Darlene:
If I get mad, I'm liable to throw ya a dirty look. And where I look dirty, no grass grows. Ever.
--June Havoc (as ) in No Time for Love
--June Havoc (as ) in No Time for Love
Leona:
What did you take as a seditive before you met me?
--June Havoc (as Leona Purdy) in Chicago Deadline
--June Havoc (as Leona Purdy) in Chicago Deadline
Leslie Quayle:
Hi, sailor. Your father working today for a change?
Sonny Phyffe: Yes. You want him?
Leslie Quayle: No thanks, honey. I just want to see him.
--June Havoc (as Leslie Quayle) in Hi Diddle Diddle
Sonny Phyffe: Yes. You want him?
Leslie Quayle: No thanks, honey. I just want to see him.
--June Havoc (as Leslie Quayle) in Hi Diddle Diddle
Ed Adams:
Your face is flushed, baby.
Leona: I'm a little dizzy. I don't get along very well with champagne; and you shouldn't have looked at me like that.
--June Havoc (as Leona Purdy) in Chicago Deadline
Leona: I'm a little dizzy. I don't get along very well with champagne; and you shouldn't have looked at me like that.
--June Havoc (as Leona Purdy) in Chicago Deadline
Elaine Wales:
I changed my name. Did you?
Phil Green: Green has always been my name. What's yours?
Elaine Wales: Estelle Walovsky. I couldn't take it. The applications, I mean. So one day I wrote the same firm two letters, same as you're doing now. I sent the Elaine Wales one, and I sent it after they said there were no openings. Well, I got the job, all right. Do you know what firm that was? "Smith's Weekly."
Phil Green: No.
Elaine Wales: Yes, Mr. Green. The great liberal magazine that fights injustice on all sides.
--June Havoc (as Elaine Wales) in Gentleman's Agreement
Phil Green: Green has always been my name. What's yours?
Elaine Wales: Estelle Walovsky. I couldn't take it. The applications, I mean. So one day I wrote the same firm two letters, same as you're doing now. I sent the Elaine Wales one, and I sent it after they said there were no openings. Well, I got the job, all right. Do you know what firm that was? "Smith's Weekly."
Phil Green: No.
Elaine Wales: Yes, Mr. Green. The great liberal magazine that fights injustice on all sides.
--June Havoc (as Elaine Wales) in Gentleman's Agreement