Dictionaries:
rita:
Short of senorita, a girl in high school parlance.See Also: bondage, sexual bondage, tits, torching for, wet and willing, wet as an otters pocket, as, wet-on
Quotes Containing rita:
The Detainer (Daliah Lavi), strapped naked on a couch , and the short madman Dr. Noah (Woody Allen) in Casino Royale (1967): - Detainer: ''Do you treat all the girls you desire this way?'' - Dr. Noah: ''Yes, oh yes . I undress them and tie them up . I learned that in the Boy Scouts.'' Hairdresser Rita (Julie Walters) and a client in Educating Rita (1983): - Client: ''Is that a book you''re reading? (...) What''s it called?'' - Rita: ''Of Human Bondage.'' - Client: ''Yeah? My husband''s got a lot of books like that.'' - Rita: ''Somerset Maugham books?'' - Client: ''No, bondage books.''
Irena (Rita Hayworth) in Fire Down Below (1957): ''Armies have marched over me!''
Gilda (Rita Hayworth) in Gilda (1946): ''If I had been a ranch they would have called me the Bar Nothing.''
Maria Acuna (Rita Hayworth) to Robert Davis (Fred Astaire) in You Were Never Lovelier (1942): ''Am I the first girl you never kissed?''
Uncle Pio (Steven Geray) to Gilda (Rita Hayworth) in Gilda (1946): ''All bad-things end up lonely, little one.''
Rita Hayworth in/as Gilda (1946): ''If I had been a ranch they would have called me the Bar Nothing.''
Rita Hayworth in/as Gilda (1946): ''If I had been a ranch they would have called me the Bar Nothing.''
Rita (Stacey Nelkin) in Bullets Over Broadwaty (1994): 'For me, love is very deep, but sex only has to go a few inches. '
Messenger 7013 (Edward Everett Horton) watching scheming Kitty Pendleton (Rita Hayworth) in Down to Earth (1947): ''Females! One head but two faces. ''
Rita (Stacey Nelkin) in Bullets Over Broadwaty (1994): 'For me, love is very deep, but sex only has to go a few inches. '
Jonathan (Jack Nicholson) speaking of Cindy (Rita Moreno) in Carnal Knowledge (1971): ''You know her problem? She wants balls .''
Jo (Rita Tushingham) in A Taste of Honey (1962): ''I''m not just talented, I''m geniused!''
Emily Ann Faulker/Rita Shawn (Kim Stanley) in The Goddess (1958): ''You know , my first husband used to tell me about how lonely he felt. Now I know what he meant. It''s like the whole world is off someplace else, like an echo.''
Jack Burroughs (Alan Alda) and Claudia Zimmer (Rita Moreno) in The Four Seasons (1981): - Jack: 'Sexuality was born in wetness.' - Claudia: 'It's easier that-way .'
Chrissy (Rita Wilson) and Roberta (Rosie O''Donnell) looking at the magazine cover featuring Teeny Terrell (Melanie Griffith) in Now and Then (1995): - Chrissy: ''Can you believe this tramp? Now what is it that she has that gets people so excited?'' - Roberta: ''Long legs, a tiny waist and perky breasts. ''
Chrissy (Rita Wilson) and Roberta (Rosie O''Donnell) looking at the magazine cover featuring Teeny Terrell (Melanie Griffith) in Now and Then (1995): - Chrissy: ''Can you believe this tramp? Now what is it that she has that gets people so excited?'' - Roberta: ''Long legs, a tiny waist and perky breasts. ''
Chrissy (Rita Wilson) and Roberta (Rosie O''Donnell) looking at the magazine cover featuring Teeny Terrell (Melanie Griffith) in Now and Then (1995): - Chrissy: ''Can you believe this tramp? Now what is it that she has that gets people so excited?'' - Roberta: ''Long legs, a tiny waist and perky breasts. ''
Anna Scott (Julia Roberts) in Notting Hill (1999): ''Rita Hayworth used to say: ''They go-to-bed-with Gilda, they wake up with me'' (...) Men went to bed with the dream and they didn''t like it when they woke up with reality.''
''As for you, baby , I''ve known dozen''s like you. Sappy kids with a heart like a curd dog that answers all the whistles and figures their having a good-time .'' Con artist Bill O''Brien (Douglas Fairbanks, Jr.) to out of work dancer Nina Barona (Rita Hayworth) in Angels Over Broadway (1940).
''As for you, baby , I''ve known dozen''s like you. Sappy kids with a heart like a curd dog that answers all the whistles and figures their having a good-time .'' Con artist Bill O''Brien (Douglas Fairbanks, Jr.) to out of work dancer Nina Barona (Rita Hayworth) in Angels Over Broadway (1940).
Dr. Roberta Martin (Rosie O''Donnell) to her 9 months pregnant friend Chrissy (Rita Wilson) in Now and Then (1995): ''Don''t go near the stove. You may burst.''
Rita Cavallini (Greta Garbo) to her friend Cornelius Van Tayl (Lewis Stone) in Romance (1930): 'What is love? It's made of kisses in the dark , of hot breath on the face , of hearts that beat with terribly strong blows. Love is just a beast that you feed all through the night and when the morning comes, love dies. ' And later: 'To me love is only a little warmth in all this cold , just a little light in all this darkness, one little minute to lie still in the beloved's arms, one little minute to forget and that's all.'
Chrissy (Rita Wilson) and Roberta (Rosie O'Donnell) looking at the magazine cover featuring Teeny Terrell (Melanie Griffith) in Now and Then (1995): - Chrissy: 'Now what is it that she has that gets people so excited?' - Roberta: 'Long legs, a tiny waist and perky breasts. '
Jack Burroughs (Alan Alda) and Claudia Zimmer (Rita Moreno) in The Four Seasons (1981): - Jack: ''Sexuality was born in wetness.'' - Claudia: ''It''s easier that-way .''
Jack Burroughs (Alan Alda) and Claudia Zimmer (Rita Moreno) in The Four Seasons (1981): - Jack: ''Sexuality was born in wetness.'' - Claudia: ''It''s easier that-way .''
Pat Cooper (Wendy Hiller) to John Malcolm (Burt Lancaster) about his relation with his ex-wife Ann Shankland (Rita Hayworth) in Separate Tables (1958): ''Well, there''s not much to choose between you two, is there? When you''re together, you slash each other to pieces, when you''re apart, you slash yourselves to pieces. '' A form of reconciliation is achieved at the end of the movie with this dialogue: - John: ''You know , don''t you Ann, that we don''t have very much hope together.'' - Ann: ''Have we all that much apart?''
Gilda Mundson (Rita Hayworth) to Johnny Farrell (Glenn Ford) in Gilda (1946): ''Hate is a very exciting emotion. Haven''t you noticed? Very exciting. I hate you too, Johnny. I hate you so much I think I''m going to die from it ... darling .'' Johnny feels the same way : ''I hated her so I couldn''t get her out of my mind for a minute.''
Ballin Mundson (George Macready) to his wife Gilda (Rita Hayworth) about her hate for Johnny Farrell (Glenn Ford) in Gilda (1946): ''Hate can be a very exciting emotion. Very exciting. Haven''t you noticed that? There''s a heat in it that one can feel.''
Gilda Mundson (Rita Hayworth) to Johnny Farrell (Glenn Ford) in Gilda (1946):''I hate you so much that I would destroy myself to take you down with me. Now I''ve warned you.''
Johnny Farrell (Glenn Ford) thinking of his ex-girlfriend Gilda (Rita Hayworth) now the wife of his boss in Gilda (1946):''I hated her so I couldn''t get her out of my mind for a minute. She was in the air I breathed and the food I ate.''
Gilda Mundson (Rita Hayworth) and Uncle Pio (Steven Geray) in Gilda (1946): - Gilda: ''Got a light?'' - Pio:''Yes, Mrs. Mundson. It''s so crowded and yet so lonely, isn''t it?'' - Gilda: ''How did you know?'' - Pio:''You smoke too much. I noticed. Only frustrated people smoke too much and only lonely people are frustrated.''
Catherine (Rita Wilson) and Blanche Munchnick (Madeline Kahn) in Mixed Nuts (1994): - Catherine: 'Phillip is completely true to Susan.' - Blanche: 'Men aren't true to anything. They will have-sex-with a tree.'
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