The Pleasure Garden (1925, European TV broadcast) - titles and intertitles
Titles and intertitles from an European TV broadcast of The Pleasure Garden (1925).
Alternative intertitles are also available for Rohauer Collection version of the film.
Opening Titles
Michael Balcon presents The Pleasure Garden Adapted by Eliot Stannard from the book by Oliver Sandys |
An EMELKA Production COPYRIGHT 1925 MÜNCHNER LICHTSPIELKUNST A.G. |
Photographed by Baron Ventimiglia Assistant Director Alma Reville |
Directed by Alfred J. Hitchcock |
Intertitles and Captions
Oscar Hamilton, Manager of the Pleasure Garden Theatre. George Snell |
"Your chorus, Mr. Hamilton, is certainly most tempting." |
"This is Miss Patsy Brand." Virginia Valli. |
"I've fallen in love with that charming kiss curl of yours." |
"Then I hope you'll be very happy together!" |
"Your love wasn't very lasting, was it?" |
"My name is Jill Cheyne, I have a letter to the manager." Carmelita Geraghty. |
". . . and now I can't pay for my cab, and I've nowhere to sleep even!" |
"You'd better stay with me to-night, and see Hamilton in the morning." |
"That's the boy I'm engaged to." |
"So I wasn't going to spend all my life being companion to a sick old lady in the country." |
". . . and on reaching London I went straight to Mr. Hamilton before bothering about an hotel." |
"Did you think he'd be waiting on the mat with a contract?" |
"I'm sure he'd have given me a part if I hand't lost that letter of introduction." |
"It's lucku for you, O Village Maiden, that you fell into the poor but honest hands of Patsy Brand." |
CALL. -------- "PASSION FLOWERS" THE ENTIRE COMPANY TO BE ON STAGE FOR FULL REHEARSAL TOMORROW, WEDNESDAY JUNE 5TH, AT 11.a.m. SHARP. Stage Manager. |
". . . anyway, I can dance much better than that." |
"Oh, no, I've never been on the stage before!" |
"Ladies and gentlemen, a great genius, who has never been on the stage, has called to teach us our business." |
"I can dance equally well to any tune." |
"Would you like to work for me . . . I'll pay you five pounds a week." |
"No — twenty!" |
What every chorus girl knows. |
"Miss Jill's fiasco is 'ere." |
"You're Miss Patsy Brand, I suppose — Jill has written me about you — I'm Hugh Fielding, her fiance." John Stuart |
"Jill's getting along fine . . . and to-day she's gone to try on her new stage costume." |
The "Try-on". |
"You shouldn't talk like that . . ." |
". . . until I'm in a flat of my own." |
"After two years in the East, I'll be rich enough to come home and marry . . and Jill's promised to wait for me, bless her!" |
"I hope you don't mind, but I asked Mr. Levet to call here for me." Miles Mander. |
"Mr. Levet follows me to the East in a couple of months, and will be my only friend out there." |
"And for two years, Miss Brand, we shall be removed from everything that makes life worth living." |
"Love is a wonderful thing, isn't it?" |
"She's next!" |
"Isn't she marvellous?" |
"Here's wishing Jill something greater than fame — happiness!" |
"Prince Ivan wishes to congratulate you on your success to-night." |
"I shall often give myself the pleasure of seeing you dance." |
"Don't worry, I'll guard her against every danger whilst you're away." |
"Poor Hugh seems scared that some 'Pleasure Garden' libertine may take his tender flower." |
"Hugh reaches his destination determined to succeed for Jill's sake." |
End Titles
The End |