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Sunset Blvd. (1950)
by Charles Brackett, Billy Wilder, D.M. Marshman, Jr.
March 21,1949.
More info about this movie on imdb.com



                       SEQUENCE "A"  


A-l-4   START the picture with the actual street sign:
        SUNSET BOULEVARD, stencilled on a curbstope.
        In the gutter lie dead leaves, scraps of paper,
        burnt matches and cigarette butts.  It is early
        morning.

        Now the CAMERA leaves the sign and MOVES EAST, the
        grey asphalt of the street filling the screen.  As
        speed accelerates to around 40 m.p.h., traffic de-
        marcations, white arrows, speed-limit warnings, man-
        hole covers, etc., flash by.  SUPERIMPOSED on all
        this are the CREDIT TITLES, in the stencilled style
        of the street sign.

        Over the scene we now hear         MAN'S VOICE
        sirens.  Police squad cars    Yes, this is Sunset
        hurtle toward the camera,     Boulevard, Los Angeles,
        turn off the road into a      California.  It's about
        driveway with squealing       five o'clock in the
        brakes.  Dismounted motor-    morning.  That's the
        cycle cops stand directing    Homicide Squad, com-
        the cars in.                  plete with detectives
                                      and newspaper men.
A-5     PATIO AND POOL OF             A murder has been re-
        MANSION                       ported from one of those
                                      great big houses in the
        The policemen and news-       ten thousand block.
        paper reporters and           You'll read all about
        photographers have            it in the late editions,
        jumped out of the cars        I'm sure.  You'll get
        and are running up to         it over your radio,
        the pool, in which a          and see it on tele-
        body is seen floating.        vision -- because an
        Photographers' bulbs          old-time star is in-
        flash in rapid suc-           volved.  one of the big-
        cession.                      gest.  But before you
                                      hear it all distorted
                                      and blown out of
                                      proportion, before those
                                      Hollywood columnists
                                      get their hands on it,
                                      maybe you'd like to
                                      hear the facts, the
                                      whole truth...

A-6     FLASH OF THE BODY
                                        MAN'S VOICE
        Angle up through the       If so, you've come to the
        water from the bottom      right party...  You see,
        of the pool, as the        the body of a young man
        body floats face down-     was found floating in the
        ward.  It is a well-       pool of her mansion, with
        dressed young man.         two shots in his back and
                                   one in his stomach.  No-
                                   body important, really.
                                   Just a movie writer with
                                   a couple of "B" pictures
                                   to his credit.  The poor
                                   dope.  He always wanted a
                                   pool Well, in the end
                                   he got himself a pool --
        SLOW DISSOLVE TO:          only the price turned out
                                   to be a little high...
                                   Let's go back about six
A-7     HOLLYWOOD, SEEN FROM       months and find the day
        THE HILLTOP AT IVAR        when it all started.
        & FRANKLIN STREETS

        It is a crisp sunny        I was living in an
        day.  The voice con-       apartment house above
        tinues speaking as         Franklin and Ivar.
        CAMERA PANS toward         Things were tough
        the ALTO NIDO APART-       at the moment.  I hadn't
        MENT HOUSE, an ugly        worked in a studio for
        Moorish structure ofsat    a long time.  So I
        stucco, about four         there grinding
        stories high.  CAMERA      out original stories,
        MOVES TOWARD AN OPEN       two a week.  Only I
        WINDOW on the third        seemed to have lost
        floor, where we look       my touch.  Maybe they
        in on JOE GILLIS' APART-   weren't original
        MENT.  Joe Gillis, bare-   enough.  Maybe they
        footed and wearing no-     were too original.
        thing but an old bath-     All I know is they
        robe.  is sitting on       didn't sell.
        the bed.  In front of
        him.  on a straight
        chair, is a portable
        typewriter.  Beside
        him, on the bed, is a
        dirty ashtray and a
        scattering of type
        written and pencil-
        marked pages.  Gillis
        is typing.  with a
        pencil clenched bet-
        ween his teeth.



A-8     JOE GILLIS' APARTMENT

        It is a one-room affair with an unmade Murphy bed
        pulled out of the wall at which Gillis sits typing.
        There are a couple of worn-out plush chairs and a
        Spanish-style, wrought-iron standing lamp.  Also a
        small desk littered with books and letters, and a
        chest of drawers with a portable phonograph and some
        records on top.  On the walls are a couple of repro-
        ductions of characterless paintings, with laundry
        bills and snapshots stuck in the frames.  Through an
        archway can he seen a tiny kitchenette, complete with
        unwashed coffee pot and cup, empty tin cans, orange
        peels, etc.  The effect is dingy and cheerless --
        just another furnished apartment.  The buzzer SOUNDS.

                          GILLIS
               Yeah.

        The buzzer SOUNDS again.  Gillis gets up and opens
        the door.  Two men wearing hats stand outside one of
        them carrying a briefcase.

                          NO. 1
               Joseph C. Gillis?

                          GILLIS
               That's right.

        The men ease into the room.  No. 1 hands Gillis a
        business card.

                          NO. 1
               We've come for the car.

                          GILLIS
               What car?

                          NO. 2
                    (Consulting a paper)
               1946 Plymouth convertible.  Calif-
               ornia license 97 N 567.

                          NO. 1
               Where are the keys?

                          GILLIS
               Why should I give you the keys?


                          NO. 1
               Because the company's played ball
               with you long enough.  Because
               you're three payments behind.  And
               because we've got a Court order.
               Come on -- the keys.

                          NO. 2
               Or do you want us to jack it up
               and haul it away?

                          GILLIS
               Relax, fans.  The car isn't here.

                          NO. 1
               Is that So?

                          GILLIS
               I lent it to a friend of mine.
               He took it up to Palm Springs.

                          NO. 1
               Had to get away for his health,
               I suppose.

                          GILLIS
               You don't believe me?  Look in
               the garage.

                          NO. 1
               Sure we believe you, only now we
               want you to believe us.  That car
               better be back here by noon tomorrow,
               or there's going to be fireworks.

                          GILLIS
               You say the cutest things.

        The men leave.  Gillis                 GILLIS' VOICE
        stands pondering beside    Well, I needed about two
        the door for a moment.     hundred and ninety dollars
        Then he walks to the       and I needed it real
        center of the room and,    quick, or I'd lose my car.
        with his back to the       It wasn't in Palm Springs
        CAMERA, slips into a       and it wasn't in the
        pair of gray slacks.       garage.  I was way ahead
        There is a metallic        of the finance company.
        noise as some loose
        change and keys drop
        from the trouser pockets.
        As Gillis bends over to
        pick them up, we see that
        he has dropped the car
        keys, identifiable be-
        cause of a rabbit's
        foot and a miniature
        license plate attached
        to the key-ring.  Gillis
        pockets the keys and as
        he starts to put on a
        shirt

        DISSOLVE TO:

A-9     EXTERIOR OF RUDY'S                   GILLIS' VOICE
        SHOESHINE PARLOR (DAY)                
                                      I knew they'd be coming
        A small shack-like build-     around and I wasn't tak-
        ing, it stands in the         ing any chances, so I
        corner of a public park-      kept it a couple of
        ing lot.  Rudy, a             blocks away in a parking
        colored boy, is giving        lot behind Rudy's Shoe-
        a customer a shine.           shine Parlor.  Rudy
                                      never asked any quest-
                                      ions.  He'd just look at
                                      your heels and know the
                                      score.

        PAN BEHIND the shack to GILLIS' CAR, a yellow 1946
        Plymouth convertible with the top down.  Gillis enters
        the SHOT.  He is wearing a tweed sport jacket, a tan
        polo shirt, and moooasins.  He steps into the car and
        drives it off.  Rudy winks after him.


A-10    THE ALLEY NEXT TO SIDNEY'S
        MEN'S SHOP ON BRONSON AVE.            GILLIS' VOICE
                                      I had an original story
        Gillis drives into the        kicking around Paranount.
        alley and parks his car       My agent told me it was
        right behind a delivery       dead as a doornail.  but
        truck.  PAN AND FOLLOW        I knew a big shot over
        HIM as he gets out, walks     there who'd always liked
        around the corner into        me, and the time had
        Bronson and then toward       come to take a little
        the towering main gate of     advantage of it.  His
        Paramount.  A few loafers,    name was Sheldrake.  He
        studio cops and extras are    was a smart producer,
        lounging there.               with a set of ulcers to
                                      prove it.

        DISSOLVE TO:

A-11    SHELDRAKE'S OFFICE

        It is in the style of a Paramount executive's office --
        mahogany, leather, and a little chintz.  On the
        walls are some large framed photographs of Paramount
        stars, with dedications to Mr. Sheldrake.  Also a
        couple of framed critics' awards certificates, and an
        Oscar on a bookshelf.  A shooting schedule chart is
        thumb-tacked into a large bulletin board.  There are
        piles or scripts, a few pipes and, somewhere in the
        background, some set models.

        Start on Sheldrake.  He is about 45.  Behind his wor-
        ried face there hides a coated tongue.  He is en-
        gaged in changing the stained rilter cigarette in
        his Zeus holder.

                          SHELDRAKE
               All right, Gillis.  You've got
               five minutes.  What's your story
               about?

                          GILLIS
               It's about a ball player, a rookie
               shortstop that's batting 347.  The
               poor kid was once mixed up in a hold-
               up.  But he's trying to go straight --
               except there's a bunch of gamblers
               who won't let him.

                          SHELDRAKE
               So they tell the kid to throw the
               World Series, or else, huh?

                          GILLIS
               More or less.  Only for the end
               I've got a gimmick that's real good.

        A secretary enters, carrying a glass or milk.
        She opens a drawer and takes out a bottle of pills for
        Sheldrake.

                          SHELDRAKE
               Got a title?

                          GILLIS
               Bases Loaded.  There's a 4O-page
               outline.

                          SHELDRAKE
                    (To the secretary)
               Get the Readers' Department and
               see what they have on Bases Loaded.

        The secretary exits.  Sheldrake takes a pill and
        washes it down with some milk.

                          GILLIS
               They're pretty hot about it
               over at Twentieth, but I
               think Zanuck's all wet.  Can
               you see Ty Power as a

                          GILLIS (cont'd)
               shortstop?  You've got the best
               man for it right here on this lot.
               Alan Ladd.  Good change of pace for
               Alan Ladd.  There's another thing:
               it's pretty simple to shoot.  Lot
               of outdoor stuff.  Bet you could
               make the whole thing for under a
               million.  And there's a great little
               part for Bill Demarest.  One of the
               trainers, an oldtime player who
               got beaned and goes out of his head
               sometimes.

        The door opens and Betty Schaefer enters -- a clean-
        cut, nice looking girl of 21, with a bright, alert
        manner.  Dressed in tweed skirt, Brooks sweater and
        pearls, and carrying a folder of papers.  She puts
        them on Sheldrake's desk, not noticing Gillis, who
        stands near the door.

                          BETTY
               Hello, Mr. Sheldrake.  On that Bases
               Loaded.  I covered it with a 2-page
               synopsis.
                    (She holds it out)
               But I wouldn't bother.

                          SHELDRAKE
               What's wrong with it?

                          BETTY
               It's from hunger.

                          SHELDRAKE
               Nothing for Ladd?

                          BETTY
               Just a rehash of something that
               wasn't very good to begin with.

                          SHELDRAKE
               I'm sure you'll be glad to meet
               Mr. Gillis.  He wrote it.

        Betty turns towards Gillis, embarrassed.

                          SHELDRAKE
               This is Miss Kramer.

                          BETTY
               Schaefer.  Betty Schaefer.  And
               right now I wish I could crawl
               into a hole and pull it in after
               me.

                          GILLIS
               If I could be of any help...

                          BETTY
               I'm sorry, Mr. Gillis, but I
               just don't think it's any good.
               I found it flat and banal.

                          GILLIS
               Exactly what kind of material do
               you recommend?  James Joyce?
               Dostoosvsky?

                          SHELDRAKE
               Name dropper.

                          BETTY
               I just think pictures should say
               a little something.

                          GILLIS
               Oh, you're one of the message
               kids.  Just a story won't do.
               You'd have turned down Gone With the
               Wind.

                          SHELDRAKE
               No, that was me.  I said, Who
               wants to see a Civil War picture?

                          BETTY
               Perhaps the reason I hated Bases
               Loaded is that I knew your name.
               I'd always heard you had some
               talent.

                          GILLIS
               That was last year.  This year
               I'm trying to earn a living.

                          BETTY
               So you take Plot 27-A, make it
               glossy, make it slick --

                          SHELDRAKE
               Carefull Those are dirty words!
               You sound like a bunch of New
               York critics.  Thank you, Miss
               Schaefer.

                          BETTY
               Goodbye, Mr. Gillis.

                          GILLIS
               Goodbye.  Next time I'll write
               The Naked and the Dead.


        Betty leaves.

                          SHELDRAKE
               Well, seems like Zanuck's got
               himself a baseball picture.

                          GILLIS
               Mr. Sheldrake, I don't want you
               to think I thought this was going
               to win any Academy Award.

                          SHELDRAKE
                    (His mind free-wheeling)
               Of course, we're always looking
               for a Betty Hutton.  Do you see
               it as a Betty Hutton?

                          GILLIS
               Frankly, no.

                          SHELDRAKE
                    (Amusing himself)
               Now wait a minute.  If we made
               it a girls' softball team, put
               in a few numbers.  Might make a
               cute musical: It Happened in
               the Bull Pen -- the story of a
               Woman.

                          GILLIS
               You trying to be funny?  -- because
               I'm all out of laughs.  I'm over a
               barrel and I need a job.

                          SHELDRAKE
               Sure, Gillis.  If something should
               come along -

                          GILLIS
               Along is no good.  I need it now.

                          SHELDRAKE
               Haven't got a thing.

                          GILLIS
               Any kind of assignment.  Additional
               Dialogue.

                          SHELDRAKE
               There's nothing, Gillis.  Not
               even if you were a relative.

                           GILLIS
                     (Hating it)
               Look, Mr. Sheldrake, could you
               let me have three hundred bucks
               yourself, as a personal loan?

                           SHELDRAKE
               Could I?  Gillis, last year some-
               body talked me into buying a ranch
               in the valley.  So I borrowed money
               from the bank so I could pay for
               the ranch.  This year I had to
               mortgage the ranch so I could keep
               up my life insurance so I could
               borrow on the insurance so I could
               pay my income tax.  Now if Dewey
               had been elected -

                           GILLIS
               Goodbye, Mr. Sheldrake.

        DISSOLVE TO:


A-12    EXT. SCHWAB'S DRUG STORE
        (EARLY AFTERNOON ACTIVITY)         GILLIS' VOICE
                                    After that I drove down
        MOVE IN toward drug store   to headquarters.  That's
        and                         the way a lot of us think
                                    about Schwab's Drug Store.
        DISSOLVE TO:                Actors and stock girls and
                                    waiters.  Kind of a
                                    combination office,Kaffee-
A-13    INT. SCHWAB'S DRUG STORE    Klatsch and waiting room.
                                    Waiting, waiting for the
        The usual Schwabadero       gravy train.
        crowd sits at the fount-
        ain, gossips at the
        cigar-stand, loiters by
        the magazine display.
        MOVE IN towards the TWO
        TELEPHONE BOOTHS.  In       I got myself ten nickels
        one of them sits Gillis,    and started sending out
        a stack of nickels in       a general S.O.S.  Couldn't
        front of him.  He's         get hold of my agent,
        doing a lot of talking      naturally.  So then I
        into the telephone,         called a pal of mine,name
        hanging up, dropping        of Artie Green -- an awful
        another nickel, dialing,    nice guy, an assistant
        talking again.              director.  He cquld let me
                                    have twenty, but twenty
                                    wouldn't do.

                                         GILLIS' VOICE (Cont.)
                              Then I talked to a couple of
                              yes men at Twentieth.  To me
                              they said no.  Finally I
                              located that agent of mine, the
                              big faker.  Was he out digging
                              up a job for poor Joe Gillis?
                              Hmph! He was hard at work in
                              Bel Air, making with the golf
                              clubs.

        Gillis hangs up with a curse, opens the door of the
        booth, emerges, wiping the sweat from his forehead.
        He walks toward the exit.  He is stopped by the
        voice of

                          SKOLSKY
               Hello, Gillis.

        Gillis looks around.  At the fountain sits Skolsky,
        drinking a cup of coffee.

                          GILLIS
               Hello, Mr. Skolsky.

                          SKOLSKY
               Got anything for the column?

                          GILLIS
               Sure.  Just sold an original for
               a hundred grand.  The Life of the
               Warner Brothers.  Starring the Ritz
               Brothers.  Playing opposite the
               Andrew Sisters.

                          SKOLSKY
                    (With a sour smile)
               But don't get me wrong -- I love
               Hollywood.

        Gillis walks out.

        DISSOLVE TO:


A-14    THE BEL AIR GOLF LINKS

        On a sun-dappled green edged with tall sycamores,
        stands Morino, the agent, a caddy and a nondescript
        opponent in the background.  Gillis has evidently
        stated his problem already.


                          MORINO
               So you need three hundred dollars?
               Of course, I could give you three
               hundred dollars.  Only I'm not
               going to.

                          GILLIS
               No?

                          MORINO
               Gillis, get this through your
               head.  I'm not just your agent.
               It's not the ten per cent.  I'm
               your friend.

        He sinks his putt and walks toward the next tee,
        Gillis following him.

                          GILLIS
               How's that about your being my
               friend?

                          MORINO
               Don't you know the finest things
               in the world have been written on
               an empty stomach?  Once a talent
               like yours gets into that Mocambo-
               Romanoff rut, you're through.

                          GILLIS
               Forget Romanoff's.  It's the car
               I'm talking about.  If I lose my
               car it's like having my legs out off.

                          MORINO
               Greatest thing that could happen
               to you.  Now you'll have to sit
               behind that typewriter.  Now
               you'll have to write.

                          GILLIS
               What do you think I've been doing?
               I need three hundred dollars.

                          MORINO
                    (Icily)
               Maybe what you need is another agent.

        He bends down to tee up his ball.  Gillis turns away.

        DISSOLVE TO:


A-15    GILLIS IN HIS OPEN CAR
                                             GILLIS' VOICE
        driving down Sunset      As I drove back towards town
        towards Hollywood.  He   I took inventory of my pros-
        drives slowly.  His      pects.  They now added up to
        mind is working.          exactly zero.  Apparently I
                                 just didn't have what it takes,
                                 and the time had come to wrap
                                 up the whole Hollywood deal
                                 and go home.  Maybe if I hocked
                                 all my junk there'd be enough
                                 for a bus ticket back to Ohio,
                                 back to that thirty-five-
                                 dollar-a-week job behind the
                                 copy desk of the Dayton Evening
                                 Post, if it was still open.
                                 Back to the smirking delight
                                 of the whole office.  All
        Gillis stops his car at  right you wise guys.  why don't
        a red light by the main  you go out and take a crack at
        entrance to Bel Air.     Hollywood?  Maybe you think
        Suddenly his eyes fall   you could -- Oh-oh!
        on:


A-16    ANOTHER CAR

        It is a dark-green Dodge business coupe, also waiting
        for the light to change.  but headed in the opposite
        direction.  In it are the two finance company men.
        They spot Gillis in his car and exchange looks.  From
        across the intersection Gillis recognizes them and
        pulls down the leather sunshade to screen his face.
        As the light changes.  Gillis gives his car the gun
        and shoots away.  The men narrowly avoid hitting
        another car as they make a U-turn into oncoming
        traffic and start after him.

A-17    THE CHASE
 to
A-21    Very short, very sharp, told in FLASHES.  (Use
        locations on Sunset between Bel Air and Holmby Hills).
        The men lose Gillis around a bend, catch sight of him
        and then -- while they are trapped behind a slow-
        moving truck.  he disappears again.


A-22    GILLIS

        He is driving as fast as he dares, keeping an eye out
        for pursuit in his rear-view mirror.  Suddenly his
        right front tire blows out.  Gillis clutches desperately
        at the steering wheel and manages to turn the careening
        car into

A-23    A DRIVEWAY

        It is overgrown with weeds and screened from the street
        by bushes and trees.  Gillis stops his car about thirty
        feet from the street and looks back.

                                             GILLIS' VOICE
                                   Was I far enough ahead?

A-24    THE OTHER CAR

        shoots past the driveway, still looking for Gillis.

A-25    GILLIS
        He watches his pursuers               GILLIS' VOICE
        shoot past and out of      Yeah...
        sight.  He opens the
        door and looks down at     I had landed myself in the
        the flat tire.  Then he    driveway of some big mansion
        looks around to see        that looked run-down and
        where he is.               deserted.  At the end of the
                                   drive was a lovely sight
A-26    DRIVEWAY WITH GARAGE       indeed -- a great big empty
                                   garage, just standing there
        An enormous, five-car      going to waste.  If ever there
        affair.  neglected and     was a place to stash away a
        empty-looking.             limping car with a hot license
                                   number...
A-27    GILLIS

        He gets back into his      There was another occupant in
        car and carefully pilots   that garage: an enormous
        the limping vehicle into   foreign-built automobile.  It
        one of the stalls.  In     must have burned up ten gallons
        the adjoining one is a     to a mile.  It had a 1932
        large, dust-covered        license.  I figured that's
        Isotta-Fraschini propped   when the owners moved out...
        up on blocks.  He closes   I also figured I couldn't go
        the garage door and walks  back to my apartment now that
        up the driveway.  In idle  those bloodhounds were on to
        curiosity he mounts a      me.  The idea was to get Artie
        stone staircase which      Green's and stay there till I
        leads to the garden.       could make that bus for Ohio.
        CAMERA IN BACK OF HIM.     Once back in Dayton I'd drop
        At the top of the steps    the credit boys a picturepost-
        he sees the somber pile    card telling them where to
        of                         pick up the jallopy.


        NORMA DESMOND'S HOUSE             GILLIS' VOICE
        It is a grandiose --   It was a great big white
        Italianate structure,  elephant of a place.  The kind
        mottled by the years,  crazy movie people built in the
        gloomy, forsaken,      crazy Twenties.  A neglected
        little formal garden   house gets an unhappy look.
        completely gone to     This one had it in spades.  It
        seed.                  was like that old woman in
                               Great Expectations -- that Miss
        From somewhere above   Haversham in her rotting wed-
        comes                  ding dress and her torn veil,
                               taking it out on the world be-
                               cause she'd been given the go-
                               by.

                          A WOMAN'S VOICE
               You there!

        Gillls turns and looks.

A-28    UPSTAIRS LOGGIA

        Behind a bamboo blind there is a movement of
        a dark figure.

                          WOMAN'S VOICE
               Wlly are you so late?  Why have
               you kept me waitlng so long?

A-29    GILLIS

        He stands flabbergasted.  A new noise attracts his
        attention -- the creak of a heavy metal-and-glass
        door being opened.  He turns and sees

A-3O    THE ENTRANCE DOOR OF THE HOUSE

        Max von Mayerling stands there.  He is sixty, and
        all in black, except for immaculate white cotton
        gloves, shirt, high, stiff collar and a white bow
        tie.  His coat is shiny black alpaca, his trousers
        ledger-atriped.  He is semi-paralyzed.  The left
        side of his mouth is pulled down, and he leans on a
        rubber-ferruled stick.

                          MAX
               In here!

        Gillis enters the shot.


                          GILLIS
               I just put my car in the garage.
               I had a blow-out.  I thought --

                          MAX
               Go on in.

        There is authority in the gesture of his white-
        gloved hand as he motions Gillis inside.

                          GILLIS
               Look, maybe I'd better take my
               car --

                          MAX
               Wipe your feet!

        Automatically, Gillis wipes his feet on an enormous
        shabby cocoanut mat.

                          MAX
               You are not dressed properly.

                          GILLIS
               Dressed for what?

                          THE WOMAN'S VOICE
               Max!  Have him come up, Max!

                          MAX
                    (Gesturing)
               Up the stairs!

                          GILLIS
               Suppose you listen just for a
               minute -

                          MAX
               Madame is waiting.

                          GILLIS
               For me?  Okay.

        Gillis enters.


A-31    INT. NORMA DESMOND'S ENTRANCE HALL

        It is grandiose and grim.  The whole place is one of
        those abortions of silent-picture days, with bowling
        alleys in the cellar and a built-in pipe organ, and
        beams imported from Italy, with California termites
        at work on them.  Portieres are drawn before all the
        windows, and only thin slits or sunlight find their
        way in to fight the few electric bulbs which are always
        burning.



        Gillis starts up the curve of the black marble
        staircase.  It has a wrought-iron rail and a worn
        velvet rope along the wall.

                          MAX
                    (From below)
               If you need help with the
               coffin call me.

        The oddity of the situation has caught Gillis'
        imagination.  He climbs the stairs with a kind of
        morbid fascination.  At the top he stops, undecided,
        then turns to the right and is stopped by

                          WOMAN'S VOICE
               This way!

        Gillis swings around.

        Norma Desmond stands down the corridor next to a
        doorway from which emerges a flickering light.  She
        is a little woman.  There is a curious style, a
        great sense of high voltage about her.  She is dress-
        ed in black house pyjamas and black high-heeled
        pumps.  Around her throat there is a leopard-pat-
        terned scarf, and wound around her head a turban of
        the same material.  Her skin is very pale, and she
        is wearing dark glasses.

                          NORMA
               In here.  I put him on my massage
               table in front of the fire.  He
               always liked fires and poking at
               them with a stick.

        Gillis enters the SHOT and she leads him into


A-32    NORMA DESMOND'S BEDROOM

        It is a huge, gloomy room hung in white brocade which
        has beconle dirty over the years and even slightly
        torn in a few places.  There's a great, unmade gilded
        bed in the shape of a swan, from which the gold had
        begun to peel.  There is a disorder of clothes and
        negligees and faded photographs of old-time stars
        about.

        In an imitation baroque fireplace some logs are burn-
        ing.  On the massage table before it lies a small
        form shrouded under a Spanish shawl.  At each end on
        a baroque pedestal stands a three-branched cande-
        labrum, the candles lighted.

                          NORMA
               I've made up my mind we'll bury him in
               the garden.  Any city laws against that?


                          GILLIS
               I wouldn't know.

                          NORMA
               I don't care anyway.  I want the
               coffin to be white.  And I want
               it specially lined with satin.
               White, or deep pink.

        She picks up the shawl to make up her mind about the
        color.  From under the shawl flops down a dead arm.
        Gillis stares and recoils a little.  It is like a
        child's arm, only black and hairy.

                          NORMA
               Maybe red.  bright flaming red.
               Gay.  Let's make it gay.

        Gillis edges closer and glances down.  Under the
        shawl he sees the sad, bearded face of a dead
        chimpanzee.  Norma drops back the shawl.

                          NORMA
               How much will it be?  I warn you -
               don't give me a fancy price just
               because I'm rich.

                          GILLIS
               Lady.  you've got the wrong man.

        For the first time.  Norma really looks at him
        through her dark glasses.

                          GILLIS
               I had some trouble with my car.
               Flat tire.  I pulled into your
               garage till I could get a spare.
               I thought this was an empty house.

                          NORMA
               It is not.  Get out.

                          GILLIS
               I'm sorry, and I'm sorry you lost
               your friend, and I don't think red
               is the right color.

                          NORMA
               Get out.

                          GILLIS
               Sure.  Wait a minute -- haven't
               I seen you -- ?


                          NORMA
               Or shall I call my servant?

                          GILLIS
               I know your face.  You're Norma
               Desmond.  You used to be in
               pictures.  You used to be big.

                          NORMA
               I am big.  It's the pictures
               that got small.

                          GILLIS
               I knew there was something
               wrong with them.

                          NORMA
               They're dead.  They're finished.
               There was a time when this busi-
               ness had the eyes of the whole
               wide world.  But that wasn't good
               enough.  Oh, nol They wanted the
               ears of the world, too.  So they
               opened their big mouths, and out
               came talk, talk, talk...

                          GILLIS
               That's where the popcorn business
               comes in.  You buy yourself a bag
               and plug up your ears.

                          NORMA
               Look at them in the front offices --
               the master minds! They took the
               idols and smashed them.  The
               Fairbankses and the Chaplins and
               the Gilberts and the Valentinos.
               And who have they got now?  Some
               nobodies -- a lot of pale little
               frogs croaking pish-poshl

                          GILLIS
               Don't get sore at me.  I'm not
               an executive.  I'm just a writer.

                          NORMA
               You are! Writing words, words!
               You've made a rope of words and
               strangled this businessl But there
               is a microphone right there to catch
               the last gurgles, and Technicolor
               to photograph the red, swollen tongue!



                          GILLIS
               Ssh! You'll wake up that monkey.

                          NORMA
               Get out!

        Gillis starts down the stairs.

                          GILLIS
               Next time I'll bring my autograph
               album along, or maybe a hunk of
               cement and ask for your footprints.

        He is halfway down the staircase when he is
        stopped by

                          NORMA
               Just a minute, you!

                          GILLIS
               Yeah?

                          NORMA
               You're a writer, you said.

                          GILLIS
               Why?

        Norma starts down the stairs.

                          NORMA
               Are you or aren't you?

                          GILLIS
               I think that's what it says on my
               driver's license.

                          NORMA
               And you have written pictures,
               haven't you?

                          GILLIS
               Sure have.  The last one I
               wrote was about cattle rustlers.
               Before they were through with it,
               the whole thing played on a
               torpedo boat.

        Norma has reached him at the bottom of the staircase.

                          NORMA
               I want to ask you something.
               Come in here.

        She leads him into


A-33    THE HUGE LIVING ROOM

        It is dark and damp and filled with black oak and
        red velvet furniture which looks like crappy props
        from the Mark of Zorro set.  Along the main wall,
        a gigantic fireplace has been freezing for years.
        On the gold piano is a galaxy of photographs of
        Norma Desmond in her various roles.  On one wall
        is a painting -- a California Gold Rush scene,
        Carthay Circle school.  (We will learn later that
        it hides a motion picture screen.)

        One corner is filled with a large pipe organ, and
        as Norma and Gillis enter, there is a grizzly
        moaning sound.  Gillis looks around.

                          NORMA
               The wind gets in that blasted
               pipe organ.  I ought to have
               it taken out.

                          GILLIS
               Or teach it a better tune.

        Norma has led him to the card tables which stand
        side by side near a window.  They are piled high
        with papers scrawled in a large, uncertain hand.

                          NORMA
               How long is a movie script these
               days?  I mean, how many pages?

                          GILLIS
               Depends on what it is -- a Donald
               Duck or Joan or Arc.

                          NORMA
               This is to be a very important
               picture.  I have written it
               myself.  Took me years.

                          GILLIS
                    (Looking at the piles
                     of script)
               Looks like enough for six impor-
               tant pictures.

                          NORMA
               It's the story or Salome.  I
               think I'll have DeMille direct it.

                          GILLIS
               Uh-huh.


                          NORMA
               We've made a lot of pictures
               together.

                          GILLIS
               And you'll play Salome?

                          NORMA
               Who else ?

                          GILLIS
               Only asking.  I did't know
               you were planning a comeback.

                          NORMA
               I hate that word.  It is a return.
               A return to the millions of people
               who have never forgiven me for
               deserting the screen.

                          GILLIS
               Fair enough.

                          NORMA
               Salome -- what a woman! What a
               part! The Princess in love with
               a Holy man.  She dances the Dance
               of the Seven Veils.  He rejects
               her, so she demands his head on a
               golden tray, kissing his cold, dead
               lips.

                          GILLIS
               They'll love it in Pomona.

                          NORMA
                    (Taking it straight)
               They will love it every place.
                    (She reaches for a
                     batch of pages from
                     the heap)
               Read it.  Read the scene just
               before she has him killed!

                          GILLIS
               Right now?  Never let another
               writer read your stuff.  He
               may steal it.

                          NORMA
               I am not afraid.  Read it!

                          NORMA (Cont'd)
                    (Calling)
               Max!  Max!
                    (To Gillis)
               Sit down.  Is there enough light?

                          GILLIS
               I've got twenty-twenty vision.

        Max has entered.

                          NORMA
               Bring something to drink.

                          MAX
               Yes.  Madame.

        He leaves.  Norma turns to Gillis again.

                          NORMA
               I said sit down.

        There is compulsion in her voice.

        Gillis looks at her                   GILLIS' VOICE
        and starts slowly          Well.  I had no pressing
        reading.                   engagement, and she'd men-
                                   tioned something to drink..
        Max comes in, wheeling     Sometimes it's interesting
        a wicker tea wagon on      to see just how bad bad
        which are two bottles o    writing can be.  This prom-
        f champagne and two        ised to go the limit.  I
        red Venetian glasses,      wondered what a handwriting
        a box of zwieback and      expert would make of that
        a jar of caviar.  Norma    childish scrawl of hers.
        sits on her feet.  deep    Max wheeled in some champagne
        in a chair, a gold ring    and some caviar.  Later, I
        on her forefinger with     found out that Max was the
        a clip which holds a       only other person in that
        cigarette.  She gets up    grim Sunset castle, and I
        and forces on Gillis       found out a few other things
        another batch of script,   about him... As for her, she
        goes back to her chair.    sat coiled up like a watch
                                   spring, her cigarette
                                   clamped in a curious holder...
                                   I could sense her eyes on me
                                   from behind those dark
                                   glasses, defying me not to
                                   like what I read, or maybe
                                   begging me in her own proud
                                   way to like it.  It meant
                                   so much to her...



A-34    SHOT OF THE                       GILLIS' VOICE
        CEILING                It sure was a cozy set-up.
                               That bundle of raw nerves,and
        PAN DOWN to the moan-  Max, and a dead monkey upstair
        ing organ.  PAN OVER   and the wind wheezing through
        TO THE ENTRANCE DOOR.  that organ once in a while.
        Max opens it, and a    Later on, just for comedy
        solemn-faced man in    relief, the real guy arrived
        undertaker's clothes   with a baby coffin.  It was
        brings in a small      all done with great dignity.
        white coffin.  (Thru   He must have been a very
        these shots the room   important chimp.  The great
        has been growing       grandson of King Kong, maybe.
        duskier.)

        DISSOLVE TO:


A-35    GILLIS                 It got to be eleven.  I was
                               feeling a little sick at my
        reading.  The lamp     stomach, what with that sweet
        beside him is now      champagne and that tripe I'd
        really paying its      been reading -- that silly
        way in the dark room.  hodgepodge of melodramatic
        A lot of the manu-     plots.  However, by then I'd
        script pages are       started concocting a little
        piled on the floor     plot of my own...
        around his feet.  A
        half-empty champagne
        glass stands on the
        arm of his chair.

        THE CAMERA SLOWLY DRAWS BACK to include Norma
        Desmond sitting in the dusk, just as she was before.
        Gillis puts down a batch of script.  There is a
        little pause.

                         NORMA
                   (Impatiently)
               Well?

                         GILLIS
               This is fascinating.

                         NORMA
               Of course it is.

                         GILLIS
               Maybe it's a little long and
               maybe there are some repetitions...
               but you're not a professional
               writer.

                          NORMA
               I wrote that with my heart.

                          GILLIS
               Sure you did.  That's what makes
               it great.  What it needs is a
               little more dialogue.

                          NORMA
               What for?  I can say anything I
               want with my eyes.

                          GILLIS
               It certainly could use a pair of
               shears and a blue pencil.

                          NORMA
               I will not have it butchered.

                          GILLIS
               Of course not.  But it ought to
               be organized.  Just an editing
               job.  You can find somebody.

                          NORMA
               Who?  I'd have to have somebody
               I can trust.  When were you born --
               I mean, what sign of the zodiac?

                          GILLIS
               I don't know.

                          NORMA
               What month?

                          GILLIS
               December twenty-first.

                          NORMA
               Sagittarius.  I like Sagittarians.
               You can trust them.

                          GILLIS
               Thank you.

                          NORMA
               I want you to do this work.

                          GILLIS
               Me?  I'm busy.  Just finished
               one script.  I'm due on another
               assignment.

                          NORMA
               I don't care.


                          GILLIS
               You know, I'm pretty expensive.
               I get five hundred a week.

                          NORMA
               I wouldn't worry about money.
               I'll make it worth your while.

                          GILLIS
               Maybe I'd better take the rest
               of the script home and read it -

                          NORMA
               Oh no.  I couldn't let it out
               of my house.  You'll have to
               finish it here.

                          GILLIS
               It's getting kind of late --

                          NORMA
               Are you married, Mr.  -- ?

                          GILLIS
               The name is Gillis.  I'm single.

                          NORMA
               Where do you live?

                          GILLIS
               Hollywood.  The Alto Nido Apart-
               ments.

                          NORMA
               There's something wrong with
               your car, you said.

                          GILLIS
               There sure is.

                          NORMA
               You can stay here.

                          GILLIS
               I'll come early tomorrow.

        Norma takes off her glasses.

                          NORMA
               Nonsense.  There's room over the
               garage.  Max will take you there...Max!

        THE CAMERA MOVES                  GILLIS' VOICE
        TOWARD NORMA'S FACE,   She sure could say a lot of
        right up to her        things with those pale eyes of
        eyes.                  hers.  They'd been her trade
                               mark.  They'd made her the Num-
                               ber One Vamp of another era.  I
                               remember a rather florid des-
                               cription in an old fan magazine
                               which said: "Her eyes are like
                               two moonlit waterholes, where
                               strange animals come to drink."

        DISSOLVE TO:



A-36    SMALL STAIRCASE, LEAD-          GILLIS'VOICE
        ING TO ROOM OVER GARAGE  I felt kind of pleased with
                                 the way I'd handled the sit-
        Max, an electric light   uation.  I'd dropped the hook,
        bulb in his hand, is     and she'd snapped at it.  Now
        leading Gillis up.       my car would be safe down
        Gillis carries a batch   below, while I did a patch-
        of the manuscript.       up job on the script.  And
                                 there should be plenty of
                                 money in it...

        Max pushes open a door at the top of the stairs.

                          MAX
                    (Opening the door)
               I made your bed this afternoon.

                          GILLIS
               Thanks.
                    (On second thought)
               How did you know I was going to
               stay, this afternoon?

        Max doesn't answer.  He walks across to the bed,
        screws a bulb in the open socket above it.  The
        light goes on, revealing:

A-37    A GABLED BEDROOM

        There are dirty windows on two sides, and dingy wall-
        paper on the cracked plaster walls.  For furniture
        there is a neatly made bed, a table and a few chairs
        which might have been discarded from the main house.

                          MAX
               This room has not been used for
               a long time.

                          GILLIS
               It will never make house Beautiful.
               I guess it's O.K. for one night.

        Max gives him an enigmatic look.

                          MAX
                    (Pointing)
               There is the bathroom.  I put in
               soap and a toothbrush.

                          GILLIS
               Thanks.
                    (He starts taking off
                     his coat)
               Say, she's quite a character,
               that Norma Desmond.

                          MAX
               She was the greatest.  You wouldn't
               know.  You are too young.  In one
               week she got seventeen thousand fan
               letters.  Men would bribe her mani-
               curist to get clippings from her
               fingernails.  There was a Maharajah
               who came all the way from Hyderabad
               to get one of her stockings.  Later,
               he strangled himself with it.

                          GILLIS
               I sure turned into an interesting
               driveway.

                          MAX
               You did, sir.
                                            GILLIS' VOICE
        He goes out.  Gillis     I pegged him as slightly
        looks after him, hangs   cuckoo, too.  A stroke maybe.
        his coat over a chair,   Come to think of it, the
        walks over to the win-   whole place seemed to have
        dow, pulls down the      been stricken with a kind of
        rickety Venetian blind.  creeping paralysis, out of
        As he does so, he looks  beat with the rest of the
        down at:                 world, crumbling apart in
                                 slow motion ...

A-38    THE TENNIS COURT OF                 GILLIS' VOICE
        THE DESMOND HOUSE        There was a tennis court, or
        (MOONLIGHT)              rather the ghost of a tennis
                                 court, with faded markings
        The cement surface is    and sagging net ...
        cracked in many places,
        and weeds are growing
        high.


A-39    GILLIS - IN THE WINDOW

        He looks away from the court to:


A-40    THE DESMOND SWIMMING
        POOL
                                            GILLIS' VOICE
        There is no water in     And of course she had a pool.
        it, and hunks of         Who didn't then?  Mabel Norm-
        mosaic which lines its   and and John Gilbert must
        enormous basin are       have swum in it ten thousand
        broken away.             midnights ago, and Vilma Banky
                                 and Rod La Roque.  It was
                                 empty now....or was it?



A-41    GILLIS - IN THE WINDOW

        He stares down, his stomach slowly turning.


A-42    THE SWIMMING POOL

        At the bottom of the basin a great rat is eating a
        decaying or,ange.  From the inlet pipe crawl two
        other rats, who join battle with the first rat over
        the orange.


A-43    GILLIS -IN THE WINDOW

        He starts away, but some-           GILLIS' VOICE
        thing attracts his atten-      There was something
        tion.  He turns back and       else going on below:
        looks down again.              the last rites for
                                       that hairy old chimp,
                                       performed with the
A-44    THE LAWN BELOW                 utmost seriousness --
                                       as if she were laying
        Norma Desmond and Max are      to rest an only child.
        carrying the white coffin      Was her life really
        towards a small grave as       as empty as that?
        which has been dug in the
        dead turf.  Norma carries
        one of the candelabra, all
        of its candles flickering
        in the wind.  They reach
        the grave and lower the
        coffin into it.  Then,
        Norma lighting his task
        with the candelabrum, Max
        takes a spade from the
        loose earth and starts
        filling in the grave.

A-45    GILLIS - IN THE WINDOW

        He watches the scene be-            GILLIS' VOICE
        low, then turns into the       It was all very queer,
        room, goes to the door         but queerer things
        to lock it.  There is no       were yet to come.
        key, and only a hole
        where the lock has been
        gouged out.  Gillis moves
        a heavy overstuffed chair
        in front of the door, then
        walks towards the bed,
        throws himself on it,
        picking up some of the
        manuscript pages to read.

        DISSOLVE

                END OF SEQUENCE "A"

                       SEQUENCE "B"

         DISSOLVE IN ON:

 B-1    LONG SHOT THE DESMOND
        HOUSE - (MORNING)

        The day is overcast.  The     SOUND: (Distant organ
        house is shrouded in low      music - improvisations
        fog.                          on an odd, mournful
                                      theme - not too loud,
                                      continuing throughout
 B-2    THE TENNIS COURT, blurred     the scene.)
        over with fog.


 B-3    THE EMPTY SWIMMING POOL
        Its dark outline even more
        melancholy under the misty
        blanket.


 B-4    THE ROOM OVER THE GARAGE

        Muted daylight seeps               GILLIS' VOICE
        through the blinds.  Gillis   That night I'd had a
        lies on the bed, under a      mixed-up dream.  In it
        shabby quilt.  The manu-      was an organ grinder.
        script is beside him, some    I couldn't see his
        of the pages scattered on     face, but the organ
        the floor.  He is just        was all draped in
        opening his eyes. It takes    black, and a chimp was
        him a moment to adjust him-   dancing for pennies.
        self to the strange sur-      When I opened my eyes,
        roundings.  His eyes, wander- the music was still
        ing about the room. suddenly  there... Where was
        stop, startled. He lifts      I?
        himself on one elbow and
        stares at -


 B-5    THE DOOR

        The heavy chair he had set    Oh yes, in that empty
        against it the night before   room over her garage.
        has been pushed back.  The    Only it wasn't empty
        door is wide ajar.            any more.  Somebody
                                      had brought in all my
                                      belongings - my
 B-6    GILLIS                        books, my typewriter,
                                      my clothes...
        He jumps out of bed.  He
        wears, shirt, trousers
        and socks.  Suddenly he
        realizes that all his
        possessions have                  GILLIS' VOICE
        been brought in. In        What was going on?
        the closet hang his
        shirts.  His books and
        typewriter are neatly
        arranged on the table.
        His phonograph-radio
        combination is all
        installed.  Gillis looks
        around startled, then
        sits down and starts
        putting on his moccasins
        hastily.

        DISSOLVE TO:


 B-7    A PAIR OF HANDS IN WHITE GLOVES, PLAYING THE ORGAN

        PULL BACK: They belong to Max von Mayerling.  He
        is sitting erect, his bull neck taut as a wrestler's
        as he rights out somber chord after somber chord.
        He sits in a shaft of gray light coming from an open
        French window.

        Through the far archway, Gillis storms into the big
        room.

                          GILLIS
              Hey, you -- Max -- whatever -your-
              name-is -- what are my things doing
              here?

        No answer.

                          GILLIS
              I'm talking to you.  My clothes
              and things are up in the room.

                          MAX
              Naturally.  I brought them myself.

                          GILLIS
                    (Furiously)
              Is that so!

                          MAX
              Why are you so upset?  Is there
              anything missing?

                          GILLIS
              Who said you could?  Who asked you to?

        Norma Desmond's shadow moves into the shaft of
        light.

                           NORMA'S VOICE
                I did.

        Gillis looks around.

        On the couch by the fireplace reclines Norma Desmond,
        dressed in a negligee.  She rises.

                           NORMA
                I don't know why you should be
                so upset.  Stop that playing,
                Max.
                     (To Gillis again)
                It seemed like a good idea --
                if we are to work together.

                           GILLIS
                Look, I'm supposed to fix up
                your script.  There's nothing
                in the deal about my staying
                here.

                           NORMA
                You'll like it here.

                           GILLIS
                Thanks for the invitation, but
                I have my own apartment.

                           NORMA
                You can't work in an apartment
                where you owe three months' rent.

                           GILLIS
                I'll take care of that.

                           NORMA
                It's all taken care of.  It's
                all paid for.

                           GILLIS
                I'm used to paying my own bills.

                           NORMA
                You proud boy, why didn't you tell
                me you were having difficulties.

                           GILLIS
                Okay.  We'll deduct it from my
                salary.

                          NORMA
                Now, now, don't let's be small
                about such matters.  We won't
                keep books.
                    (To Max)
                Go on, unpack Mr. Gillis' things.

                          GILLIS
                Unpack nothing.  I didn't say
                I was staying.

                          NORMA
                    (Her glasses off again)
                Suppose you make up your mind.
                Do you want this job or don't you?

        DISSOLVE TO:


 B-8    BIG ROOM, NORMA DESMOND'S
        HOUSE - (DAY)                       GILLIS' VOICE

        Gillis sits at an impro-     So I let him unpack my
        vised table, his typewriter  things. I wanted the
        in front of him, working     dough, and I wanted to
        hard at the manuscript.      get out of there as
        Pencils, shears and a        quickly as possible.
        paste-pot at hand.           I thought if I really
                                     got going I could toss
        Facing him at some dis-      it off in a couple or
        tance sits Norma,dressed     weeks.  But it wasn't
        in another version of her    so simple, getting some
        favorite lounging pajamas,   coherence into that wild,
        the cigaette contraption     scrambled melodrama
        on her finger.  She is       she'd concocted.  What
        autographing large photo-    made it tougher was that
        graphs of herself and put-   she was around all the
        ting them in envelopes.      time -- hovering over
                                     me, afraid I'd do injury
                                     to that precious brain-
                                     child of hers.

        Gillis takes two or three pages from Norma's hand-
        written script, crosses them out and puts them to
        one side.

        Norma rises, crosses towards Gillis, looks over his
        shoulder.

                          NORMA
                What's that?

                          GILLIS
                Just a scene I cut out.

                          NORMA
                What scene?

                          GILLIS
                The one where you go to the slave
                market.  You can cut right to the
                scene where John the Baptist -

                          NORMA
                Cut away from me?

                          GILLIS
                Honestly, it's a little old hat.
                They don't want that any more.

                          NORMA
                They don't?  Then why do they still
                write me fan letters every day.
                Why do they beg me for my photo-
                graphs?  Because they want to see
                me, me, me!  Norma Desmond.

                          GILLIS
                    (Resigned)
                Okay.

        He pulls the page from his typewriter. As he does
        so he glances over towards Norma.
                                            GILLIS' VOICE
        On the table in front        I didn't argue with her.
        of her are the photo-        You don't yell at a
        graphs which she is sign-    sleepwalker-- he may fall
        ing. On the long table       and break his neck.That's
        in the living room is a      it -- she was still
        gallery of photographs       sleepwalking along the
        in various frames -- all     giddy heights of a lost
        Norma Desmond. On the        career --plain crazy
        piano more photographs.      when it came to that one
        Above the piano an oil       subject: her celluloid
        portrait of her.  On the     self, the great Norma
        highboy beside him still     Desmond.  How could She
        more photographs.            breathe in that house,
                                     so crowded with Norma
        DISSOLVE TO:                 Desmonds? More Norma
                                     Desmond and still more
                                     Norma Desmond.
 B-9    THE BIG ROOM - (NIGHT)
                                            GILLIS' VOICE
        Shooting towards the big     It wasn't all work - of
        Gold Rush painting. Max,     course.  Two or three
        white gloves and all,        times a week Max would
        steps into the shot, shoves  haul up that enormous oil
        the painting up towards      painting that had been
        the ceiling,revealing a      presented to her by some
        motion picture screen.       Nevada Chamber of Com-
        Max exits.                   merce, and we'd see a
                                     movie,right in her
                                     living room.

 B-1O   NORMA AND GILLIS
                                             GILLIS' VOICE
        They sit on a couch,facing    "So much nicer than going
        the screen. On a table in     out," she'd say.  The
        front of them are champagne,  plain fact was that she
        cigarettes and coffee.        was afraid of that world
        Above their heads are the     outside.  Afraid it
        typical openings for a pro-   would remind her that
        jector. The lights go off.    time had passed.
        From the opening above
        their heads shoots the wide
        beam of light.


 B-11   MAX, IN THE PROJECTION        They were silent movies,
        BOOTH BEHIND THE ROOM         and Max would run the
                                      projection machine, which
        The light of the machine      was just as well -- it
        flickering over his face,     kept him from giving us
        which is frozen, a somber     an accompaniment on
        enigma.                       that wheezing organ.

 B-12   NORMA AND GILLIS
                                      She'd sit very close to
        watching the screen.          me, and she'd smell of
        Gillis looks down and sees    tuberoses, which is not
        that Norma's hand is clasp-   my favorite perfume, not
        ing his ann tight. He         by a long shot. Sometines
        doesn't like it much but      as we watched, she'd c
        he can't do anything about    lutch my arm or my hand
        it. However. when she for     forgetting she was my
        a second lets go his arm      employer becoming just a
        to pick up a glass of         fan, excited about that
        champagne, he gently with-    actress up there on the
        draws his arm, leans away     screen....I guess I don't
        from her and crosses his      have to tell you who the
        arms to discourage any        star was.  They were
        resumption of her approach.   always her pictures --
        Norma puts the glass down     that's all she wanted
        doesn't find his arn, but     to see.
        is not aware of any signifi-
        cance in his maneuver. They
        both watch the screen.


 B-13   THE OTHER END OF THE BIG ROOM. WITH THE SCREEN

        On it flickers a famous scene from one of Norma's old
        silent pictures.  It is not to be a funny scene.  It
        is old-fashioned, but shows her incredible beauty
        and the screen presence which made her the great star
        of her day.

 B-14   NORMA AND GILLIS ON THE COUCH

                         NORMA
              Still wonderful, isn't it?  And
              no dialogue.  We didn't need
              dialogue.  We had faces.  There
              just aren't any faces like that
              any more.  Well, maybe one --
              Garbo.

        In a sudden flareup she jumps to her feet and stands
        in the flickering beam of light.

                         NORMA
              Those idiot producers!  Those
              imbeciles!  Haven't they got any
              eyes?  Have they forgotten what
              a star looks like?  I'll show them.
              I'll be up there again.  So help me!

        DISSOLVE TO:


 B-15   THE BIG ROOM - (NIGHT)

        It is apparently empty.            GILLIS' VOICE
        The elaborate lamps         Sometimes there'd be a
        make pools of light.        little bridge game in the
                                    house, at a twentieth-of-
        THE CAMERA PULLS BACK       a cent a point.  I'd get
        AND PANS to reveal a        half her winnings.  Once
        card table around           they ran up to seventy
        which sit Norma and         cents, which was about
        three friends - three       the only cash money I
        actors of her period.       ever got.  The others
        They sit erect and play     around the table would
        with grim seriousness.      be actor friends - dim
                                    figures you may still
        Beside Norma sits           remember from the silent
        Gillis, kibitzing on a      days.  I used to think of
        game which bores him        them as her Wax Works.
        extremely.  An ashtray
        on the card table is
        full and Norma holds
        it out for Gillis to
        take away.  He crosses
        the room to the fire-
        place. but his eyes
        fall on the entrance
        door and he stops.


 B-16   THE ENTRANCE HALL - (FROM GILLIS' POINT OF VIEW)

        Max stands in the open door.  Outside are the two
        men who came to the apartment for Gillis' car.

 B-17   GILLIS

        He steps back so that he cannot be seen from the
        door.  A second later Max appears, looking for him.

                          MAX
                    (Quietly)
               Some men are here.  They asked
               for you.

                          GILLIS
               I'm not here.

                          MAX
               That's what I told them.

                          GILLIS
               Good.

                          MAX
               They found your car in the
               garage.  They are going to tow
               it away.

        Gillis doesn't know what to do.  From offstage
        comes:

                          NORMA'S VOICE
               The ashtray, Joe dear!  Can we
               have the ashtray?

        Gillis dumps the cigarette butts into the cold fire-
        place, crosses to the bridge table, puts the
        ashtray down, leans over and speaks into Norma's ear.

                          GILLIS
               I want to talk to you for a
               minute.

                          NORMA
               Not now, my dear.  I'm playing
               three no trump.

                          GILLIS
               They've come for my car.

                          NORMA
               Please.  Now I've forgotten how
               many spades are out.

                          GILLIS
               I need some money right now.

                          NORMA
               Can't you wait till I'm dummy?

 3.22.49                  GILLIS
               No.

                          NORMA
                    (Angry by now)
               Please!

        Gillis stands frustrated, hideously embarrassed
        by the stares of the waxworks. He turns away
        and hurries to the door.


 B-18   ENTRANCE DOOR TO THE HOUSE

        It is half open. Gillis comes into the shot
        and, taking cover, looks out.


 B-19   COURTYARD (FROM GILLIS' ANGLE)

        The men from the finance company are cranking up
        the car.  Max stands watching silently.  When they
        finish the cranking job, the men climb into the
        front seat of the truck.


 B-2O   GILLIS - AT THE DOOR

        Over the shot the SOUND of the truck being started
        and the cars moving away.  Gillis moves out into
        the courtyard and stands staring after the car.
        From the house comes Norma.

                          NORMA
               Now what is it?  Where's the
               fire?

                          GILLIS
               I've lost my car.

                          NORMA
               Oh...and I thought it was a
               matter of life and death.

                          GILLIS
               It is to me.  That's why I came
               to this house.  That's why I took
               this job -- ghost writing!

                          NORMA
               Now you're being silly.  We don't
               need two cars.  We have a car.  And
               not one of thuse cheap new things
               made of chromium and spit.  An
               Isotta-Fraschini.  Have you ever
               heard of Isotta-Fraschinis?  All
               hand-made.  Cost me twenty-eight
               thousand dollars.

        THE CAMERA HAS PANNED over to the garage and FOCUSES
        on the dirty Isotta-Fraschini on its blocks.

        DISSOLVE TO:


 B-21   NORMA'S ISOTTA-FRASCHINI
        DRIVING IN THE HILLS
        ABOVE SUNSET (DAY)

        Max is at the wheel,               GILLIS' VOICE
        dressed as usual except     So Max got that old bus
        for a chauffeurfs cap.      down off its blocks and
                                    polished it up.  She'd
                                    take me for rides in the
 B-22   INSIDE THE CAR              hills above Sunset.

        Gillis sits beside Norma,   The whole thing was up-
        who is wearing a smart      holstered in leopard
        tailleur and her eternal    skin, and had one of
        sun glasses. Gillis         those car phones, all
        wears his sport jacket-     gold-plated.
        flannel trousers-moccasin
        combinatIon.

        He sits uncomfortably. Norma is studying him.

                          NORMA
               That's a dreadful shirt you're
               wearing.

                          GILLIS
               What's wrong with It?

                          NORMA
               Nothing, if you work in a fill-
               ing station.  And I'm getting
               rather bored with that sport
               jacket, and those same baggy
               pants.
                    (She picks up
                     the car phone)
               Max, what's a good men's shop
               in town?  The very best...
               Well, go there !

                          GILLIS
               I don't need any clothes, and
               I certainly don't want you buy-
               ing them for --

                        NORMA
                 Why begrudge me a little fun?
                 I just want you to look nice,
                 my stray little boy.

        By this time Max has made a U-turn.

        QUICK DISSOLVE TO:


 B-23   INT. MEN'S DEPARTMENT, AN ELEGANT WILSHIRE STORE

        Gillis stands in front of a full-length triple mirror,
        surrounded by a couple of salesmen and the tailor, who
        is busily working out alterations.

        Gillis wears a double-breasted gray flannel coat with
        chalk stripes.  His trousers belong to another suit
        of glen plaid.  Norma is running the show.

                              NORMA
                 There's nothing like gray flannel
                 with a chalk stripe.
                    (she points at
                     the trousers)
                 This one single-breasted, of course.
                     (to another salesman)
                 Now we need a topcoat.  Let's see
                 what you have in camel's hair.

        The salesman leaves.

                              NORMA
                 How about some evening clothes?

                              GILLIS
                 I don't need a tuxedo.

                              NORMA
                 Of course you do.  A tuxedo and
                 tails.

                              GILLIS
                 Tails.  That's ridiculous.

                              NORMA
                 You'll need them for parties.
                 You'll need them for New Year's
                 Eve.
                     (to a salesman)
                 Where are your evening clothes?

                          SALESMAN
                  This way, Madame.

        He leads her off.  The other salesman arrives with a
        selection of topcoats.

                          SALESMAN
                  Here are some camel hairs, but
                  I'd like you just to feel this
                  one.  It's Vicuna.  Of course,
                  it's a little more expensive.

                          GILLIS
                  A camel's hair will do.

                          SALESMAN
                       (With an insulting
                        inflection)
                  As long as the lady is paying
                  for it, why not take the Vicuna?

        DISSOLVE:




                END OF SEQUENCE "B"


                       SEQUENCE "C"

        DISSOLVE IN:

C-1     LONG SHOT DESMOND HOUSE

        A day in December.  Rain.

        QUICK DISSOLVE TO:


C-2     INT. ROOM OVER GARAGE

        Water is drizzling from            GILLIS' VOICE
        two or three spots in the   The last week in December
        ceiling into pans and       the rains came -- a great
        bowls set to catch it,      big package of rain.
        one bowl right on the       Over-sized, like every-
        bed.  The room is almost    thing else in California.
        emptied of Gillis' be-
        longings by now.  Max       It came right through
        is carrying out a hand-     the old roof of my room
        full of new suits on        above the garage.  She
        hangers.  He has a          had Max move me to the
        dressing gown over his      main house.  I didn't
        shoulder.  Gillis holds     much like the idea -- the
        a stack of shirts, his      only time I could have
        typewriter, and some        to myself was in that
        manuscript.  He surveys     room -- but it was better
        the room for the last       than sleeping in a rain-
        time, to see whether        coat and galoshes.
        he's forgotten any-
        thing.  He has.  He
        puts down the typewriter
        and picks up from under
        the bed a pair of very
        smart red leather bedroom
        slippers.  He tucks them
        under his arm, picks up
        the typewriter and leaves.

        QUICK DISSOLVE TO:


C-3     A BEDROOM IN TIiE MAIN HOUSE

        It is obviously a man's room -- heavy Spanish
        furniture -- one wall nothing but a closet with
        shelves and drawers for shirts and shoes.  Max is
        hanging up the suits.  Gillis throws the shirts on
        a big chair, tosses the slippers at the foot of the
        bed, places the typewriter and manuscript on a desk
        at the window.

                          GILLIS
               Whose room was this?

                          MAX
               It was the room of the husband.
               Or of the husbands, I should say.
               Madame has been married three
               times.

        Slightly embarrassed, Gillis picks up his toilet
        kit with razor, toothbrushes, soap, etc., and starts
        towards the bathroom, pausing en route at a rain-
        splattered window.

                          GILLIS
               I guess this is the one you
               can see Catalina from.  Only
               this isn't the day.

               He proceeds towards the half-opened door leading
               to the bathroom.  Something strikes his attention
               and he stops.  As in the door to the room above
               the garage, this lock, too, has been gouged out.

                          GILLIS
               Hey, what's this with the
               door? There isn't any lock.

                          MAX
               There are no locks anywhere
               in this house.

        He points to the entrance door of the room, and to
        another door.

                          GILLIS
               How come?

                          MAX
               The doctor suggested it.

                          GILLIS
               What doctor?

                          MAX
               Madame's doctor.  She has moments
               of melancholy.  There have been
               some suicide attempts.

                          GILLIS
               Uh-huh?

                          MAX
               We have to be very careful.  No
               sleeping pills, no razor blades.
               We shut off the gas in her bed-
               room.

                          GILLIS
               Why?  Her career?  She got enough
               out of it.  She's not forgotten.
               She still gets those fan letters.

                          MAX
               I wouldn't look too closely at the
               postmarks.

                          GILLIS
               You send them.  Is that it, Max?

                          MAX
               I'd better press your evening
               clothes, sir.  You have not for-
               gotten Madame's New Year's party.

                          GILLIS
               No, I haven't.  I suppose all
               the waxworks are coming?

                          MAX
               I don't know, sir.  Madame made
               the arrangements.

        Max leaves.  Gillis comes out of the bathroom, picks
        up his shirts, goes over to a closet, opens it.  As
        he does so one of the doors without a lock swings
        slightly open.  Gillis looks through the half-open
        door and sees.


C-4     NORMA DESMOND'S ROOM

        It is empty.  The rainy            GILLIS' VOICE
        day does nothing to        There it was again - that
        help its gloom.            room of hers, all satin and
                                   ruffles, and that bed like
                                   a gilded rowboat.  The per-
                                   fect setting for a silent
                                   movie queen.  Poor devil,
                                   still waving proudly to a
                                   parade which had long since
                                   passed her by.
        He pushes the door shut
        and walks back into the
        room.

        DISSOLVE TO:


C-5     STAIRCASE OF DESMOND
        HOUSE (NIGHT)

        Gillis is coming down the         GILLIS' VOICE
        stairs in his tailcoat        It was at her New Year's
        adjusting the handkerchief    party that I found out
        in his pocket.  He obviously  how she felt about me.
        feels a little uneasy in      Maybe I'd been an idiot
        this outfit.  From below      not to have sensed it
        comes a tango of the Twen-    was coming - that sad,
        ties.  played by a small      embarrassing revelation.
        orchestra.  Gillis stops
        in the archway leading to
        the big room and looks
        around.

C-6     THE BIG ROOM has been deco-
        rated for the occasion with
        laurel garlands.  Dozens of
        candles in all the sconces
        and candelabra are ablaze.
        Their flickering flames are
        reflected in the waxed sur=
        face of the tile floor.
        There is a buffet, with
        buckets of champagne and
        caviar on ice.  In one corner
        on a little platform banked
        with palms.  a four-piece
        orchestra is playing.

        At the buffet are Max and Norma.  She is drinking
        a glass of champagne.  She is wearing a diamonte
        evening dress.  very high style.  with long black
        gloves and a headdress of paradise feathers.  Her
        eyes fall on Gillis.  She puts down the glass of
        champagne.  picks up a gardenia boutonniere and
        moves toward him.

                          NORMA
               Joe,  you look absolutely
               divine.  Turn around!

                          GILLIS
                    (Embarrassed}
               Please.

                          NORMA
               Come on!

        Gillis makes a slow 36O-degree turn.

                          NORMA
               Perfect.  Wonderful shoulders.
               And I love that line.


        She indicates the V from his shoulders to his hips.

                          GILLIS
               All padding.  Don't let it fool
               you.

                          NORMA
               Come here!

        She puts the gardenia on his lapel.

                          GILLIS
               You know, to me dressing up
               was always just putting on
               my dark blue suit.

                          NORMA
               I don't like those studs they've
               sent.  I want you to have pearls.
               Nice big pearls.

                          GILLIS
               Now, I'm not going to wear ear-
               rings, I can tell you that.

                          NORMA
               Cute.  Let's have some drinks.

        She leads him over to the buffet.

                          GILLIS
               Shouldn't we wait for the others?

                          NORMA
                    (Pointing at the floor)
               Careful, it's slippery.  I
               had it waxed.

        They reach the buffet.  Max is ready with two
        glasses of champagne.  Norma hands Gillis a glass.

                          NORMA
               Here's to us.

        They drink.

                          NORMA
               You know, this floor used to
               be wood but I had it changed.
               Valentino said there is nothing
               like tiles for a tango.

        She opens her arms.



                          GILLIS
               Not on the same floor with
               Valentino!

                          NORMA
               Just follow me.

        They start to tango.  After a moment --

                          NORMA
               Don't bend back like that.

                          GILLIS
               It's those feathers.  They tickle.

        Norma pulls the paradise feathers from her hair
        and tosses them away.


C-7     THE ORCHESTRA

        As they play the tango, the musicians eye the danc-
        ing couple, take in the situation, exchange glances
        and turn away with professional discretion.


C-8     NORMA AND GILLIS, TANGOING

        Gillis glances at his wrist watch.

                          GILLIS
               It's a quarter past ten.  What
               time are they supposed to get
               here?

                          NORMA
               Who?

                          GILLIS
               The other guests?

                          NORMA
               There are no other guests.  We
               don't want to share this night
               with other people.  This is for
               you and me.

                          GILLIS
               I understand some rich guy bought
               up all the tickets for a perfor-
               mance at the Metropolitan and sat
               there listening to La Traviata,
               all by himself.  He was afraid of
               catching cold.


                          NORMA
               Hold me tighter.

                          GILLIS
               Come midnight, how about blind-
               folding the orchestra and smash-
               ing champagne glasses on Max's
               head?

                          NORMA
               You think this is all very funny.

                          GILLIS
               A little.

                          NORMA
               Is it funny that I'm in love
               with you?

                          GILLIS
               What's that?

                          NORMA
               I'm in love with you.  Don't you
               know that? I've been in love
               with you all along.

        They dance on.  Gillis is acutely embarrassed.
        THE CAMERA SLOWLY PULLS BACK, PANS past the faces
        of the musicians, who play on with a rather overe-
        mphasized lack of interest.  Finally it winds up
        on Max, behind the buffet.  He stands watching Gillis,
        a faint trace of pity in his eyes.

        DISSOLVE TO:


C-9     NORMA'S FINGER, WITH THE
        CIGARETTE GADGET, as she          GILLIS' VOICE
        inserts a cigarette.        I'm sure a lot of you will
                                    laugh about this.  Ridicu-
                                    lous situation, wasn't it?
                                    -- a woman almost twice my
                                    age ...  It got to be about
                                    a quarter of eleven.  I
                                    felt caught, like a cig-
                                    arette in the prongs of
                                    that contraption on her
                                    finger.
        PULL BACK TO:

        NORMA AND GILLIS sitting on a couch in front of the
        cavernous fireplace.  Norma holds out her cigarette
        to Gillis, who lights it.


                          NORMA.
               What a wonderful next year it's
               going to be.  What fun we're going
               to have.  I'II fill the pool for
               you.  Or I'll open my house in
               Malibu, and you can have the whole
               ocean.  Or I'll buy you a boat
               and we'll sail to Hawaii.

                          GILLIS
               Stop it.  You aren't going to buy
               me anything more.

                          NORMA
               Don't be silly.
                    (She reaches under a
                     pillow of the couch
                     and brings out a
                     leather box)
               Here.  I was going to give it to
               you at midniglht.

        Gillis opens the box.  It contains a matched gold
        cigarette case and lighter.

                          NORMA
               Read what's inside.

        Gillis snaps open the case.  Engraved inside the
        cover is: TO JOE FROM NORMA, and two bars of
        music.

                          GILLIS
               What are the notes?

                          NORMA
               "Mad about the boy."

                          GILLIS
               Norma, I can't take it.  You've
               bought me enough.

                          NORMA
               Shut up.  I'm rich.  I'm richer
               than all this new Hollywood trash.
               I've got a million dollars.

                          GILLIS
               Keep it.

                          NORMA
               I own three blocks downtown.
               I have oil in Bakersfield --
               pumping, pumping, pumping.
               What's it for but to buy us
               anything we want.

                          GILLIS
               Cut out that us business.

        He rises.

                          NORMA
               What's the matter with you?

                          GILLIS
               What right do you have to take
               me for granted?

                          NORMA
               What right? Do you want me to
               tell you?

                          GILLIS
               Has it ever occurred that I may
               have a life of my own? That there
               may be some girl I'm crazy about?

                          NORMA
               Who? Some car hop, or a dress
               extra?

                          GILLIS
               Why not? What I'm trying to say
               is that I'm all wrong for you.
               You want a Valentino -- somebody
               with polo ponies -- a big shot --

                          NORMA
                    (Getting up slowly)
               What you're trying to say is
               that you don't want me to love
               you.  Is that it?

        Gillis doesn't answer.  Norma slaps his face and
        rushes from the room and upstairs.

        Gillis stands paralyzed, the slap burning his cheek.


C-1O    THE TOP OF THE STAIRCASE AND CORRIDOR

        Norma rushes up the last few steps, down the corridor
        and into her bedroom, banging the door.  MOVE THE
        CAMERA toward the closed door, centering on the
        gouged-out lock.


C-11    GILLIS, IN THE BIG ROOM

        He still stands motionless.  He glances around fur-
        tively, to see if his humiliation has been observed.


C-12    THE ORCHESTRA

        The musicians are playing away.  They have turned
        their eyes away from Gillis rather too ostentatious-
        ly for comfort.


C-13    GILLIS

        His eyes move over toward


C-14    MAX

        He is subtler than the musicians.  He appears very
        busy at the buffet, putting empty bottles and used
        glasses on a tray.  He walks across the room with
        them.


C-15    GILLIS

        He starts slowly out.  As he does so his long gold
        key chain catches on a carved ornament of the sofa
        and holds him for a second of additional embarrass-
        ment.  He yanks it loose and walks with as much
        nonchalance as he can muster to


C-16    THE HALL

        Crossing towards the coat closet, Gillis throws a
        look upstairs.  Then he pulls the Vicuna coat from
        its hangar and slips into it as he crosses to the
        entrance door.  He opens the door on the darkness
        of the courtyard.


C-17    EXT. DESMOND HOUSE 
        (NIGHT - RAIN)

        Gillis shuts the door.           GILLIS'VOICE
        He takes a few steps       I didn't know where I was
        forward, then stands       going.  I just had to get
        for a while breathing      out of there.  I had to be
        deep.  The rain is         with people my own age.  I
        balm to that cheek         had to hear somebody laugh
        where the slap still a     again.  I thought of Artie
        burns.  He walks for-      Green.  There was bound to
        ward with a great          be a New Year's shindig
        sense of relief.           going on in his apartment
                                   down on Las Palmas -- the
                                   hock shop set -- not a job
C-18    DRIVEWAY LEADING TO        in the room.  but lots of
        	fun on the cuff.

        Gillis walks to the
        street, which is dark
        and empty.  He starts
        down Sunset in an
        Easterly direction.
        A car passes.  He
        tries to thumb a
        ride, without success.
        However, the second

        car, a florist's
        delivery wagon, stops.
        Gillis jumps in and the
        car drives off.

        DISSOLVE TO:

C-19    ARTIE GREEN'S APARTMENT

        It is the most modest one-room affair, jam packed
        with young people flowing over into the miniature
        bathroom and the microscopic kitchenette.  The only
        drink being served is punch from a pressed-glass
        bowl -- but everybody is having a hell of a time.
        Most of the men are in slacks and sweaters, and only
        a few of the girls in something that vaguely suggests
        party dress.

        Abe Burroughs sits at a small, guest-festooned piano
        and sings Tokio Rose.  By the door, a group of young
        men and girls respond to the song by sing1ng Rinso
        White or Dentyne Chewing Gum or something similar,
        in the manner of a Bach choral.  Artie Green, a dark
        haired, pleasant-looking guy in his late twenties,
        is conducting with the ladle from the punch bowl.

        The door behind some of the singers is pushed open,
        jostling them out of their places.  In comes Gillis,
        his hair and face wet, the collar of his Vicuna coat
        turned up.  Artie stops conducting, but the commer-
        cial goes right on.

                          ARTIE
               Well, what do you know ! Joe
               Gillis !

                          GILLIS
               Hi, Artie.

                          ARTIE
               Where have you been keeping that
               gorgeous face of yours?

                          GILLIS
               In a deep freeze.

                          ARTIE
               I almost reported you to the Bureau
               of Missing Persons.
                    (To the company)
               Fans, you all know Joe Gillis, the
               well-known screen writer, opium
               smuggler and Black Dahlia suspect.

        Gillis greets some of the kids by name as he and
        Artie push their way into the room.

                          ARTIE
               Give me your coat.

                          GILLIS
               Let it ride for a while.

                          ARTIE
               You're going to stay, aren't you?

                          GILLIS
               That was the general idea.

                          ARTIE
               Come on.

        Artie starts peeling the coat off Gillis.  Its
        texture takes his breath away.

                          ARTIE
               What is this - mink?

        He has taken the coat.  He looks at Gillis standing
        there in tails.

                          ARTIE
               Judas E. Priest, who did you
               borrow that from? Adolphe
               Menjou?

                          GILLIS
               Close, but no cigar.

        Gillis stands embarrassed While Artie rolls up the
        Vicuna coat and tucks it above the books on a book-
        shelf.

                          ARTIE
               Say, you're not really smuggling
               opium these days,  are you?

                          GILLIS
               Where's the bar?

        The two make their way toward the punch bowl.  It's
        a little like running the gauntlet for Gillis.  There
        are whistles and 'stares of astonishlnent at his tails.
        When they reach the punch bowl, Artie picks up a
        half-filled glass and fills it.

                          GILLIS
               Good party.

                          ARTIE
               The greatest.  They call me the Elsa
               Maxwell of the assistant directors.
                    (To some guests who are
                     dipping their empty cups
                     into the punch bowl)
               Hey, easy on the punch bowl.  Budget
               only calls for three drinks per extra.
               Fake the rest.

                          GILLIS
               Listen, Artie, can I stick around
               here for a while?


                          ARTIE
               Sure, this'll go on all night.

                          GILLIS
               I mean, could you put me up for
               a couple of weeks?

                          ARTIE
               It just so happens we have a
               vacancy on the couch.

                          GILLIS
               I'll take it.

                          ARTIE
               I'll have the bell-hop take care
               of your luggage.

        He runs his finger across the decollete back of a
        girl standing in a group next them.

                          ARTIE
               Just register here.

        The girl turns around.  She is Betty Schaefer.

                          BETTY
               Hello, Mr.  Gillis.

                          ARTIE
               You know each other?

        Gillis looks at her a little puzzled.

                          BETTY
               Let me help you.  Betty Schaeter,
               Sheldrake's office.

                          GILLIS
               Sure.  Bases Loaded.

                          ARTIE
               Wait a minute.  This is the woman
               I love.  What's going on? Who
               was loaded?

                          GILLIS
               Don't worry.  She's just a fan
               for my literary output.

                          BETTY
                    (to Artie)
               Hurt feelings department.

                          GILLIS
               About that luggage.  Where's
               the phone?

                          ARTIE
               Over by the Rainbow Room.

        Gillis squeezes his way through groups of people
        to the telephone, which is next to an open door
        leading to the bathroom.  The phone is busy.  A
        girl sits listening to it, giggling wildly.  Another
        girl beside her is laughing too.  They are apparently
        sharing a conversation with some man on the other end
        of the wire.  The telephone passes from hand to hand.
        Gillis watches impatiently, then

                          GILLIS
               When youlre through with that
               thing, can I have it?

        The girl just nods, going on with her chattering.
        Gillis stands waiting, and Betty Schaefer comes up
        with his glass.

                          BETTY
               You forgot this.

                          GILLIS
               Thanks.

                          BETTY
               I've been hoping to run into you.

                          GILLIS
               What for? To recover that knife
               you stuck in my back?

                          BETTY
               I felt a little guilty, so I got
               out some of your old stories.

                          GILLIS
               Why, you sweet kid.

                          BETTY
               There's one called....Window...
               something with a window.

                          GILLIS
               Dark Windows.  How did you
               like it?

                          BETTY
               I didn't.

                          GILLIS
               Thank you.

                          BETTY
               Except for about six pages.
               You've got a flashback there ...

        There is too much racket for her.

                          BETTY
               Is there someplace we can talk?

                          GILLIS
               How about the Rainbow Room?

        They squeeze their way towards the bathroom, past
        Artie.

                          ARTIE
               I said you could have my couch.
               I didn't say you could have my
               girl.

                          BETTY
               This is shop talk.

        She and Gillis go through the open door into


C-20    ARTIE'S BATHROOM

        It's a little less noisy, although there are some
        guests there, chatting and having fun.  Betty and
        Gillis sit down on the edge of the tub.

                          GILLIS
               Now if I got you correctly, there
               was a short stretch of my fiction
               you found worthy of notice.

                          BETTY
               The flashback in the courtroom,
               when she tells about being a
               school teacher.

                          GILLIS
               I had a teacher like that once.

                          BETTY
               Maybe that's why it's good.
               It's true, it's moving.  Now
               why don't you use that character...

                          GILLIS
               Who wants true? Who wants moving?

                          BETTY
               Drop that attitude.  Here's some-
               thing really worth while.

                          GILLIS
               Want me to start right now?
               Maybe there's some paper around.

                          BETTY
               I'm serious.  I've got a few ideas.

                          GILLIS
               I've got some ideas myself.  One
               of them being this is New Year's
               Eve.  How about living it up a
               little?

                          BETTY
               As for instance?

                          GILLIS
               Well....

                          BETTY
               We could make some paper boats
               and have a regatta.  Or should
               we just turn on the shower?

                          GILLIS
               How about capturing the kitchen
               and barricading the door?

                          BETTY
               Are you hungry?

                          GILLIS
               Hungry? After twelve years in
               the Burmese jungle.  I am starving,
               Lady Agatha -- starving for a
               white shoulder --

                          BETTY
               Phillip, you're mad!

        One of the girls who was on the phone comes to
        the door.

                             GIRL
               You can have the phone now.

                             GILLIS
                    (Paying no attention)
               Thirsting for the coolness of
               your lips -

                             BETTY
               No, Phillip, no.  We must be
               strong.  You're still wearing
               the uniform of the Coldstream
               Guards!  Furthermore, you can
               have the phone now.

                             GILLIS
               O.K.
                    (He gets up, starts
                     out, turns)
               I find I'm terribly afraid of
               losing you.

                             BETTY
               You won't.
                    (She takes the glass
                     out of his hand)
               I'll get us a refill of
               this awful stuff.

                             GILLIS
               You'll be waiting for me?

                             BETTY
               With a wildly beating heart.

                             GILLIS
               Life can be beautiful!

        He leaves.


C-21    THE MAIN ROOM

        Gillis squeezes himself through some guests to
        the phone.  He has to stand in a cramped position,
        holding the instrument close to him as he dials
        a number.

                             GILLIS
               Max?  This is Mr. Gillis.
               I want you to do me a favor.

C-22    NORMA DESMOND HOUSE

        Max is at the phone, in the lower hall.

                          MAX
               I am sorry, Mr.  Gillis.
               I cannot talk now.


C-23    GILLIS ON THE PHONE

                          GILLIS
               Yes you can.  I want you to get
               my old suitcase and I want you
               to throw in my old clothes --
               the ones I came with, and my
               typewriter.  I'll have somebody
               pick them up.


C-24    MAX AT THE PHONE

                          MAX
               I have no time to talk.  The
               doctor is here.


C-25    GILLIS ON THE PHONE

                          GILLIS
               What doctor? What's going on?


C-26    MAX AT THE PHONE

                          MAX
               She got the razor from your
               room.  She cut her wrists.

        Max hangs up, moves toward the staircase.


C-27    GILLIS AT THE PHONE

                          GILLIS
               Max ! Max !

        He hangs up the dead receiver, stands numb   with
        shock.  Betty elbows her way up to him, carrying
        the two punch glasses filled again.

                          BETTY
               I just got the recipe: take
               two packages of cough drops,
               dissolve in one gallon of
               lukewarm grape juice --

        Gillis looks up at her.  Without a word he pushes
        her aside so that she spills the drink.  He makes
        his way through the guests to the Vicuna coat, pulls
        it from the shelf, some books tumbling with it, and
        rushes towards the door and out.  Betty stands look-
        ing after him, completely bewildered.

        DISSOLVE TO:


C-28    EXT. DESMOND HOUSE - (NIGHT, RAIN)

        The doctor's car is parked in the driveway.  A taxi
        pulls up.  Gillis, in his Vicuna coat now, jumps
        out, throws a couple of dollars to the rdriver and
        runs toward the house.


C-28a    DOORWAY, NORMA DESMOND HOUSE>

        Max is opening the door to let out the doctor, a
        professional looking man carrying a black bag.
        Gillis runs into the SHOT.

                          GILLIS
               How is she?

                          MAX
               She is upstairs.

        Gillis starts to push past Max.  Max grabs his arm.

                          MAX
               Be careful.  Do not race up the
               stairs.  The musicians must not
               know what has happened.

        Gillis goes into the house.


C-29    ENRANCE HALL AND STAIRCASE

        Gillis crosses the hall and starts up the stairs.


C-3O    INT. NORMA DESMOND'S ROOM

        Only one alabaster lamp lights the big, cold room.
        On the bed lies Norma in her evening dress.  She is
        white as a sheet.  Her wrists are bandaged.  Her eyes
        are wide open, staring at the ceiling.  One of her
        shoes has halt slipped off her foot.  The other is
        on.  Gillis opens the door and stands there tor a
        second.  Then he slowly moves to the toot of the bed.
        He takes the shoes from her feet and puts them on
        the floor.

                          NORMA
               Go away.

                          GILLIS
               What kind of a silly thing was
               that to do?

                          NORMA
               To fall in love with you -- that
               was the idiotic thing.

                          GILLIS
               It sure would have made attractive
               headlines: Great Star Kills Her-
               self for Unknown Writer.

                          NORMA
               Great stars have great pride.

        She puts one bandaged forearm over her eyes, sobbing.
        Gillis walks slowly over to the mantelpiece, stands
        there for awhile.

                          NORMA
               Go away.  Go to that girl of yours.

                          GILLIS
               Look, I was making that up because
               I thought the whole thing was a
               mistake.  I didn't want to hurt you.
               You've been good to me.  You're the
               only person in this stinking town
               that has been good to me.

                          NORMA
               Why don't you just say thank you
               and go, go, go --

                          GILLIS
               Not until you promise to act like
               a sensible human being.

                          NORMA
               I'll do it again, I'll do it again,
               I'll do it again!

        Gillis stands looking at her helplessly.


C-31    LIVING ROOM, THE DESMOND HOUSE

        The candles burned down, the orchestra playing to
        the emptiness.  The orchestra leader looks at his
        watch, rises, silences the orchestra, then starts
        them in on Auld Lang Syne.

                                                                     


C-32    INT. NORMA'S ROOM

        Gillis still stands.  Norma lies on the bed, arms
        over her eyes, sobbing.

                          GILLIS
               Happy New Year.

        Norma continues to sob.  Gillis goes to the bed,
        puts his arms on her shoulders and turns her around.

                          GILLIS
               Happy New Year.

        Norma looks at him, tears in her eyes.  Slowly she
        enfolds him in her bandaged arms.

                          NORMA
               Happy New Year.  darling.

        She kisses him.

        DISSOLVE





                END OF SEQUENCE "C"




                       SEQUENCE "D"

        DISSOLVE IN ON:

D-1     INT. HALLWAY, NORMA              GILLIS' VOICE
        DESMOND'S HOUSE (DAY)       Around the middle of May
                                    some incidents happened
        The telephone is heard      which I think I should tell
        ringing.  Max comes from    you about.
        living room to the phone,
        picks it up.

                          MAX
               Hello ... Yes?


D-1a    BETTY SCHAEFER, AT THE PHONE ON HER DESK IN THE
        READERS' DEPARTMENT

                          BETTY
               Is this Crestview 5-1733? ... I'm
               sorry to bother you again, but I've
               confirmed the number.  I must speak
               to Mr. Gillis.

D-1b    MAX, AT THE PHONE

                          MAX
               He is not here.

D-1c    BETTY ON THE PHONE

                          BETTY
               Where can I reach him?  Maybe
               somebody else in the house could
               tell me.

D-1d    MAX ON THE PHONE

                          MAX
               Nobody here can give you any
               information.  You will please
               not call again.

        He hangs up.  From off comes:

                          NORMA'S VOICE
               Who was it, Max?  What is it?


D-1e    PATIO, NORMA'S HOUSE

        It is a sunny day.  The garden is in somewhat better
        shape.  The old house looks less unkept.  The pool
        is filled.  Norma sits on a wicker chaise longue, her
        face shielded by an enormous straw hat, her eyes by
        dark glasses.  Gillis, in bathing trunks, is on a
        rubber mattress in the pool.  Max comes to the
        entrance door.

                          MAX
               Nothing, Madame.  Somebody Inqu-
               iring about a stray dog.  We must
               have a number very similar to the
               pound.

        He starts to turn back.

                          NORMA
               Wait a minute.  I want you to get
               out the car.  You're going to
               take the script over to Paramount
               and deliver it to Mr. De Mille in
               person.

                          MAX
               Yes, Madame.

        He goes into the house.

                          GILLIS
                    (climbing out
                     of the water)
               You're really going to send it
               to De Mille?

                          NORMA
               This is the right day.

        She indicates a typewritten letter she is holding.

                          NORMA (Cont'd)
               The chart from my astrologer.
               She read deMille's horoscope.
               She read mine.

                          GILLIS
               Did she read the script?

                          NORMA
               DeMille is Leo.  I'm Scorpio.
               Mars has been transmitting
               Jupiter for weeks.  Today is
               the day of greatest conjuction.
               Now turn around.  Let me dry
               you.

        She puts the towel around his sholders and starts
        drying him.

                          GILLIS
               I hope you realize, Norma,
               that scripts don't sell on
               astrologers' charts.

                          NORMA
               I'm not just selling the script.
               I'm selling me.  DeMille always
               said I was his greatest star.

                          GILLIS
                When did he say it, Norma?

                          NORMA
               So he said it quite a few years
               ago.  So what?  I never looked
               better in my life.  Do you know
               why?  Because I've never been as
               happy in my life.

        She kisses him.

        DISSOLVE TO:


D-2     INT. THE ISOTTA, DRIVING
        DOWN SUNSET ABOUT 8:30
        IN THE EVENING                    GILLIS' VOICE
                                    A few evenings later we
        Max is driving.  In the     were going to the house of
        tonneau sit Norma, in a     one of the waxworks for
        chinchilla wrap, and        some bridge.  She'd taught
        Gillis in his tuxedo.       me how to play bridge by
        Norma is rummaging          then, just as she'd taught
        through her evening         me some fancy tango steps,
        bag.  She finds a           and what wine to drink
        cigarette case, opens       with what fish.
        it.  It is empty.

                          NORMA
               That idiot.  He forgot to fill
               my cigarette case.

                          GILLIS
                    (Proffering his case)
               Have one of mine.

                          NORMA
               They're awful.  They make me cough.

                          GILLIS
                    (Pushing open the glass
                     partition, to Max)
               Pull up at the drugstore, will
               you, Max.
                    (To Norma)
               I'll get you some.

                          NORMA
               You're a darling.

        She takes a dollar bill from her purse and gives it
        to him.


D-3     EXT. SCHWAB'S DRUGSTORE
        The car drives up and Gillis hurries into the store.


D-4     INT. SCHWAB'S DRUGSTORE
        Business is still rather lively.  There are about a
        dozen shoppers, and the soda counter is half filled.
        Gillis enters and steps to the tobacco counter.

                          GILLIS
                    (To the salesgirl)
               Give me a pack of those Turkish
               cigarettes -- Melachrinos.

        The girl opens the glass showcase to locate the fancy
        brand.  From OFF comes

                          ARTIE'S VOICE
               Stick 'em up, Gillis, or I'll
               let you have it!

        Gillis turns.


D-5     AT THE SODA FOUNTAIN

        Artie Green and Betty Schaefer sit having a sandwich
        and a milk shake.  With his forefinger and a sound
        effect, Artie riddles Gillis' body.  Gillis walks
        INTO THE SHOT.

                          GILLIS
               Hello, Artie.  Good evening,
               Miss Schaefer.

                          BETTY
                    (Excitedly)
               You don't know how glad I am
               to see youl

                          ARTIE
               Walking out on the mob.  What's
               the big idea?

                          GILLIS
               I'm sorry about New Year's. Would
               you believe me if I said I had
               to be with a sick friend?

                          ARTIE
               Someone in the formal set, no
               doubt, with a ten-carat kidney
               stone.

                          BETTY
               Stop it, Artie, will you?
                    (To Gillis)
               Where have you been keeping your-
               self? I've got the most wonderful
               news for you.

                          GILLIS
               I haven't been keeping myself at
               all.  Not lately.

                          BETTY
               I called your agent.  I called the
               Screen Writers Guild.  Finally your
               old apartment gave me some Crestview
               number.  There was always somebody
               with an accent growling at me.  You
               were not there.  You were not to be
               spoken to.  They never heard of you.

                          GILLIS
               Is that so? What's the wonderful
               news?

                          BETTY
               Sheldrake likes that angle about
               the teacher.

                          GILLIS
               What teacher?

                          BETTY
               Dark Windows.  I got him all
               hopped up about it.

                          GILLIS
               You did?

                          BETTY
               He thinks it could be made into
               something.

                          GILLIS
               Into what? A lampshade?

                          BETTY
               Into something for Barbara Stan-
               wyck.  They have a commitment with
               Barbara Stanwyck.

                          ARTIE
               Unless you'd rather have Sarah
               Bernhardt.

                          BETTY
               This is on the level.  Sheldrake
               really went for it.

                          GILLIS
               O.K.  Where's the cash?

                          BETTY
               Where's the story? I bluffed it
               out with a few notions of my own.
               It's really just a springboard.
               It needs work.

                          GILLIS
               I was afraid of that.

                             BETTY
                  I've got twenty pages of notes.
                  I've got a pretty good character
                  for the man.

                             ARTIE
                  Could you write in plenty of back-
                  ground action, so they'll need an
                  extra assistant director?

                             BETTY
                  Shut up, Artie.
                       (To Gillis)
                  Now if we could sit down for two
                  weeks and get a story.

                             GILLIS
                  Sorry, Miss Schaefer, but I've
                  given up writing on spec.

                             BETTY
                  I tell you this is half sold.

                             GILLIS
                  As a matter of fact.  I've given
                  up writing altogether.

        Max has appeared in the door.

                            MAX
                 Mr. Gillis, if you please.

                            GILLIS
                 Right with you.

        Max leaves.

                            ARTIE
                 The accent! I've got it: this guy
                 is in the pay of a foreign government.
                 Get those studs.  Get those cuff-links.

                            GILLIS
                 I've got to run along.  Thanks any-
                 way for your interest in my career.

                            BETTY
                 It's not your career -- it's mine.
                 I kind of hoped to get in on this
                 deal.  I don't want to be a reader
                 all my life.  I want to write.

                            GILLIS
                 Sorry if I crossed you up.

                            BETTY
                 You sure have.

                            GILLIS
                 So long.

        He leaves.

                          ARTIE
                    (Patting her hand)
               Babe, it's like that producer says:
               In life, you've got to take the
               bitter with the sour.


D-6     THE ISOTTA, PARKED OUTSIDE

        Gillis comes from Schwab's, gets into the car.

        Max takes off.

                          NORMA
               What on earth, darling? It took
               you hours.

                          GILLIS
               I ran into some people I knew.

                          NORMA
               Where are my cigarettes?

                          GILLIS
               Where are your...?

        He realizes he's forgotten them, takes the dollar
        and hands it back to her.

                          GILLIS
               Norma, you're smoking too much.

        DISSOLVE TO:


D-7     LIVING ROOM, NORMA
        DESMOND'S HOUSE 
        (EARLY AFTERNOON)

        Start on a tiny                       GILLIS' VOICE
        parasol being             Whenever she suspected I
        twirled...Norma           was getting bored, she
        peeks out from one        would put on a live show
        side of the parasol,      for me: the Norma Desmond
        a bandanna tied           Follies.  Her first number
        around her head with      was always the Mack Sennett
        a rabbit's-ear bow.       Bathing Beauty.
        She bats her eyes,
        winks roguishly.

        THE CAMERA PULLS BACK to reveal that Norma's black
        pyjama trousers are rolled up over her knees and her
        black stockings rolled down below them.  The whole
        effect approximates a Mack Sennett bathing costume
        pretty effectively.  She points at a leather pour.

                          NORMA
               This is a rock.

        She climbs on it, pantomimes timidity, an attempted
        dive, then jumps off.

        Gillis lolls on a couch, watching the performance,
        very bored.

                          NORMA
               I can still see myself in the
               line: Bebe Daniels, Marie Prevost,
               Mabel Normand ... Mabel was always
               stepping on my feet ...What's the
               matter with you, darling?  Why are
               you so glum?

                          GILLIS
                    (Lighting a cigarette
                     with a match)
               Nothing is the matter.  I'm having
               a great time.  Show me some more.

                          NORMA
                    (Taking the match)
               All right.  Give me this.  I need
               it for a moustache.  Now close
               your eyes.

        She runs out of the                 GILLIS' VOICE
        picture.  Gillis has      Something was the matter,
        closed his eyes.          all right.  I was thinking
        THE CAMERA MOVES to       about that girl of Artie's,
        his face.                 that Miss Schaefer.  She
                                  was so like all us writers
                                  when we first hit Holly-
                                  wood -- itching with am-
                                  bition, panting to get
                                  your names up there:
                                  Screenplay by.  Original
                                  Story by.  Hmph!  Audiences
                                  don't know somebody sits
                                  down and writes a picture.
                                  They think the actors make
                                  it up as they go along.

                          NORMA'S VOICE
               Open your eyes.

        Gillis opens his eyes.

        Norma has equipped herselr with a derby hat, a cane,
        and blacked in a small moustache.  She goes into a
        little Chaplin routine.  While she is doing it, the
        telephone rings.  After a moment Max comes to the
        living room door.

                          MAX
               Madame is wanted on the telephone.

                          NORMA
               You know better than to interrupt me.

                          MAX
               Paramount is calling.

                          NORMA
               Who?

                          MAX
               Paramount studios.

                          NORMA
                    (To Gillis)
               Now, now do you belive me? I told
               you deMille would jump at it.

                          MAX
               It is not Mr. deMille in person.
               It is someone by the name or Gordon
               Cole.  He says it's very important.

                          NORMA
               Certainly it's important.  It's
               important enough for Mr. deMille
               to call me personally.  The idea
               of having an assistant call me!

                          MAX
               I myself was surprised at Mr. de
               Mille's manners.

                          NORMA
               Say that I'm busy, and hang up.

                          MAX
               Very good, Madam.

        He bows and exits.

                          NORMA
               How do you like that? We've
               made twelve pictures together.
               His greatest successes.

                          GILLIS
               Maybe deMille is shooting.

                          NORMA
               I know that trick! He wants to
               belittle me.  He's trying to get
               my price down.  I've waited
               twenty years for this call.  Now
               Mr. deMille can wait till I'm
               good and ready.

        DISSOLVE TO:


D-8     NORMA, IN THE TONNEAU
        OF THE LIMOUSINE,
        DRIVING DOWN MELROSE

        She is in full makeup,             GILLIS' VOICE
        with a veil, a daring     About three days later she
        hat, a suit so stunning   was good and ready.  In-
        only she would venture    credible as it may seem,
        to wear it.  THE CAMERA   there had been some more
        PULLS BACK.  Beside her   of those calls from
        sits Gillis in the glen   Paramount.  So she put on
        plaid suit.  Max is       about half a pound of
        driving.                  makeup, fixed it up with
                                  a veil, and set forth to
                                  see deMille in person.

        Norma is examining her face in the mirror of her
        vanity.  Max, while driving, sees her in the rear
        view mirror.

                          MAX
               If you will pardon me, Madame.
               The shadow over the left eye
               is not quite balanced.

                          NORMA
               Thank you, Max.

        With a handkerchief, she corrects it.


D-9     MAIN GATE, EXT. PARAMOUNT STUDIO

        The car drives down Bronson and stops smack in front
        of the iron gate.  A young policeman is talking to
        an extra; an old policeman sits reading a newspaper.
        Max sounds the horn impatiently.

                          YOUNG POLICEMAN
               Hold that noise!

                          MAX
               To see Mr. de Mille.  Open the gate.

                          YOUNG POLICEMAN
                Mr. deMille is shooting.  You
                got an appointment?

                          MAX
                No appointment is necessary.  I
                am bringing Norma Desmond.

                          YOUNG POLICEMAN
                Norma Who?

        Norma has rolled down the window on her side.  She
        calls to the old policeman.

                          NORMA
                Jonesy! Come here, Jonesy!

                          OLD POLICEMAN
                Yeah?
                     (He comes forward slowly)
                Why, if it isn't Miss Desmond!
                How have you been, Miss Desmond?

                          NORMA
                Fine, Jonesy.  Now open that gate.

                          OLD POLICEMAN
                Sure, Miss Desmond.
                     (To the young policeman}
                Come on, Mac.

                          YOUNG POLICEMAN
                They can't drive on the lot
                without a pass.

                          OLD POLICEMAN
                Miss Desmond can.  Come on.

        They fling open the gate.

                          OLD POLICEMAN
                     (As the car drives through)
                Stage eighteen, Miss Desmond.

                          NORMA
                Thank you, Jonesy.  And teach
                your friend some manners.  Tell
                him without me he wouldn't have
                any job, because without me there
                wouldn't be any Paramount Studio.
                     (To Max)
                Go on.

        They drive through the gates.  The old policeman
        goes to wall phone beside the gate, dials a number.

                          OLD POLICEMAN
                    (Into phone)
               Norma Desmond coming in to
               see Mr. deMille.

D-10    STAGE 18

        A scene from SAMPSON AND DELILAH is being rehearsed
        in the background.  The usual turbulent activity
        surrounds it: extras.  makeup men, grips,
        assistants, etc., etc.  In the dim foreground a
        stage hand is answering a stand telephone.  He
        puts down the phone and moves (CAMERA WITH HIM)
        to a second assistant.

                          STAGE HAND
               Norma Desmond is coming to see
               Mr. deMille.

        The second assistant walks (CAMERA WITH HIM)
        to the first assistant.

                          2nd ASSISTANT
               Norma Desmond coming in to
               see Mr. deMille.

        The first assistant (CAMERA WITH HIM) hurries
        to the set.  Sitting with his back toward us
        is C.B. himself.  He is rehearsing a scene with
        Hedy Lamarr.

                          1ST ASSISTANT
               Norma Desmond is coming in to
               see you, Mr. deMille.

        C. B. turns his head.

                          DEMILLE
               Norma Desmond?

                          lst ASSISTANT
               She must be a million years old.

                          DEMILLE
               I hate to think where that puts
               me.  I could be her father.

                          1ST ASSISTANT
               I'm terribly sorry, Mr. de Mille.

        By this time de Mille is on his feet.

                          DEMILLE
               It must be about that appalling
               script of hers.  What can I say
               to her? What can I say?

                          1ST ASSISTANT
               I can tell her you're all tied
               up in the projection room.  I
               can give her the brush ...

                          DEMILLE
               Listen, thirty million fans
               have given her the brush.
               Isn't that enough?

                          1ST ASSISTANT
               I didn't mean to --

                          DEMILLE
               Of course you didn't.  You didn't
               know Norma Desmond as a plucky
               little girl of seventeen, with
               more courage and wit and heart
               than ever came together in one
               youngster.

                          1ST ASSISTANT
               I hear she was a terror to
               work with.

                          DEMILLE
               She got to be.  A dozen press
               agents working overtime can
               do terrible things to the human
               spirit.
                    (to the set)
               Hold everything.

        He leaves, accompanied by his entourage.

D-11    EXT. STAGE 18

        Norma's limousine drives up.  Max dismounts
        and opens the door.

                          NORMA
                    (taking Gillis's hand)
               Don't you want to come along,
               darling?

                          GILLIS
               I don't think so.  It's your
               script.  It's your show.
               Good luck.

                          NORMA
               Thank you, darling.

        She presses his hand against her cheek, descends
        from the car and walks toward -

D-12    THE DOOR OF STAGE 18

        The first assistant is holding it open.  In the door-
        way stands Mr. deMille.  Seeing Norma, he stretches
        out his arms.

                            DE MILLE
                 Hello, young fellow.

                            NORMA
                 Hello, Mr. deMille.

        She has reached him.  They embrace.

                            NORMA
                 Last time I saw you was someplace
                 very gay.  I remember waving to you.
                 I was dancing on a table.

                           DE MILLE
                Lots of people were.  Lindbergh had
                just landed in Paris.  Come on in.

        He leads her into


D-13    STAGE 18

        During the ensuing dialogue, Mr. deMille walks Norma
        towards the set.

                            DE MILLE
                 Norma, I want to apologize for
                 not calling you.

                            NORMA
                 You'd better.  I'm very angry.

                            DE MILLE
                 I'm pretty busy, as you can see...

                            NORMA
                 That's no excuse.  You read the
                 script, didn't you?

                            DE MILLE
                 Yes, I did.

                            NORMA
                 Then you could have picked up the
                 phone yourself instead of leaving
                 it to one of your assistants.

                            DE MILLE
                 What assistant?

                           NORMA
                Don't play innocent.  Somebody
                named Gordon Cole.

                           DE MILLE
                Gordon Cole?

                           NORMA
                And if you hadn't been pretty
                darned interested in that script,
                he wouldn't have tried to get
                me on the phone ten times.

                           DE MILLE
                Gordon Cole... Look, Norma,
                I'm in the middle of a rehearsal.
                     (Indicating his
                      own chair)
                Make yourself comfortable.

        He walks onto the set, accompanied by his assistants.

                           DE MILLE
                     (Sotto voce, to his
                      first assistant)
                Get me Gordon Cole on the phone.

        Meanwhile, Norma starts to sit, sees the name
        MISS LAMARR on the chair and with a look of
        distaste changes and sits on the one marked
        C.B. DE MILLE.    From somewhere comes

                           A VOICE
                Hey, Miss Desmond! Miss Desmond!

        She looks around her.

                         VOICE
              Up here!

        Norma looks up at the scaffolding.

        On the scaffold stands one of the electricians,
        next to his light.

                         ELECTRICIAN
              It's met It's Hog-eyel

        Norma waves at him.

                         NORMA
              Hello.

        Hog-eye points his light at her.

                         HOG-EYE
              Let's get a look at you.

        The beam of the lamp moves toward Norma.  It hits
        her.  She sits bathed in light.  A couple of old
        costume extras recognize her.

                         EXTRAS
              Say, it's Norma! Norma Desmond!

        They rush over and start wringing her hand.  Into
        the shot comes a middle-aged hairdresser.

                         HAIRDRESSER
              Hello, Miss Desmond.  It's Bessie.

        Some elderly electricians and stagehands move in.


D-14    ANOTHER PART OF THE STAGE

        The first assistant brings the portable phone to
        deMille.  DeMille lifts the receiver.

                         DE MILLE
              Hello.


D-15    GORDON COLE'S OFFICE IN THE PROPERTY DEPARTMENT,
        GORDON COLE ON THE PHONE.

                         COLE
              Prop Department.  Gordon Cole speaking.

D-16    DE MILLE ON THE PHONE

                          DE MILLE
               Cole, this is C. B. deMille.  Have
               you been calling Norma Desmond?...
               What's it about?


D-17    GORDON COLE, ON THE PHONE

                          COLE
               It's that car of hers -- an old
               Isotta-Fraschini.  Her chauffeur
               drove it on the lot the other day.
               It looks just right for the Crosby
               picture.  We want to rent it for a
               couple of weeks.


D-18    DE MILLE ON THE PHONE

                          DE MILLE
                    (Troubled)
               Oh.  Well, thank you.

        He hangs up, walks back towards Norma.  (CAMERA
        WITH HIM).

        Norma stills sits in the shaft of light, surrounded
        by about a dozen people who have come up to pay court.
        DeMille gestures up to Hog-eye and the light shifts
        away.  The people about Norma disperse slowly with
        various ad-libs.

                          DE MILLE
               Well, Norma ...
                    (He sits down next to her)
               I got hold of Gordon Cole.

        Norma hasn't heard a word.

                          NORMA
               Did you see them? Did you see
               how they came?

                          DE MILLE
               You know, crazy things happen in
               this business.  I hope you haven't
               lost your sense of humor ...

        Suddenly he realizes that she is crying.  She takes
        the handkerchief from his pocket and puts it over her
        eyes.

                          DEMILLE
               What's the matter, Norma?

                          NORMA
               Nothing.  I just didn't realize
               what it would be like to come back
               to the old studio.  I had no idea
               how I'd missed it.

                          DEMILLE
               We've missed you too, dear.

                          NORMA
               We'll be working again, won't we, Chief?
               We'll make our greatest picture.

                          DEMILLE
               That's what I want to talk to you about.

                          NORMA
               It's a good script, isn't it?

                          DEMILLE
               It's got a lot of good things.  Of
               course, it would be an expensive picture...

                          NORMA
               I don't care about the money.
               I just want to work again.  You
               don't know what it means to know
               that you want me.

                          DEMILLE
               Nothing would thrill me more --
               if it were possible.

                          NORMA
               But remember, darling -- I don't
               work before ten in the morning,
               and never after 4:30 in the afternoon.

        The first assistant comes up.

                          1ST ASSISTANT
               We're ready with the shot, Mr. deMille.

                          DEMILLE
               You'll pardon me, Norma? Why
               don't you just sit and watch?
                    (He steps onto the set)
               O.K.  Here we go.

                          1ST ASSISTANT
               Roll 'em.

                          DEMILLE
               Action!
        The scene starts.

D-19    THE ISOTTA, PARKED OUTSIDE STAGE 18

        Max stands talking to Gillis, who is seated in the
        car.

                          MAX
                    (Pointing to the row
                     of offices in the
                     building opposite)
               You see those offices there, Mr.
               Gillis? They used to be her
               dressing room, The whole row.

                          GILLIS
               That didn't leave much for Wallace
               Reid.

                          MAX
               He had a great big bungalow on
               wheels.  I had the upstairs.  See
               where it says 'Readers' Department'?
               I remember my walls were covered
               with black patent leather...

        The words "Readers' Department" have registered on
        Gillis' mind.  He gets out of the car.

                          GILLIS
               I'll be with you in a minute.

        He crosses the street towards the green staircase
        leading to the second floor.

        Meanwhile, two prop men walking down the street
        come into the SHOT.

                          1ST PROP MAN
               Hey, that's the comic car Cole
               was talking about!
                     (To Max)
               Do you mind if we look inside?

                          MAX
               Go away.  Go away.


D-2O    CUBICLE IN THE READERS' DEPARTMENT

        Behind the desk sits Betty, typing the synopsis of
        a novel, a half-eaten apple marking her place.  The
        door behind her opens and Gillis enters.

                          GILLIS
               Just so you don't think I'm a
               complete swine -- if there's
               anything in Dark Windows you
               can use, take it.  It's all
               yours.

                          BETTY
               Well, for heaven's sake!

        She moves the book and the apple aside and points at
        the free space on the desk.

                          BETTY
               Have a chair.

        Gillis sits on the desk.

                          GILLIS
               I mean it.  It's no good to me
               anyway.  Help yourself.

                          BETTY
               Why should you do that?

                          GILLIS
               If you get a hundred thousand for
               it, you buy me a box of chocolate
               creams.  If you get an Oscar, I
               get the left foot.

                          BETTY
               You know, I'd take you up on that
               in a minute.  I'm just not good
               enough to do it all by myself.

                          GILLIS
               What about all those ideas you had?

                          BETTY
               See if they make sense.  To begin
               with, I think you should throw out
               all that psychological stuff --
               exploring a killer's sick mind.

                          GILLIS
               Psychopaths sell like hotcakes.

                          BETTY
               This story is about teachers --
               their threadbare lives, their
               struggles.  Here are people doing
               the most important job in the
               world, and they have to wprry
               about getting enough money to
               re-sole their shoes.  To me it
               can be as exciting as any chase,
               any gunplay.

                          GILLIS
               Check.

                          BETTY
               Now I see her teaching day classes
               while he teaches night school.  The
               first time they meet ...

        From below comes the SOUND of the Isotta's horn.

                          GILLIS
               Look, if you don't mind, I haven't
               got time to listen to the whole
               plot ...

                          BETTY
               I'll make it short.

                          GILLIS
               Sorry.  It's your baby now.

                          BETTY
               I'm not good enough to write it
               alone.  We'll have to do it together.

                          GILLIS
               I'm all tied up.  I can't.

                          BETTY
               Couldn't we work in the evenings?
               Six o'clock in the morning? This
               next month I'm completely at your
               disposal.  Artie is out of town.

                          GILLIS
               What has Artie to do with it.

                          BETTY
               We're engaged.

                          GILLIS
               Good for you.  You've got yourself
               the best guy in town.

                          BETTY
               I think so.  They're on location
               in Arizona, shooting a Western.
               I'm free every evening, every week-
               end.  If you want, we could work at
               your place.

                          GILLIS
               It's just impossible.

                          BETTY
               Nobody can be that busy.

        There is another honk: from down below.

                          GILLIS
               Look, Betty, It can't be done.
               It's out.

                          BETTY
               You're tough, all right.

                          GILLIS
               You're on your own.  Stop being
               chicken-hearted and write that story.

                          BETTY
               Honest to goodness, I hate you.

                          GILLIS
                    (Turning 1n the open door)
               And don't make it too dreary.  How
               about this for a situation: she
               teaches daytimes.  He teaches at
               night.  Right?  They don't even know
               each other, but they share the same
               room.  It's cheaper that way.  As a
               matter of fact, they sleep in the
               same bed -- in shifts, of oourse.

                          BETTY
               Are you kidding? Because I think
               it's good.

                          GILLIS
               So do I.

                          BETTY
               Came  on back.  Let me show you
               where it fits in.

        She reaches in a drawer for her notes on Dark
        Windows.

                          GILLIS
                     (At the door)
               So long.

        Betty picks up the apple and is about to throw it
        after him.

                          BETTY
               Oh, you --

                          GILLIS
               And here's a title: AN APPLE FOR
               THE TEACHER.

        He ducks out quiokly, slamming the door behind him.
        Betty looks after him, then angrlly hurls the
        apple into the wastebasket.


D-21    STAIRCASE OUTSIDE READERS' DEPARTMENT

        Max is rush1ng up the stairs toward the descending
        Gillis.

                          GILLIS
               What's the matter, Max?

                          MAX
               I just found out why all those tele-
               phone calls.  It is not Miss Desmond
               they want.  It is the car they want
               to rent.

                          GILLIS
               What?

        Max has seen something off.

                          MAX
               Ssh...

        With his head he indicates


D-22    ENTRANCE TO STAGE 18

        The first assistant has opened the door.  DeMille
        is showing Norma out.

                          DE MILLE
               Goodbye, young fellow.  We'll see
               what we can do.

                          NORMA
                    (embracing him)
               I'm not worried.  Everything will
               be fine.  The old team together.
               Nothing can stop us.

        She turns and walks out of the shot.  De Mille
        stands for a second watching her, then turns to
        his assistant.

                          DE MILLE
               Get Gordon Cole.  Tell him to forget
               about her car.  He can find another
               old car.  I'll buy him five old cars,
               if necessary.

                          1ST ASSISTANT
               Yes, Mr. De Mille.

        They turn back into Stage 18.

D-23    THE ISOTTA

        Gillis seated in the rear.  Max is helping Norma
        in and putting the robe over her.

                         GILLIS
                    (Apprehensively)
              How did it go?

                         NORMA
              It couldn't have gone better.
              It's practically set.  Of course,
              he has to finish this picture
              first, but mine will be his next.

        There is an exchange of looks between Max and Gillis.

                         GILLIS
              He must be quite a guy.

                         NORMA
              He'a a shrewd old fox.  He can
              smell box office.  Only I'm going
              to outfox him a litt1e.  This isn't
              going to be C. B. deMille's Salome.
              It's going to be Norma Desmond's
              Salome, a Norma Desmond Production,
              starring Norma Desmond...Home, Max.

                         MAX
              Yes, Miss Desmond.

        As he says the words, he and Gillis exchange a glance
        in the rear view mirror.

        SLOW DISSOLVE:

                         END OF SEQUENCE "D"



                       SEQUENCE "E"

        DISSOLVE IN ON:

E-1     CLOSEUP OF NORMA'S FACE
                                            GILLIS' VOICE
        Absolutely no makeup.  A       After that, an army of
        hand with a strong small       beauty experts invaded
        flashlight comes into the      her house on Sunset
        picture.  The beam of the      Boulevard.  She went
        flashlight travels over the    through a merciless
        face, exploring it merci-      series of treatments,
        lessly.  While the light is    massages, sweat cabinets,
        still on it, two pairs of      mud baths, ice compres-
        creamed hands come into the    ses, electric devices.
        shot and start to massage it.  She lived on vegetable
                                       juices and went to bed
        DISSOLVE TO:                   at nine.  She was deter-
                                       mined to be ready --
                                       ready for those cameras
E-2     A SHORT MONTAGE of various     that would never turn.
        beauty treatments applied
        to Norma.

        DISSOLVE TO:

E-3     NORMA BEFORE THE MIRROR
        IN HER BEDROOM

        It is nine o'clock in the evening.  She is in night
        gown and negligee and has put triangular patches on
        the saddle of her nose and at the outer corner of
        each eye.  She is rubbing lotion on her hands.

        She gets up and crosses to the door of Gillis' room
        and opens it a crack.

                           NORMA
                 Joe darling, are you there?

E-4     GILLIS' ROOM

        It is dark except for a lamp over the chaise longue.
        Gillis lies on it, fully clothed, reading a book.

                           GILLIS
                 Yes, Norma.

        Through the slit in the door there is a suggestion
        of Norma.

                           NORMA
                Don't turn around.  Keep your
                eyes on the book.

                           GILLIS
                Yes, Norma.

        Norma pushes the door open and comes in.

                           NORMA
                I just came to say good night.
                I don't want you to see me --
                I'm not very attractive.

                           GILLIS
                Good night.

                           NORMA
                I've lost half a pound since
                Tuesday.

                           GILLIS
                Good.

                           NORMA
                I was a little worried about the
                line of my throat.  This woman
                has done wonders with it.

                           GILLIS
                Good.

                           NORMA
                You'd better get to bed yourself.

                           GILLIS
                I think I'll read a little.

                           NORMA
                You went out last night, didn't
                you, Joe?

                           GILLIS
                Why do you say that?

                           NORMA
                I just happen to know it.  I had
                a nightmare and I screamed for
                you.  You weren't here.  Where
                were you?

                           GILLIS
                I went for a walk.

                           NORMA
                No you didn't.  You took the
                car.

                           GILLIS
                All right, I drove to the beach.
                Norma, you don't want me to feel
                I'm locked up in this house?

                           NORMA
                Of course not, Joe.  It's just
                that I don't want to be left alone.
                Not now, while I'm under this
                terrible strain.  My nerves are
                being torn apart.  All I ask is
                for you to be a little patient and a
                little kind.

                           GILLIS
                I haven't done anything, Norma.

                           NORMA
                Of course you haven't.  I wouldn't
                let you.

        She bends and kisses the top of his head.

                           NORMA
                Good night, my darling.

        She goes into her room, shutting the door behind her.

        Gillis puts his book down and looks at her door.


E-5     THE DOOR TO NORMA'S ROOM

        The light can be seen through the gouged-out
        keyhole.  It goes out.

        DISSOLVE TO:

E-6     UPPER LANDING STAIRWAY
        AND HALL BELOW (NIGHT)                GILLIS' VOICE

        Gillis, with his coat on by    Yes, I was playing hooky
        now, comes cautiously to
        the upper railing and looks    every evening along in
        down into the lighted hall
        below.                         there.  It made me think I

        Max is just extinguishing      of when I was twelve and
        the lights.  Max exits in,
        the direction of the liv-      used to sneak out on the
        ing room.
                                       folks to see a gangster
        After a moment Gillis starts
        silently down the stairs.      picture.  This time it

                                       wasn't to see a picture,
E-7     LIVING ROOM
                                       it was to try and write
        (Lighted only by the last
        flicker of a fire on the       one.  That story of mine
        hearth).  Max is putting a
        fire screen in front of        Betty Schaerer had dug
        the fire.  He hears some
        steps and the creak or the     up kept going through
        main door being opened.
        He looks out and sees          my head like a dozen

                                       locomotives...
E-7a    THE MAIN DOOR

        Gillis, in the moonlit porch,
        is closing the main door
        behind him.


E-8     LIVING ROOM

        Max looks after Gillis, his
        face enigmatic as ever.

        DISSOLVE TO:


E-9     GARAGE AND DRIVEWAY
        (MOONLIGHT)

        Gillis comes into the shot,
        gets into the Isotta, drives
        it out or the garage and down
        the driveway to Sunset, as
        quietly as possible.

        DISSOLVE TO:

E-10    READERS' OFFICE BUILDING
        PARAMOUNT (NIGHT)

        Start on a LONG SHOT.  THE             GILLIS' VOICE
        BOOM MOVES FORWARD to the only     So we'd started
        two lights.  They are the door     working on it, the
        and window of Betty Schaefer's     two of us.  Nights,
        cubicle.  Betty sits at the        when the studio was
        desk, typing.  Gillis, his         deserted, up in her
        coat off, his shirt-sleeves        little cubby-hole
        rolled up, j.s pacing the floor,   of an office.
        discussing the construction of
        a sentence.  The discussion at
        a stalemate, Betty suggests
        some coffee.  Gillis agrees.
        From the electric plate on the
        shelf beside her, Betty takes
        a glass coffee machine.  Gillis
        seats himself in her chair
        and starts typing.

        Betty opens the door and comes out on the balcony to
        fill the coffee machine from the water cooler stand-
        ing beside the door.

                           BETTY
                 I got the funniest letter from
                 Artie.  It's rained every day
                 since they got to Arizona.  They
                 re-wrote the whole picture for
                 rain and shot half of it.  Now
                 the sun is out.  Nobody knows
                 when they'll get back.

        She moves back into the room.

                           GILLIS
                 Good.

                           BETTY
                 What's good about it?  I miss
                 him something fierce.

                           GILLIS
                 I mean this is good dialogue
                 along in here.  It'll play.

                           BETTY
                 It will?

                           GILLIS
                 Sure.  Especially with lots
                 of music underneath, drowning
                 it out.

                           BETTY
                 Don't you sometimes hate yourself?

                           GILLIS
                 Constantly.  No, in all serious-
                 ness, it's really good.  It's
                 fun writing again.  I'm happy
                 here, honest I am.

        He resumes typing.  Betty puts the water on.  She
        picks up a pack of cigarettes on the desk, finds it's
        empty and throws it away, sees Gillis' open gold
        cigarette case and lighter on the table by the couch.
        Betty reaches for a cigarette.  The inscription en-
        graved inside the case catches her eye.  It reads:

                          MAD ABOUT THE BOY --

                                    Norma


                           BETTY
                 Who's Norma?

                           GILLIS
                 Who's who?

                           BETTY
                 I'm sorry.  I don't usually
                 read private cigarette cases.

                           GILLIS
                 Oh, that.  It's from a friend
                 of mine.  A middle-aged lady,
                 very foolish and very generous.

                           BETTY
                 I'll say.  This is solid gold.

                           GILLIS
                 I gave her some advice on an
                 idiotic script.

                           BETTY
                 It's that old familiar story,
                 you help a timid little soul
                 across a crowded street.  She
                 turns out to be a multimillionaire
                 and leaves you all her money.

                           GILLIS
                 That's the trouble with you
                 readers.  You know all the plots.
                 Now suppose you proof-read page
                 ten while the water boils.

        DISSILVE TO:

E-11    AN EMPTY STREET AT THE                GILLIS' VOICE
        PARAMOUNT STUDIO (NIGHT)      Sometimes when we got
                                      stuck we'd make a
        Gillis and Betty are walking  litte tour of the
        down it.  From a stage where  drowsing lot, not talk-
        they are erecting a new set   ing much, just wandering
        comes a great shaft of light. down alleys between the
        They stop at an apple-vending sound stages, or through
        machine in the foreground,buy the sets they were get-
        themselves a couple of apples ting ready for the next
        and walk on.                  day's shooting.  As a
                                      matter of fact, it was
        DISSOLVE TO:                  on one of those walks
                                      when she first told me
                                      about her nose ...

E-12    PARAMOUNT'S NEW YORK STREET (NIGHT)

        Betty and Gillis are walking down it, THE CAMERA
        AHEAD OF THEM.

                           BETTY
                 Look at this street.  All card-
                 board, all hollow, all phoney.
                 All done with mirrors.  I like
                 it better than any street in the
                 world.  Maybe because I used to
                 play here when I was a kid.

                           GILLIS
                 What were you -- a child actress?

                           BETTY
                 I was born just two blocks from
                 this studio.  Right on Lemon Grove
                 Avenue.  Father was head elec-
                 trician here till he died.  Mother
                 still works in Wardrobe.

                           GILLIS
                 Second generation, huh?

                           BETTY
                 Third.  Grandma did stunt work
                 for Pearl White.  I come from a
                 picture family.  Naturally they
                 took it for granted I was to become
                 a great star.  So I had ten years of
                 dramatic lessons, diction, dancing.
                 Then the studio made a test.  Well,
                 they didn't like my nose -- it slanted
                 this way a little.  I went to a doctor
                 and had it fixed.  They made more
                 tests, and they were crazy about my
                 nose -- only they didn't like my acting.

                           GILLIS
                    (Examining her nose
                     by the flame of his
                     lighter)
                 Nice job.

                           BETTY
                 Should be.  It cost three hundred
                 dollars.

                           GILLIS
                 Saddest thing I ever heard.

                           BETTY
                 Not at all.  It taught me a little
                 sense.  I got me a job in the mail
                 room, worked up to the Stenographic.
                 Now I'm a reader...

                           GILLIS
                 Come clean, Betty.  At night you
                 weep for those lost closeups, those
                 gala openings...

                           BETTY
                 Not once.  What's wrong with being
                 on the other side of the cameras?
                 It's really more fun.

                           GILLIS
                 Three cheers for Betty Schaefer!
                 I will now kiss that nose of yours.

                           BETTY
                 If you please.

        Gillis kisses her nose.  As he stands there, his
        face close to hers -

                           GILLIS
                 May I say you smell real special.

                           BETTY
                 It must be my new shampoo.

                           GILLIS
                 That's no shampoo.  It'smore like
                 a pile of freehly laundred hand-
                 kerchiefs, like a brand new auto-
                 mobile.  How old are you anyway?

                           BETTY
                 Twenty-two.

                          GILLIS
               That's it -- there's nothing like
               being twenty-two.  Now may I suggest
               that if we're ever to finish this
               story you keep at least two feet
               away from me ...  Now back to the
               typewriter.

        They start walking in the direction of the office.

        DISSOLVE TO:


E-13    THE GARAGE

        Gillis gets out.  From the seat next him he takes a
        batch of script, folds it and puts it in his pocket.
        He suddenly becomes aware that he is watched, turns.
        Max stands in the moonlight, evidently waiting for
        him.

                          GILLIS
               What is it, Max? Want to wash
               the car, or are you doing a little
               spying in your off hours?

                          MAX
               You must be very careful as you
               cross the patio.  Madame may be
               watching.

                          GILLIS
               How about my going up the kitchen
               stairs and undressing in the dark.
               Will that do it?

                          MAX
               I'm not inquiring where Mr.
               Gillis goes every night...

                          GILLIS
               Why don't you? I'm writing a
               script and I'm dying to finish
               it, no matter what.

                          MAX
               It's just that I'm very worried
               about Madame.

                          GILLIS
               Sure you are.  And we're not help-
               ing her any, feeding her lies and
               more lies.  Getting herself ready
               for a pioture ...  What happens when
               she finds out?

                          MAX
               She never will.  That is my job.
               It has been for a long time.  You
               must understand I discovered her
               when she was eighteen.  I made her
               a star.  I cannot let her be destroyed.

                          GILLIS
               You made her a star?

                          MAX
               I directed all her early pictures.
               There were three young directors
               who showed promise in those days:
               D.W. Grirrith, C.B. deMille, and
               Max von Mayerling.

                          GILLIS
               And she's turned you into a
               servant.

                          MAX
               It was I who asked to come back,
               humiliating as it may seem.  I
               could have gone on witn my career,
               only I found everything unendur-
               able arter she divorced me.  You
               see, I was her rirst husband.

        DISSOLVE TO:


E-14    NORMA DESMOND'S BEDROOM

        One lamp lit.  Norma, in a white negligee, with the
        patches on her face, is pacing up and down -- a
        small, tormented, pitiable woman.  Finally she opens
        the door to:


E-15    GILLIS' ROOM (MOONLIGHT)

        Gillis lies in bed asleep, Norma in the doorway.

                          NORMA
               You're here, Joe ... When did
               you come home? Where were you?
               Is it a woman? I know it's a
               woman ... Who is she? Oh Joe,
               why can't I ask you? I must know,
               I must!

        Her eyes fall on Gillis' coat, which hangs over a
        chair.  In a pocket is part of the script.  Norma
        takes it out, looks at it.  She can't see it in the
        moonlight.  She hurries with it into:


E-16    NORMA'S BEDROOM

        Carrying the script Norma goes to the lamp and looks
        at it.  On the first page she sees something which
        confirms all her suspicionso It reads:

                     UNTITLED LOVE STORY
                            by
                      Joseph C.  Gilliss
                            and
                       Betty Schaefer

        DISSOLVE:


E-17    BETTY'S CUBICLE (NIGHT)

        Betty is typing.  Gillis sits on the couch, proof-
        reading a scene.  Betty stops typing and Gillis
        becomes aware of her eyes fixed on him.

                          GILLIS
               Hey, what's the matter...
               Betty, wake up!
                   (He whistles and
                    catches her attention)
               Why are you staring at me like that?

                          BETTY
               Was I?  I'm sorry.

                          GILLIS
               What's wrong with you tonight?
               What is it, Betty?

                          BETTY
               Something came up.  I don't want
               to talk about it.

                          GILLIS
               Why not?

                          BETTY
               I just don't.

                          GILLIS
               What is it you've heard.  Come
               on, let's have it.

        Betty gets up.

                          GILLIS
               Is it about me?

        Betty doesn't answer, walks out on


E-18    THE BALCONY

        She leans against a post, crying.  Gillis comes out
        after her.

                          GILLIS
               Betty, there's no use running
               out on it.  Let's face it, what-
               ever it is.

                          BETTY
               It's nothing.  I got a telegram
               from Artie.

                          GILLIS
               From Artie.  What's wrong?

                          BETTY
               He wants me to come on to Arizona.
               He says it only oosts two dollars
               to get married there.  It would
               kind of save us a honeymoon.

                          GILLIS
               Why don't you? We can finish the
               script by Thursday.

        Betty stands crying silently.

                          GILLIS
               Stop crying.  You're getting
               married.  That's what you've
               always wanted.

                          BETTY
               I don't want it now.

                           GILLIS
                 Why not? Don't you love Artie?

                           BETTY
                 Of course I love him.  I always
                 will.  I'm just not in love
                 with him any more.

                           GILLIS
                 What happened?

                           BETTY
                 You did.

        There is a moment's pause before he takes her in
        his arms.  THE CAMERA MOVES AWAY.

        DISSOLVE TO:


E-19    HALL AND STAIRCASE                  GILLIS' VOICE
        DESMOND HOME- (NIGHT)        It wasn' t until I got
                                     back to that peculiar
        Gillis enters, closes        prison of mine that I
        the door as quietly as       started facing the facts.
        he can, and goes up          There it was -- Betty
        the stairs.                  Schaefer's future right
                                     in the palm of my hand.
E-20    GILLIS' ROOM                 Betty Schaefer engaged
                                     to Artie Green, as nice
        He enters and turns on the   a guy as ever lived.
        light.  He sinks down on     And she was in love with
        the chaise longue,thinking.  me.  Me ! She was a fool
        His eyes wander to the       not to sense that there
        door of Norma's room.        was something phony in
        Through the gouged-out key-  my set-up.  And I was a
        hole he sees the light.      heel not to have told
                                     her.  But you just can't
                                     say those things to
                                     somebody you're crazy
                                     about.  Maybe I'd never
                                     have to.  Maybe I could
                                     get away with it, get
                                     away from Norma.  Maybe
                                     I could wipe the whole
                                     nasty mess right out of
                                     my life...
        From Norma's room comes the sound of a telephone
        being dialled.  Gillis enters the shot and stands
        listening.

                           NORMA'S VOICE
                 Is this Gladstone 0858?

E-21    NORMA'S BEDROOM
        Norma lies in bed, dialing a number.  She has the
        beauty patches at the corners of her eyes and over
        her nose.

                          NORMA
               Can I speak to Miss Betty
               Schaefer? She must be home by
               now.


E-22    A BEDROOM IN BETTY'S FLAT

        Connie, a girl of Betty's age with whom she shares
        the flat, is on the phone.  Betty, in a dressing-
        gown, comes from the bathroom, toothbrush in hand.

                          CONNIE
                    (Hand over mouthpiece)
               Betty, here's that weird-sounding
               woman again.

                          BETTY
               What is this anyway?
                    (Taking the phone)
               This is Betty Schaefer.


E-23    NORMA AT IHE PHONE

                          NORMA
               Miss Schaefer, you must forgive
               me for calling you so late, but
               I really feel it's my duty.  It's
               about Mr. Gillis.  You do know Mr.
               Gillis? ...Exactly how much do you
               know about him? Do you know where
               he lives? Do you know how he lives?
               Do you know what he lives on?


E-24    BETTY AT THE PHONE

                          BETTY
               Who are you? What do you want?
               What business is it of yours
               anyway?


E-25    NORMA ON THE PHONE

                          NORMA
               Miss Schaefer, I'm trying to do
               you a favor.  I'm trying to spare
               you a great deal of misery.  Of
               course you may be too young to even
               suspect there are men of his sort...

                          NORMA (Cont'd)
               I don't know what he's told you, but
               he does not live with relatives, nor
               with friends, in the usual sense of
               the word.  Ask him ... Ask him again.

        During the latter part of her call, the doors from
        Gillis' room have been pushed open and Gillis has
        walked towards her.  Suddenly Norma senses his pre-
        sence and turns around.  The telephone freezes in her
        hand.  She tries to hang it up.  Very calmly Gillis
        takes the receiver from her hand.

                          GILLIS
                    (Into phone)
               That's right, Betty, ask me again.
               This is Joe.


E-26    BETTY ON THE PHONE

                          BETTY
               Joe, where are you? What's this
               all about?


E-27    GILLIS ON THE PHONE

        Norma beside him.

                          GILLIS
               Or maybe it would be a better
               idea if you came over and saw it
               for yourself.  The address is 10086
                .

        He hangs up.  Norma looks up at him as he crosses to
        the other end of the room and stands staring at her.
        The silence becomes unbearable.

                          NORMA
               Don't hate me, Joe.  I did it because
               I need you.  I need you as I never
               needed you.  Look at me.  Look at my
               hands, look at my face, look under my
               eyes.  How can I go back to work if I'm
               wasting away under this torment? You
               don't know what I've been through these
               last weeks.  I got myself a revolver.
               You don't believe me, but I did, I did!
               I stood in front of that mirror, only
               I couldn't make myself.  It wouldn't be

                          NORMA (Cont'd)
               fair to all those people who are
               waiting to see me back on the
               screen.  I can't disappoint them.
               Only, if I'm to work, I need
               sleep, I need quiet, I need you!
               Don't just stand there hating
               me! Shout at me, strike me!
               But don't hate me, Joe.  Don't
               you hear me, Joe?

                          GILLIS
               Yes, I hear you.  And I wish you'd
               keep still so I can hear the doorbell
               when she rings it.


E-28    BETTY AND CONNIE, DRIVING IN A SMALL COUPE DOWN
          (NIGHT)


E-29    INT. COUPE

        Connie is looking at the house numbers.

                          CONNIE
               Here's ten thousand seventy-nine,
               Betty.  It must be over there.

        Betty turns the car into the driveway of Norma's
        place, stops at the entrance steps.  Betty gets out.

                          CONNIE
               Betty, let me come along with
               you.  Please.

                          BETTY
               No, I'll be all right.

        She shuts the door of the car and goes up the steps.


E-30    NORMA'S BEDROOM

        Norma lies on the bed.  Gillis sits in a far corner
        of the room, motionless.

                          NORMA
                    (In a whimpering monotone)
               I love you, Joe.  I love you, Joe.
               I love you, Joe.  I love you, Joe.

        There is the sound of footsteps below and the ringing
        of a doorbell.  Gillis rises.

                          NORMA
               What are you going to do, Joe?

        Without a word, he leaves the room.  Norma raises
        herself on the bed, reaching for a black negligee
        lying at the foot of it.  As she does so, she dis-
        lodges her pillow a little, revealing a revolver
        hidden beneath it.


E-31    DOWNSTAIRS HALL, THE DESMOND HOUSE (DARK)

        Max crosses the hall, putting on his alpaca jacket.
        He turns on the lights.  Outside stands Betty.
        From the staircase comes -

                          GILLIS' VOICE
               It's all right, Max.  I'll take it.

                          MAX
               Yes, sir.

        He stands back as Gillis opens the door.

                          GILLIS
               Hello, Betty.

                          BETTY
                    (On the threshold)
               I don't know why I'm so scared,
               Joe.  Is it something awful?

                          GILLIS
               Come on in, Betty,

        Betty enters.  As he leads her into the living room,
        Gillis puts his arm around her shoulders.

                          GILLIS
               Ever been in one of these old
               Hollywood palazzos? That's from
               when they were making eighteen thou-
               sand a week, and no taxes.  Careful
               of these tiles, they're slippery.
               Valentino used to dance here.

                          BETTY
               This is where you live?

                          GILLIS
               You bet.

                          BETTY
               Whose house is it?

        They have reached


E-32    THE LIVING ROOM

        Gillis leads Betty in.

                          GILLIS
               Hers.

                          BETTY
               Whose?

                          GILLIS
               Just look around.  There's a lot
               of her spread about.  If you don't
               remember the face, you must have
               heard the name of Norma Desmond.

                          BETTY
               That was Norma Desmond on the phone?

                          GILLIS
               Want something to drink?  There's
               always champagne on ice, and plenty
               of caviar.

                          BETTY
               Why did she call me?

                          GILLIS
               Jealous.  Ever see so much junk?
               She had the ceiling brought from
               Portugal.  Look at this.

        He pulls the rope, showing the projection screen
        under the picture.

                          GILLIS
               Her own movie theatre.

                          BETTY
               I didn't come here to see a house.
               What about Norma Desmond?

                          GILLIS
               I'm trying to tell you.  This is
               an enormous place.  Eight master
               bedrooms.  A sunken tub in every
               bathroom.  There's a bowling alley
               in the cellar.  It's lonely here,
               so she got herself a companion.
               A very simple set-up: An older
               woman who is well-to-do.  A younger
               man who is not doing too well ...
               Can you figure it out yourself?

                          BETTY
               No.

                          GILLIS
               All right.  I'll give you a few
               more clues.

                          BETTY
               No, no! I haven't heard any of
               this.  I never got those telephone
               calls.  I've never been in this
               house ... Get your things together.
               Let's get out of here.

                          GILLIS
               All my things? All the eighteen
               suits, all the custom-made shoes and
               the eighteen dozen shirts, and the
               cuff-links and the platinum key-
               chains, and the cigarette cases?

                          BETTY
               Come on, Joe.

                          GILLIS
               Come on where? Back to a one-room
               apartment that I can't pay for?
               Back to a story that may sell and
               very possibly will not?

                          BETTY
               If you love me, Joe.

                          GILLIS
               Look, sweetie -- be practical.
               l've got a good thing here.
               A long-term contract with no options.
               I like it that way.  Maybe it's not
               very admirable.  Well, you and Artie
               can be admirable.

                          BETTY
               Joe, I can't look at you any more.

                          GILLIS
               Nobody asked you to.

        Betty turns from him, to hide the fact that she is
        crying.

                          GILLIS
               All right, baby.  This way out.

        He leads her in the direction of the door.

E-33    UPPER LANDING, DESMOND HOUSE

        Sitting crouched behind the balustrade is Norma,
        peering down into


E-34    THE LOWER HALL

        Betty and Gillis have reached the entrance door.
        Gillis opens it.

                          GILLIS
               Good luck to you, Betty.  You can
               finish that story on the way to
               Arizona.  When you and Artie get
               back, if the two of you ever feel
               like a swim, here's the pool ...

        He switches on the light.


E-35    THE PATIO

        The lights go on in the pool, which shines brilliant-
        ly in the dark garden.


E-36    BETTY

        She doesn't even look.  Her eyes filled with tears,
        she runs down the entrance porch toward her car.


E-37    THE ENTRANCE HALL

        Gillis looks after her, closes the door.  From the
        upper landing comes the sound of soft sobbing.  He
        looks up.


E-38    NORMA, ON THE UPPER LANDING

        Gillis ascends the stairs.

                          NORMA
               Thank you, Joe -- thank you, Joe.

        She tries to take his hand to kiss it as he passes.
        He doesn't stop.  Norma catches his coat.  Gillis
        moves right on into his room.  Norma lies on the
        floor looking after him.  She crawls toward a con-
        sole, pulls herself up by it, starts towards Gillis'
        door, passes a mirror, realizes how she looks, moves
        back to the mirror and takes the patches off her
        face and does a hasty job of removing the cream with
        her handkerchief, readjusts her expression to a poor
        travesty of a smile and goes to the door of Gillis'
        room.

                          NORMA
               May I come in?  I've stopped cry-
               ing.  I'm all right again.  Joe,
               tell me you're not cross -- tell
               me everything is just as it was,
               Joe.

        She opens the door.


E-39    GILLIS' ROOM

        In the foreground, open on the bed, is a half-packed
        suitcase, Gillis just putting some of his old shirts
        in.  Norma stands staring, speechless, for a second.
        Gillis moves out of the shot towards the closets.

                          NORMA
               What are you doing, Joe?  What
               are you doing?  You're not leaving
               me?

                          GILLIS
               Yes, I am, Norma.

                          NORMA
               No, you're not.
                    (Calling)
               Max! Max!

                          GILLIS
               Max is a good idea.  He can help
               with my luggage.
                    (He gestures in the
                     direction of the closet)
               Thanks for letting me wear the
               handsome wardrobe.  And thanks
               for the use of all the trinkets.

        He takes the cigarette case and throws it on the
        chaise longue.  Then he throws the lighter, the
        wrist watch, the platinum key-chain and the tie clip.

                          GILLIS
                    (Indicating the bureau)
               The rest of the jewelry is in the
               top drawer.

                          NORMA
               It's yours, Joe.  I gave it to
               you.

                          GILLIS
               And I'd take it in a second, Norma --
               only it's a little too dressy for
               sitting behind the copy desk in
               Dayton, Ohio.

                          NORMA
               These are nothing.  You can have
               anything you want if you'll only
               stay.  What is it you want --
               money?

                          GILLIS
               Norma, you'd be throwing it away.
               I don't qualify for the job, not any
               more.

                          NORMA
               You can't do this!  Max!  Max!
               ... I can't face life without you,
               and I'm not afraid to die, you
               know.

                          GILLIS
               That's between you and yourself,
               Norma.

                          NORMA
               You think I made that up about
               the gun...

        She rushes into her room.  Gillis closes the suitcase
        calmly, notices that he is still wearing some cuff-
        links Norma gave him, takes them off.

        Norma reappears in the door, carrying the revolver.

                          NORMA
               See, you didn't believe me!..
               Now I suppose you don't think I
               have the courage!

                          GILLIS
               Oh.  sure -- if it would make a
               good scene.

                          NORMA
               You don't care.  do you?  But
               hundreds of thousands of people
               will carel

                          GILLIS
               Wake up, Norma.  You'd be killing
               yourself to an empty house.  The
               audience left twenty years ago.
               Now face it.

        During the preceding.  Max has entered.  He stands
        listening, paralyzed.

                           NORMA
                That's a lie!  They still want me!

                           GILLIS
                No, they don't.

                           NORMA
                What about the studio?
                What about De Mille?

                           GILLIS
                He was trying to spare your feelings.
                The studio wanted to rent your car.

                           NORMA
                Wanted what?

                           GILLIS
                De Mille didn't have the heart
                to tell you.  None of us has had
                the heart.

                           NORMA
                That's a lie!  They want me, they
                want me!  I get letters every day!

                           GILLIS
                You tell her, Max.  Come on, do
                her that favor.  Tell her there
                isn't going to be any picture --
                there aren't any fan letters,
                except the ones you write yourself.

                           NORMA
                That isn't true! Max?

                           MAX
                Madame is the greatest star of
                them all...  I will take Mr.
                Gillis' bags.

        He leaves.

                           NORMA
                You heard him.  I'm a star!

                           GILLIS
                Norma, grow up.  You're a woman
                of fifty.  There's nothing tragic
                about being fifty - not unless
                you try to be twenty-five.

                           NORMA
                 I'm the greatest star of them
                 all.

                           GILLIS
                 Goodbye.  Norma.

                           NORMA
                 No one leaves a star.  That
                 makes one a star.

        Gillis picks up the typewriter and leaves.

                           NORMA
                 You're not leaving me!


E-40    STAIRCASE

        Gillis descending with the typewriter.

                           NORMA'S VOICE
                 Joe! ...Joe!

        There is the SOUND OF A SHOT.  The glass of the front
        door is shattered.  Gillis at the door opens it and
        walks out, without looking back.

        Down the staircase rushes Norma.  a disordered wild-
        ness in the way she moves.

                           NORMA
                 You're not leaving me!

        She hurries after Gillis.


E-41    PATIO (NIGHT)

        Dark except for lights from the house and the
        luminousness of the lit pool.

        Gillis is crossing the patio towards the garage.  He
        is carrying the typewriter.  He doesn't accelerate
        his step, although he has heard the shot.  Behind
        him Norma comes from the lighted house.

                           NORMA
                 You're not leaving me!

        She shoots twice in rapid succession.  Gillis drops
        the typewriter.  The shots have swung him around.  He
        is now facing Norma.  She shoots him.  This shot
        hits him in the belly.  He doubles up, instinctively
        backs away from her, plummets into the lit pool.

        Up the stone steps from the garage rushes Max.
        He sees the situation, hurries towards Norma, who
        stands exultant in the strange light from the pool.

                           NORMA
                 Stars are ageless, aren't they?

        DISSOLVE TO:


E-42    THE PATIO

        Dawn is breaking.  At the edge of the pool
        stand policemen, detectives and police photographers.
        Motorcycle policemen are holding off the mob which
        is trying to storm the house.

        A lietuenant from the Homicide Bureau leaves the
        crowd around the pool and goes into


E-43    THE LOWER HALL, DESMOND HOUSE

        It is filled with a pandemonium of police officers,
        newspaper people, etc.  who are kept from the upper
        floor by two policemen at the head of the stairs.
        The lieutenant from the Homicide Bureau goes
        through the crowd to the telephone at the foot of
        the stairs, picks up the phone and dials.

                           LIEUTENANT
                 Coroner's office? ... I want to
                 speak to the Coroner ... Who's
                 on this phone?


E-44    THE WHITE TELEPHONE IN NORMA'S BEDROOM

        Standing talking into it is Hedda Hopper.

                           MISS HOPPER
                 I am! Now get off, this is more
                 important ... Times City Desk?
                 Hedda Hopper speaking.  I'm talking
                 from the bedroom of Norma Desmond.
                 Don't bother with a rewrite man, take
                 this direct.  Ready? -- As day breaks
                 over the murder house, Norma Desmond,
                 famed star of yesteryear, is in
                 a state of complete mental shock ...

        THE CAMERA PANS TO ANOTHER PART OF THE BEDROOM, where
        Norma sits at a mirror, staring at herself blankly.
        Firing questions at her are the Captain of the Holmby
        Hills Division and the L.A.  Homicide Squad.  Max
        stands by faithfully.

                          HOLMBY HILLS CAPTAIN
                You do not deny having killed
                this man, Miss Desmond?

                          HEAD OF HOMICIDE
                Did you intend to kill him?
                Just answer me that.

                          HOLMBY HILLS CAPTAIN
                Was it a sudden quarrel?  Had there
                been any trouble between you before?

                          HEAD OF HOMICIDE
                If it was a quarrel, how come you
                had the gun right there?

                          HOLMBY HILLS CAPTAIN
                This guy -- where did you meet him
                for the first time?  Where did he
                come from? Who is he?

                          HEAD OF HOMICIDE
                Did he have a wife?  Did he had a
                girl friend?  Did you know them?

                          HOLMBY HILLS CAPTAIN
                Had he been trying to blackmail you?

E-45    PATIO - (DAWN)                     GILLIS' VOICE

        The body of Gillis   Well, this is where you came.
        being fished from    Here's that pool again,the one
        the pool, put on a   I always wanted.  They must have
        stretcher, covered   photographed me a hundred times.
        with an army blanket.Then they got a couple of prun-
        Two men from the     ing hooks from the garden and
        Coroner's office     fished me out ever so gently.
        carry it towards     Funny how gentle people get with
        the Coroner's        you once you're dead.  They
        hearse, CAMERA       beached me, like a harpooned
        PANNING with them.   baby whale, and started to check
                             the damage, just for the record
                             ... By this time the whole joint
                             was jumping -- cops,reporters,
                             neighbors, passersby -- as much
                             hoopdedoo as we get in Los
                             Angeles when they open a Super
                             Market.  Even the newsreel guys
                             came roaring in.  Here was an
                             item everybody could have some
                             fun with, the heartless so-and-
                             so's.  What would they do to her?
                             Even if she got away with it in
                             court- crime of passion - tempo-
                             rary insanity - those headlines
                             would kill her: Forgotten Star
                             a Slayer--Aging Actress--
                             Yesterday's Glamour Queen...

E-46    NORMA'S BEDROOM

        The interrogators are still firing questions at Norma
        who sits lifeless, staring at herself.  Max watches.

                          HEAD OF HOMICIDE
               Did the deceased ever threaten you?
               Were you in fear of bodily injury?

                          HOLMBY HILLS CAPTAIN
               Did you hate him?  Had you ever thought
               of doing something like this before?

                          HEAD OF HOMICIDE
               Was theft involved?  Did you catch
               him trying to steal something, or
               find he had stolen something?

        A police lieutenant has entered, goes to the Head of
        Homicide.

                          LIEUTENANT
               The newsreel guys have arrived with
               the cameras.

                          HEAD OF HOMICIDE
               Tell them to go fly a kite.  This
               is no time for cameras.

        A word has pierced the mists that surround Norma.

                          NORMA
               Cameras? ...What is it, Max?

                          MAX
               The cameras have arrived, Madame.

                          NORMA
               They have?  Thank you, Max.  Tell
               Mr. DeMille I will be on the set
               at once.

        Max flashes a look at the Head of Homicide.

                          HEAD OF HOMICIDE
               What is this?

                          MAX
               Please ...

                          HOLMBY HILLS CAPTAIN
                    (sotto voce, to Head of Homicide)
               Well, it's one way to get her down stairs.

                          HEAD OF HOMICIDE
               Okay.  And let's have the car right
               outside.

7-1                       NORMA
               You will pardon me, gentlemen.
               I have to get ready for my scene.

        She takes a comb and runs it through her hair, then
        starts applying some wild makeup.


E-47    STAIRCASE AND LOWER HALL

        Max makes his way down the stairs through the crowd
        of newsmen to the newsreel cameras, which are being
        set up in the hall below.

                          MAX
                Is everything set up, gentlemen?
                Are the lights ready?

        From the stairway comes a murnur.  They look up.

        Norma has emerged from the bedroom and comes to the
        head of the stairs.  There are golden spangles in
        her hair and in her hand she carries a golden scarf.

        The police clear a path for her to descend.  Press
        cameras flash at her every step.

        Max stands at the cameras.

                          MAX
                Is everything set up, gentlemen?

                          CAMERAMAN
                Just about.

        The portable lights flare up and illuminate the
        staircase.

                          MAX
                Are the lights ready?

                          2ND CAMERA MAN
                All set.

                          MAX
                Quiet, everybody!  Lights!
                Are you ready, Norma?

                          NORMA
                    (From the top of the
                     stairs)
                What is the scene? Where am I?

                          MAX
                This is the staircase of the palace.

                           NORMA
               Oh, yes, yes.  They're below,
               waiting for the Princess ...
               I'm ready.

                           MAX
               All right.
                    (To cameramen)
               Camera!
                    (To Norma)
               Action!

        Norma arranges the golden             GILLIS' VOICE
        scarf ebout her and proudy    So they were grinding
        starts to descend the stair-  after all, those cam-
        case.  The cameras grind.     eras.  Life, which can
        Everyone watches in awe.      be strangely merciful,
                                      had taken pity on Norma
                                      Desmond.  The dream she
                                      had clung to so des-
                                      perately had enfolded
                                      her...

        At the foot of the stairs Norma stops, moved.

                          NORMA
               I can't go on with the scene.
               I'm too happy.  Do you mind,
               Mr. DeMille, if I say a few words?
               Thank you.  I just want to tell
               you how happy I am to be back in
               the studio making a picture again.
               You don't know how much I've missed
               all of you.  And I promise you
               I'll never desert you again, because
               after "Salome" we'll make another
               picture, and another and another.
               You see, this is my life.  It always
               will be.  There's nothing else -
               just us and the cameras and those
               wonderful people out there in the
               dark...  All right, Mr. DeMille,
               I'm ready for my closeup.

        FADE OUT.

                       THE END
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