Episode
175 - The Maid
pc:
919 season 9, episode 19
Broadcast
date: April 30, 1998
Written
by Alec Berg & David Mandel & Jeff Schaffer
Story
by Alec Berg & David Mandel & Jeff Schaffer and Kit Boss &
Peter Mehlman
Directed
by Andy
Ackerman
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The
Cast
Regulars:
Jerry
Seinfeld ...................... Jerry Seinfeld
Jason
Alexander .................. George Costanza
Julia
Louis-Dreyfus .............. Elaine Benes
Michael
Richards .................. Cosmo Kramer
Guest
Stars:
Daniel
Von Bargen .............. Kruger
Angela
Featherstone ........... Cindy
Anthony
Crivello ................. Maxwell
Markus
Flanagan ................. Charles
Sam
Whipple ........................ Phone Guy #1
Kyle
Colerider-Krugh .......... Phone Guy #2
Steve
Franken ...................... Brendan
Davenia
McFadden .............. Coco
Damon
Jones ........................ Watkins
Chip
Chinery ........................ Co-Worker #1
Colin
McClean ...................... Co-Worker #2
Anthony
Mangano ...............
Fireman
==================================================================
[INT.
MONK'S RESTAURANT - DAY]
(George
and Jerry sit at their usual booth.)
JERRY
(to waitress): Cup of tea with lemon.
GEORGE:
What happened to your voice?
JERRY:
I was screamin' at hecklers all night. The last time I open for a
rodeo.
GEORGE:
Well, Jerry, I been thinkin'. I've gotten as far as I can go with
George Costanza.
JERRY:
Is this the suicide talk or the nickname talk?
GEORGE:
The nickname. George. What is that? It's nothing. It's got no snap,
no zip. I need a nickname that makes people light up.
JERRY:
You mean like...Liza!
GEORGE:
But I was thinking...T-bone.
JERRY:
But there's no "t" in your name. What about
G-bone?
GEORGE:
There's no G-bone.
JERRY:
There's a g-spot.
GEORGE:
That's a myth.
(George
takes a bite of his sandwich and gets a piece stuck to his
chin.)
JERRY:
T-bone, the ladies are gonna love ya.
[INT.
JERRY'S APARTMENT - DAY]
(Jerry
and Elaine are sitting on the sofa chewing gum.)
ELAINE:
Why did they hire you for a rodeo?
JERRY:
They heard I opened for Kenny Rogers once.
ELAINE:
Didn't he throw you off a bus in the middle of Alabama or--
JERRY:
Oh, I had that comin' to me.
ELAINE:
You know, Kenny Rogers has a-
(Jerry's
maid exits from his bedroom and walks over to the kitchen.)
ELAINE
(whispering): Why did you get a maid?
JERRY:
You don't have to whisper. She knows she's a maid.
ELAINE:
Where did you get her?
JERRY:
I hired her from a service!
MAID:
All done.
JERRY:
Thank you. Nice job.
MAID:
Is this mine?
JERRY:
Yeah.
(The
maid leaves Jerry's apartment. Elaine smiles at Jerry.)
JERRY:
What?
ELAINE:
Come on, Jerry. You didn't notice?
JERRY:
Notice what? She's not really even a maid.
ELAINE:
Oh.
JERRY:
She wants to be an actress...or a, uh, model...or a dancer...or
a...news woman.
ELAINE:
Uh-huh. News woman. Yeah.
(Kramer
enters.)
KRAMER:
Hey. Well, bad news, boys. My life is over. My girlfriend's movin'
away.
JERRY:
You have a girlfriend?
(Jerry
stands up; Kramer opens the fridge.)
KRAMER:
Jerry, where have you been?
JERRY:
At a rodeo. Where's she moving?
KRAMER:
Downtown.
ELAINE:
Downtown New York?
KRAMER:
Yeah. I don't know if I can handle one of these long-distance
relationships.
JERRY:
It's like 10 minutes by subway.
KRAMER:
I don't know.
(Kramer
opens a bottled carbonated drink which overflows and spills onto the
floor.)
KRAMER:
Oh! Jeez! Well, you've got a maid. It's a whole different world
downtown-- different Gap, different Tower Records, and she's a
646.
ELAINE:
What? What is that?
JERRY:
That's the new area code. They've run out of 242s, so all the new
numbers are 646.
ELAINE:
I was a 718 when I first moved here. I cried every night.
KRAMER:
Listen. Heads up, Elaine. I'm gonna have to stop by later and pick up
a fax.
ELAINE:
At work?
KRAMER:
No. At your apartment.
ELAINE:
I don't have a fax machine.
JERRY:
Here we go.
KRAMER:
Well, now what are we gonna do? (to Jerry) See? This is why you
should get a fax and a Xerox.
JERRY:
And a dead bolt.
KRAMER
(to Elaine) Are ya sure you don't have one? Because there's a lot of
stuff in my apartment I've never seen.
ELAINE:
Then maybe you have a fax machine.
KRAMER:
You just blew my mind.
[INT.
MEETING ROOM - DAY]
(Everyone
is gathered around a large conference table.)
KRUGER:
Let's order lunch.
KRUGER:
Mary, I will have a chef's salad.
MALE
WORKER: Turkey sandwich.
GEORGE:
T-bone steak.
KRUGER:
For lunch?
GEORGE:
Well, I am just a T-bone kinda guy. Love that T-bone. In fact, you
might as well call me--
WATKINS:
That sounds good. I'll have one, too.
KRUGER:
Watkins, you're havin' a T-bone?
WATKINS:
I love 'em.
KRUGER:
Well, then we should call you T-bone.
GEORGE:
Uh, no. No, we shouldn't.
KRUGER:
T-bone!
ALL
(chanting): T-bone! T-bone! T-bone! T-bone! T-bone! T-bone! T-bone!
T-bone!
[INT.
ELAINE'S APARTMENT - DAY]
(The
phone rings. Elaine enters her apartment carrying bags of groceries.
She drops the bags and picks up the phone.)
ELAINE:
Hello?
(A
fax squeal.)
ELAINE:
What?
(She
checks her answering machine.)
MACHINE:
You have 57 messages. Message one...
(Fax
squeal. She skips to the next message.)
MACHINE:
Message two...
(Fax
squeal. She skips to the next message.)
MACHINE:
Message three...
GEORGE:
Hey, it's George. Listen, I-
(She
skips to the next message.)
MACHINE:
Message four...
(Fax
squeal.)
ELAINE
Kramer!
(The
phone rings. Elaine hesitates and lets it ring. She finally caves and
picks it up.)
EALINE:
Hello?
(Another
fax squeal.)
ELAINE:
Aah!
[INT.
JERRY'S APARTMENT - DAY]
JERRY:
Well Cindy, the place looks great.
(She
grabs her money off the counter.)
CINDY:
Thanks Jerry, gotta run.
JERRY:
Ok, I'll see ya.
(As
Cindy leaves, Jerry gives her a big kiss. Elaine shows up and
watches, amused.)
CINDY:
Hi, Elaine.
(Jerry
groans as Elaine enters and Cindy exits.)
ELAINE:
All right! You're foolin' around with your maid. That is a wise
decision.
JERRY:
Elaine, do you think I would go willy-nilly into a situation so
obviously fraught with potential complications?
ELAINE:
You are paying a woman to come to your house and sleep with
you.
JERRY:
No. I pay her to clean. The rest is--
ELAINE:
What? A health plan?
JERRY:
I was going to say, "Being a good host."
ELAINE:
Oh-ho-ho. Oh.
JERRY:
But the point is we have our personal relationship, and we have our
work relationship. They're separate and, I think, some what
sophisticated.
ELAINE:
So you consider this a relationship?
JERRY:
Yes, I do.
ELAINE:
Oh. Have you been out?
JERRY:
Yes, we have.
ELAINE:
Where did you go?
JERRY:
The store.
ELAINE:
Mm! To get what?
JERRY:
Stuff.
ELAINE:
Cleaning supplies?
JERRY:
And gum.
ELAINE:
Oh. Well, there's nothin' more sophisticated than diddlin' the maid
and then chewin' some gum.
JERRY:
She's not a maid. She might be a news woman!
(Kramer
enters.)
KRAMER:
Hey. Well, I just saw Madeline off. Yeah. She's in a cab and--nguh
nguh nguh--on her way. I miss her already.
(Kramer
sits down on the couch.)
ELAINE:
Hey, Kramer, what was it you were having faxed to my house every 30
seconds?
KRAMER:
Well, I signed up for a food delivery service, Now We're Cookin'.
That's a play on words. You know, they're faxing me the menus from
some restaurants.
ELAINE:
Which ones?
KRAMER:
Well, all of them. It's the deluxe package.
ELAINE:
So this is never gonna stop?
KRAMER:
Well, it better not. Paid for the whole year. So, should I pick those
up later?
ELAINE:
You can pick 'em up right now.
(Elaine
imitates the fax squeal right into Kramer's ear.)
KRAMER:
Ah!
[INT.
ELAINE'S APARTMENT - DAY]
(She
fondles a candle stick as a phone man fixes her phone.)
ELAINE
(thinking): I wonder if anyone knows he's here. If he just
disappeared...would anybody notice?
PHONE
MAN: All right, miss Benes, all finished. Here's your new
number.
ELAINE:
Ahem. 646? What is this?
PHONE
MAN: That's your new area code.
ELAINE:
I thought 646 was just for new numbers.
PHONE
MAN: This is a new number.
ELAINE:
No, no, no, no. It's not a new number. It's--it's--it's just a
changed number. See? It's not different. It's the same,
just...changed.
PHONE
MAN: Look, I work for the phone company. I've had a lot of experience
with semantics, so don't try to lure me into some maze of circular
logic.
ELAINE:
You know, I could've killed you, and no one would've known.
PHONE
MAN: I could've killed you, and no one would've known.
[INT.
JERRY'S APARTMENT - NIGHT]
JERRY:
Kramer, you're still on the phone?
(Kramer
is sitting on the couch with a blanket. He's on the phone.)
KRAMER:
Madeline and I are watching Quincy together. Jerry, you know this
comes on at the same time here as it does there?
JERRY:
Really? It's Tuesday here. What day is it there?
KRAMER
(into phone): Jerry's teasing. Uh-oh! Commercial. Oh, you going to
the bathroom? Yeah. I'll go, too.
(Kramer
gets up and Jerry grabs the phone from him.)
JERRY:
Madeline stays here.
(George
enters.)
JERRY:
Hey, T-bone!
GEORGE:
No. No T-bone.
JERRY:
No T-bone?
KRAMER
(from bathroom): Hey, is that T-bone?!
JERRY:
No! There's no T-bone!
KRAMER:
Well, why no T-bone?!
JERRY:
Why no T-bone?
GEORGE:
'Cause Neil Watkins from accounting is T-bone!
(Kramer
returns from the bathroom and picks up the phone.)
KRAMER:
Oh, yeah I'm back. Hey, you wanna play cards over the phone?
(Kramer
opens the door.)
KRAMER:
Oh, hey, uh, listen, Jerry, uh, laundry's pilin' up there. You might
want to tell your girlfriend. Mmm. Yeah.
(Kramer
leaves.)
GEORGE:
Your girlfriend is doin' your laundry?
KRAMER
(from hallway): He's sleeping with his maid!
GEORGE:
You're sleepin' with the maid?
JERRY:
Yes.
GEORGE:
I've done that. Did you ever eat an ostrich burger?
JERRY:
No.
[EXT.
CITY SIDEWALK - DAY]
(Elaine
and a man are talking.)
MAN:
You're probably one of those women who doesn't like to give out her
number.
ELAINE:
No, I'm not. Here you go.
MAN:
646?
ELAINE:
It's a new area code.
MAN:
What area? New Jersey?
ELAINE:
No, no. It's right here in the city. It's the same as 212. They just
multiplied it by 3, and then they added one to the middle number.
It's the same.
MAN:
Do I have to dial a one first?
(Elaine
nods and the man crumples up her number.)
MAN:
I'm really kinda seein' somebody.
ELAINE:
Yeah? Well, so am I!
[INT.
KRUGER'S OFFICE BUILDING - DAY]
GEORGE:
Excuse me. Can I talk to you for a second there, Watkins?
(George
and Watkins stand just outside the conference room
talking.)
WATKINS:
It's T-bone.
GEORGE:
The thing is...I'm supposed to be T-bone.
WATKINS:
Heh heh. You're not a T-bone. You're a perfect George.
GEORGE:
What? Now, you listen to me!
(Kruger
and a few other people watch George through the window of the
conference room door.)
KRUGER:
Hey, look at George. He's givin' it to T-bone. He's jumpin' up and
down like some kind of monkey. Hey, what was the name of that monkey
that could read sign language?
WATKINS:
All right, you can have T-bone. Stop crying.
GEORGE
(sniffling): I'm not crying. And I shouldn't have said that about
your wife. Please accept my apologies.
(Watkins
and George enter the conference room.)
GEORGE:
Ok, everybody, uh...I have an announcement to make. From now on, I
will be known as-
KRUGER:
Koko the monkey.
GEORGE:
What?
ALL
(chanting): Koko! Koko! Koko! Koko! Koko! Koko! Koko! Koko! Koko!
Koko!
[INT.
ELAINE'S APARTMENT - DAY]
(Elaine
walks down the hallway. Two people exit an apartment.)
MAN:
Thank you both for being here.
EALINE:
Um, excuse me. I live in the building. Did something happen to Mrs.
Krantz?
MAN:
She passed.
ELAINE:
Oh, I'm so sorry.
MAN:
Thank you.
ELAINE:
A quick question-- did she by any chance have a 212 phone
number?
[INT.
JERRY'S APARTMENT - DAY]
CINDY:
I can't find my earring. Oh, here it is.
(Cindy
walks into Jerry's bedroom. Kramer enters.)
KRAMER:
Hey, listen, can I borrow your suitcases?
JERRY:
Yeah. It's in your closet.
KRAMER:
No, no, no. I looked.
JERRY:
They're behind my skis and my tennis racket.
KRAMER:
Thanks, buddy.
JERRY:
Where you goin'?
KRAMER:
Huh? Well, I'm gettin' out of town. I'm gonna visit Madeline for the
weekend. You know, this place is lookin' kinda messy. What happened
to Cindy?
JERRY:
Well, she's here. She just didn't get around to it.
KRAMER:
Oh.
(Cindy
comes from Jerry's bedroom.)
CINDY:
Hi, Kramer.
(She
picks up her money from the counter.)
CINDY:
Thanks, Jerry. Bye.
(She
leaves.)
KRAMER:
Well, what's the matter?
JERRY:
What did I just pay for?
KRAMER:
Uh-oh. You're a john.
[INT.
MONK'S RESTAURANT - DAY]
JERRY:
Koko?
(George
and Jerry are sitting at the counter.)
GEORGE:
Koko.
JERRY:
Well, it's probably the most intelligent ape there is.
GEORGE:
Yeah. So, how's Cindy the maid?
JERRY:
Well, everything's goin' great except, basically, I'm payin' for
sex.
GEORGE:
Tell me about it. I went out with this girl last week. First I had to
pay for dinner, then--
JERRY:
No, George. She's coming over and not cleaning. It's like I'm seein'
a prostitute.
GEORGE:
How much you pay this maid?
JERRY:
40.
GEORGE:
40? I'm payin' 60 to my maid. She doesn't do laundry and I'm gettin'
nothin'. All right. Once she pinched my ass, but I don't know what
that was.
JERRY:
I don't know what this is.
(Kramer
enters and sits at the counter so George is between him and
Jerry.)
KRAMER:
Hey, hey, hey. Look at that.
(Kramer
shows of his I Love New York shirt.)
JERRY:
Ooh.
KRAMER:
Jerry, you wouldn't believe what it's like down there. Taxicab
drivers are insane. You know, everybody is in a hurry.
GEORGE:
I can't eat with you leanin' over like this. Just look straight
forward.
KRAMER:
Well, now I can't see Jerry.
JERRY:
I look about the same.
GEORGE:
What?
JERRY:
I was talking to him.
KRAMER:
What?
JERRY:
Never mind.
KRAMER:
Come on. What'd he say?
GEORGE:
Never mind.
KRAMER:
Jerry, come on. What'd you say?
(Kramer
and Jerry try to talk to each other by leaning back and forth, but
keep missing each other. Jerry leans forward to look at Kramer, but
Kramer leans back. Kramer leans forward, Jerry leans back.)
JERRY:
What?
KRAMER:
Come on. Where'd you go?
JERRY:
Go back.
KRAMER:
Eh! Come on. What did you say?
JERRY:
I said, never mind.
KRAMER:
Yeah. I know that. Uh, uh.
JERRY:
I hate the counter.
(Elaine
enters and sits at the counter next to Jerry.)
ELAINE:
Hey.
JERRY:
Hey.
ELAINE:
I hate the counter.
KRAMER:
Who's that?
ELAINE
(to Jerry): Well, I got a 212 number from this little old lady in my
building-- Mrs. Krantz.
JERRY:
Oh, she didn't mind?
ELAINE:
No. She died.
JERRY:
Hey, that's great.
GEORGE:
What happened to Mrs. Krantz?
JERRY:
Elaine got a new number because she died.
KRAMER:
Newman died?
ELAINE:
What did he say?
JERRY:
Some new kind of pie.
GEORGE:
I'll try a piece.
KRAMER:
All right, who's down there?
JERRY:
Hey, there's a booth.
(They
all get up to move.)
KRAMER:
Hey, Elaine.
ELAINE:
Oh, hi.
KRAMER:
Did you hear about Newman?
ELAINE:
What?
(Kramer
whimpers.)
[INT.
JERRY'S APARTMENT - DAY]
(Jerry
is cleaning his kitchen and Cindy is reclined on the sofa. George
enters.)
GEORGE:
Hey.
JERRY:
So how's it goin' at work? They get tired of it?
GEORGE:
Oh, yeah.
(He
unfurls a jersey that reads, "Koko 00.")
JERRY:
Double zero?
GEORGE:
It's "ooh" As in "ooh ooh ah ah."
CINDY:
Your nickname's Koko? One of the girls down at the maid service is
named Coco.
GEORGE:
Really? Coco?
CINDY:
Yeah. Coco. That girl's all right.
(Cindy
gets up and goes into Jerry's bedroom.)
GEORGE:
You know, if I could get this Coco woman down to Kruger, they
wouldn't be able to call me Koko anymore because Kruger would never
allow 2 Kokos.
JERRY:
Sounds like he runs a real tight ship.
GEORGE:
Say good-bye to Koko.
(George
leaves as Kramer enters.)
JERRY:
Good-bye, Koko.
KRAMER:
Bye, Koko. Whew! Jerry, this relationship is killing me. The
distance, the longing, the distance, the-- you know, I didn't realize
it, but I'm a needy person.
JERRY:
Kramer, maybe this relationship isn't for you.
KRAMER:
Oh, yeah? So what am I supposed to do, be more like you? All sealed
up in here, emotionally unavailable, paying scrubwomen for sexual
favors! No! Jerry, I won't be like you! Never! I'll never be like
you!
(Kramer
storms out of the apartment and Cindy returns.)
CINDY:
What was that?
JERRY:
I didn't hear anything.
CINDY:
All right, I'm takin' off. Aren't you forgetting something?
JERRY:
Oh, right! Hey, it was great seeing you again. I love your
outfit.
CINDY:
No. My money.
JERRY:
For what?
CINDY:
For my maid services. You booked me for today.
JERRY:
But you didn't really do any work.
CINDY:
I made the bed.
JERRY:
But you took a nap in it.
CINDY:
So?
JERRY:
I thought that was kind of girlfriend bed making.
CINDY:
No. That was the maid.
JERRY:
Well, who took the nap?
CINDY:
The girlfriend.
JERRY:
$40 seems kind of steep for a nap.
CINDY:
So, what are you saying? That I'm a bad maid or some kind of a
prostitute?
JERRY:
Ho, ho...ho! Hold on. Let's keep this sophisticated.
CINDY:
You know, I don't think I want to be your girlfriend or your
maid.
JERRY:
So is this a breakup/quitting?
CINDY:
Yeah. Don't ever call me or hire me again.
(Cindy
walks out of Jerry's apartment.)
JERRY:
Oh, yeah? Well, then, we're through! And you're fired!
[INT.
ELAINE'S APARTMENT - DAY]
PHONE
MAN: Sign here.
ELAINE:
Yes! 212.
(Elaine
and the phone man.)
ELAINE:
Hey, what happened to the guy I had last time?
PHONE
MAN: Oh, you know, it's an odd thing. He went out on a job and never
came back. Nobody knows what happened.
(The
phone man leaves and the phone rings.)
ELAINE:
All right! I am back in the game.
(She
picks up the phone.)
ELAINE:
Hello?
BOY:
Gammy!
ELAINE:
No. You got the wrong number, kid.
BOY:
Gammy Krantz, it's your grandson Bobby. Why haven't you
called?
ELAINE:
Oh...nuts.
BOY:
Do you hate me 'cause of my lazy eye?
ELAINE:
No. It's just that I've been kind of buried over here.
[INT.
JERRY'S APARTMENT - NIGHT]
(Elaine
and Jerry are playing Battleship.)
JERRY:
So the kid doesn't know his grandmother is dead? G-5?
ELAINE:
Hit. No. I guess his parents didn't want to tell him. B-2?
JERRY:
Miss.
ELAINE:
He called 6 times yesterday. What a nightmare it must be to have a
real family.
JERRY:
I wouldn't worry about it. B-6?
ELAINE:
Hit. Uhh...you sank my submarine.
JERRY:
Elaine...
(Elaine
makes an explosion sound. Jerry nods in approval. The phone rings and
Jerry answers.)
[JERRY'S
APARTMENT/PHONE BOOTH]
JERRY:
Hello?
COMPUTER
VOICE: You have a collect call from--
KRAMER:
Hey, buddy, don't say no!
JERRY:
I accept.
KRAMER:
I went down to Madeline's. I told her, "You gotta move, or it's
over."
JERRY:
Well, what happened?
(Elaine
gets up and leaves.)
KRAMER:
I think it's over. We had a big fight, she threw me out, I started
walkin', and now I'm lost downtown! I don't have any money. I don't
recognize anybody. I miss home, and I don't even know how to get
there.
JERRY:
What's around you?
KRAMER:
I'm lookin' at Ray's Pizza. You know where that is?
JERRY:
Is it Famous Ray's?
KRAMER:
No. It's Original Ray's.
JERRY:
Famous Original Ray's?
KRAMER:
It's just Original, Jerry!
JERRY:
Well, what street are you on?
KRAMER:
Hey, I'm on first and first. How can the same street intersect with
itself? I must be at the nexus of the universe.
JERRY:
Just wait there. I'll pick you up, and, Kramer, stay alive no matter
what occurs, I will find you!
KRAMER:
Aah!
(Jerry
leaves.)
[EXT.
CITY STREET - NIGHT]
(Jerry
finds a man waiting by his car.)
MAN:
You Steinfeld?
JERRY:
Yeah.
MAN:
My name is Maxwell. I'm from Maid To Order. It's a pun. I sent one of
my girls over to your place.
JERRY:
Cindy.
MAN:
She says she had a little problem with you. You didn't pay.
JERRY:
You know, she didn't really do what she was supposed to do.
MAN:
Oh, yeah? She told me what you like. You're a little sickie, aren't
you? Disinfectant on the blinds, vacuuming the counter--
JERRY:
Hey, come on. Come on. I gotta live around here.
MAN:
You know what I do to people who stiff me on a job?
JERRY:
What?
MAN:
Well, it kinda depends on the situation, but if I don't get my money
from you, I'm gonna get it from her.
JERRY:
I don't want to make trouble. You want the money? Here.
MAN:
Hey! Wait, wait, wait! Whoa! Give it to the girl. I'm an independent
contractor. Tax purposes.
[INT.
ELAINE'S APARTMENT - NIGHT]
(Elaine
is sitting on her couch flipping through a magazine. She's on the
phone.)
ELAINE:
Bobby, you gotta stop calling your Gammy. Why? Because sometimes you
call very early in the morning when Gammy has been out late the night
before and sometimes when Gammy's not alone. Your parents still
haven't said anything to you about your Gammy? (sighs) All right,
here we go. (coughing) Gammy doesn't feel so good. I think Gammy
might be dying. Yep. Yep. Ok. Good-bye, Bobby. Don't call anymore.
I'm dead now. Gotta go.
(Bobby
dials 911.)
BOBBY:
9-1-1.
[EXT.
CITY STREET - NIGHT]
(Jerry
is driving down the street when he sees Cindy walking on the
sidewalk.)
JERRY:
Nexus of the universe. Hey, Cindy. Cindy.
CINDY:
What do you want?
JERRY:
Here. I got your money.
CINDY:
I don't want any money from you.
JERRY:
Come on. Take it. It's money. Let me give it to ya.
(A
police cruiser pulls up with lights on.)
POLICE:
Looking for a good time, sir? You wanna step out of the car,
sickie?
JERRY:
Well, this is all very sophisticated.
[INT.
ELAINE'S APARTMENT - NIGHT]
(Elaine
is sitting on the sofa reading when there is a pounding on the door.
The door bursts open and some fire fighters run in.)
FIREMAN:
All right, hang on, Gammy! You're gonna make it!
ELAINE:
Aah!
[EXT.
CITY STREET - NIGHT]
(Kramer
is waiting near a phone booth with a suitcase. A car pulls up. It's
Maxwell.)
MAXWELL:
Hey, you look a little lost. You from around here?
KRAMER:
Uh, no.
MAXWELL:
You know where you're going?
KRAMER:
Not really. My friend was supposed to pick me up, but I don't know
where he is.
MAXWELL:
Doesn't sound like much of a friend. You got any money?
KRAMER:
Uh, no.
MAXWELL:
You wanna make some?
KRAMER:
Ok.
MAXWELL:
Do you know how to use a mop wringer?
KRAMER:
Yeah, yeah.
MAXWELL:
Why don't you get in the car?
(Kramer
hops in.)
KRAMER:
Hi. Ahh...these are soft seats.
(The
two drive off.)
[INT.
MEETING ROOM - NIGHT]
KRUGER:
Hey, Koko, Who's this?
(Everyone
is gathered again around the conference table. George is standing
introducing the newest employee.)
GEORGE:
This is our new Vice-president of Acquisitions, sir.
KRUGER:
So you're just hiring new people now? That's your job, to hire
people?
GEORGE:
Yes?
KRUGER:
Ok, good enough for me, Koko.
(George
sits down.)
KRUGER:
Ahem. Now, what's your name?
COCO:
My name is Coco. Coco Higgins.
GEORGE:
Coco?
KRUGER:
We can't have 2 Cocos. So I guess you're back to being
George.
GEORGE:
Well, it was a hell of a ride.
KRUGER:
All right, the Grace building. There's a big stain on the front. How
do we get it off?
COCO:
When I was a little girl in Jamaica, my Gammy taught me to take a wet
rag and in a circ--
GEORGE:
Ah, excuse me, Vice-president Coco, no one cares about your
Gammy.
COCO:
What did you say about my Gammy?
GEORGE:
Forget Gammy.
KRUGER:
Who's Gammy?
GEORGE:
There's no Gammy.
KRUGER:
Maybe there should be a Gammy.
GEORGE:
Oh, no.
KRUGER:
George.
ALL
(chanting): Gammy! Gammy! Gammy! Gammy! Gammy! Gammy! Gammy!
GEORGE:
Gammy's gettin' upset!
The
End