaski, Jimmy.
06:17Our friend, the linguist.
06:19Saab, these people live here.
06:26This person, head man.
06:28Now war is over, they have come back home.
06:30Ah, that's too bad, Jimmy, because we're living here now.
06:34Eh?
06:34So sling your hook.
06:36Malam?
06:37Scram!
06:38Um, no vacancies.
06:40Comprehend, eh?
06:42Um, you are all trespassers.
06:45This, WD property.
06:47King George.
06:48Take a powder.
06:51We've no room.
06:52Cheer off.
06:52Just a moment.
06:53Can you all stop behaving like barbarians for one minute?
06:57Don't you realise you're talking to human beings?
07:00This is their home.
07:01We're the trespassers.
07:02Ah, but if we let them in, we'll end up sleeping in the jungle.
07:06I think Paddy's is right.
07:08You can't let them sleep in the open air.
07:10Not with the girls and kids.
07:12I've got an idea.
07:13If this lot move in,
07:15they'll have to move us out, back to base.
07:17Away from this rotten, stinking jungle.
07:20And we'll sleep in decent beds.
07:21They might even have flush toilets.
07:23Eh.
07:24Just imagine.
07:25Flushed toilets.
07:26It's been so long since I've seen one,
07:28I forgot what they look like.
07:30And ask them which one is their hat.
07:32You're making a big mistake, Gloria.
07:37Chuck them out now.
07:38Sergeant Major's Basha is their house sub.
07:43Tell them to move in.
07:46Make themselves a hole.
07:47Now, oh, shut up.
07:49We're going to start raving mad.
07:50I mean, it'll kill us.
07:51Hang about, fellas.
07:52Why don't we tell them to wait until the officers get back?
07:55Good idea.
07:56Um, would you mind waiting here until the, um, oops, sorry, the officers come back, you see,
08:05and then we will persuade them to let you stay?
08:10Won't we tell us?
08:11Oh, yeah.
08:11Oh, yeah.
08:12Yeah.
08:12We will ask you to ask you, and you will see it.
08:15You are a great human being.
08:18Your eyes are like this,
08:20as if you are looking at the sky above the sky.
08:28He says you are a man of great kindness, Gloria Saab.
08:31It shines from your eyes like the sun on a mountain top.
08:35That's very nice.
08:38Now, is there anything else?
08:40Yes.
08:41Ask him, what time are they killing that goat?
09:04What the hell do you think you are playing at, Johnny?
09:07How dare you stop an army vehicle on official business?
09:09Excuse me, please, sir. I have a puncture.
09:12Will you give me a lift, please?
09:13Shove off, Johnny.
09:15Don't talk to me as I was some damn native.
09:18I merely asked a civil question. Will you give me a lift?
09:21Give you a lift? I should go-go.
09:24For your information, Johnny, King's regulations clearly state
09:26that the British Army does not give lifts to civilians.
09:29Oh, let me ask you a question.
09:32Would you give me a lift if I was British?
09:35Well, if you was in uniform, yes.
09:37That's only an excuse.
09:38Would you give me a lift if I was a British civilian?
09:41If you was a British civilian, you would not be wearing that silly hat.
09:44For your information, sir, all members of Congress party wear this hat
09:48and I am damn proud of it.
09:50How dare you insult my party hat?
09:53I am in a hurry. Move that bicycle.
09:56I am perfectly entitled to have my bicycle in the road if I wish, sir.
09:59This is a public highway.
10:01And I am perfectly entitled to push your face in.
10:08Do you know who you're talking to, sir?
10:10My name is Kunwar Pulhara.
10:13I am the chief foreign affairs correspondent
10:15of the world-famous newspaper, the Calcutta Bugle.
10:19Well, blow off!
10:23How dare you touch my bicycle, sir?
10:29You damn British barbarian!
10:45Let me tell you, sir, I represent the power of the press.
10:48And the power of the press is not to be trifled with.
10:51You will hear more about this, I promise you.
10:53You damn British!
10:55Why don't you go away
10:57and leave the rest of the world to get on in peace?
11:00Quit India!
11:01Do you hear me, sir?
11:03I said quit India!
11:14Hey, Gloria!
11:15Gloria!
11:16Gloria!
11:17He's back!
11:18He's back!
11:19Quick whitewash!
11:20Whitewash!
11:21Have you finished that whitewash yet?
11:22What about all that weeding I asked you to do?
11:23Them stones is no...
11:24Oh, my dear.
11:25What's all that mess?
11:26People, Sergeant Major.
11:27Actually, Sergeant Major.
11:28They're the villagers who used to live here.
11:29They've come back home.
11:30Him with the beard.
11:31He's your landlord.
11:32Shut up and get him out!
11:33They're perfectly entitled to be here, Sergeant Major, after all it is their village.
11:35And, after all, it is their village.
11:37With you
11:42What's all that mess
11:45People that you make it actually such major they're the villagers who used to live here
11:49They've fun. They've come back home in with the bed. He's your landlord
11:56Shut up and get about perfectly entitled to be here sergeant major after all it is their village
12:01And after all this is their village
12:04Let me tell you mr. Lardy-Dark on a graham as long as that flags at the top of that pole this is our village
12:09They is trespassing you get them out
12:12Isn't that a bit cruel sergeant major? They've got nowhere to go
12:16Did you hear that?
12:19This boy is all heart
12:22But you will find get a parking in real life. You have to be cruel to be kind you see these people
12:29By nature is higurant
12:34If we let them stay here they won't bother to build a nice new village for themselves, so I is doing them a favor
12:45All natives out I said all natives out
12:51Don't you recognize me I'm the child I work here shut up
12:55It's a human those old folks and kids can't sleep out in the open air
13:01He's a cold-hearted monster
13:03And stay out father dear. I want a double guard on that gate all right
13:11I said stay out now shut up
13:13Do you mind over the door sergeant major?
13:18Better be sorry sir. I thought it was natives
13:21What on earth is going on sergeant major? Why all those people out there?
13:24Yeah, they're villagers sir. They used to live here. They wants to come back. I told them the village was requisitioned
13:29But there are some old people and children out there. Can't we make room for them?
13:32Oh, you left one in sir. Have you no end to it? I mean we could be swamped by them
13:36It is their village. Have you explained our situation? Oh in great detail sir before I kicked them up the backside
13:42What on earth can happen to them? Oh, perhaps they've got an aunt or someone they could go and stay with
13:49Yes, uh, better call them in in that minute
13:52Well, don't you think this is a dangerous president? This is an order
13:55Very well, get them in bombardier
14:03Would you come this way please?
14:05We'll see you now
14:06How'd it go?
14:17Lovely weather, isn't it?
14:19You'll be quiet Ashford. Now who's in charge?
14:23This person headman sir. Well, ask him if he knows of anyone he can stay with while we sort this out
14:27No one's up. He said this is their home and they want it back
14:36They fed up when war start the japanese man come and say he will save them from british
14:41Then he takes all their food and tell them to go
14:44Then japanese man run away and they return to village then british man come and say he will save them from japanese
14:49Then he takes all their food and tell them to go and come back when war is over now what is over they have come back home
14:57A bit of a problem. What do you think Ashford?
14:59Well, sir, we could uh, we could uh, it's a tricky one, sir
15:04Well, tell them to wait outside while we think about it
15:07Um, would you mind waiting outside won't keep you minutes
15:11The way I see it sir, this village has been requisitioned by some top high up army official
15:18Now if we de-requisitioned it over his head, we could end up in very hot water
15:22Besides which we won't have nowhere to sleep
15:25What do you think Ashford?
15:26There's a lot of force in what the sergeant major says
15:28Yes, well, we better leave them where they are
15:30Now you get on the radio to ghq and tell them what's happening
15:33So
15:33Somebody else at the door up and down up and down every minute
15:45Yes
15:46Oh, good afternoon may I speak with whoever is in charge please
15:49Follow me colonel Reynolds
15:51Yes
15:52Somebody here to see you
15:53Ah, hello can I help you
15:56I sir am Mr Kunwar Pulhara foreign affairs correspondent from the calcutta bugle
16:03I have just been talking to those poor people outside
16:05Is it true that you have driven them from their homes?
16:08Well, we didn't actually drive them out to see what really
16:11Excuse me, I'm talking to the organ grinder
16:13I don't wish to have words with a monkey
16:19One more crack like that and I'll jolly we'll give you a punch on the news
16:23You damn British always going around offering violence and behaving in a totally uncivilized manner
16:30Be very careful, sir
16:32Everything you say to me will be read by millions
16:36I don't care about your rotten rag publish and be damned
16:39Steady on, Ezra
16:40Look, we haven't actually turned anybody out, have we?
16:42No, we haven't actually turned anybody out
16:45No, just ask them to wait pending instructions
16:47Oh, and how long will they have to wait?
16:50Five minutes five years in the meanwhile all people and children are exposed to the elements
16:55I couldn't get through on the radio, sir. There's too much on
17:00What are you doing here? Get out
17:02Steady on, Sergeant Major. He's a reporter
17:05Don't you bother with him, sir. He's a troublemaker
17:07I will tell you how much of a troublemaker I am
17:11I will return later on today and if those poor people are not back in their houses
17:16This whole sordid business will be exposed in every newspaper from Bombay to Singapore
17:23Goodbye
17:24Move it, Johnny
17:30I'll see him out
17:33You're damn serious, Ashwood
17:35We could find ourselves in the middle of an international incident
17:38Sergeant Major, get back on that radio and don't come off it until you get through to GHQ
17:41Sir
17:42Now he's out of the way, Gloria, why not drop that hint about his basher
17:45Aye, old sharp will kick up such a stink. They'll have to find somewhere else for us
17:49Precisely
17:54Excuse me, sir. May we make a suggestion?
17:57Ah, yes. What is it?
17:58Well, there's not many of them
18:00Why don't we let them have their little house back?
18:04Which is their little house? It's not the officer's basher, is it?
18:06No, sir
18:07Oh, very good idea
18:10Is it yours?
18:11No, it's not ours
18:13Is it, um...
18:16Yes, sir
18:18I think perhaps you'd better tell, Sergeant Major Ashwood
18:24Wouldn't it be better coming from you, sir?
18:25No
18:28Why, I won't tell him just now, because he's busy on the wireless
18:40I am deeply grateful you volunteered to get out of your basher
18:43If I did not volunteer, sir
18:45No, no, no, but you would have done it if you'd known all the circumstances
18:47And by doing this, you've been instrumental in avoiding what could have been a very nasty international incident
18:53And I want to thank you personally
18:54That's the lot, Sergeant Major
18:56Just one thing, sir
18:58Where is I sleeping?
18:59Well, the Colonel and I have decided you can come in with us
19:01Thank you, sir
19:04Right, boys
19:06Move my gear into the office's bar
19:07A half a minute
19:08Uh, when Captain Ashwood said in with us
19:11He didn't actually mean in with us
19:14Not in our bedroom
19:15I mean, we couldn't have that, could we?
19:16We'll go, sir
19:19We couldn't have that
19:21You mean on the veranda, sir?
19:23Well, in a way, yes
19:26Very nearly on the veranda
19:27Now, Donald Clarke, put his things very nearly on the veranda
19:32Very good, sir
19:32Come on, Atlas
19:33Okay, now
19:34You're undone
19:34Come on, come on
19:37You are whole, my class
19:39Come on
19:41What the hell do you think you're doing, Johnny?
19:43I am not talking to you
19:45I am not even seeing you
19:47Colonel, these poor people were outside
19:50So I asked them to come here
19:51But there just isn't room
19:52Now, listen, fellas
19:53This is our chance
19:54If they move into our basher
19:55As well as old shut-ups
19:57They'll have to find us somewhere else to go
19:59Are you sure you know what you're doing, Gloria?
20:01Just leave it to me
20:03Excuse me, sir
20:06They can have our basher
20:08Shut up
20:10This man is obviously a humanitarian
20:13Not a tyrant like you
20:15Well, I don't mind
20:16I mean, I know the army will find us somewhere else to go
20:20Calcutta
20:21Colchester
20:23Shut up
20:23Don't you stop
20:25Well, I dare say
20:26You can move your stuff in the vicinity of our basher
20:29Yes, sir
20:29The sergeant major's very nearly on the veranda
20:32And they could be not quite on the veranda
20:34Yes, well, tell them, will you, please, Charwater
20:37All right, because it's not quite on the veranda
20:39Right, well, we'd better get back to the HQ sort things out
20:42Now, don't antagonise this press fellow, will you
20:45It's a very delicate situation
20:46But sir, the whole thing is just interrogating into a complete chaotic situation
20:50Just do nothing till we get back
20:51Just carry on as you
20:52Come along
20:53You have your instructions
20:56I am making note of everything you say and do
20:59Right
21:00The colonel said carry on as usual
21:02Get that in for PT
21:04Move yourselves
21:05Sergeant Major, we haven't finished moving our stuff
21:07Shut up
21:07Get that in
21:08Move on
21:08You are harassing the villagers
21:12I am writing it down
21:14Just one R in harassing
21:16Shut up
21:16I can't speak north
21:19Sergeant Major, I don't want to take my shirt off in front of all these people
21:22They'll only laugh at me
21:24Yes, Sergeant Major
21:25And I'm very sensitive too
21:27I mean, I don't mind when we're all men together
21:30All good enough to be ashamed of, sir
21:36What are you talking about, Charwalla?
21:38A fine pair of shoulder thumb
21:40Yes, well, I can't argue with that
21:42Hey, scouts
21:44Get a load of that
21:44And next, both of these dusting corzos
21:47In front of these innocent maidens
21:49I am writing it down
21:51Shut up
21:52Reckon arms as fine commands
21:53Hut two, hut two
21:55Get on with it
21:56Get them down, folks
21:57Hurry up, move it
21:58Now you are harassing the court
22:00I am writing that down
22:02C-O-A-T-S
22:05Get this thing
22:06You're washing off
22:06All you want
22:07Move it
22:08Move it
22:08Move it
22:09Move it
22:09Now you are harassing the washing
22:11I am writing that down
22:18That won't do you any good
22:19I've still got it all in my head
22:27Shut up
22:28Shut up
22:32What's he doing with my lovely whitewash?
22:34He's painting it with mud
22:35They don't want their pretty village to look like a dirty army camp
22:38Dirty army camp
22:42Vandals
22:43My lovely white one
22:45My
22:46Where did he get that flag?
22:51He took it down
22:53It was making the place look untidy
22:55All right
22:56That's it
22:59Get your rifles and bayonets
23:01What for, Sergeant Major?
23:03Shut up
23:04That's an order
23:04Fix bayonets
23:06Are you going to be an undefenceless women and children?
23:09Brave soldier
23:10I'll show you what I'm going to do, Johnny
23:19You have done it now
23:21Fired undefenceless civilians
23:23The whole world will hear about it
23:26I have written it all down
23:27In my head
23:28If you don't get out of here in two seconds, Johnny
23:35You won't have no head
23:36Move it, move it
23:49Excuse me, Sergeant Major
23:51Shut up
23:52Don't you think you'd rather overstep them up?
23:55McIntosh
23:56Put that flag back where it belongs
23:58I haven't got the flag, Sergeant Major
24:00I think they took it with them
24:02Go and get it back
24:04There is no need
24:05I have it here
24:06Where did you come from?
24:08Through the back door
24:09Take your foreign hands off that flag
24:14With pleasure
24:15And this is what I think of a flag that fires on defenceless women and children
24:22Right
24:27You've done it now
24:29You're under arrest for treason
24:31McIntosh Clark
24:32Grab him
24:32Sir
24:33No
24:34No
24:35No
24:36No
24:37No
24:38No
24:39Just grab his legs
24:40Sir
24:41Sergeant, take his shoes off
24:42Put him in a store hat
24:43Hey, Chaiwalla
24:44Help me
24:46I'm sorry
24:47I'm under contract to British Army
24:49He never slapped me
24:52Excuse me
24:54I have the right to make one telephone call
24:57Shut up
24:59I depart to see my solution
25:00Shut up
25:01You push your head through that hole once more, Johnny,
25:07and you'll party out of me round your shoulders.
25:10There are no toilet facilities in here.
25:13I'm waiting just once more, Johnny.
25:15Sergeant Major's really cooked his goose this time.
25:18I hope they don't keep us here for the court of inquiry.
25:21You think you'll get into trouble, then?
25:23Get into trouble?
25:24My dear Lofty, it'll be in every newspaper throughout the world.
25:28The press'll have a field day.
25:29When they finish with the Sergeant Major,
25:32he'll make Attila the Hun look like Godfrey Wynne.
25:35And see the headlines now.
25:37British atrocities in Burma.
25:39This could stop us from getting home.
25:41They could want us as witnesses.
25:43We didn't see a thing, did we, fellas?
25:45No, no, no.
25:47Come on, fellas.
25:49I mean, surely the army will cover up for him.
25:51Of course they won't.
25:52The establishment will use him as a scapegoat.
25:55You mean he might go to prison?
25:57I think he got it, Johnny!
25:59What's he doing now?
26:01I'll leave him alone.
26:02He'll play for hours.
26:05Well, I feel sorry for him.
26:07What are you talking about?
26:08He's made our life hell for the past year.
26:10Well, I don't think it's fair a load of foreigners trying to ruin him.
26:14Now, if we pushed him over a cliff or something, that'll be different.
26:17What are you on about?
26:21I never touched you.
26:22I said you have been bitten by a scorpion.
26:25Pull the other leg, Johnny.
26:27What do you think this is, you damn fool?
26:30It is a scorpion.
26:31It's a small brown one, Sergeant Major.
26:33They're deadly.
26:34Right.
26:35Get him out of there.
26:36Put him in the office of this basher.
26:38The charwalla, get me some boiling water.
26:39Oh, my dear, get me a sharp knife.
26:43And, uh, Graham, get me some field dressing.
26:45Field dressing, here.
26:52Oh.
26:53Oh.
26:53Well, I'm worn out.
26:56I never thought I'd finish up as a removal man for a load of Burmese.
27:00Oh, they didn't half have a lot of gear for us to carry.
27:02Oh.
27:03That was a nice little village they built for themselves.
27:05Aye, I reckon we'd did them a favour.
27:07Oh, yes.
27:08They'd have never bothered if we hadn't chased them out at the point of a bernet.
27:12Well, let us let you off the hooks, Sergeant Major.
27:14We're pleased to hear the reporter's out of hospital.
27:16He's not going to use the story.
27:17In fact, he's dropped the whole thing.
27:19I should have think so, sir.
27:20I've saved his life.
27:21You should be grateful to him.
27:24If he hadn't dropped the whole thing, you'd have been disgraced and humiliated.
27:28All I had to do for him, sir, was humiliating enough.
27:32I wouldn't call it humiliating.
27:34Brave, maybe.
27:36I must say, I wouldn't like to suck scorpion poison out of somebody's foot.
27:40He didn't tread on that scorpion, sir.
27:47He sat on it.
27:51I mean, I may not.
27:57But the boys are here.
27:58The boys still went to take it.
28:01With music and laughter, to everyone you're with.
28:04To raise and the parties in the hey, hey, hey.
28:07With songs and sketches and jumps and jumps are in new.
28:10With us about.
28:11We hope the blues.
28:12So we're going to get down.
28:14Because the boys are here, the boys to entertain you.
28:18We are here to make it to gang, so give us a cheer with a hey, hey, hey.
28:24Just gather around, don't put down your gun, with us around, there's plenty of fun.
28:29So meet the gang, because the boys are here, the boys to entertain you.
28:35B-O-B-O-Y-S, boys to entertain you.
28:40B-O-B-O-Y-S, boys to entertain you.

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