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Okay, just a snippet remembered: A very sad woman saying "And I loved you so much..." Or something like that. She may be weeping, but I'm not sure. Sorry, I know its very little to go on. I know its not the woman proclaiming her love in "Soul Mates" and I've listened to SO many shows looking for this very specific part. Any help or ideas would be appreciated. Thanks!
Tim
Tim
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Unsu...
Re: yet another "what show" question
Sat, August 26, 2006 - 9:31 AMThat sounds like one of the "rent-a-family" series. -
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Re: yet another "what show" question
Sun, August 27, 2006 - 7:32 PMThanks Darwin.
Well, its not in the "remix"--I'll go back and listen to the whole three-parts of "Rent-a-Family" and see if it's there. But as I recall, the woman's voice doesn't sound like Eleanor from the Eleanor and Arthur phone exchanges. She sounded more like the female actor from "Tour of the City"--the one who is paralyzed.
The search continues.
Tim -
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Re: yet another "what show" question
Tue, August 29, 2006 - 10:29 AMis it the one where joe finds out that he was adopted as a child? Part of the work in progress series. Starts of with the voluptuous would be hitch-hiker who blows him up.
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Re: yet another "what show" question
Fri, September 8, 2006 - 2:14 PMA lead--what episode does Joe call all his old girlfriends and profes his true love to them? This might be it. I'll go through episodes on one of the wiki pages but I was hoping somebody could tell me right away. Thanks again.
Tim -
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Re: yet another "what show" question
Sat, September 9, 2006 - 7:28 AMunfortunately i don't remember the name of that one
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Re: yet another "what show" question
Sat, September 9, 2006 - 11:25 AM>A lead--what episode does Joe call all his old girlfriends and
>profes his true love to them? This might be it. I'll go through
>episodes on one of the wiki pages but I was hoping somebody
>could tell me right away. Thanks again.
Are you thinking of the passage in Let Me Not Dream (repeated in Black Light) where Joe calls his ex girlfriends and sings "I'll remember you?"
As I recall they don't actually talk about thier relationships much at all, and I don't remember a passage in which a woman talks about having loved someone. But, it's certainly worth a try.
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Re: yet another "what show" question
Sat, September 9, 2006 - 11:41 AM>Okay, just a snippet remembered:
>A very sad woman saying "And I loved you so much..."
Hi Tim,
I'm stumped. Can you give us any more to go on?
Was she talking in a second person monolog, or were there other people in the conversation?
Can you recall any other parts of the program?
Do you remember any of the music?
Any sense of when it might have been aired or when or where you heard it?
Can you rule out any of Joe's regular actors? (eg. are you sure it's not Debi Mae West?)
A few random possibilities:
Jerry's world - one of Merle's passages.
Lover Man - a woman with a French accent gives a second person monologue to her lover.
Home and The Truth About Women - monologues by women that include past relationships. (As I recall neither is particularly sad or largely in the second person - but it may be worth a try.)
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Re: yet another "what show" question
Sat, September 23, 2006 - 5:08 PMAlright, FOUND IT!!!!
Thanks Erik for your suggestions--I found the part I was looking for in "Black Light." Since this seems to be a compilation piece, I'm not sure if this is where it originally appeared. If anyone has any further information on where and in what context it was first presented, that would be cool.
The part in question appears at around the 40 minute mark in Black Light--right after some interrogation dialogue and then lasts almost until the end when Joe returns to call "Amy" to sing his song. My part is a monologue about this woman (not sure if it is "Amy," I don't think she gives her name) meeting Joe, going to some parties, the demise of their relationship. Where I probably threw people was with my "remembered" snippet of monologue--she doesn't say "And I loved you so much." Her last line is, "And I was really crazy about you."
The subject matter and specifics of this piece have some personal resonance for me; others might not find it so powerful. But it's pretty heavy and I remember when I first heard it I was with someone in a car and we simply had to stop and listen. It was so intense and it left both of us silent and weepy. Listening to it just now brought back the same feelings. So sad and bittersweet.
Thanks again, everyone, for helping me find this. Appreciate the knowledge and time.
Tim
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Re: yet another "what show" question
Sat, September 23, 2006 - 5:21 PMSeems that it first appeared in "The Truth About Woman, Part One." But sounds better in "Black Light"--more echo or reverb or something.
Tim
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