Rev. 3/25/92 (Blue) Rev. 4/03/92 (Pink) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN written by Marty Kaplan HOLLYWOOD PICTURES PRODUCTION REVISION 500 South Buena Vista Burbank, CA 91521 March 17, 1992 (818) 560-3370 THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 FADE IN: 1 A FLASH OF LIGHT 1 A radiant shiny something dazzling in EXTREME CLOSEUP. BEGIN TITLES. CAMERA very slowly PULLS BACK. The sparkling surface turns out to be a lot of carats. WE SEE the stone, then the ring, then suddenly, in b.g., something HUGE SWEEPS by. REVEAL a mechanical claw above the ring, hanging from a crane. The ring sits in a sea of tiny dolls, joke eyeballs, and other carnival junk. The claw descends on the ring again and again, sometimes catching it for a moment then tragically dropping it -- accompanied by OOHS and AAHS (O.S.) of hope and disap- pointment. INTERCUT with the HANDS of a young black man working the controls. The EYES of a young black woman watching him work. Another guy's HANDS digging in his pocket for change. QUARTERS going into the slot. MAN'S VOICE (O.S.) This'll never work, Tommy. TOMMY (O.S.) Be positive, Armando. Course it will. The claw inadvertently snags a rabbit's foot. TOMMY (O.S.) Look. See what a lucky fuck I am? WOMAN'S VOICE (O.S.) He don't mean the ring, hon, he means the whole plan. TOMMY (O.S.) So do I. The claw catches the ring and closes on it. QUICK CUTS of their FACES as the crane rises. A very pretty lady. A beefy Latino with a two-day beard. Their apprehension. Tommy's confidence. Then his exceptional smile. He gets the ring. 2 INT. PENNY ARCADE - DAY 2 TOMMY Okay -- one down, one to go. (returning to the claw) You got quarters, Loretta? END TITLES. THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 2. 3 EXT. FLORIDA LUXURY HOTEL - DAY 3 Palm trees. The smell of money. Valets in Foreign Legion khakis greeting arriving luxury cars. 4 INT. HOTEL FUNCTION ROOM - DAY 4 A big crowd of GUESTS at a cocktail reception. A lot of lime jackets, cherry trousers, and blue hair. People wear name tags. ON Tommy, in pastel bow tie and full waiter drag, con- firming orders for a group of guests. He speaks in a PRISSY, OVER-SOLICITIOUS VOICE: TOMMY That's a diet ginger ale, an extra- spicy virgin mary no salt, a club soda -- good choice -- a lime rickey, and a bourbon and a planter's punch. Five people, five drinks... it's Kismet! Tommy turns away, looking toward the entrance to the room. 5 INT. LOBBY - DAY - CLOSE SHOT - THE RING 5 glittering on Loretta's finger. LORETTA, stunning in designer clothing and accessories, enters. Her looks attract looks. 6 INT. FUNCTION ROOM - DAY 6 Tommy, maintaining his vantage point, repeats another order, this time in a heavy CARRIBEAN ACCENT: TOMMY That's a vodka tonic, a Pellegrino, lime and no ice, a gin Gibson straight up with ex-tra onions -- I am also fond of de onions -- and a Chardonnary spritzer...also with extra onions -- no, no, do not worry, that is just a little joke. There will be no onions whatsoever in your spritzer! He LAUGHS HUGELY, rather amused with himself. The guests aren't. GUEST You don't need to write it down? (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 3. 6 CONTINUED: 6 TOMMY Mr. Memory? Do not make me laugh! He LAUGHS HUGELY, turns, takes two steps away and makes absolutely no effort to get their drinks. He looks toward the door. 7 INT. HALLWAY/ENTRANCE TO FUNCTION ROOM - DAY 7 Loretta approaches the function room, where pert DEBBIE, wearing a JOHNSON FOR CONGRESS button, staffs a felt- covered table. On a nearby easel, a photo of a silver- haired Man with a legend in blue and gold: JEFF JOHNSON. THE NAME YOU KNOW. LORETTA (Eurotrash accent) I'm not too late, am I, dear? (extending a hand) Hello, darling, Alma Preston, how are you today? DEBBIE Thanks for coming, Ms. Preston, I'm Debbie Bartle. (consulting a list) Do we have your check yet? Loretta pulls a Mont Blanc pen and a checkbook from her bag. LORETTA No, honey, I don't think you do, we just got in last night from our place in Barbados -- how much is it? DEBBIE Five hundred a person. Barbados? LORETTA (writing) Yes, we're just down the beach from Mick Jagger and Jerry. (looking up) You wouldn't turn down a couple of thousand, would you? A pleased smile from Debbie. Loretta opens the check- book, flashing the immense RING in front of Debbie. DEBBIE Um, that's a lovely ring. (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 4. 7 CONTINUED: 7 LORETTA Oh, thank you. I thought it might be a little gaudy...who should I make this out to? DEBBIE Johnson for Congress. It's not gaudy, it's just...nice and big. LORETTA That's my Carlos...I can't even look in a store window. We're walking down this street in Rio, we pass a jewelry store...I didn't even turn my head and he's in the shop... (holds up ring) ...$250,000. I said it's crazy... but you know Carlos. DEBBIE I wish I did. ON Tommy watching Loretta. A Guest standing just behind Tommy -- wearing MRS. ZEKE BRIDGES name tag -- watches JEFF JOHNSON gladhand the room robustly. MRS. BRIDGES I hear they had him open for six hours. ZEKE, a very fat cigar-smoker, marvels at Johnson's appearance. ZEKE (chuckling) The sum' bitch looks terrific. Tommy, eavesdropping, joins Zeke's chuckle, which unfor- tunately turns into a wheeze and then a cough. Zeke turns to Tommy. ZEKE How about taking our orders, son? TOMMY Absolutely my friend! How can I pleasure you? ZEKE Bourbon straight up and a Perrier rocks for the lady. (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 5. 7 CONTINUED: (2) 7 TOMMY Ah! Fire and ice! Wonderful! But may I suggest you make that a double sir? After all, so many guests, so few of me -- who knows when I may be back? ZEKE Sure, why not. AT THE ENTRANCE LORETTA pauses before going into the room. LORETTA You know where the powder room is, hon? I should freshen my face before I go in. DEBBIE It's just over there. ON JEFF JOHNSON with his well-groomed wife, VERA, and a barrel-chested Man in full resort wear, wearing an OLAF ANDERSEN name tag. JOHNSON So how the heck are you, Olaf? ANDERSEN I should be asking how you are, congressman. Johnson pats his chest and smiles at Vera. JOHNSON This old ticker never felt better. ANDERSEN It's good to see you back on your feet, Jeff. We need you in Washington. Inconspicuously, a pretty young redhead whispers to Vera. This is JENNIFER, Johnson's Administrative Assistant (his AA). VERA JOHNSON How's that granddaughter of yours, Olaf? Ready for the Olympics? ANDERSEN She'll be thrilled you asked after her. 8 IN THE HALLWAY Loretta emerges from the Ladies' Room... 8 catches a spike heel... recovers her balance... then frantically searches her hands and clothes, SCREAMS, and gets down on hands and knees. (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 6. 8 CONTINUED: 8 LORETTA My God! My God! Oh my God! Debbie rushes over to her. DEBBIE What's the matter? LORETTA (hyperventilating) My -- my ring. My diamond. I took it off in the ladies' room to wash my hands. I was just putting it on -- I must have dropped it. DEBBIE (getting down) Let me help you, we'll find it. LORETTA Call Security! 9 IN THE FUNCTION ROOM Tommy maintains his watch on 9 Loretta. Zeke Bridges taps Tommy on the shoulder. ZEKE Hey, what about our drinks? Tommy instantly assumes an ANGRY YOUNG STREET BLACK VOICE: TOMMY Yeah? What you want? ZEKE What? You already took our order. TOMMY That wasn't me! You must be thinking of Jamal. I'm Karim. What you want? ZEKE Bourbon straight up and a Perrier rocks. TOMMY (snorts derisively) Hunh. He walks two steps...and once again makes no attempt to get the drinks. Zeke returns to Jeff Johnson. (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 7. 9 CONTINUED: 9 ZEKE Don't get me wrong, Jeff. Pyramid Insurance doesn't want special breaks. I just think we ought to be able to set our own rates without Uncle Sam sticking his nose in our business. Johnson signals Jennifer to come over. JOHNSON Do you know my AA? Zeke Bridges, this is Jennifer, my Administrative Assistant. Zeke's been a tremendous help to us. I'd like you to listen to his view on health insurance. JENNIFER I'd be very happy to. ZEKE At Pyramid Insurance, we call our approach the Patient's Bill of Rights. 10 IN THE HALLWAY Loretta and Debbie are on hands and 10 knees, still looking. A pair of shoes comes INTO FRAME. They LOOK up at a bullet-headed man. BRUNO Ms. Preston? Bruno Handler, hotel security. LORETTA My ring! My ring! Oh my god...! BRUNO Now just calm down, Ma'am... can you describe the ring? LORETTA It's a diamond ring! A big diamond ring! Oh my Christ! She's frantic. Debbie takes Bruno aside. DEBBIE I saw it. It's huge... it must be like eight carats. She says it was a quarter of a million dollars! Bruno turns back to Loretta, trying to calm her. (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 8. 10 CONTINUED: 10 BRUNO Ma'am... calm down. Now, is the ring insured? LORETTA Of course it's insured! But you know how it works -- if I report it, they'll cancel me. And I don't want another ring! I need this ring! The ring Carlos gave me. Bruno turns, speaks into the walkie-talkie he's carrying. BRUNO Where the fuck is housekeeping? I called for those dickheads ninety seconds ago. 11 IN THE FUNCTION ROOM the Guests have gathered to hear 11 Johnson speak. As Andersen introduces him, Tommy con- tinues eyeing Loretta. ANDERSEN Now I won't run through Jeff's record -- he's been in Congress twenty years, and I've only got two minutes. I'll just say this: When those of us in pharmaceuticals, or agribusiness, or insurance, or (indicating himself) utilities, or you name it -- when we've needed him, Jeff's been there for us. And we've been there for Jeff, too -- we raised a hundred thousand dollars today! (APPLAUSE) Without further ado, our man in Washington, Jefferson Davis Johnson. 12 IN THE HALLWAY Debbie hears the APPLAUSE (O.S.). She 12 gets up. DEBBIE I should be in there. Good luck, Ms. Preston. I hope you find it. She leaves. Loretta, mascara smeared, gets up, as does Bruno. LORETTA I can't go in there like this. God! Please... listen... I'll pay a ten thousand dollar reward for anybody who finds my ring. Just don't tell Carlos! (suddenly grim) He'll kill me. THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 9. 13 IN THE FUNCTION ROOM, as Johnson takes questions, Tommy 13 slips out. QUESTIONER What do you make of all this campaign reform business, Jeff? JOHNSON Well, y'know Ernie... these days, everyone's down on the political action committees and so-called special interests. But, heck, I think you and Fran have a right to participate in our democracy in exactly the way you're doing today. I'm in Congress to represent you. I don't want any so-called reform to take that power away from you. 14 APPLAUSE (O.S.). IN THE HALLWAY Bruno issues orders to 14 two Maintenance Men. BRUNO I want every heating grate opened and inspected. I want every air conditioning duct vacuumed. Do you understand what I'm saying? AS he speaks, Bruno SEES Tommy pass through the hallway ... spot something on the floor... pick it up... furtive- ly put it in his pocket... and walk rapidly toward the door to the kitchens. BRUNO (running after him) Hey, you! Waiter! Hold it right there! Bruno puts an arm on Tommy. Tommy instantly assumes a frantic, wimpy, craven persona, along wth his CARRIBBEAN ACCENT. TOMMY No! Please! Do not report me! I will be deported! BRUNO Calm down. What've you got in your pocket? TOMMY I told the CIA everything! I agreed to poison the pineapples! My green card is in the mail! (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 10. 14 CONTINUED: 14 BRUNO Stow it! I'm not Immigration, I'm hotel security. Now, what did you just put in your pocket? TOMMY Nothing. BRUNO I'm warning you, flathead, get cute with me and I will tear you a second asshole. Now a valuable diamond ring is mising... TOMMY Valuable? We can almost see the light bulb click on above Bruno's head. BRUNO Very valuable. All right, I'll give you a hunnert bucks for it. TOMMY A hundred and five? Bruno snorts agreement, goes for his wallet... Tommy goes gor the ring... then suddenly leaps back in a cringe! TOMMY No! It's a trick! You will call me a thief and send me back and the Security Police will make me stand on my head in the guano pit! I have seen such things on CNN! Bruno snaps and GRABS TOMMY BY THE COLLAR. BRUNO Jesus, I'm not trying to trick you... TOMMY No, no... it is a trap! I must turn this over to police. He starts to leave. Bruno grabs him. (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 11. 14 CONTINUED: (2) 14 BRUNO Listen, dipshit... a valuable ring is missing and there's thousands of dollars in reward money waiting. So you'd better fork over... TOMMY How big is this... reward? Another lightbulb. BRUNO Um, five hundred dollars. TOMMY You said 'thousands.' BRUNO Yeah. Right. A thousand dollars. TOMMY No, no, no...you said thousands. With an 'S'. This is plural. This means "two or more thousands." BRUNO (deep sigh) Okay, you win. Two thousand. TOMMY Or more. Two or more. Bruno's had enough -- his grip tightens around Tommy's neck. TOMMY Just making a point. 15 IN HOTEL LOBBY AT THE CASHIER'S DESK Bruno slides a 15 check to the Cashier, who counts a stack of bills. Bruno picks up a house phone, dials. 16 INT. HOTEL ROOM - DAY 16 ARMANDO, still unshaven, answers the RINGING phone. ARMANDO Hello? INTERCUT with Bruno in the lobby. BRUNO Hello, may I speak with Ms. Preston? (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 12. 16 CONTINUED: 16 ARMANDO She's in the bathroom. This is Carlos. Can I take a message? BRUNO (smiling to himself) No, thanks, I'll call back. ARMANDO hangs up the phone and exits the hotel room. BRUNO crosses to the far side of the lobby, where Tommy waits inconspicuously. He gives him the money. Tommy gives him ring. BRUNO Now get back to work! As Tommy heads back to the function room, Bruno picks up a house phone, dials, listens. He dials again, listens. No answer. He dials the operator. BRUNO This is Bruno in Security. Put me through to 502 -- there must be something wrong with the line, I can't get an answer... What do you mean, there's no one in 502? I just spoke to them!... No one's registered in 502? Are you sure?... Well, check again!... Shit! He hangs up, looks at the ring, and realizes he's been taken. His face twisting with rage, he hurries after Tommy. 17 ON TOMMY MOVING swiftly through the function room toward 17 an exit. Zeke Bridges grabs him. ZEKE Hey! Where the hell are our drinks. Surprised, Tommy opts for an EAST INDIAN ACCENT. TOMMY I remember... you were the sloe gin fizz and the mango daquiri? With perhaps a small umbrella for the lady? ZEKE Bourbon neat and a Perrier, dammit! TOMMY And would you still be wanting the umbrella then? (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 13. 17 CONTINUED: 17 As Zeke's face flushes in anger, Tommy SEES Bruno come into the room, blood in his eye. Tommy turns sharply and heads out the terrace doors to the -- 18 EXT. COURTYARD - DAY 18 Tommy conceals himself behind a pillar, across the court- yard, away from the Guests. But from another direction, Johnson and Andersen approach, arm in arm, and sit on a bench by the pillar. JOHNSON Olaf, there's something I wanted to sound you out on. As a special friend. ANDERSEN Shoot. Tommy moves away from the pillar, sees Bruno roaming the terrace, and retreats. JOHNSON I'm thinking of retiring from Congress. Andersen's eyes widen in astonishment. ANDERSEN You're what? JOHNSON I'm thinking maybe I won't run. Maybe I should listen more (indicating his heart) to this. Really appreciate these years. Sail around the world. Climb mountains. Enjoy the finer things of life. ANDERSEN Jeff. Listen to me. You can't retire. Florida needs you. I need you. I need you on rates. I need you on regulations. I need you on those environmental nutcases -- JOHNSON Olaf, if I retire this year, I get to keep all the money left over in my campaign treasury. Comes to a very tidy nest-egg. ANDERSEN How tidy? (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 14. 18 CONTINUED: 18 JOHNSON One-point-three million. (chuckles) It's called the grandfather loophole. Bruno has gone. But Tommy stays. His eyes light up at the money. ANDERSEN Come on, Jeff. Look at what you'd be giving up. Going to the best resorts in the world and calling it "official business." Golfing and skiing and fishing, and never picking up a tab. And, Jeff -- there's no aphrodisiac like power. You can have some of the most intelligent, attractive women in the country. You've got it made! JOHNSON Oh, I suppose that one-point-three may seem like spare change to the head of Gulf Coast Power, but to a country boy like me -- ANDERSEN Okay, Jeff. I get it. Look. There's a little software company that's about to go through the roof. Johnson smiles at the direction the conversation is taking. ON Tommy also smiling, in admiration at the transaction going down. ANDERSEN A few thousand worth of stock options would stand to make you quite a pile. As long as your blind trust buys them, you're clean -- the SEC can't shake a stick at you. Half a million, easy -- and that's just a start. JOHNSON Well, if you put it like that... I now see I have a duty to continue my career in public service. Johnson stands, puts his arm on Andersen. Tommy emerges, shakes his head, and laughs. TOMMY I'm in the wrong business. THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 14A. 19 EXT. BAIT SHACK - DAY 19 A ramshackle bait shack, paint peeling, on the inland waterway. At the rear of the shack, Armando shoots hoops into a tattered net. Loretta, back in jeans, looks at her watch. A bondo-patched Econoline van pulls up. Tommy jumps out, big smile. He gives Loretta an energetic round of APPLAUSE. TOMMY The best li'l roper in America! But she doesn't want the charm. LORETTA You took your time. ARMANDO Cops bust you, Tommy? TOMMY Busted? Moi? Fuck no. He pulls out the wad of bills. Their faces brighten considerably. TOMMY That look like busted? 20 EXT. CAPITOL - NIGHT 20 Washington, D.C. The illuminated dome of the Capitol. 21 INT. CONGRESSIONAL OFFICE - NIGHT 21 CAMERA ROAMS the well-hung walls. From the photos and memorabilia, we realize that we are in the office of Rep. Jeff Johnson. In the reflections on the frames, we GLIMPSE some MOVEMENT on the desk explaining the considerable BREATHING and MOANING (O.S.). JOHNSON (O.S.) Oh my God. Oh my God. Oh my... But then a strange GURGLING sound (O.S.) escapes from Johnson. JOHNSON (O.S.) ... God. A silent beat. Then a horrified CRY. Jennifer rises INTO FRAME. JENNIFER Oh my god! THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 14B. 22 INT. CHURCH - FLORIDA - DAY 22 The congregation is SINGING. We SEE the widow Johnson. At her side, in the aisle seat, a powerful man with bushy eyebrows, about 60, in a three-piece suit and watch chain: congressman DICK DODGE. The HYMN ends. Dodge steps up to the pulpit. DODGE It was my honor to serve in Congress with Jeff Johnson for a generation. No one could have been a better legislator. No one could have been a finer husband and father. And now -- He presses the tips of his fingers together and looks skyward, as if communing with his memory of the deceased. DODGE And now God has called his servant home. ANGLE ON Jennifer, in black. DODGE (O.S.) We will miss him. But we are grateful that his passing was so peaceful -- and so like him -- working late into the night at his desk, the consummate public servant. (CONTINUED) 15. 22 CONTINUED: 22 Vera sneaks a look at Jennifer, who is poker-faced. 23 EXT./INT. VERANDA/JOHNSON HOME - DAY 23 On the veranda of the gracious home, mourners pay respects to the family. Dodge puts a gentle hand on the widow's shoulder and draws her aside. He throws a look at Jennifer, who joins them. DODGE Vera, I know you're still in shock from Jeff's... passing. But we have to talk about his seat. Vera stares at Jennifer. She knows the score. JENNIFER Mrs. Johnson, if you'd like to discuss this in private -- VERA You can stay -- what's the difference? DODGE Vera, I'd like you to announce that you're going to run for Congress. Let a few days pass to show proper respect. But next week, I want to stand next to you at a press conference where you declare for Jeff's seat in the House. VERA JOHNSON No, Dick -- no. DODGE There's nothing to be afraid of, Vera. With your name, you can't lose. People around these parts are so used to voting for Jeff Johnson -- why, Mrs. Jeff Johnson would win in a walk. VERA JOHNSON Dick, I was a Washington wife for twenty years. Twenty years of Potomac bullshit is plenty for one lifetime. DODGE Vera, we're talking about becoming a Member of Congress. We're talking about a sure thing. (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 16. 23 CONTINUED: 23 JENNIFER Don't worry about running the office -- I'll be there night and day. VERA JOHNSON I'm sure you would, dear. But I couldn't give you the same job satisfaction Jeff gave you. Jennifer, embarrassed, didn't know Vera knew. Nor did Dodge. 24 OMITTED 24 25 EXT. CONDOMINUM COMPLEX - DAY 25 A retirement community in the Florida sunshine. 26 INT. CONDO ELEVATOR/HALLWAY - DAY - THE ELEVATOR DOORS 26 open. A supermarket shopping cart full of groceries, tied with a big bow, rolls out, pushed by Tommy. Loretta accompanies him. Tommy BUZZES at a door. It's answered by Tommy's GRANDMA, a limber lady in leggings and a bright top. She sees the groceries, kisses him. GRANDMA This is very sweet of you, darling. But you shouldn't have done it. Where did you get the money? TOMMY You don't want to know. 27 INT. GRANDMA'S CONDO - DAY 27 Tommy and Loretta are watching the track results on the local tv news. Tommy, playing solitaire, shuffles bril- liantly. Grandma comes in from the kitchen, shaking her head. GRANDMA How did I end up with a thief for a grandson? TOMMY Grandma -- I told you. I'm not a thief. I'm a con man. An artist. GRANDMA But also a crook. (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 17. 27 CONTINUED: 27 TOMMY But I only con crooks, Grandma. You can't con an honest man. Only somebody who wants something for nothing. (pause) But the good Lord must have been fond of pigeons, because he made so many of them. GRANDMA Sometimes I just wish you were more like your Daddy... TOMMY You mean, dead? GRANDMA No, smartmouth... I mean someone who made something of himself. LORETTA (pointing at TV) LOOK...it's the ad! VIDEO...a cheap TV spot -- a busty blonde in a skimpy outfit tossing her hair and pouting. LORETTA (V.O.) (fake Swedish accent) I am Inga. I'm here from Sweden and I'm s-o-o lonely. I need a man...and so do my girlfriends. VIDEO...Scantily-clad babes to match the names. Loretta speaks along with the V.O. LORETTA (AND V.O.) ...Maria, my hotblooded Spanish friend...Babette, the Parisian pussycat...and many others. So call the "Girls of Many Nations," at 1-900-555-NATO. SUPER: CALL 1-900-555-NATO. LORETTA (Swedish accent) So what do you think of my accent, Grandma? GRANDMA Compared to what? Loretta, why don't you go baste the turkey? (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 18. 27 CONTINUED: (2) 27 Loretta gets up and goes for the kitchen. We hear a high-pitched ELECTRONIC WARBLE. Tommy reaches into Loretta's purse and pulls out a cellular phone. TOMMY (calls to Loretta) See? I told you TV advertising works. He opens the phone and speaks in a toneless, recording- like voice. TOMMY Hello...you have reached Girls of Many Nations. For Hot Blooded Italian Wildcats, press "one" now. (nothing) For Perky American Cheerleaders, press "two" now. (nothing) For a Sultry Swedish Love Goddess, press "three" now... ("BEEP") He covers the mouthpiece and calls to Loretta. TOMMY Bingo! Loretta...guy wants to speak to Inga. LORETTA (o.c.) Tell him to call back. I'm basting. TOMMY grins mischievously and speaks into the phone in the husky voice of a SWEDISH WOMAN. TOMMY Ja, this is Inga. Hello Paul... how are you tonight? You are feeling naughty? That's all right ...you have your what in a bowl of oatmeal? Yes, that is very naughty, and maybe a little sick. GRANDMA Disgusting. (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 19. 27 CONTINUED: (3) 27 TOMMY Oh NO! It's my husband Lars. He's home early, I must go before ...you want to talk to Lars too? So you like to talk dirty out of both sides of your mouth. (normal voice) Man, you are one twisted bastard! Laughing, he hangs up. GRANDMA Tommy, please! TOMMY Sorry, grandma, just getting a third minute out of him. He clicks off the phone and slams it back into Loretta's purse. Loretta, meanwhile, has reappeared. LORETTA You hung up on Paul? He's one of my best customers. GRANDMA I can't believe any relative of mine does that for a living. LORETTA C'mon Gramma...it's only my voice. They never actually meet me. GRANDMA So my granddaughter talks dirty for a living and my grandson's a thief. TOMMY What's up, Grandma? Are you embarrassed to show my picture around the pool? GRANDMA Of course I'm not. Look. She goes to her sewing basket and pulls something from it. She unfolds it: a long piece of needlepoint she's been working on. INSERT It spells out Tommy's full name: Thomas Jefferson Johnson. (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 20. 27 CONTINUED: (4) 27 GRANDMA (O.S.) Look what these arthritic hands been doing. BACK TO SCENE GRANDMA Make me proud of you, Tommy. Make me proud of the name you carry. In the silence between them that follows, we HEAR the tv. GENERAL MANAGER I'm Ned Grable, vice president and general manager of WFLA. We think Mrs. Jeff Johnson did the right thing in not running for the congressional seat left vacant by her husband's death. The editorial catches Grandma's attention. GENERAL MANAGER Jeff Johnson's name may still be magic. But it'll take more than the magic of name recognition to solve our region's problems. I'm Ned Grable. GRANDMA Name recognition. Lordy, what a notion. People have to be some boobs just to vote for someone because their name is Johnson. Tommy's eyes widen. GRANDMA I remember once back in Georgia, they even elected a dead man. His name was still on the ballot -- people were just used to voting for him. TOMMY What did you say, Grandma? 28 EXT. BAIT SHACK - DAY 28 HOMER, the proprietor of Homer's Pit Stop, wearing fuel- smeared overalls, is dieseling a Customer's boat down by the water. TOMMY (O.S.) Homer! Get your ass over here! (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 20A. 28 CONTINUED: 28 Up by the racks of junk food and beer, and pails of fish slop, Tommy and Armando await Homer. In b.g., an older black gentleman plays checkers, solo. This is VAN DYKE. ARMANDO What's this about, jefe? TOMMY (calling) Loretta! Get off the damn phone! ARMANDO This better be good. TOMMY (sarcastic mimic) "This better be good." Loretta! ON LORETTA on the pay phone, moaning in Swedish ecstasy. LORETTA Oh, ya, ya, God, you're so big! (waving at Tommy) Uh-oh, I have to go now, my husband Sven is home early... Tommy grabs the phone. He pushes aside a protesting Loretta... TOMMY Goddammit, Inga, is it that pervert again! Damn! He smacks the receiver with his hand. TOMMY (into receiver) Listen, you little shit -- I just spent eight years in the joint, nobody talks to my woman like that! I got your adress, I got a machete, I got two Rotweilers... I'm gonna come to your house and tear your ass up! (hangs up, laughing) LORETTA Okay, Tommy, what's so damn important? HOMER Yeah, I got work to do. (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 21. 28 CONTINUED: (2) 28 They all look at him expectantly. He takes a dramatic pause, then launches into a "Come to Jesus" speech. TOMMY My friends, I want to tell you about a town where the streets are paved with gold. This is a town where the marks give you money before you ask. A town where they take you to dinner after you fuck 'em. A town where when they need money, they just print more. This is a town where a guy bounced nine hundred checks and he didn't even have to skip town!!! ARMANDO Ain't no town like that. LORETTA You mean Vegas? TOMMY No. (beat) Washington, D.C. I'm going to run for Congress. His big smile meets their blank surprise. Their faces fall. LORETTA What is this, a joke? HOMER I don't get it. ARMANDO What's the con, Tommy? TOMMY Van Dyke. You remember Willie Sutton? VAN DYKE Of blessed memory. TOMMY You remember what he said? They asked him, Why do you rob banks? And he said, That's where the money is. I tell you, people -- Washington. That's where the money is. (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 22. 28 CONTINUED: (3) 28 Tommy produces a sheaf of Xeroxes and pamphlets. TOMMY I found this shit in the library. You know how much a congressman makes? A hundred and thirty a year -- and that's just base pay for getting your ass elected. Then there are these things called PACs, and these lobbyists, whose whole point in life is to buy you off. It's the con of a lifetime -- and the damn thing is, it's legal! This is hot, people, we can do this! ARMANDO Who "we," white man? TOMMY You never heard of staff, Armando? I get in, I get a staff allowance of five hundred and thirty-seven grand a year -- Loretta wolf-WHISTLES. TOMMY -- which I will generously share with you. LORETTA And how exactly were you going to get your butt to Congress? HOMER Yeah -- why would anyone vote for you? TOMMY Not for me, Homer. For Jeff Johnson. Name recognition -- that's what it's all about. You think folks know their congressman died? I get on the ballot as Jeff Johnson, I guarantee they'll vote for me. Now all's I have to do is get on the ballot. LORETTA Which is how? (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 23. 28 CONTINUED: (4) 28 TOMMY Which is where you folks come in. (picking up a ream of forms) All's we have to do is collect five thousand six hundred twenty five signatures. ARMANDO You shittin' us? HOMER In your dreams, Tommy. TOMMY You people got a better idea? VAN DYKE I do. 29 INT. SILVER FOXES CHAPTER - DAY 29 Senior citizens fold brochures, stuff envelopes, make phone calls. Van Dyke and Tommy enter. TOMMY Okay... gimme the four-one-one on these Silver Foxes Again. It's a bunch of old folks who like to vote? VAN DYKE Don't laugh, they get an enormous turnout. But the big thing is, they have their own line on the ballot. They already got the signatures. TOMMY Ah. VAN DYKE The lady we're meeting, Hattie Rifkin, they call her the condo queen. TOMMY So all I have to do is snow one old lady. Don't sound like major surgery. THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 24. 30 INT. INNER OFFICE - SILVER FOXES - DAY 30 Tommy and Van Dyke are seated opposite HATTIE RIFKIN, a high-energy woman, 70s, with a frizz of white curls. HATTIE So, what brings you here? You want to talk politics... talk! VAN DYKE We were wondering who you were going to run for Congress this year. HATTIE Oh, the usual sacrifical lamb. Probably Sylvia Roland. She just lost her husband, she needs to meet new people. Why? TOMMY Mrs. Rifkin... I want to run. HATTIE Well, I want to run too -- but with this plastic hip, it's not gonna happen. Tommy breaks up. In spite of himself, he's charmed by the salty old babe. TOMMY What I mean is... I'd like to run for Congress on the Silver Fox ticket. I care about you and your issues. HATTIE Yeah, that's what my son says. But does he call? Anyway, what makes you think a group of alter cockers are gonna support a man who hasn't clipped his first nose hair yet? TOMMY Because I can win. HATTIE No, no... a Democrat can win. A Republican can win. A Silver Fox can only make a symbolic point. TOMMY Mrs. RIfkin, if you give me a ballot line, and if I can get support from... (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 25. 30 CONTINUED: 30 HATTIE If... if. Ven die bubbah halla tsehen qulishkes, het gehaya zadeh. TOMMY Sure, but... besser die viller ein der kenner. Hattie cracks up. Tommy leans over and translates for Van Dyke: TOMMY She said, 'If my grandmother had balls, she'd be my grandfather.' HATTIE (recovering) Where the Hell did you learn to speak Yiddish? TOMMY The same place I learned to hustle shtarkers at gin rummy. From Morris Elfbein... the Gin King of Miami Beach. HATTIE No kidding... you knew the Rudolf Valentino of Dade County? TOMMY He taught me a great deal. He taught me you don't always need the best cards to win. HATTIE Maybe not in gin, but in politics, young man, you need money to win, you need a name to win, you... TOMMY Oh, I have a name. HATTIE What, you're an athlete, a movie star? I don't get out as much as I used to. You're not on MTV, are you? TOMMY No ma'am. My name is Johnson. Jeff Johnson. The Name You Know. (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 26. 30 CONTINUED: (2) 30 She ponders for a minute. And then she gets it. A wicked smile. HATTIE Jeff Johnson. Well, that's a name even our Alzheimer's Group will remember. (beat; shakes her head) Still, for a full-up campaign, we'd need materials, we'd need ads... TOMMY You leave that to me, Mrs. R. 31 INT. JOHNSON HOME - DAY 31 The widow Johnson is pouring tea for Tommy, now in super- nerd drag -- wire-rim glasses and tweed sport jacket. VERA JOHNSON I'm not sure I understand, Professor Franklin -- you wrote your doctoral thesis on my husband? TOMMY He was a great man, Mrs. Johnson. He did so much for my people. VERA JOHNSON He... did? TOMMY Oh, yes. I'll never forget when he said 'Welfare is a drug -- and you gotta kick it cold turkey.' It was... inspirational. VERA JOHNSON Really... well, I'm sure... TOMMY And I was actually in the audience when he said, 'If you people would just get off your dead asses and look for work, this country might be fit to live in again.' Powerful stuff. VERA JOHNSON It's very kind of you to say so. And you're very kind to come all the way from... where was it? (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 27. 31 CONTINUED: 31 TOMMY Wilson-Pickett State Teachers College. But I didn't just come to pay respects, ma'am. I came because your husband deserves an archive. A place where scholars can study his legacy. A storehouse for the record of his remarkable career. VERA JOHNSON I see. So you want... his papers? TOMMY Oh, not just his papers, Mrs. Johnson. Everything. Buttons, posters, bumper stickers. All the paraphernalia of his campaigns -- proof of his political genius. Now I realize that you may have a sentimental attachment to a few items... VERA JOHNSON Take 'em. TOMMY I beg your pardon. VERA JOHNSON Take 'em all. Would you like the wedding photos, too? TOMMY Well, I don't think that's necess... VERA JOHNSON Good -- that way you won't have to go rooting around in the garbage. Is there anything else? TOMMY Well, um... no. VERA JOHNSON More tea? Or something stronger? I know it's only ten-thirty, but, hell, sun's over the yardarm somewhere, right? TOMMY Actually, ma'am, I should be getting back. (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 28. 31 CONTINUED: (2) 31 VERA JOHNSON You're in pretty good shape for a professor. D'you work out? Tommy rises and packs his briefcase hastily. TOMMY Look, I, um, have a class to teach. You know how blind students are... they're so dependent. (edges toward door) Don't worry ma'am... your materials will be in good hands. 32 EXT. WHARF - DAY - CLOSE ANGLE - A SCISSORS 32 cuts the RE- off a RE-ELECT JEFF JOHNSON bumper sticker in familiar blue and gold. Van Dyke, Armando, and Homer have a production line going, doctoring the old Johnson campaign materials, slicing off and painting out the RE-'s and the years. VAN DYKE Are you sure you don't want to come to Washington with us, Homer? HOMER You bums got time on your hands. (indicating bait shack) I got a business to run. ON LORETTA working the RINGING pay phone. LORETTA Hello? Who? The League of Women Voters? Sorry, Mr. Johnson won't be attending the debate. No -- no, Betty, I'm sorry, I can't tie up this line. (hangs up; it RINGS) Hello? The Sarasota Star-Ledger? I'm sorry, we're out of photographs. No, you can't, Mr. Johnson has just had surgery for a deviated septum. (hangs up; it RINGS) Hello? (brightening) Ya, this is Inga. PAN TO TOMMY training a home video camera on a poster that reads JEFF JOHNSON FOR CONGRESS. (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 29. 32 CONTINUED: 32 TOMMY (very white) We're not going to show you Jeff Johnson waving a flag. We're not going to show you Jeff Johnson kissing babies. We're not going to show you Jeff Johnson doing anything, because you already know what Jeff Johnson can do. 33 INT. JOHNSON HOME - NIGHT - ON TV SCREEN 33 The poster fills the screen. TOMMY (V.O.) Tomorrow, vote for Jeff Johnson. The name you know. A very puzzled Vera Johnson watches the ad on tv. 34 SERIES OF SHOTS - NIGHT (MOS) 34 The congressional district sleeps. But in the darkness, a kind of D-Day onslaught is under way. QUICK SUPER- IMPOSED CUTS of Tommy's secret army of Silver Foxes, opening crates, fanning through parking lots, swarming over lawns, driving in stakes, tacking up posters everywhere. INCLUDE Tommy climbing a telephone pole... Armando shinnying up a light pole across the street... Loretta and Van Dyke pulling on a rope... which hoists a huge bundle to Tommy... who opens and unfolds it... and gets an end through the air to Armando. They unfurl the biggest banner imaginable. JEFF JOHNSON: THE NAME YOU KNOW 35 EXT. COMMERCIAL STREET - DAWN 35 CAMERA TILTS DOWN. Every square inch of town seems to have been plastered with JOHNSON FOR CONGRESS material. It's on billboards, bumpers, bus shelters, balloons, banners, utility poles... all in the late congressman's signature design. 36 QUICK SERIES OF SHOTS - DAY 36 The Econoline, now a JOHNSON ad on wheels, ghetto-blasters mounted front and back on the roof, rolls by a Jewish deli ...a soul food joint... a whitebread country club... a Chinese restaurant... At each, Tommy's amplified VOICE says: (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 30. 36 CONTINUED: 36 TOMMY Jeff Johnson. The name you know. In a different appropriate accent. 37 EXT. ELEMENTARY SCHOOL - DAY 37 In front of a polling place, Van Dyke pulls up in a hearse with an ELECT JOHNSON banner. So, driving muscle cars, do Armando, Homer, and Loretta -- Tommy's get-out-the-vote fleet. Exhilarated senior citizens pile out, led by Hattie. 38 INT. POLLING PLACE - DAY 38 An ordinary Couple, 40s, sign the registration book, then enter adjacent voting carrels. After a moment, the HUSBAND leans out. HUSBAND Who are we voting for Congress? WIFE Don't we always vote for Johnson? HUSBAND That's it -- Johnson. HIS HAND punches the hole in the ballot next to Johnson. 39 VIDEO 39 A NETWORK ANCHOR at an election-night news set. NETWORK ANCHOR If you're just joining us, our exit polls project that in Florida, an unknown, independent candidate whose sole asset appears to be his name may just possibly win a slim victory. 40 OMITTED 40 thru thru 42 42 43 EXT. BAIT SHACK - NIGHT 43 Blinding lights. Media circus. TV power cords, a huge tangle snaking back toward mobile generators. Cameramen narrowly miss knocking each other into the water. A STEEL DRUM BAND plays "Happy Days Are Here Again." (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 31. 43 CONTINUED: 43 The small crowd -- Tommy's cronies, their pals, and a jubilant contingent of Panthers led by Hattie -- lets out a great WHOOP. FLORIDA REPORTER #1 Is that him? Tricia, I believe Congressman-elect Johnson is coming this way. For the first time, we see Tommy wearing a beautifully-cut suit. He's instantly engulfed by lights, cameras, and Supporters. An amazed CAMERAMAN, watching Tommy, whispers to a Producer. CAMERAMAN Jesus -- he's not... white. I actually voted for the guy. I thought he was Jeff Johnson. Tommy jumps onto a bench. APPLAUSE from his Supporters. TOMMY Thank you, thank you, all of you, for your help. Give yourself a round of applause. They do. As APPLAUSE continues (O.S.), CAMERA PANS from Reporter to Reporter to Reporter, their mikes bearing the call-letters of different channels. ON GRANDMA being interviewed. She wears a JOHNSON FOR CONGRESS button and speaks with manifest pride. GRANDMA I've never been so proud in all my life. He was always such a good boy...well, I think he meant well. Sometimes -- well he was a clean child. That's important, I think... PAN TO FLORIDA REPORTER #2 doing a stand-up. FLORIDA REPORTER #2 Then in Massachusetts, there was a guy named Kennedy who got elected, but he wasn't really a Kennedy. PAN TO -- (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 32. 43 CONTINUED: (2) 43 FLORIDA REPORTER #3 A lot of dead incumbents get re-elected, actually. It's an American tradition. ON Tommy. Speaking meaningfully, with great sincerity, he shows a gift for political discourse. TOMMY We ran a positive campaign. We campaigned on the issues. The issue is leadership. Leadership for the future. Ask not what you can do for your country. The people have spoken. The only thing we have to fear is fear itself. If you can't stand the heat stay out of the kitchen. Live Free or Die. And in conclusion...read my lips! (APPLAUSE and CHEERS) 44 INT. AIRPLANE - DAY 44 Tommy looking out the window at the city below. 45 EXT. WASHINGTON, D.C. - AERIAL VIEW - DAY - (STOCK) 45 The approach to National Airport gives a good view of Washington and its landmarks. TOMMY The promised land. 46 EXT. AIRPORT RUNWAY - DAY 46 The plane touches down. 47 INT. NATIONAL AIRPORT - DAY 47 Through the airport move our Floridians. They look like they're going to opening day at the track. VOICE (O.S.) Congressman Johnson! Congressman Johnson! Tommy looks. It's REINHHARDT, a young straight-arrow bearing two huge document briefcases, which he puts down to shake hands. (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 33. 47 CONTINUED: 47 REINHARDT Arthur Reinhardt. You remember me -- I Fed-Exed that material to you in Key West? TOMMY Reinhardt, my man! Of course! You look just like I pictured you. Nice wing tips. REINHARDT Thank you. Congressman, I hope you don't think I'm out of line for meeting you here -- I thought you might want some help with logistics, settling in at your hotel -- (indicating the briefcases) Since you didn't make it to the Harvard seminar, I put together a set of their papers for you. TOMMY I like your initiative, Reinhardt, but to tell you the truth, I've never been much of a student. Maybe you can brief my staff sometime. Reinhardt looks Tommy's cronies over. Not your classic Hill types. TOMMY But thank you, I will take you up on those logistics. Hey! Entourage! What hotel we at? They look at one another, puzzled. TOMMY Reinhardt, it appears that the staff has neglected to nail down some details. REINHARDT Oh, Jesus, the IMF's in town. Where are we going to find a room? TOMMY Four rooms. 48 OMITTED 48 THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 34. 49 INT. AIRPORT BAR - DAY 49 The entourage is enjoying a round of libations. Reinhardt runs up. REINHARDT I got lucky at the Madison. Thank god there's been a coup in Uruguay. Their delegation just checked out. TOMMY You're a wizard, Reinhardt. I knew you could handle it. 50 EXT. AIRPORT TAXI RANK - DAY 50 Tommy's entourage and their luggage are being packed into a cab. Tommy turns to Reinhardt. TOMMY So when does the House open for business? Reinhardt hasn't heard it put quite that way before. Reinhardt gets his courage up. REINHARDT Say, Congressman, you got my resume, didn't you? TOMMY (hasn't a clue) I'm sure I did. REINHARDT There's something I wanted to ask you. I know it's a big step, but -- I'd like you to consider me to be your AA. TOMMY That's quite an offer, Reinhardt, very decent of you, but I'm just a social drinker. REINHARDT No. AA. Your Administrative Assistant. I worked for Congressman Johnson. I'd like to work for you, Congressman Johnson. TOMMY Really. Tommy looks at his own troops, then back to Reinhardt. (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 35. 50 CONTINUED: 50 TOMMY You mean like an affirmative action thing? Tommy opens the cab door. TOMMY Tell you what -- I'll think about it, okay? Tommy gets in and closes the door. TOMMY (through the open window) Thanks for getting us settled, really appreciate it. (to driver) Madison Hotel. 51 OMITTED 51 52 EXT. MEMORIAL BRIDGE - MAGIC HOUR 52 The bridge over the Potomac has a classic view of the Lincoln Memorial and the Washington Monument. Their taxi drives by. 53 OMITTED 53 & & 54 54 55 EXT. CANNON BUILDING - DAY 55 Morning. Tommy and cronies get out of a cab and bound up the grand flight of stairs. In b.g., the Capitol dome. 56 INT. CANNON GROUND FLOOR CORRIDOR/ELEVATOR - DAY 56 They walk the superb ground floor corridor of Cannon, salivating. Marble columns... chandeliers... grand offices. Real class. AT AN ELEVATOR with a sign above it -- MEMBERS ONLY -- they stop. Tommy presses the button. The door opens. The seated ATTENDANT gets a load of this group. Especially Loretta. ATTENDANT Sorry, folks, this elevator's for Members only. (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 36. 56 CONTINUED: 56 TOMMY That's okay, they're with me. Sixth floor please. Cannon 609. I'm going to my office. ATTENDANT I said Members only. TOMMY I am a Member. Now take us to six before I haul your ass in front of the committee on disrespectful behavior. ATTENDANT Elevator don't go to six. You have to get off at five and walk. 57 INT. CANNON STAIRWELL - DAY 57 Looking puzzled, they make their way up a drab stairwell. 58 INT. CANNON TOP FLOOR - DAY 58 Not classy. On one side of the hallway, the windows give out on a brutally ugly courtyard. On the other side of the hall are cages: windowless storage bins behind metal fences crammed with junk -- and an occasional xerox machine, Mr. Coffee, and pitiful staffer at a tiny desk. Tommy opens the door to 609. 59 INT. TOMMY'S RECEPTION AREA - DAY 59 Tommy's office is a small, dark garret, with dirty car- peting, bare shelves, and a pile of bulging canvas U.S. Mail bags. TOMMY Wait here. He heads further into the office. 60 INT. TOMMY'S OFFICE - DAY 60 Equally unattractive. Perched on the desk: Reinhardt. TOMMY You again! REINHARDT Good morning, congressman. TOMMY What is this shithole? (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 37. 60 CONTINUED: 60 REINHARDT Excuse me? TOMMY (gesturing, peeved) This. REINHARDT (casual) Oh -- you missed the freshman lottery for offices. They assign them by draw. You didn't show for the draw, so you got the worst office in Congress. TOMMY I missed what lottery? REINHARDT It was all in the briefing books I mailed you. TOMMY What else did I miss, Reinhardt? REINHARDT Are you hiring me, congressman? Tommy gives Reinhardt a good once-over, seeing him anew. TOMMY You're shaking me down, aren't you? Tommy laughs, then clasps Reinhardt's shoulders. TOMMY This is fantastic, Reinhardt. I haven't been here five minutes, and you're shaking me down. God, I'm gonna love this town. You're hired, man. Just tell me what to do next. I don't want to miss out on any of the good shit. REINHARDT The dinner for new Members is tonight, at Union Station. Do you have black tie? BEGIN elegant, spirited classical MUSIC. 61 INT. UNION STATION - MAIN HALL - NIGHT 61 With its hundred-foot barrel-vaulted ceiling and grand windows, the magnificent Beaux-Arts station has been beautifully restored. (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 38. 61 CONTINUED: 61 A big crowd slowly makes its way along a red carpet to the party. Tommy was born to wear a tux. In his lapel, a red-and- gold eagle pin. On his arm, Loretta, in a dramatic shoulderless and nearly backless gown, with three-quarter gloves. The other Women in sight are far more conserva- tively dressed. 62 INT. UNION STATION - ADIRONDACKS RESTAURANT - NIGHT 62 A STRING QUARTET provides the music. Tommy and Loretta linger uncertainly near the entrance. Then: TOMMY Let's meet some natives. Tommy leads her over to two Men, 30s, excellent haircuts. Both wear pins. He extends a hand. TOMMY Tommy Johnson, how'd you do, nice party, heck of a railroad station, isn't it? RAFE Rafe Simon, freshman from Tulsa. And this is Bo Chandler -- BO -- from Lufkin, Texas. You must be the one who didn't come to Harvard. TOMMY No, I couldn't, it was my Princeton reunion.... RAFE Jeff Johnson? You're Jeff Johnson? The guy from Florida? TOMMY That's right. RAFE (to Bo) The rest of us are out there on the campaign trail, raising money, kissing ass, making speeches, dragging our butts from place to place -- and he slides in on pure name recognition! (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 39. 62 CONTINUED: 62 He puts his face close to Tommy. RAFE Let me tell you something, Jeff. A tense beat. Then Rafe breaks into a smile. RAFE Fuckin' brilliant. Bo winks at Tommy. Tommy Thank you. Thank you both very much. (to Loretta) Isn't that nice, now, don't you think? (to Rafe and Bo) This is Miss Loretta, boys. She extends a regal hand to each, Liza Doolittle at the ball. LORETTA How do yo do. How do you do. TOMMY And it's Tommy. My friends call me Tommy. "Jeff" is my... professional name. So what line of work were you boys in before you got elected? You lawyers or something? RAFE Oh, no, I did morning weather and traffic for KTOK in Tulsa. BO You don't remember me? I was a tight end for the Oilers -- my knee gimped out. The origins of the gentlemen's political success is not lost on Tommy. BO Hey, stop by my reception after the swearing in tomorrow, okay? RAFE Yeah, but don't you go to his reception before you go to my reception. (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 40. 62 CONTINUED: (2) 62 TOMMY Fine, but I'm gonna be real offended if either of you miss my reception. They leave. TOMMY I think we have to have a reception. AT THE BUFFET, as Tommy and Loretta help themselves generously to oysters and champagne, they overhear TWO MEMBERS passing by. FIRST MEMBER So then I ran an ad calling him a draft dodger, but then he ran an ad calling me a plagiarist. SECOND MEMBER What did you do? FIRST MEMBER Oh, leaked a rumor that his father- in-law was a Nazi. I went up ten points in a weekend. TOMMY (to Loretta) We're in the majors, doll. 62A THE BALCONY is full of people working one another. As 62A Tommy and Loretta pass some large stone statues, a man extends his hand -- liquor lobbyist KEN KORNGOLD. KORNGOLD Congressman? I'd like to introduce myself. Ken Korngold. National Distilled Spirits Association. TOMMY Tommy Johnson. Distilled Spirits, is that right? KORNGOLD It's super that you won, congressman. Any way we can help, please don't hesitate. TOMMY Pleasure's all mine, Ken, hope you can make it to my reception. Do you happen to have a card? (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 41. 62A CONTINUED: 62A KORNGOLD (giving him one) I sure do. 63 INT. UNION STATION - MEN'S ROOM - NIGHT 63 Tommy is along a wall where other guests are similarly occupied. TOMMY You now what I love about this place? The way everyone calls you a Member. Every time I hear that, it makes me think of Mr. Happy here. The Member next to him bursts out laughing. TOMMY Don't you be peeing on my shoe. They go to the sinks. The Member introduces himself. IOWA Mike Strangland. Iowa -- first CD. TOMMY You got a CD? Shit, I missed that, too. IOWA First Congressional district. TOMMY Ohhh. Tommy Johnson. Florida. So Iowa -- how'd you get to Washington? You do the crop report on tv? IOWA has a big open face and a flat Midwestern voice. IOWA No -- I owe it all to the Vietnamese. TOMMY War hero? IOWA P.O.W. When I got back to Cedar Rapids, I spent so many years telling the Rotary Club what was wrong in Washington, they finally told me to put up or shut up -- so I put up. And here I am. (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 42. 63 CONTINUED: 63 TOMMY Wait a minute. What's wrong in Washington? IOWA C'mon -- there's acid rain killing fish, and no one's stopping it... there's topsoil washing away, and no erosion program... there's chemicals in our livestock -- God, I sound like a Boy Scout. TOMMY That's alright, Iowa -- this place could use a few geeks like you. 64 INT. UNION STATION - ADIRONDACKS - TOMMY'S DINNER 64 TABLE - NIGHT Tommy shakes hands around the table, taking business cards as he goes. FIRST LOBBYIST Pete Slocum. Asbestos Information Institute. SECOND LOBBYIST Mike Gustofson. Freedom to Advertise Coalition. THIRD LOBBYIST Paul Zeckhauser. American Tobacco Council. TOMMY Hey... thank you... nice to see you... hope you can make it to my reception. Have y'all met Miss Loretta? TOMMY'S TABLEMATE is lawyer-lobbyist TOMMY O'CONNOR, 40s. As Waiters serve lobster bisque, he hands TJ a business card. O'CONNOR Tommy O'Connor. Soon as I saw how you got elected, I knew you were a real comer. Hell, I bet old Olaf Andersen voted for you. TOMMY Who's Olaf Andersen? (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 43. 64 CONTINUED: 64 O'Connor points. ON THE DAIS, Andersen is engrossed with Dodge. O'CONNOR (O.S.) I won't tell him you asked. Chairman of Gulf Coast Power. Constituent of yours, client of mine. BACK TO SCENE O'CONNOR Pays the rent, know what I mean? Say, could I host a little welcome- to-Washington thing for you down at my law firm? Meet some of my clients, five hundred a head -- you could pick up twenty, twenty-five grand to get you started. TOMMY (cautious) And how much of that do you get? O'CONNOR (amused) Oh, it doesn't come off the top. Down the road, I'll bill 'em each five hundred an hour whenever I take you to lunch. TOMMY Tommy, I think this is the beginning of a beautiful relationship. 65 INT. UNION STATION - ADIRONDACKS - NIGHT - ON DODGE 65 making a speech from the dais. DODGE Tonight we unite the two great pillars of our system -- political and financial. To the forty-four newly-elected Members of Congress, I say, Look around you tonight. Look around, and be thankful for the generosity. Tommy inspects the sea of barracudas. (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 44. 65 CONTINUED: 65 DODGE The people you see not only provided tonight's hospitality. They are the people you serve. That's our system of checks and balances at its best. Their support helped get you elected... your work will help them... and their support will help you in your next campaign, which I remind you is already less than two years away. 66 INT./EXT. ADIRONDACKS - LARGE DOORS - NIGHT 66 In b.g., the Capitol dome. As Tommy and Loretta leave, they pass Dick Dodge, who is saying goodnight to guests. He stops them. DODGE You know, Mr. Johnson, it's customary for new Members to pay a courtesy call on the old fogies in the leadership. Especially from their HOME STATE. TOMMY Well, I would have, but I just got to town. It's an honor to meet you, sir. A real privilege. This is Miss Loretta. LORETTA Public liaison. She pronounces the word so carefully, it sounds lewd. DODGE How do you do? (to Tommy) You could make up for it by having a nightcap with me. (to Loretta) May I have my car take you home? 67 EXT. CAPITOL HILL - NIGHT 67 Tommy and Dodge walk up steps toward the Capitol. 68 INT. HALLWAY - CAPITOL - NIGHT 68 A darkened hallway. A hand-lettered sign by a door reads COMMITTEE ON POWER AND INDUSTRY. THE CHAIRMAN. MR. DODGE. Tommy and Dodge approach. As Dodge unlocks the door: (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 45. 68 CONTINUED: 68 TOMMY Excuse me, Mr. Chairman, but this ain't no homo shit we up to, is it? DODGE No. No, it's not. But -- (amused) Good thinking, Johnson. I'm impressed by your instincts. 69 INT. DODGE'S OFFICE - CAPITOL - NIGHT 69 A single table lamp lights Dick Dodge's office, reflecting off the velvet drapes, sculpted ceiling, and crystal chandeliers. Tommy and Dodge are in leather armchairs, ties undone. On the table between them, a bottle of Jim Beam. Dodge casts a cool eye on Tommy. DODGE Tell me, Johnson. Why did you come to Washington? TOMMY Well... of course... it's a chance to do something for my country. I mean, there's the topsoil thing, and acid rain is killing the cattle -- DODGE Cut the bullshit, Johnson. I saw how you got elected. Flukes like you are either nutcases or troublemakers. I just want to know which one I have on my hands. Who sent you here? TOMMY No one sent me. DODGE You pulled off that upset on your own? TOMMY (acknowledging modestly) Kid's got his talents. DODGE I'm impressed, Johnson, I am. But why did you run for Congress? TOMMY No bullshit? (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 46. 69 CONTINUED: 69 DODGE No bullshit. TOMMY Opportunity knocks. This town is the fuckin' Yukon. A stunned silence from Dodge -- then deep and generous laughter. DODGE What a refreshing answer. He laughs again, richly amused. Tommy joins in the laughter. 70 EXT. CANNON - DAY 70 Shining in the bright sun. 71 INT. TOMMY'S OFFICE - DAY - ON TOMMY'S DESK 71 Hundreds of business cards. An expert riffle, a one- handed cut, and Tommy deals lightning fast, a perfect diamond formation with two cards in the middle. He turns them over one at a time. TOMMY Food... drinks. LORETTA (reads card) Ken Korngold, National Distilled Spirits Association. Bob Rafferty ...Wisconsin Cheese Board. (to Tommy) What do you want me to do? TOMMY You're on cheese. I'll handle booze. He reaches for the phone... 72 EXT. DISTILLER'S BUILDING - DAY 72 Pan from Capitol Hill to gleaming glass office building. TOMMY (V.O.) (taking the phone) Ken! Ken Korngold! Tommy Johnson here... Right -- last night. How's it going, big guy? KORNGOLD (V.O.) Congressman! THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 47. 73 INT. KORNGOLD'S OFFICE - DAY 73 Expensive furniture, rugs, and art. KORNGOLD How are you on this helluva fine day! I'm looking forward to your reception. INTERCUT TOMMY AND KORNGOLD TOMMY Actually, that's why I'm calling, Ken. You said if I needed some help -- KORNGOLD You name it, congressman. Issue papers, testimony, floor speeches -- TOMMY Tell you what I have in mind. I was just thinking, wouldn't it be a plus for old Ken Korngold if I was to -- how should I put this -- showcase some of his distillers' products at my reception? You know, like they put Reese's pieces in E.T.? It's called "product placement." People come in, they have a tremendous time, they see your products, they think well of you -- and they think well of me, too. It's good for both of us, Ken. What do you say? KORNGOLD Well, it's a new one on me, but hey, sure, I think we can help you out. Say, while I have you on the line, there was one thing... 74 INT. HOUSE CHAMBER - DAY 74 The SPEAKER administers the oath of office to the assembled House. SPEAKER Do you solemnly swear that you will support and defend the Constitution of the United States... ON GRANDMA next to Tommy, eyes welling with pride. It's the one day a year that non-Members (meaning families) can be on the floor. (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 48. 74 CONTINUED: 74 SPEAKER ... against all enemies, foreign and domestic; that you will bear true faith and allegiance to the same... 75 INT. TOMMY'S OFFICE - DAY - VIDEO - WIDE SHOT OF HOUSE 75 The 435 Members (with family) taking the oath, watched on C-span by Loretta, Armando, Van Dyke, and Reinhardt. SPEAKER (V.O.) ... that you take this obligation freely, without any mental reservation or purpose of evasion... 76 INT. HOUSE CHAMBER - DAY 76 ON IOWA taking the oath, his toddler in his arms. PAN along faces of other Members... to Tommy. SPEAKER (V.O.) ... and that you will well and faithfully discharge the duties of the office on which you are about to enter. So help you God? TOMMY (AND MEMBERS) I do. SPEAKER (V.O.) Congratulations. You are now Members of Congress. Sustained APPLAUSE. Tommy kisses Grandma. INTERCUT Tommy's cronies APPLAUDING. ON THE FLOOR Tommy dries Grandma's tears with a finger. GRANDMA It's just that -- I'm so happy you straightened out. Tommy smiles ambiguously. As APPLAUSE continues, his eyes roam the room and make contact with Dick Dodge, standing at one of the leadership tables. Tommy winks conspiratorially at him. There's such diabolical glee in it, it even takes Dodge aback. 77 INT. CANNON TOP FLOOR - DAY 77 A beautiful black woman, 20s, walks briskly down the busy Cannon corridors. CELIA. There's intelligence in her eyes, and fire. (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 49. 77 CONTINUED: 77 She makes her way down the corridor, exchanging AD LIB greetings, glancing in at the sedate receptions, and drawing closer to the source of the REGGAE (O.S.) -- Tommy's office. She looks in. 78 INT. TOMMY'S RECEPTION AREA - DAY 78 It's packed, mainly with men. Everyone has drinks and talks noisily. It looks like a fraternity smoker for lobbyists. MUSIC comes from a boom box. The bar -- a tablecloth over some desks -- is lavishly stocked. So are the bookcases, which now look like liquor store shelves. ANGLE ON LORETTA, in a cocktail dress and a HELLO MY NAME IS MISS LORETTA badge, staffing a little table, handing Celia a name-tag. INSERT Celia's hands print CELIA KIRBY. PRO BONO. BACK TO SCENE - ON Tommy and Reinhardt talking with a LOBBYIST. FOURTH LOBBYIST It's an informal breakfast. You give us your views, we give you bacon and eggs, plus a couple of thousand dollar honorarium. (winking) For your favorite charity. Tommy looks at Reinhardt, who explains. REINHARDT The Tommy Johnson Foundation. TOMMY (savoring the word) Honorarium. I like that. Loretta appears with a platter of food. LORETTA Herring, gentlemen? FOURTH LOBBYIST Uh, no thanks. LORETTA Really? We've got it in cream sauce and in wine sauce. (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 49A. 78 CONTINUED: 78 REINHARDT I think I'll pass. Tommy steers her aside and takes a roll of soggy, toothpick-impaled herring. TOMMY What is this? Where's the cheese? LORETTA The cheese guy didn't return my call. So I called the guy at the American Smoked Fish Institute. She points at the food table. There's nothing but a few boxes of crackers and two huge mounds of herring -- one white, one pink. The centerpiece is a large smoked fish, eyes staring accusingly. TOMMY Oh, that's just wonderful. Sixty heavy hitters drop in, and I'm feeding 'em cat food. He breaks off, as Celia comes into view in the doorway behind. Tommy picks her up on his radar. TOMMY We'll talk about this later. We follow Tommy through the crowd until he reaches Celia. TOMMY Hi there. Glad you could make it. So you're... Celia Kirby. That's an extremely beautiful name. For an extremely beautiful woman. CELIA Wow! That's smooth. After ten straight hours on my feet making small talk and breathing cheap cigar smoke, that's exactly the kind of line I'm ready to fall for. TOMMY Whoa, slow down. CELIA Sure, sure, forget it. Can you just tell me, which one's Congressman Johnson? (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 49B. 78 CONTINUED: (2) 78 TOMMY What if I said... me? CELIA Oh. I see. So tell me, Congressman, just how deep is the shit I'm standing in? Tommy has to laugh. TOMMY Don't worry about it. Why don't we just start over again? CELIA Celia Kirby. I'm the legislative director of Pro Bono. TOMMY Ah. Pro Bon. That's an extremely beautiful name. For an extremely beautiful organization. Um... what is it? CELIA (amused) We're a public interest research and advocacy group. I'd like to brief you on our priorities this session. Can I call your AA to get on your schedule? TOMMY Why don't you brief me over dinner tonight? CELIA I want an appointment, Congressman, not a date. TOMMY Yeah, sure, we'll type it up on the schedule, it'll be an appointment, except with wine and flowers on the table. CELIA No thanks. I really should be going. TOMMY Won't you at least stay for a drink and some herring? (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 49C. 78 CONTINUED: (3) 78 CELIA I'm afraid I'm busy. TOMMY Well then, can I tempt you with a smelt? CELIA No thanks. (extending her hand) Nice to meet you. I'll be in touch with your office. I especially look forward to hearing your view on extending the sexual harassment law to include congressmen. TOMMY I love the way you say that. She slips out through the sea of revelers. 79 EXT. CAPITOL - DAY 79 A fine Washington morning. 80 OMITTED 80 81 EXT. CAPITOL STEPS - DAY 81 Rep. ELIJAH MARSHALL, 50s, black, and a pain in Dodge's ass, is shaking hands and saying goodbye to some Constituents. Dodge approaches. (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 3/25/92 50. 81 CONTINUED: 81 DODGE I heard in the steam room you're going to try to screw up my ethics bill. MARSHALL Not screw up. Amend. DODGE Come on, Eli, your amendments don't have a chance in hell to pass. My bill isn't perfect, I know, but it'll pass. And the President'll sign it. MARSHALL "Isn't perfect"? Dick, your bill's the Incumbents Protection Act! How can you even call it an ethics bill? DODGE Because the public wants an ethics bill! So that's what we call it. MARSHALL But it's got no teeth! It won't change a thing, and you know it. DODGE Come on, Eli, you're a politician, too. The less you're going to do about something, the more you have to talk about it. You know that. They start walking. MARSHALL I see. We close the bank, we stop the rubber checks, we raise the prices in the barber shop, we stop fixing parking tickets, and abracadabra! We say we've cleaned up Congress. Well, I don't think the American people want what this place has become. DODGE That's the beauty of it! They must, Eli -- they keep re-electing us. MARSHALL Not anymore! This new Congress is full of new faces. (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 51. 81 CONTINUED: (2) 81 DODGE Oh, I wouldn't read too much into that. A few extra retirements, some redistricting -- nothing more than that. It's still business as usual up here. Dodge takes his glasses from his pocket and wipes them. DODGE I live in the real world, Eli. Do you? What's unemployment up to in your district? Eight percent? Eight-five? MARSHALL Eight point six. DODGE Power and Enterprise is about to fund a solar demonstration plant, Eli. It could mean a whole lot to a district -- new jobs, new construction -- that interest you? MARSHALL You can't bribe me, Dick. 82 INT. DODGE'S RECEPTION AREA - DAY 82 Dodge and Marshall enter. DODGE Eli, the people who elected you. They sent you here to help them. Don't you want to? MARSHALL Not if it means supporting your bill. All you want is the perfect platform to campaign for Speaker. Dick Dodge. Mr. Clean. What a joke! DODGE (undeterred) Come on board, Eli. (leaning in) You know -- you can't save the world if you can't save your seat. Tommy enters. Marshall gives him a once-over and extends a hand. (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 52. 82 CONTINUED: 82 MARSHALL We haven't met. Eli Marshall. TOMMY Tommy Johnson. MARSHALL I know. The Florida upset. Well, now that you're here, what are you going to do with it? You gonna feather your own nest, or are you gonna make something of your office? TOMMY I plan to be as good a congressman as all the others. MARSHALL Exactly what does that mean? TOMMY Well, ever since I got back from Nam, I've wanted to do something about the rain forest -- MARSHALL No, do me a favor, don't tell me. I try not to get depressed until the second week of a new session. DODGE (ushering Tommy into his office) Eli, you'll excuse us -- we have a meeting. 83 INT. DODGE'S OFFICE - DAY 83 DODGE Johnson, I'm the chairman of a committee up here called Power and Industry. We've got an open seat, and I was wondering if you'd consider filling it. TOMMY Is this good news? (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 53. 83 CONTINUED: 83 DODGE (tongue in cheek) Well, it is a difficult assignment -- look at what we cover: energy, health, telecommunications, environment... the committee is constantly beset by a swarm of special interests. These are powerful people, they've got all the money in the world, and they're not shy about using it. TOMMY So... this is very good news. DODGE Most members would give their right nut for it. TOMMY So what do you want from me, Dick? DODGE Congressman... I just want you to smile for the cameras. 84 INT. POWER AND ENTERPRISE COMMITTEE - DAY 84 The committee members -- all white males, except Tommy -- mill around, awaiting the start of the hearings. As the TV cameras whir, Dodge shakes Tommy's hand warmly. Big smiles and an explosion of flashbulbs. Dodge breaks off and Tommy drifts over to Reinhardt. REINHARDT (indicating dais) So, Congressman, welcome to the honey pot. You should be one happy freshman. TOMMY Yeah? Well, I'm not. I'm suspicious. One thing I've learned is, when somebody gives you something for nothing, the nothing ain't nothing. It's something. What is it? Why me? Reinhardt puts his hand on Tommy's shoulders. (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 54. 84 CONTINUED: 84 REINHARDT Congressman, I don't want you to take this the wrong way, but... you're black. And I mean that in the nicest possible way. TOMMY Keep talking. REINHARDT Dodge wants to run for Speaker. And he ain't gonna make it without votes from the black caucus. Suddenly, Dodge reappears. He throws his arm around Tommy's shoulders. DODGE Tommy, someone I want you to meet... Dodge steers TJ to a preppy-looking man at the witness table -- BARCLAY "SKEETER" WARBURTON. DODGE Skeeter, do you know Tommy Johnson? Meet the new member of the committee. Tommy, this is Barclay Warburton. TOMMY Pleased to meet you, Barclay. WARBURTON'S voice is aristocratic, a la George Plimpton. WARBURTON Skeeter. Please. Been called that since boarding school. TOMMY Skeeter. WARBURTON Damned fine to meet you. As Dodge and Tommy head for the dais, Tommy imitates Warburton's lockjaw. TOMMY "Tommy. Please. Been called that since reform school." Dodge chuckles, shakes his head in mock rebuke. Tommy takes his seat at the lower dais, smiles at the Members on his left and right. (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 55. 84 CONTINUED: (2) 84 ON THE UPPER DAIS, Dodge gavels... DODGE This EPA oversight hearing of the Committee on Power and Industry will come to order. I'd like to welcome our first witness, the distinguished Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency... (Warburton nods) ... but before I do, I note that a new Member is joining us today, the distinguished gentleman from Florida. THE BIGGEST EXPLOSION OF FLASHES YET... and as the motor drives whir, Tommy flashes his biggest smile yet. 85 INT. TOMMY'S RECEPTION AREA - DAY 85 Tommy's office walls are now richly hung with plaques, awards, and framed photos. We see he has been named the PESTICIDE COALITION'S Man of the Month. The winner of the NATIONAL RIFLE ASSOCIATION'S Achievement Award. The MOTION PICTURE ASSOCIATION OF AMERICA'S Outstanding Young Legislator. Etc. The liquor is gone. Loretta is at the receptionist's desk. A LOBBYIST enters. FIFTH LOBBYIST Morning. Ron Yaeger. Snack-PAC -- Snack Foods Political Action Committee. I have a ten o'clock. LORETTA Please have a seat. The congressman is running just a little bit late. He sits and opens his briefcase. Van Dyke approaches him with the dignity of a superb butler. VAN DYKE Would you care for some herring? 86 INT. CAPITOL FUNCTION ROOM - DAY 86 Tommy rises to speak at a breakfast meeting. The podium bears the seal of the American Poultry Association. (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 56. 86 CONTINUED: 86 TOMMY Let me start with a confession. I don't know much about poultry. But I do know something about people. And let me tell you: I like you people. So when you have something to say about poultry, I listen. Thank you very much. He sits down to generous APPLAUSE. ON Armando, in attendance, CLAPPING, marveling at the response TJ gets. 87 INT. CATACOMBS - MOVING - DAY 87 Capitol Hill is actually two worlds: the aboveground buildings that visitors and television cameras see, and the catacombs, the busy tunnels and corridors connecting the congressional office buildings and the Capitol. They're surprisingly unglamorous -- exposed pipes, white- washed brick walls, dumpsters, pizza carry-outs -- and through them move the legislators and their staffs. And here is Tommy, whistling ZIPPEDY DOO DAH. He loves this place. Passing a snack bar, he greets the Cashier. TOMMY My man. He blows a kiss to a pretty Teller in the credit union. Passing the barber shop, he calls out to the Shoeshine Guy. He passes a black TELEPHONE MAN at an open panel of wires. TELEPHONE MAN Tommy! What's up, man? TOMMY (whispering) Sweet Sue. Third race at Santa Anita. 88 INT. TOMMY'S RECEPTION AREA - DAY 88 Several lobbyists are now awaiting Tommy balancing plates of herring on their knees. Some are enjoying it more than others. Tommy breezes in. TOMMY Hey, how you folks doin', good to see you, Van Dyke making you comfortable? Tommy hits a button on a tape deck, turning on some EASY LISTENING. (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 57. 88 CONTINUED: 88 TOMMY Be with y'all shortly. BEHIND THE DIVIDER, outside Tommy's office door, Tommy has a word with Reinhardt. Tommy indicates his office. TOMMY She in there? Reinhardt nods. Tommy gives himself a couple of squirts of Binaca. TOMMY Stick around for this, Reinhardt. I've finally figured something out about the women in this town. 89 INT. TOMMY'S OFFICE - DAY 89 Tommy and Reinhardt meeting with Celia and an elfin guy in corduroy. CELIA Thank you for seeing us, congressman, we won't take up much of your time. This is Ira Schecter, our research director. TJ Hi, good to meet you, you folks know Reinhardt, don't you? Don't rush, Miss Kirby, we can take as long as we want. CELIA But you have people waiting, and -- TOMMY That's all right. They can wait. CELIA Well. She pulls documents from her briefcase and hands them to Tommy. CELIA These are issue papers. This session we're targeting auto insurance premiums, child safety, and food additives. As votes come up, we know you'll be hearing plenty from the other side. We'd just like a clean shot at making our case, too. (MORE) (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 58. 89 CONTINUED: 89 CELIA (CONT'D) (rising) So, we'll follow up with your staff in the next week or... TOMMY Wait a minute, you just got here. I clean my calendar, and you're out the door. Let's back up, give this stuff the attention it deserves. Car insurance... Ira, what do you pay? IRA Oh, I've got an '85 Plymouth, about six-fifty a year... TOMMY Six-fifty? Highway robbery! A chop shop wouldn't give you more than a hundred forty for a junker like that. (beat) Or so I've heard. (beat) But I'm flying blind here, I need depth. Could Miss Kirby put together a briefing? Maybe schedule a Saturday or two to really dig into the issues? IRA (surprised and pleased) Oh... we'd be delighted. We've got some figures that will amaze you. TOMMY I'm sure you do. CELIA (rising) Well, we won't take up any more... TOMMY Whoa, whoa, hold on, what about child safety? CELIA Well, we're sponsoring a bill imposing safety standards on imported toys... (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 59. 89 CONTINUED: (2) 89 TOMMY Great! About time! I hate imported toys. What about food additives? How about we block out a few evenings, you can take me through the details. IRA Celia, if that's what the Congressman wants... any problem? CELIA (to him) You want to do this in the evening? IRA I'm away for the next two weeks. She gives him a look. Ira turns to Tommy. IRA So, when can Celia start your briefings? TOMMY Saturday night? IRA Saturday night sounds fine. CELIA Fine. Wednesday morning. Nine- fifteen. 90 INT. CATACOMBS - NIGHT - CLOSE ANGLE - A SIGN 90 On a door in the House sub-basement: MEMBERS ONLY. 91 INT. HOUSE GYM - NIGHT 91 The regular evening pickup basketball game. Even among these ruthless players, Tommy's street moves are outstand- ingly down and dirty. His principal accomplice: Elijah Marshall. 92 INT. LOCKER ROOM - HOUSE GYM - NIGHT 92 A standing poker game among the towel- and robe-clad Members. It's Tommy's shuffle and deal. He is convincingly awkward. A BULLDOG of a man examines his hand, tosses two cards in. He assembles his new hand. Four fives and an ace. (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 60. 92 CONTINUED: 92 ON Tommy's hand. A pair of threes. The betting starts, at a couple of chips, and comes round to Tommy. He pushes a stack of chips to the center. TOMMY Let's get serious, fellas. 93 INT. CATACOMBS (OR CORRIDOR) - NIGHT 93 Tommy, Marshall, and the Bulldog, back in suits, exit the MEMBERS ONLY door and move through the catacombs. MARSHALL I need your help on the ethics bill, Leon. I want you to co- sponsor my amendments. BULLDOG You make a persuasive case, Eli. MARSHALL That wasn't a yes. BULLDOG (courteously ambiguous) I promise to give it the attention it deserves. The Bulldog gives Tommy a friendly squeeze -- BULLDOG Better luck next time, son. -- and leaves them. Tommy and Marshall continue on. MARSHALL He took six hundred dollars off you that last hand, didn't he? TOMMY Yeah, he's taking a real shine to me. MARSHALL If I didn't know better, I'd say you lost to him on purpose. TOMMY Nothing wrong with letting the chairman of the ethics committee roll you once in a while. (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 60A. 93 CONTINUED: 93 MARSHALL (shaking his head) You fit in real well up here. Too well. TOMMY So Eli, how come you haven't asked for my help with your amendments? MARSHALL Give it a rest, Tommy. You've got a great jump shot. But everyone knows you're Dick Dodge's boy. TOMMY (bristling) I'm nobody's boy, mister. MARSHALL (weary) Don't waste your outrage on me. I know what you are. TOMMY I'm no different from anyone else. MARSHALL That's not true. Some people here actually try to do something besides save their own ass. TOMMY You know, Eli, I like you, I really do. You remind me of my father. MARSHALL Oh, really? How so? TOMMY He thought I was scum, too. BELLS begin RINGING and LIGHTS FLASHING on all the clocks and sconces down the corridor. Three RINGS, pause, three RINGS, pause... Marshall does a U-turn. Tommy doesn't follow suit. MARSHALL Aren't you going to vote? TOMMY (indicating clocks) Vote? Is that what that is? We got a pool going in the office on when it'll go off next. THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 60B. 93A INT. LOBBY OUTSIDE HOUSE CHAMBER - DAY 93A It's called "Gucci Gulch." The lobby just outside the doors to the House chamber is pandemonium -- a sea of lobbyists, lawyers, PACmen, Members, and staffers urgently trying to find their masters and signal them thumbs-up or-down. Tommy enters, sweeps the room with his eyes, looking for Reinhardt, shrugs, then goes through the doors onto the floor. 93B INT. HOUSE CHAMBER - DAY 93B Tommy goes to a console on the rear of a seat. A blue light says OPEN. Tommy inserts a card (it looks like an electronic hotel key). Red, green, and amber lights at buttons labeled NAY, YEA, and PRES. Tommy shrugs, pushes NAY. 93C INT. LOBBY OUTSIDE HOUSE CHAMBER - DAY 93C As Tommy heads away, he passes a class trip -- a dozen fifth-graders and their TEACHER, who hails him. TEACHER Excuse me -- Congressman? Do you have a moment? We're from the Hawthorne Avenue School, in Union, New Jersey? I'm Mrs. Kozlowski. Social Studies. We were just learning how a bill becomes a law. (indicating the BELLS) Was that a vote? TOMMY Yes, it was. TEACHER And what did you vote? TOMMY I voted "Nay." It's a terrible bill. It'd destroy the fabric of American life. TEACHER And what was the vote on? Tommy hasn't a clue. He calls out to Rafe, who is among those leaving the chamber. TOMMY Hey, Rafe! Tell these kids what that vote was about. (MORE) (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 61. 93C CONTINUED: 93C TOMMY (CONT'D) (to kids) Guy's got a real knack for explaining things. RAFE Well, it was a motion to reconsider the motion to reconsider. Bo, passing by, intervenes. BO No, it was the rule on amending the reauthorization. TOMMY Which means? BO Clean Air. RAFE (overlapping) School lunches. TOMMY You're in excellent hands, kids. 94 INT. RESTAURANT - DAY 94 A NOISY restaurant popular with lobbyists. Power photos on the wall. Table hopping. People SHOUTING greetings across the room. Waiters in long aprons. Tommy is having lunch with Tommy O'Connor. O'CONNOR You're a gentleman, Tommy. We can always do bid'ness -- I like that in a Member. TOMMY Thank you, Tommy. I love you too. O'CONNOR Listen, I'd like to do more money for you -- I just need to know your positions on a few issues. O'Connor takes out a pen and leather notecard case. O'CONNOR For instance, where are you on sugar price supports? (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 62. 94 CONTINUED: 94 Tommy has no idea, but he's certainly open to suggestions. TOMMY Sugar price supports. Where do you think I should be, Tommy? O'CONNOR Shit -- makes no difference to me. If you're for 'em, I got money for you from my sugar producers in Louisiana and Hawaii. If you're against 'em, I got money for you from the candy manufacturers. TOMMY You pick. O'CONNOR (writing) Let's put you down as for. Now what about putting limits on malpractice awards? TOMMY You tell me. O'CONNOR Well, if you're for 'em, I got money from the doctors and insurance companies. If you're against 'em, I got money from the trial lawyers. Tell you what, let's say against. Now how about pizza? TOMMY (indicating his plate) I'll stick with the salad. O'CONNOR Not for lunch, shmuck, for PAC money. A lot of the frozen pizzas use phony cheese. There's a law pending requiring them to disclose it on their labels. Where do you stand? Tommy thinks it through. TOMMY If I vote for the labels...then I get money from the dairy industry... (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 63. 94 CONTINUED: (2) 94 O'CONNOR Good... TOMMY And if I vote against the labels, I get money from the frozen food guys. O'CONNOR Excellent! And don't forget the ranchers, because they get hurt if pepperoni sales go down! TOMMY (laughing in admiration) A pepperoni lobby. I love this town. O'CONNOR So which is it? TOMMY Fuck the cheese people. Thanks to them my office smelled like smelt for a week. O'CONNOR All right. For. TOMMY So Tommy, tell me -- with all this money on every side, how does anything get done? O'CONNOR It doesn't! That's the genius of the system! 95 INT. TOMMY'S OFFICE - DAY 95 A briefing in progress. Flip charts, ring binders, Celia, Ira, a couple of other Pro Bono types. Tommy is riveted by Celia. CELIA It comes down to a question of what is acceptable risk. Are we willing to feed our kids a substance that causes cancer in lab rats? More important, who gets to make the decision? Bureaucrats and big corporations, or the people whose lives depend on it? THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 64. 96 INT. TOMMY'S BOILER ROOM - DAY 96 Tommy's staff shares one small office. Everyone's on the phone. VAN DYKE Mr. Willie? Congressman Johnson is calling. Can you take his call? Thank you. Please hold. Van Dyke puts him on hold, counts to three, gets back on the line. VAN DYKE I'm sorry, Mr. Willie, he just picked up another call. Listen, I know why he was calling -- he hasn't heard from you about his fundraiser... PAN TO Armando. ARMANDO ... That's right, Mr. Brown, on the thirtieth... A thousand a couple...A whole table? He'll be so happy to hear it. Thank you so much. (calling) Loretta! Put down nuclear power for ten g's. PAN TO Loretta, who chalks the figure onto a toteboard. LORETTA Cool. (into phone) Mr. Newburg? It's Miss Loretta, from Congressman Johnson's office, how you doin'? On Loretta's bulletin board is a map of the United States, with flags, pushpins, and air travel routes. LORETTA Say, the congressman's going to be out your way next week... Palm Springs, the Bob Hope Classic -- yes, a celebrity player. As long as he's on the coast, we were wondering whether you aerospace people might want to lay on a lunch so you can hear his views... Uh-huh ... Uh-huh... Lovely. Now what kind of contribution to his foundation you folks thinking about? THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 65. 97 INT. TOMMY'S OFFICE - DAY 97 Celia continues her briefing. CELIA ...And in the 1988 study, it was up to eight per hundred-thousand. Um...am I losing you on these mortality rates? TOMMY No, I was just wondering how much of this is a statutory problem, and how much is a regulatory one? I mean, didn't the Merton Act cover most of this? CELIA (surprised) Hmmm, that's an excellent point. Let me see something... As she starts rummaging in her briefcase, we TRACK AROUND to a COMPUTER SCREEN on Tommy's desk -- it displays THE EXACT WORDS HE'S JUST SPOKEN. CELIA Wow...you're right. Maybe we can get them to amend Merton-Simmons. RACK FOCUS...reveals REINHARDT in b.g., sitting at another computer terminal. He is typing in Tommy's responses, which appear on Tommy's screen. TOMMY Well, for Merton to apply you have to show high contagion...sounds to me like your contagion rates are no higher than the common clod. In b.g., Reinhardt DIVES FORWARD to his keyboard and begins correcting his typo. Celia looks puzzled. TOMMY Common cold. (beat) Must have picked up a little dyslexia over the weekend. CELIA I see. Well, I must say I'm pretty impressed. TOMMY You're also impressively pretty. (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 66. 97 CONTINUED: 97 Celia is startled. Tommy is embarrassed...the dumb compliment he's just spoken was one Reinhardt typed on the computer screen. CELIA Oh come on... TOMMY You're right. Sorry. Excuse me a second. (calls out) Arthur? Without explanation, he THROWS HIS PENCIL hard out of frame. REINHARDT (O.S.) Ow! 98 EXT. GULF STREAM JET - AIRBORNE - DAY 98 A jet flies through the sky. 99 INT. GULF STREAM JET - DAY 99 Tommy and handful of other Members listen to their GUN LOBBYIST host. GUN LOBBYIST Frankly, we think the semi-automatic has gotten a bad rap. That's why the American Sporting Gun Users PAC put together this trip. ON TOMMY AND DODGE enjoying champagne and hors d'oeuvres. 100 EXT. DUCK BLIND - DAY 100 Tommy, wearing full L.L. Bean drag, wading with the other Members. Someone blows a shrieking DUCK CALL. A flock takes flight. Everyone in the group raises their weapons: AK-47s. A burst of GUNFIRE. Rambo time. We SEE the flock still flying. One duck drops at the feet of the hunters. TOMMY Must have had a heart attack. THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 67. 101A EXT. GOLF COURSE - FIRST TEE - DAY 101A A LARGE SIGN READS: SCRAP IRON INSTITUTE CELEBRITY PRO-AM. Tommy tees off. He is wearing a veritable pro shop of custom golf gear, all emblazoned with logos of corporate sponsors and lobbies. He hits the ball about 200 yards...but more or less perpendicular to the hole. REVEAL BOB HOPE standing nearby, watching. BOB HOPE I knew all these congressmen get a slice, but I didn't know it was that big. 101 INT. JET - DAY 101 Tommy on the phone. TOMMY Did you miss me? 102 INT. PRO BONO OFFICES - DAY 102 Celia at her desk in the somewhat ratty Pro Bono offices. CELIA Where did you go? INTERCUT CELIA AND TOMMY TOMMY Oh, a fact-finding mission, some issue conferences, a few speaking engagements, a charity event... the usual. CELIA More like the Petroleum Institute Ski Cup, the NRA Open, the -- TOMMY Hey. Have lunch with me tomorrow. CELIA I can't -- we're having a press conference. TOMMY What is it -- the ozone layer? No fault? Killer apples? (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 68. 102 CONTINUED: 102 CELIA (laughing) Toy safety. Wait a minute. Tomorrow's Friday. Aren't you back early? TOMMY (beaming) You remembered! That means you missed me. 103 EXT. JEFFERSON MEMORIAL - NIGHT 103 Tommy and Celia walk over the bridge to the cherry trees by the Tidal Basin. TOMMY So, how'd you end up hustling for Pro Bono instead of pesticides? I mean, you could have been a big- time lawyer, right? CELIA Oh, I was for a while. It... depressed me. TOMMY At a hundred grand a year, how depressed can you get? Doesn't it depress you to lose all the time? CELIA Sometimes. Mostly it gets me angry. And the anger keeps me going. Sure, I wouldn't mind winning a few. And it's not like I'm allergic to money... TOMMY So why do you do it? She skips a stone on the water. CELIA God, it's so embarrassing to come out and say it. TOMMY Say it. CELIA Meaning. I need my life to mean something. (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 69. 103 CONTINUED: 103 This actually hits Tommy. Celia, embarrassed, changes the subject. CELIA My question is, how'd you get named after a Memorial? TOMMY Grandma like Jefferson. Y'know, "Life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness." It's a lot to live up to, so I specialized in the last part. CELIA And how's the pursuit going? TOMMY Fine...'til I met you. Now...the better I do, the worse I feel. They have stopped walking. They are standing close together. They kiss. TOMMY So...when can I see you again? How about dinner Saturday night? She shakes her head. CELIA How about Sunday morning? TOMMY Brunch? 104 INT. OLD CHURCH - BALTIMORE - DAY 104 In the pulpit, Rev. Elijah Marshall thunders: MARSHALL The wages of sin is death! And to the man who values Gold over Goodness...the Lord allows no exemptions! REVEAL TOMMY and Celia in the front pew. Marshall appears to be preaching directly to Tommy, who wears a slightly sick smile. MARSHALL To the man who shows no respect for the privilege of walking this Earth, God allows no deductions! (MORE) (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 70. 104 CONTINUED: 104 MARSHALL (CONT'D) (AMEN) And to the man whose pockets are bulging and whose soul is empty... the Lord grants no 90-day extension! (AMEN) And when the last trump sounds, believe me, you will be audited! TOMMY (aside to Celia) This is one hell of a date. 105 EXT. CHURCH - DAY 105 On the steps, Marshall shakes hands with his Congregants. Tommy and Celia exit the church. Marshall takes Celia by the hands and kisses her familiarly. Tommy is taken aback. MARSHALL Hello, darling. Glad you could make it. CELIA I liked the sermon, Uncle Eli. TOMMY Uncle Eli? MARSHALL My niece says you're not half as slimy as I thought. TOMMY Your niece? MARSHALL That would put you somewhere between a lizard and a toad. Quite a step up. Tommy looks from Marshall to Celia and back again. TOMMY How could I have missed the family resemblance? 106 EXT. CANNON BUILDING - DAY - ESTABLISHING 106 107 INT. CANNON TOP FLOOR - DAY 107 WHISTLING happily, Tommy rounds the corner and heads to his office. (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 71. 107 CONTINUED: 107 Ahead of him, encamped in the hallway, he sees a phalanx of SENIOR CITIZENS, many carrying placards, and some camera crews. Tommy adjusts his tie, turns on the charm, and approaches. TOMMY Ladies! Looking good! How can I help you folks today! But Hattie Rifkin and her troops will have none of it. HATTIE Don't "Ladies!" me, you dick! The camera lights go on. 108 INT. DODGE'S OFFICE - DAY 108 DODGE Now let me get this straight. You voted to make people on Medicare pay more money to their doctors? TOMMY The Medical Association made a persuasive case. Ten grand from their PAC, plus Christmas in Aspen. DODGE (shaking his head) Tommy -- if I'm not mistaken, you wouldn't be here without the good senior citizens of your district. You got to dance with the girl that brung you, son. If you have a bit of business to do, do it quietly... in the corridors... in the subcommittees... with little amendments. You mess around on the big ones like Medicare, you'll be dead meat on election day. TOMMY Yeah, well, then it's thanks for the memories, and on to the next gig. DODGE Do you know what your problem is, son? You don't think big enough. You have a real knack for this town, but you have the soul of a two-bit hustler. Listen to me, Tommy. (MORE) (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 72. 108 CONTINUED: 108 DODGE (CONT'D) Five hundred thirty-five Members of Congress. Some are smart, and some stupid. Some good, some not. But all of them, son, all of them consumed by the single overriding imperative that defines the very Washington way of life. TOMMY Which is? DODGE Getting re-elected. TOMMY Wait a minute. You're talkin' 'bout my re-election? DODGE You don't know what percent of the incumbents who ran last time got re-elected, do you? TOMMY Fifty? Sixty? DODGE Ninety-six. And ninety-eight before that. It's like that election after election. If you don't fuck up, you can be here, raking it in, for life. Life, Johnson. Tommy considers this. Then a big smile. TOMMY I can think of worse places to get life. DODGE (smiles) I knew you had it in you. TOMMY So how do I get the Silver Foxes off my ass? DODGE Oh, throw them a bone... why don't you co-sponsor a bill for mandatory universal health insurance? (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 73. 108 CONTINUED: (2) 108 TOMMY What's that mean? DODGE Nothing. It'll never pass. 109 INT. TOMMY'S RECEPTION AREA - DAY 109 A couple of Lobbyists await Tommy. Van Dyke mans the desk. In come ELLEN JUBA, 40s, and her 13-year-old daughter, MICKEY, whose pony tail sticks out from her Florida Marlins baseball cap. VAN DYKE May I help you? MRS. JUBA Yes, I'm Ellen Juba. This is my daughter, Mickey. We'd like to see our congressman. We live in the district. VAN DYKE Just a moment, please. (dials; into phone) Could you come out? Thank you. (hanging up) Be right with you. (to Mickey) I like your hat. Loretta comes out and extends a hand. LORETTA How do you do, I'm Miss Loretta, public liaison for the congressman. MRS. JUBA Ellen Juba. My daughter Mickey. We'd like to see him. LORETTA Y'all from the district? Up here seein' the sights? How'd you folks like some gallery passes? Go on over and listen to the great debates of our day? She reaches into Van Dyke's desk drawer to get some passes. MICKEY We don't want to go to the gallery. We want to see Congressman Johnson. (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 74. 109 CONTINUED: 109 LORETTA How 'bout a House key ring for each of you? Here -- see that? Isn't that something? Turns into a pen. MRS. JUBA You don't understand. We're not tourists. We're constitutents. LORETTA (helpfully) You aren't with some organization, are you, honey? MRS. JUBA I'm a goddam citizen! Isn't that enough! MICKEY We're not leaving here till we see him! Loretta exchanges a look with the Lobbyists, who get the picture. She picks up the phone and speaks nonchalantly. LORETTA Oh, Armando? Could you come out front, please? Tommy enters, carrying an enormous tennis trophy. TOMMY Look what I won! Must be that new racket. Armando has come out to hear this. ARMANDO There a problem, congressman? MRS. JUBA Congressman? You? Armando tries to escort her out. MRS. JUBA Get your hands off me! Mickey tries to block Armando. MICKEY Let go of her, you creep! (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 75. 109 CONTINUED: (2) 109 SIXTH LOBBYIST Careful, she may be armed! MICKEY Stop it! Get away from her! Armando, defending himself from Mickey, manages to knock her hat off. With the hat comes her (apparently false) pony tail. ON MICKEY. She's bald. Her skull bears the mark of surgery. Everyone stops. It's quiet. Mickey's eyes burn into Tommy's. Then she picks up her hat. MICKEY Come on, Ma. It's okay. Let's go. TOMMY Wait. What happened to you? MICKEY Not just me. 110 INT. TOMMY'S OFFICE - DAY 110 Tommy and his staff listen to the Jubas. MICKEY I was lucky. They said they got it all. I'm going to be okay. But what about the others? TOMMY The others? MRS. JUBA They call it a "cancer cluster." Oh, at first, none of us in the neighborhood wanted to believe it, but then we all saw it -- for me, it was when the two-year-old across the street developed a brain tumor, same as Mickey. We looked at everything -- the water, the air, dump sites, insects, you name it. But we didn't have to look that far. It was staring us in the face. TOMMY What? (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 76. 110 CONTINUED: 110 MICKEY Power lines. MRS. JUBA High-voltage power lines. The wires cause magnetic fields -- and the magnetic fields cause cancer. Especially in children. TOMMY I never heard of that. Mickey pulls a stack of journals and xeroxes from her book bag and gives it to her mother, who in turn gives the materials to Tommy. MRS. JUBA The studies, the numbers -- it's all there. MICKEY (to Tommy, skeptical) You're not actually going to read those, are you? TOMMY (caught) Oh, they'll be read... MICKEY Why don't you come see for yourself? Tommy has no quick answer. 111 EXT. PARK/SCHOOL - FLORIDA - DAY 111 Children playing on swings and seesaws in a small public park. TILT UP. A pair of electric power derricks carrying 225,000-volt lines almost directly overhead. The derricks cast shadows across a nearby school. We SEE the neighborhood. Quite a few FOR SALE signs. A house with a moving sale in progress on the front lawn. ON Tommy taking it all in. With him are Celia and the Jubas. MRS. JUBA Five children in the neighborhood have cancer. One more has precancerous lesions. Pregnant women around here are scared to death. (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 77. 111 CONTINUED: 111 TOMMY This is Mickey's school? MRS. JUBA Turns out a lot of schools are near power lines. The land's cheap, so the schools tend to buy it from the power companies in the first place. TOMMY But isn't the school district responsible? MRS. JUBA We asked the superintendent to measure the magnetic field inside the school. He said, Okay, only it'll cost forty thousand dollars, and what program did we want him to cut that from? TOMMY Nice. MRS. JUBA We're nobody, congressman. You're somebody. We need your help. Tommy takes Celia aside. TOMMY Do you believe it? CELIA It's impossible to know. No one's really looked into it hard enough. TOMMY But why isn't it being investigated? CELIA Why didn't they investigate breast implants all those years? What about those side-effects of that sleeping pill, Halcion? Why isn't anything being investigated? It's always the same. TOMMY Money talks. CELIA You got it. (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 78. 111 CONTINUED: 111 TOMMY There must be something I can do for those people. CELIA Don't tell me you're actually developing a conscience. TOMMY Shit, I hope not -- it'd be a fucking nuisance in Congress. CELIA No, that's not fair. Some people on the Hill actually believe in things, and try to do a decent job, and don't forget why they went to Washington, and who sent them. TOMMY (amazed) No shit. (remembering) Oh, yeah, I met one of those geeks. So what can I do? CELIA Make a stink. Round up some Members and hold a press conference. Get that committee of yours to hold hearings. Haul in in the Environmental Protection Agency, the Surgeon General, the National Academy of Sciences. Get the issue on every breakfast table in America. 112 OMITTED 112 112A INT. POWER AND ENTERPRISE COMMITTEE - DAY 112A A press conference. Half a dozen congressmen, Tommy among them. Iowa is speaking to the few Cameras and Reporters. Beside him, Mickey Juba and her mother. Reinhardt and Ceila among the handful of staff and onlookers. IOWA This goes beyond personal tragedy. It goes to a public health hazard of unknown proportions. It goes to the right of ordinary people to know all the facts -- (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 79. 112A CONTINUED: 112A TOMMY Yeah, right -- people ought to know if their neighborhoods are killing them. DODGE (O.S.) Amen, gentleman. Amen. They turn, somewhat surprised to see Dick Dodge, who joins Iowa at the microphones, a natural leader. DODGE What a fine effort this is. I am totally sympathetic. Congressional hearings should be scheduled as soon as possible. The American people deserve no less. He puts an arm around Mickey. DODGE Message: we care. 112B INT. TOMMY'S HOUSE - NIGHT 112B Tommy and Celia are watching the press conference on TV. CELIA Well, congratulations. You've found yourself your own hopeless cause. TOMMY Speaking of hopeless causes... They kiss, and slide OUT OF FRAME. 113 OMITTED 113 & & 114 114 115 INT. DODGE'S OFFICE - NIGHT 115 An impressive THUNDERSTORM pounds on Dodge's windows. DODGE (pouring) On the rocks, or neat? TOMMY Whatever you're having. (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 80. 115 CONTINUED: 115 DODGE Well, why ruin good bourbon with the taste of some shitty Sears icemaker, that's what I always say. (handing Tommy a glass) Cheers. TOMMY Cheers. Dodge downs his drink. Tommy follows suit. DODGE Son, you're a real comer. I wouldn't be surprised if you ended up in the leadership. I'll say this: if I were Speaker, I'd sleep better with you as a lieutenant. TOMMY Why, thank you, Mr. Chairman. You know, to tell you the truth, I didn't know you'd be on my side on those power lines. DODGE But I'm not. TOMMY But you said you were sympathetic -- DODGE Of course I did. We're all sympathetic to little girls with cancer. But I'm not sympathetic to holding an inquiry. TOMMY But you said -- DODGE I know what I said. But that was just a press conference, son. I wasn't under oath. The intercom BUZZES. DODGE (into phone) Yes?... Bring them right in! (hanging up) Look. Son. It's great to get your name in the paper. (MORE) (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 81. 115 CONTINUED: (2) 115 DODGE (CONT'D) I bet the gentleman from Iowa was all over the evening news in Des Moines tonight. Getting good press -- letting them know you care -- that's what it's all about. Smart move, Tommy. But that's as far as I'd go with this, if I were you. The door opens. Dodge turns to see Olaf Anderson, Tommy O'Connor, and Zeke Bridges enter. DODGE What a surprise! ANDERSEN Mr. Chairman! DODGE Mr. Chairman! Hello, Tommy. Zeke you're looking well, good to see you. ZEKE (wheezing) Good to see you, you old sum' bitch. O'CONNOR Evening, Mr. Chairman, thanks for taking the -- Tommy, you s.o.b., they let you in here? (indicating Andersen and Bridges) You folks finally get to press flesh! Olaf, meet Tommy Johnson. Tommy, Olaf Andersen. Chairman of Gulf Coast Power. TOMMY The boys here have told me a lot about you. O'CONNOR Yeah -- I told him you voted for him! They all share a laugh. Except for Bridges, who squints at Tommy. ANDERSEN Glad to meet you, son. They tell me you've got a real talent for the game. (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 81A. 115 CONTINUED: (3) 115 O'CONNOR And this is Zeke Bridges, CEO of Pyramid Insurance. ZEKE (still puzzling) Congressman. TOMMY Good to meet you. DODGE Help me with these, would you, Tommy? He hands Tommy a couple of drinks. TOMMY (to Zeke) Chivas on the rocks? ZEKE (taking the drink) You look awfully familiar. Tommy just smiles. DODGE Tommy and I were just talking about power lines. TOMMY Yeah, what a coincidence. I thought this little party might be for me. (to Anderson) You may not like this. (to Dodge) I think we should hold those hearings. DODGE You really fell for the line that parents group fed you, didn't you? Tommy is struck by Dodge's intelligence. TOMMY How'd you know I met the parents group? (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 81B. 115 CONTINUED: (4) 115 DODGE Oh, I keep my ear to the ground, that's what a good politician does. Listen, Tommy, why don't we just get Olaf's take on this. ANDERSEN It's tragic, cancer's a terrible thing, but there's no way you can link it to power lines. Truth is, there's a bigger electromagnetic field given off by an electric blanket, or a microwave oven, than by those derricks. TOMMY But there are studies that say -- ZEKE For every study that says one thing, I'll show you a study saying another. We've studied it ourselves. Nada. ANDERSEN There's not a single state health official anywhere in this country who says power lines cause cancer. TOMMY But what if you're wrong? As Tommy persists, Andersen looks increasingly angry. TOMMY People didn't use to say smoking causes cancer, either. What if the evidence is just building, and some day we wake up and discover that your power lines are killing us? ANDERSEN (exploding) "Kill us"? "Kill us"? You calling me a murderer? You're saying there's blood on these hands? How dare you talk to me like that, you -- O'Connor puts a restraining arm on Andersen. O'CONNOR Calm down, Olaf, calm down, he didn't mean it that way, did you, son? Alright, gentlemen. Easy. (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 82. 115 CONTINUED: (5) 115 Andersen backs off, regains his composure. The outburst makes an impression on Tommy. Tommy I'm just saying, it's worth looking into. ANDERSEN Tommy -- do you want to move the power lines? Do you know how much it would cost to bury them? Millions. Tens of millions. I don't have that money. The state doesn't have that money. You people up here sure don't have that money. You know who'd end up paying for it? Folks who sent you here, that's who. O'CONNOR Now how'd you like the people in your district to think of you as the putz who tripled their electric bill? You think they'd thank you for that on election day? TOMMY All I'm saying is, maybe we should hold hearings to look at -- O'CONNOR Think for a minute, boychik. You hold your hearings. Overnight, everyone who lives near a substation finds the value of his home in the toilet. You kill the real estate market. ZEKE You kill the insurance companies. O'CONNOR You kill the school district. ANDERSON You kill the local economy. DODGE For a smart boy, you're not thinking very politically. Tommy watches the LIGHTNING. TOMMY Maybe I should think about it. (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 83. 115 CONTINUED: (6) 115 DODGE Yeah, the system ain't perfect, but the fleas come with the dawg. ANDERSEN Oh, by the way, Tommy, on a completely different subject -- You don't have a state PAC yet, do you? I'd like to give you a hundred thousand dollar corporate contribution to start one up. ZEKE My company would be honored to do the same. TJ Can you do that? I thought there were limits -- O'CONNOR Oh, it's all aboveboard, we all believe deeply in the rules. It's just that the state rules are often more flexible about these things. ANDERSEN Are you interested? TJ I'm always interested in the happiness of my constituents. DODGE I'll drink to that. Dodge and Andersen shoot each other a look. 116 OMITTED 116 & & 117 117 118 EXT. TOMMY'S HOUSE - NIGHT 118 Tommy pulls up in a Corvette with Florida congressional plates in front of his Capitol Hill row house. 119 INT. TOMMY'S BEDROOM - NIGHT 119 Tommy slips into bed next to Celia, who's half asleep. CELIA Mmmm... (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 84. 119 CONTINUED: 119 TOMMY Mmmm... CELIA So what did he say? TOMMY Who? CELIA Dodge. The hearings. TOMMY Oh -- I, uh, haven't asked him yet. Celia suddenly looks quite awake. TOMMY (casual) It wasn't the right moment. Besides, I was thinking, maybe I ought to line up some other Members first -- you know, get my ducks in a row. CELIA Oh. 120 INT. HOUSE STEAM ROOM - DAY 120 Dick Dodge and several other towel-clad MEMBERS. DODGE You see that ABC poll? THIRD MEMBER Free fall. DODGE President in trouble like that, he's liable to do something desperate. Some damn fool stunt. FOURTH MEMBER Invade Japan. FIFTH MEMBER Declare war on Congress, more like it. (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 3/25/92 85A. 120 CONTINUED: (A1) 120 The door opens. Eli Marshall, fully dressed, comes in. MARSHALL You shafted me on the ethics bill. (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 86. 120 CONTINUED: 120 DODGE Hello, Eli, good to see you. Why don't you loosen your tie? MARSHALL It's a closed rule. I can't get my amendments on the floor. I can't get a recorded vote. I can't get squat. DODGE Last time I looked, it was the Rules Committee in charge of that. This isn't the Rules Committee, Eli. This is the steam room. MARSHALL This is the U.S. Congress! The American people deserve better than -- DODGE You know what your problem is, Eli? You've got sermonitis. The other Members chuckle. DODGE Can't open your mouth without climbing into the pulpit, can you? Why don't you just calm down, have a massage -- MARSHALL I've got news for you, Dick. I'm going to run against you for Speaker. I may not have a rat's ass of a chance to beat you. But I sure as hell can tell the world the kind of sleaze you stand for. 121 EXT. CAPITOL TERRACE - DAY - TOMMY AND DODGE 121 DODGE I went too far with him, I know it. You know him pretty well, don't you? TOMMY Oh, I don't know... DODGE Come on, you play basketball together, you're seeing his niece, you've been to his church -- TOMMY How did you know that? (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 87. 121 CONTINUED: 121 Dodge indicates his bloodhound nose. DODGE He'll listen to you, Tommy. I want you to go make peace between us. Tell him we'll work something out on his amendments -- not a vote, I won't go that far, but at least he'll get to say his piece on the floor. Just get him off my back. Can you do that for me? TOMMY That's not a question, is it? DODGE That's right. Is there a problem? TOMMY No, no -- I've still got my right nut, I can work with that. 122 INT. CRAB HOUSE - NIGHT 122 A WAITER removes an empty pitcher of beer. WAITER Another? TOMMY Sure, why not. Marshall takes a boiled crab from the platter between them, places it on the butcher paper in front of him, christens it -- MARSHALL The honorable Dick Dodge. -- raises a big wooden mallet, and SMASHES it on the crab, smiling. TOMMY You know, Eli, sometimes people do things they regret. Everyone makes mistakes. Fact is, Dick's been under a lot of pressure lately -- MARSHALL That man's a walking quid quo pro -- prid quo -- quid pro quo, and you know it. He put you up to this, didn't he? (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 88. 122 CONTINUED: 122 TOMMY What do you mean? MARSHALL Don't shit me, Tommy. You're Dick Dodge's yes-man. I know what you're up to. This is damage control. TOMMY I'm not a yes-man. When Dick says no, I say no. Marshall SMASHES down again with the mallet. Crab carnage. MARSHALL You know why no one on the Hill drops a dime on anyone else? Mutual assured destruction. Our little gentleman's agreement. Everybody has something on somebody, so nobody has anything on anybody, because everybody wants to save his own ass. TOMMY (interested) Oh, yeah? What do they have on you? MARSHALL They think I'm a pompous ass. TOMMY Shit, that ain't no secret. 123 EXT. CRAB HOUSE - NIGHT 123 Reinhardt and Loretta about to go in. LORETTA You sure they don't want to be alone, Reinhardt? REINHARDT No, no -- I bet they've been talking about the ethics bill all night. Come on, Loretta, you'll know how to get Marshall's mind off business. 124 INT. CRAB HOUSE - NIGHT - ON MARSHALL AND TOMMY 124 MARSHALL Shit, this place isn't about passing laws any more. It isn't about doing good any more. All it's about is... being here. (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 88A. 124 CONTINUED: 124 Loretta and Reinhardt approach their table. LORETTA Well, as I live and breathe. Tommy! Tommy is surprised to see them. She flashes a smile at Marshall. TOMMY Eli, this is Loretta Hicks, from my staff. Loretta, Congressman Marshall. LORETTA Pleasure to meet you. MARSHALL Entirely mine. TOMMY You know Reinhardt, my AA? Marshall nods. Reinhardt turns to Tommy. REINHARDT Excuse me, congressman, could I just do a couple of quick calendar things with you? MARSHALL (to Loretta) Would you care for a drink? LORETTA Tell you the truth, nothing for me. MARSHALL Well, when a pretty lady shoots him down, an old man knows it's time to go home. Marshall rises, pulling out his car keys. MARSHALL You kids have a good time. REINHARDT (indicating pitcher) Listen, you gentlemen look like you've had a few -- Loretta, why don't you be a designated driver? Loretta stands and takes Marshall's keys from him. (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 89. 124 CONTINUED: (2) 124 LORETTA Excellent idea. MARSHALL Ah. The good Samaritan. LORETTA Good night, y'all. They leave. REINHARDT Now we've already got the Bankruptcy Institute breakfast tomorrow, but if you don't mind we could wedge in the Prune Board -- This isn't what Tommy wants to be doing now. He gets up. TOMMY I'm packing it in. REINHARDT (also rising) Can we talk while I drive you? TOMMY Thanks, I'll walk. I could use the air. 125 INT. MARSHALL'S CAR - MOVING - NIGHT 125 Marshall and Loretta are singing. MARSHALL and LORETTA "Amazing grace, how sweet the sound, that saved a wretch like me -- " 126 EXT. CAPITOL HILL STREET - NIGHT 126 Tommy is on foot. Marshall's car, with its Maryland congressional plates, pulls over. LORETTA Come on, honey, no use you getting mugged. 127 INT. MARSHALL'S CAR - MOVING - NIGHT 127 MARSHALL and LORETTA "I once was lost, but now am found; was blind, but now I see... " Tommy, in the back, cradles his head. As Loretta heads into a traffic circle, she SEES THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 90. 128 EXT. TRAFFIC CIRCLE - NIGHT - A HOOKER 128 in high sling-back heels. 129 INT. MARSHALL'S CAR - NIGHT 129 LORETTA (turning to look) Check out the fuck-me pumps on that. Mm-mm. I gotta get me some shoes like that. TOMMY Loretta! Please! Your mouth! 130 EXT. TRAFFIC CIRCLE - NIGHT 130 With a SCREECH of brakes and a CRUNCH of metal, a TAXI rear-ends them, SLAMMING Marshall's car into a lamppost. 131 INT. TAXI - NIGHT 131 The Taxi Driver looks at the wreck for a moment. Then he lays rubber and SQUEALS away. 132 INT./EXT. MARSHALL'S CAR - NIGHT 132 On the back floor, Tommy stirs. Seems to be okay. Lifts himself to see up front. The windshield is smashed. Loretta and Marshall are both unconscious. Tommy climbs into the front but can't get the door open. He kicks out a broken window and climbs through. He runs to a phone on the corner and dials 911. TOMMY I need an ambulance right away. IN THE CAR no motion from Loretta or Marshall. AT THE PHONE he dials another number. TOMMY Evening, Mrs. Dodge, Tommy Johnson here, sorry to call at this hour, is Dick back from the Gridiron dinner yet? Could I speak with him for just a moment? 133 INT. DODGE BEDROOM - NIGHT 133 MRS. DODGE is in bed. She hands the phone to Dodge, who's in white tie and tails, looking more sinister than splendid. MRS. DODGE Tommy Johnson. (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 91. 133 CONTINUED: 133 DODGE (into phone) What's wrong? INTERCUT Tommy and Dodge. TOMMY How did you know? DODGE Good news doesn't come at this hour. TOMMY I went out with Marshall. We got into an accident. He's out cold. I'm okay. Dodge looks off balance. DODGE Were you driving? TOMMY No. Someone else. Loretta. Dodge recovers his equilibrium. DODGE The girl from your office? TOMMY Yeah. She's out, too. I don't like the way it looks. For anybody. Look. You said you wanted to get back into Marshall's good graces. Well, here's an opportunity. DODGE Listen carefully. Tell the ambulance to take you to Walter Reed. It's a privilege they give congressmen. It's also the only hospital without a bunch of goddam reporters shtupping the nurses in exchange for leaks. They'll keep it quiet. I'll handle the police. You go home and keep your mouth shut. 134 INT. PARKING GARAGE - NIGHT 134 Two figures approach one another in the shadows: Reinhardt, and the Taxi Driver who rear-ended Marshall's car. The cabbie nods. Reinhardt hands him an envelope. The Driver inspects the cash. THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 91A. 135 INT. TOMMY'S BATHROOM/BEDROOM - MORNING 135 Tommy is shaving. He HEARS the local tv news from the bedroom. WASHINGTON ANCHOR (V.O.) ... and the Beltway is bumper-to bumper, so you might as well take a day of annual leave and enjoy yourself. At the top of the news, Maryland Congressman Elijah Marshall is in satisfactory condition at Walter Reed Hospital after an overnight accident in the District. Tommy bolts into the bedroom. On the television he sees 136 VIDEO - EXT. WALTER REED HOSPITAL - GATES - DAY 136 A CORRESPONDENT doing a stand-up. CORRESPONDENT That's right, Tom. Marshall reportedly had alcohol in his blood. Also slightly injured was an unidentified woman whom police say has a record in several states for prostitution. Tommy looks sick. TOMMY Oh sweet Jesus. WASHINGTON ANCHOR Linda, Congressman Marshall -- that's Reverend Marshall, isn't it? CORRESPONDENT Right you are, Tom. How this plays into his longstanding campaign to reform congressinoal ethics is now anyone's guess. WASHINGTON ANCHOR Thank you. In other news... Tommy leaps for his clothes. 137 INT. HOSPITAL CORRIDOR - DAY 137 Tommy races down the corridor. Ahead of him, Celia, coming out of Marshall's room. She freezes at the sight of him. (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 92. 137 CONTINUED: 137 CELIA Get away from him. He approaches her. CELIA And get away from me. TOMMY I have to talk to you. CELIA Go away! TOMMY I was set up! CELIA You were set up? You were in the car! I didn't hear your name on the news! TOMMY No, someone screwed him -- CELIA "Someone"? TOMMY Celia, something stinks here -- CELIA Yeah -- it's you! You don't give a damn about anything! And to think, the other night, I actually thought you cared about someone else. He puts his hand to her face. She brushes it off. CELIA Not me, you jerk -- Mickey Juba! You caved on those power lines, didn't you? I knew it. Damn it, I knew it! What did you get for it? Tommy O'Connor's box at the Redskins? Someone slip you a condo in the Virgin Islands? TOMMY If you'd give me a chance to -- (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 93. 137 CONTINUED: (2) 137 CELIA God, I hate this town -- the only reason I stay is because I hate it so much. TOMMY Celia -- CELIA Get the hell out of here. 138 EXT. FLORIDA PARK - DAY - LONG SHOT - TOMMY AND 138 MICKEY JUBA sitting on the ground, backs to us, beneath the power lines. A quiet moment. REVERSE ANGLE - TWO SHOT. Mickey is shuffling a deck of cards. MICKEY Is it thumb over, or thumb under? TOMMY Under. She tries her hand at a false shuffle. TOMMY Not bad, kid. You've got potential. MICKEY So what's happening? I thought you were going to kick some ass on -- She indicates the derricks. Tommy looks at her, comes to a decision. TOMMY I am. He takes the deck from her, fans it face up, pulls all the kings and aces, stacks them on top, and squares the deck. TOMMY This is one's called the double duke. How many players? MICKEY Six. TOMMY Who's the mark? (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 94. 138 CONTINUED: 138 She points to an imaginary poker player. MICKEY Number two -- over there. Tommy, smiling, calculates something for a moment, then gives the deck four shuffles. He hands Mickey the cards. TOMMY Your deal. She deals out six hands in a circle on the ground. TOMMY Look at the sucker's hand. She turns over the hand at number two. It has the four kings. Mickey WHISTLES at the hand. TOMMY Look at your hand. She turns over her own hand. It has the four aces. Mickey looks at the power lines, at the hands, at TJ. Then, understanding: MICKEY That's what you're going to do? Tommy nods. Her face opens into a big smile. MICKEY Let's kick some ass. What do I do? TOMMY Something very important. 139 INT. TOMMY'S LIVING ROOM - DAY 139 Tommy pow-wows with Loretta Van Dyke, and Armando. Aside from a sling, Loretta looks okay. VAN DYKE Why are we meeting here, Tommy? There trouble at the office? TOMMY (impersonating Dodge) "I keep my ear close to the ground." His ear my ass. He had an inside man. ARMANDO That little fuck Reinhardt? (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 95. 139 CONTINUED: 139 LORETTA Hot damn -- I knew my driving wasn't that bad. Speaking of which -- you think I should wear one of those whiplash things, Tommy? There some insurance angle I should be working here? TOMMY We got bigger fish to fry, darlin'. VAN DYKE What do we do? TOMMY (beat) The big con. LORETTA We gonna git that sucker. TOMMY Dick always said I should think big. ARMANDO Whoa! Aren't we gettin' out of our league, man? That Dodge is a pro! VAN DYKE You can't con a con, Congressman. LORETTA Shit, that's right, Tommy -- these politicians are serious slick fish. TOMMY You people gone soft on me? Bunch of fuckin' incumbents I got here. Now listen up. Thursday morning Dodge has a breakfast with the Arts Caucus in the Longworth Room. Armando -- find out how fast I can get from Longworth to my office. Loretta -- we need some scoop from the EPA for the roper, I'll give you a list. Van Dyke -- call Hattie at the Silver Foxes, and -- LORETTA Wait a minute -- we need a new roper, don't we? Everyone around here knows our faces. Outside a HORN sounds (O.S.). Tommy looks at his watch. (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 96. 139 CONTINUED: 139 TOMMY Right on the nose. He throws open the bay window of the narrow house. Just below is a pickup truck with "Homer's Pit Stop" lettered on the side. Homer gets out. TOMMY My man! The others come to the window to see Homer, still wearing his fuel-smeared overalls, and SHOUT greetings. TOMMY Now let's get to work. 140 INT. POWER AND ENTERPRISE COMMITTEE - DAY 140 The Members are being seated for a hearing. At the dais, Tommy approaches Dodge. A beat as Dodge studies Tommy's face. TOMMY Eli Marshall caught his tail in a crack, didn't he? DODGE He did. TOMMY You kept my name out of it. DODGE I did. TOMMY I owe you one. DODGE (pleased) You learn fast. TOMMY Do me one favor, Dick. Next time you pull some heavy shit involving my ass, tip me off, okay? DODGE (indulgent chuckle) Alright, son. (BANGS gavel) This hearing of the Power and Enterprise Committee is now in order. The health of America's securities industry -- (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 97. 140 CONTINUED: 140 Reinhardt approaches Tommy and slips him a packet of materials. TOMMY (whispering) Thanks. Listen, Reinhardt, something's come up, and I don't quite know how to handle it. There's a guy from the EPA -- I don't know him -- says he wants to see me. Tonight. Out of the office. Alone, he says. Sound of it makes me nervous. I'd feel better if you were there. REINHARDT You got it, jefe. 141 EXT. GRANT'S STATUE - NIGHT 141 A man waits, alone, in the shadow of a large statue. It's Homer. In a jacket and tie, his stubble shaved off, he looks like a plausible government worker. Tommy and Reinhardt approach. TOMMY Mr. Yancey? HOMER (cold) I thought you'd be alone. TOMMY He's my AA. He goes where I go. If you can trust me, you can trust him. Homer eyes Reinhardt a moment, then continues. HOMER Congressman, I have information I think you may want. It's about something going on at the EPA. TOMMY What have you got? HOMER I got a wife and three kids, and a note on my house, that's what I got. (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 98. 141 CONTINUED: 141 TOMMY (laughs) Nothin' comes for nothin' in this town, do it? (to Reinhardt) You got any cash on you? I'm kind of light. REINHARDT (whispering) You can't do that! TOMMY (to Homer) This stuff's pretty good? HOMER In the right hands, it could mean a great deal. TOMMY Okay. Sunday. Fifth race at Del Mar. Blueboy is running twenty to one. I'd take a major position. HOMER You have to be shitting me. TOMMY No, not at all -- my Cousin Henry spends his days pumping water into horses' stomachs and stuffing Percodan up their butts. Trust me. Reinhardt is interested in this. And he admires Tommy's m.o. HOMER (after a moment) Alright. The White House is putting heat on the EPA. They want us to announce a major investigation of the relation between power lines and cancer clusters. REINHARDT But didn't the EPA already do a study? HOMER Yeah, but when the draft got to the White House, they didn't like it. So they brought their own scientists in to kill it. (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 99. 141 CONTINUED: (2) 141 TOMMY Why did the White House change its mind? HOMER Who knows? TOMMY Is there new evidence? HOMER Yeah -- their polls have dropped like a rock. They need an issue. This one makes them look good on the environment, and they don't have to spend a penny. TOMMY And what good is this to me? HOMER Come on, congressman, in this town, information is currency. And advance information is gold. Reinhardt nods in agreement. HOMER But you've got to move fast. Once the White House goes public with this, they can't turn back. If your friends at the power company want to kill this investigation, they'd better do it now. Evening, gentlemen. After Homer leaves: REINHARDT Blueboy. Twenty to one. Is your Cousin Henry always right? TOMMY I ain't got no Cousin Henry. 142 EXT. PAY PHONE - BY REFLECTING POOL - NIGHT 142 Reinhardt dials. MRS. DODGE'S VOICE (V.O.) Hello? (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 100. 142 CONTINUED: 142 REINHARDT Mrs. Dodge, it's Arthur Reinhardt. May I speak to the Chairman, please? DODGE (V.O.) Hello? REINHARDT Are you sitting down? 143 INT. ART CAUCUS ROOM - DAY 143 The Longworth Room, a small circular committee room with an ornate rotunda. The Arts Caucus breakfast is ending. THIRD MEMBER Unless there is further business, our caucus stands adjourned. Dodge gets up. As he makes to leave, Tommy comes in. TOMMY Got a minute, Dick? Tommy takes him aside. The room empties except for them. TOMMY Listen, Dick, I heard something. There's got to be some bid'ness in it. Tommy very discreetly gestures with his thumb and palm: money. TOMMY Maybe we can go in on it together. DODGE I'm listening. TOMMY The EPA is going to make a stink about power lines. The White House is pushing them to do a big study. DODGE That's very interesting, my friend. I've heard that, too. TOMMY (acting surprised) Nothing gets by, do it? Tommy touches his nose, in tribute to the master. (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 100A. 143 CONTINUED: 143 DODGE But thank you, son -- I'm glad you chose to share it with me. We do make quite a team, don't we? TOMMY I -- I hope it wasn't my press conference that started this. DODGE No, this is a stunt for the polls. TOMMY So do you think there's something in it for us? DODGE (musing) If we got the EPA off Olaf Andersen's back, he'd be extremely appreciative. TOMMY And how do we do that? DODGE My committee writes the EPA's programs. We audit their funds. We confirm their appointees. I've got them by the balls. TOMMY And you're going to -- ? Tommy makes a squeezing gesture, grins. DODGE Oh, no, not at all -- just... persuasion. Strenuous persuasion. TOMMY That's allowed? DODGE Persuasion, yes. Intimidation, no. But it's a gray area. Who's to say which is which? TOMMY Dick, wait a minute -- shouldn't we check out the tip? Make sure the EPA's really going through with this investigation? (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 101. 143 CONTINUED: (2) 143 DODGE Of course. (looks at watch) He should be in by now. TOMMY Who? DODGE Skeeter Warburton, of course. Always go right to the top, son. 144 INT. DODGE'S RECEPTION AREA - DAY 144 Dodge passes his Secretary's desk on the way into his office. DODGE Get me the EPA Administrator, please. 145 INT. CORRIDOR/STAIRWELL - CANNON - DAY 145 Tommy jogs along the corridor. A tourist Family stares at him. He explains his haste with a smile -- TOMMY There's a vote on the floor. -- and ducks into the stairwell. 146 INT. CATACOMBS - PHONE CABLE ROOM - DAY 146 In a chamber crammed with cables, the Telephone Man listens to a handset. He now sports a gold Rolex on his wrist -- his horse must have come in. Van Dyke, also there, looks at any array of dials and meters, whose hands all suddenly move. Some electronic phone CHIRPS, then the filtered RINGING of a call. VAN DYKE Here he comes. The Telephone Man nods, adjusts some wiring, smiles satisfiedly. TELEPHONE MAN And there he goes. 147 INT. TOMMY'S OFFICE 147 Loretta wears a beaded sling, which adds to her look. She is at Tommy's desk, watching his phone as it RINGS. Tommy comes in. (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 102. 147 CONTINUED: 147 TOMMY The Administrator. Loretta picks up the phone. LORETTA Office of the Adminstrator. (listens) Thank you, I'll put you right through. She hands the phone to Tommy, who mimics the George Plimpton voice. TOMMY Warbuton here. (listens) Thank you. (waits) Mr. Chairman! I do hope there's something I can help you with today. 148 INT. DODGE'S OFFICE - DAY 148 DODGE I need a straight answer from you, Skeeter. Is the White House on your ass about power lines? TOMMY Off the record? DODGE Of course. TOMMY I was looking forward to some serious sailing this week -- Tish and I have a lovely spot right by Kennebunkport. Instead, here I am at three in the morning, writing testimony to your committee about cancer clusters. DODGE Thanks for your candor, Warburton. TOMMY Not at all. You must come sailing with us. Cheers. Bye-bye. Tommy passes the phone back to Loretta. TOMMY Next. THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 102A. 149 INT. ANDERSEN'S OFFICE - DAY 149 ANDERSEN Yes? SECRETARY (V.O.) Zeke Bridges on line two. Andersen punches the button to connect the call. 150 INT. TOMMY'S OFFICE - DAY 150 LORETTA I'll just put you through to him. She passes the phone to Tommy. TOMMY Olaf? (coughs) Olaf, Zeke Bridges. Listen, you sum' bitch, I'm so mad, I can't sit down to shit. Have you heard what I heard? (wheezes) INTERCUT with Andersen. ANDERSEN What's that. TOMMY The EPA's fixing to make a big stink about power lines and cancer. They're going to serve us up for breakfast. ANDERSEN Wait a minute. There's no scientific proof -- TOMMY Proof don't mean shit. We're talking politics. They make a federal case out of power lines, I'm screwed. Whole insurance business is screwed. You know how much cash I'd have to pay out in settlements? Even if I stiffed everybody on claims, the legal fees'd be enough to kill me. ANDERSEN I can't believe it. (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 103. 150 CONTINUED: 150 TOMMY You better believe it. You're screwed, too. Every hot dog trial lawyer in America soon be lining up to sue both our asses. We got to move on this, Olaf. If I wasn't tied up here, I'd go to Washington myself. Shouldn't you be getting on a plane? Just between us -- you find a way to stop this, I'll find a million bucks if I have to. 151 INT. CORPORATE JET - DAY 151 A very worried Andersen. 152 INT. HILL CORRIDOR - DAY 152 Tommy and Dodge walking along a Capitol hallway. DODGE Olaf will be at my office at five o'clock. TOMMY How do we play it? DODGE Cool. Real cool. You just follow my lead. 153 INT. DODGE'S OFFICE - DAY - DODGE, TOMMY, ANDERSEN, 153 O'CONNOR DODGE I don't know how I can help you on this one, Olaf. This is the EPA. This is the President. ANDERSEN This is my lifeblood! DODGE I see that, Olaf, I see that. But in this town, you pick your fights. ANDERSEN This could mean six figures, Dick. Dodge says nothing, but makes his eyebrows fly. ANDERSEN High six figures. Dodge flicks his eyebrows again: More. (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 104. 153 CONTINUED: 153 ANDERSEN Seven figures? TOMMY Between us. It's not that much -- what can you get for half a million these days? ANDERSEN How the hell can I funnel that kind of money to you? O'CONNOR If that's what you want, we can always find a loophole. No one will see your fingerprints. ANDERSEN No one will know? DODGE No one will know. O'CONNOR You're only in trouble if someone can prove a connection. DODGE Of course there's no connection. Olaf's just making a contribution as a patriotic citizen. And in return for it, he's getting -- TOMMY Good government. DODGE Exactly. A little access, that's all. 154 INT. ORNATE CAPITOL HALLWAY - DAY 154 Dodge, Andersen, Tommy, and O'Connor walking along. Up ahead, a cocktail reception. On an easel by the door: HAZARDOUS WASTE ASSOCIATION MEET YOUR REPRESENTATIVE NIGHT. DODGE I've got to do a drop-by. You gentlemen like to join me for a drink? 155 INT. ORNATE FUNCTION ROOM - DAY 155 Dodge and Tommy work the room genially. Tommy spots Celia talking to some Guests and goes over to her. (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 105. 155 CONTINUED: 155 TOMMY Hi. CELIA (to Guests, smiling) Excuse me. She turns, starts to walk away. Tommy stops her. TOMMY Look. Whatever you think of me, just promise me one thing. She glares at him angrily. But then she's surprised to hear: TOMMY Come to the Clean Air hearing tomorrow. CELIA (baffled) What? TOMMY Power and Enterprise. Noon. CELIA But why? He gives her an enigmatic smile and slips away. As he rejoins Dodge, Tommy SEES WARBURTON enter the room. Alarmed, TOmmy moves in on Dodge, steering him to avoid the EPA Administrator. TOMMY Shouldn't we be heading off, Dick? DODGE Let's work the room just a bit more. REINHARDT (O.S.) Congressman! Mr. Chairman! As Dodge turns to see him -- DODGE Evening, Reinhardt. -- he SEES Warburton. (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 106. 155 CONTINUED: (2) 155 REINHARDT (O.S.) Good to see you, sir. By the way, I thought your opening statement in committee yesterday was brilliant. Dodge points out Warburton to Tommy. DODGE Well. Look who's over there -- Skeeter Warburton from the EPA. The very man we want to see. TOMMY (trying to turn him) Have you tried the oysters, Dick? DODGE At a hazardous waste event? (shakes head) I think we'll go talk to him. TOMMY No, he's the wrong man -- DODGE (bemused by Tommy) You don't understand -- he's the perfect man. TOMMY But -- but you don't want to bother him with this. Talk to one of his underlings -- Dodge looks at Tommy with curiosity, not understanding his reluctance. DODGE Nothing beats man-to-man. TOMMY Here? Not here! DODGE A public place. What could be better? TOMMY But it's the wrong time! DODGE While the iron is hot, son. (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 107. 155 CONTINUED: (3) 155 REINHARDT (chiming in helpfully) No time like the present. TOMMY Shut up, Reinhardt, I'm talking to the Chairman. Beat it, okay? REINHARDT (smiling to Dodge) I'll go get him. Reinhardt heads for Warburton. TOMMY (puts hand on abdomen) You heard about this stomach thing going around? DODGE Come on, son, we've got the people's business to do. He leads Tommy off to one side. Reinhardt brings Warburton to them. WARBURTON Mr. Chairman. Congressman. DODGE I've got a big problem, Skeeter. WARBURTON What's that? DODGE Your power lines investigation. WARBURTON What power lines investigation? Tommy is sweating bullets. DODGE We're off the record, Skeeter. This witch-hunt for cancer clusters is bad news for everyone. WARBURTON I don't know what you're talking about, Dick. (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 108. 155 CONTINUED: (4) 155 DODGE Alright, I know you're being a good soldier -- WARBURTON No, I'm being straight with you -- DODGE Then let me be straight with you. You announce this study -- I'm not talking about the results down the road, mind you, I'm just talking about the announcement -- and there's broken crockery everywhere. Real estate. Utilities. Insurance. Schools. Local governments. It'll cost jobs. Uproot families. WARBURTON I agree with you completely. There isn't going to be an investigation, old chap, I promise you. DODGE (beat) I'm glad we understand each other. WARBURTON (beat) Yes, I think we do. Tommy silently rejoices in his good fortune. DODGE And we'll just forget about that phone call this morning? WARBURTON We didn't speak on the phone. DODGE (vastly impressed) Excellent. Dodge claps him on the shoulder, then heads off with Tommy, who is delighted to have dodged a bullet. TOMMY (imitating Warburton) "There isn't going to be an investigation, old chap." DODGE (chuckling) You're bad. (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 109. 155 CONTINUED: (5) 155 They join up with Andersen and O'Connor. DODGE (sotto voce) Worked like a charm. We scared him shitless. The investigation's dead. ANDERSEN Waiter! Champagne! (to Dodge) See you at the Clear Air hearings. 156 INT. TOMMY'S RECEPTION AREA/CORRIDOR - DAY 156 As Reinhardt comes into the office, Tommy intercepts him. TOMMY Morning, Reinhardt! Got a minute? I need your advice on something. REINHARDT Sure. Tommy leads him back into the corridor. 157 INT. TOMMY'S BOILER ROOM - DAY 157 Van Dyke, Armando, and Loretta work the phones. VAN DYKE Is this the assignment desk? Yes, I'm calling from Chairman Dodge's office, on the Hill. We wanted to be sure CNN was sending a crew to the Clean Air hearing today. ARMANDO (OVERLAPPING) No, not the new emission standards. We're breaking news. This is the biggest thing since Watergate. LORETTA (OVERLAPPING) This is Cynthia Leeson in the White House Press Office. My boss wanted me to let you folks know -- we're making a major announcement at the Clean Air hearings today. (listens) No, I can't tell you, but it's hot. (listens) Well, if the New York Times wants to be the only paper in town to miss the story of the year, that's up to y'all. THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 109A. 158 INT. TOMMY'S CAGE/CORRIDOR - DAY 158 Tommy has drawn Reinhardt into the cage. TOMMY I want to do a little something nice for Dodge. That EPA thing -- he's been good to me, Reinhardt. Is there some way I can, like, throw a bouquet to him at the hearing today without having to sit through that boring testimony shit? REINHARDT Why don't you ask him to give you the floor at the start? TOMMY He's do that? REINHARDT For some flattery? In a New York minute. Just tip him ahead of time. TOMMY Good thinking. They return to the corridor. Tommy looks at his watch. TOMMY Say, Reinhardt, my Grandma's plane comes in at ten. You wouldn't mind picking her up and driving Miss Daisy around, would you? REINHARDT Can't one of the others do it? TOMMY No, I don't trust them the way I trust you. TOMMY pats him on the back and sends him on his way. 159 INT. TOMMY'S OFFICE - DAY 159 Tommy, joined by his cronies and the Jubas. TOMMY This is it, people. Game time. Let's get it right. ARMANDO Tell me one thing, jefe. How do you know Andersen is going to bite? TOMMY I don't. You run a con, you run a risk. THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 110. 160 INT. POWER AND ENTERPRISE COMMITTEE - DAY 160 A hundred or so members of the public -- trade groups, Hill staffers, lawyers, tourists -- settle into their seats. VAN DYKE escorts Hattie Rifkin and a busload of Silver Foxes. Loretta comes in with Ellen and Mickey Juba. GRANDMA comes in, on Reinhardt's arm. She is dressed up as a biddy, down to a hat with fruit on it. COMMITTEE MEMBERS head for their seats at the dais. OLAF ANDERSEN is at the witness table, along with a couple of other businessmen. In a seat behind Andersen, Tommy O'Connor. THE PRESS. A good turnout, with several camera crews. WASHINGTON REPORTER #1 You know what this is? WASHINGTON REPORTER #2 (confidential) It's very hot. Electric cars. CELIA is seated with Ira, her Pro Bono associate. CELIA I'm cutting out early. IRA (indicating TJ) Don't want to run into him? CELIA You got that right. AT THE DAIS Tommy has a private word with Dodge. TOMMY Dick, I thought it might be a nice way to open if I congratulated you on the fine work you been doin' on this committee. Really express our appreciation. Especially on behalf of the minority community. DODGE Why, thank you, son. (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 111. 160 CONTINUED: 160 TOMMY (indicating cameras) Wouldn't hurt to have tape like that in the bank, would it, Mr. Speaker? HOMER slips in next to Reinhardt, who is surprised to see him. REINHARDT Mr. Yancey? Arthur Reinhardt. Are you testifying for the agency? GRANDMA (leaning over) Hello, Homer, dear. REINHARDT No, Mrs. Johnson, you must be mistaken -- let me introduce you. This is Mr. Yancey of the EPA. GRANDMA (to Reinhardt) Don't be silly, child. HOMER Homer Norton. Homer's Pit Stop, Axahatchee, Florida. GRANDMA Homer's known Tommy since they were in diapers. REINHARDT (getting up) What the -- ? From the row behind Reinhardt, Armando clamps Reinhardt down. ARMANDO Move and you're history. DODGE GAVELS the meeting to order. DODGE This meeting of the Power and Enterprise Committee to consider the reauthorization of the Clean Air Act is now in session. Today's first business is a panel of national leaders in the field of utilities. (MORE) (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 112. 160 CONTINUED: (2) 160 DODGE (CONT'D) Before I welcome them, Chair would like to yield to the gentleman from Florida for a word. If there is no objection from the Committee -- ? The gentleman may proceed. TOMMY Mr. Chairman, on behalf of the other members of this committee, and on behalf of myself, I have a very personal statement to make. From the bottom of my heart, I want to thank you -- thank you for your leadership, for your insight, for your boldness... Dodge preens for the cameras, until: TOMMY ... and for your courage. Especially your courage. DODGE (surprised) My courage? TOMMY Your courage in exposing the corruption that eats away at this institution. Your courage in taking on the special interests. Your courage in taking a major new step -- DODGE But I've... I've... I've done nothing new, nothing at all -- what are you talking about? TOMMY You're right -- integrity isn't new to you, Mr. Chairman, it's second nature to you. Still it's a rare public servant who'll take on the special interest money, take on the PACs -- ANDERSEN, wary, senses danger. TOMMY (O.S.) take on the lobbyists and fat cats -- CELIA is fascinated. (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 113. 160 CONTINUED: (3) 160 TOMMY (O.S.) ... and who'll stand up instead for ordinary American citizens... ON ELLEN AND MICKEY JUBA TOMMY (O.S.) ... the plain people who just want peace of mind -- who just want to know they're raising their kids in safe neighborhoods and sending them to safe schools. ON THE DAIS Dodge wants to wrap this up. TOMMY Yes, courage, Mr. Chairman, is a quality that you have in abundance -- DODGE Well, yes, thank you, but we have to move along, if the gentleman would -- TOMMY (undeterred) Ladies and gentlemen, yesterday, the Chairman and I had a meeting in his office with Olaf Andersen of Gulf Coast Power, and his lobbyist, Mr. Tommy O'Connor -- (indicating) these gentlemen here. Chairman Dodge and I listened in astonishment as Olaf Andersen offered us seven figures -- that's one million dollars, ladies and gentlemen. A BUZZ in the room. O'CONNOR leans forward to Andersen. O'CONNOR Dodge double-crossed us. ANDERSEN You're fired. ON TOMMY TOMMY One million dollars, if we would stop the EPA from investigating the connection between power lines and cancer clusters. (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 114. 160 CONTINUED: (4) 160 Shocked MURMURS sweep the room. REINHARDT is aghast. HOMER and ARMANDO are delighted. TOMMY Isn't that right, Mr. Andersen? Tommy flicks his eyebrows at Andersen, provocatively, imitating Dodge. ANDERSEN That's a vicious lie. Dodge GAVELS sharply, turns to Tommy. DODGE Will the gentleman yield? ANDERSEN That's not possible! You can't give anyone that kind of money! Dodge continues GAVELING. TOMMY Oh, yes, you can. As Mr. O'Connor said to you, quote: "If that's what you want, we can always find a loophole. No one will know." Remember saying that, Tommy? O'CONNOR I do not! DODGE (standing) I insist that the gentlemen yield! Tommy also stands, and produces a video tape. TOMMY You can't deny it, Mr. Andersen! We have the whole thing on this tape! The room erupts. THE PRESS loves it. Still cameras CLICK and WHIR. DODGE despairs. REINHARDT puts his hand over his face. TOMMY Yesterday, at Chairman Dodge's courageous suggestion, I taped the whole conversation. It's all there. Mr. Chairman, I thank you. The people thank you. America thanks you. (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 115. 160 CONTINUED: (5) 160 AUDIENCE APPLAUDS DODGE. The clapping is considerably sweetened by the Panthers and the rest of Tommy's claque. DODGE gauges their reaction, gets an inspiration. The storm leaves his face, and becomes a smile, which he beams on Tommy. DODGE I thank the distinguished gentleman. And I thank my fellow citizens. Our methods in this investigation may have been unorthodox, but together -- (indignant, at Andersen) we have exposed a canker at the very heart of democracy. APPLAUSE. Tommy is amazed at Dodge's survival skills. REINHARDT, delighted at the turn, claps heartily. ANDERSEN, livid, leaps up and shouts at Dodge. ANDERSEN You bastard! You set me up! DODGE Witness is out of order! ANDERSEN You stood to make a million bucks off of me! Who offered you more? I want to know! A new BUZZ sweeps the room. O'Connor tries to restrain Andersen, who sloughs him off. ANDERSEN You're as big a whore as he is! MICKEY JUBA catches Tommy's eye and mouths a question. MICKEY Now? Tommy shakes his head: no. 161 INT. HOSPITAL ROOM - DAY 161 The phone by Eli Marshall's bed RINGS. He answers. MARSHALL Hello? No. You're joking. (to Man in next bed) You mind if I put on C-span? THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 116. 162 INT. POWER AND ENTERPRISE COMMITTEE - DAY 162 ANDERSEN There's no loyalty any more, is there, Dick? What about the three hundred grand you squeezed from me for that goddam voter registration front of yours -- that just water under the bridge? O'Connor tries again to restrain him. ANDERSEN Don't touch me, you scum! MICKEY JUBA mouths: MICKEY Now? Tommy shakes his head again. No. ANDERSEN What about the two hundred k for your phony foundation, Dick? How about the ten thousand copies if your goddam autobiography you muscled me to buy -- what's all that, ancient history? Andersen advances toward the dais, pointing now to six or seven other Members of the Committee among the total of 28. ANDERSEN And you -- what about those bundled checks from my executives? I gave you my condo in Vail! I gave you my corporate jet to fly all over the world! I gave your kids summer jobs! I put up scholarships to put your kids through college! I hired your goddam wife to redecorate my office! You telling me none of that counts for anything? Andersen grabs Dodge by the throat. ANDERSEN I thought you people were for sale! I was wrong -- you're just for rent! Dodge struggles free of Andersen, who is dragged away from Dodge by Capitol Police. (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 117. 162 CONTINUED: 162 DODGE How dare you impugn my integrity! Everything I've done has been completely legal! TOMMY (acting astonished) Mr. Chairman! You mean to say you did all that stuff? You took all that money? Shock in the room. Some BOOS. IOWA does a nice HOG CALL. TJ sends a little wave and smile to Celia. DODGE There's nothing I've done that -- (indicating other Members) -- that these gentlemen haven't done! Committee Members rush to dissociate themselves from Dodge. MEMBERS No!... Not me!... Just him!... I never!... He crossed the line! ANDERSEN They're whores! All of them! MICKEY JUBA tries again. MICKEY Now? TJ nods yes. MICKEY Throw the bums out! LAUGHTER and APPLAUSE. She's touched a nerve. TJ leaps into the moment. TJ Damn straight! Throw the bums out! This place is an outhouse! ON THE PUBLIC. GASPS, WHOOPS, and APPLAUSE. Reinhardt sinks lower and lower into his seat. VOICES (calling) Throw the bums out! Throw the bums out! (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 118. 162 CONTINUED: (2) 162 Tommy, enjoying the triumph, can't help rubbing Dodge's nose in it. TOMMY I owed you one. Dodge wheels on Tommy, exploding. DODGE You lowlife hustler! Who are you to talk? You got into this House through fraud. You think I didn't check up on you? He pulls a piece of paper from the pile at his place. DODGE Ladies and gentlemen, I have here some rather startling revelations about this Mr. Johnson before you. This man is nothing but a con man! A fresh BUZZ from the room. DODGE A common grifter! (consulting paper) He's wanted in three counties for bunco! He's a convicted swindler! Some BOOS. REINHARDT emerges from his hole, encouraged. DODGE (O.S.) A fugitive from justice for card sharping, bookmaking, confidence games -- ON DODGE AND TOMMY DODGE -- and other charges the FBI has only begun to investigate! I dare you to respond! A hush in the room. TOMMY You know what? He's right! But let me tell you something -- all that's nothing, compared to what I pulled here in Washington... and this shit's all legit! (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 119. 162 CONTINUED: (3) 162 LAUGHTER and APPLAUSE. Dodge BANGS the gavel repeatedly. DODGE The gentleman is out of order! The gentleman is out of order! This committee is adjourned! GRANDMA leaps to her feet. GRANDMA Stop banging! Stop banging! That man has something to say! Massive APPLAUSE. Dodge is stunned by the enormity of the sentiment against him. TOMMY Adjourned? Fine. Leave. (indicating cameras) Turn your backs on the whole country. That what you want to do, gentlemen? The Members remain in place, paralyzed. TOMMY (to the room) I'm a con man. A small-time con man. Do you know what it was like for me to come to Congress? It was for like dying and going to heaven. If I did back home the kind of scams I've run in Congress, my ass would be in Sing Sing. But no, I'm not a crook -- up here, I'm a distinguished gentleman! 163 INT. HOSPITAL ROOM - DAY 163 Eli, watching on television. TOMMY (ON TV) Now don't get me wrong. They're not all bums. But boy, do the rotten fish stink up the barrel. Marshall APPLAUDS. The Man in the next bed joins in. 164 INT. POWER AND ENTERPRISE COMMITTEE - DAY 164 TOMMY Now tell me, people -- while these guys are buying and selling each other, who's standing up for you? (MORE) (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 120. 164 CONTINUED: 164 TOMMY (CONT'D) I'll tell you who. Nobody! Nobody gets five hundred bucks an hour to lobby for the average Joe! There's no Shnook PAC! There's no National Association for Ordinary Assholes! Sure, everyone's against cancer, but "everyone" doesn't have an office on K Street! (to committee Members) Don't you folks get it? We're supposed to be the people's lobbyists. Congress is supposed to be America's political action committee. APPLAUSE and SHOUTS of support. Several Members on the dais join the applause, seeing a winning issue. CELIA shakes her head in wonder. Tommy goes to Mickey and stands her up on a chair. TOMMY She's right. Throw the bums out -- starting with me! I'm gonna found me a new party. The Don't Vote For Me Party. Any of y'all want to join up? APPLAUSE and CALLS of enthusiasm. TOMMY Well, come on, then! C'mon, get up, we got work to do! The room erupts, electrified, chanting. VOICES Throw the bums out! Throw the bums out! Tommy is engulfed by people and lights. Dodge, Andersen, and O'Connor -- desperate, snarling -- are pinned to the wall by the SHOUTING Press Corps. Loretta AND GRANDMA watch Tommy bask in his new notoriety. LORETTA That Miss Oprah's gonna love his ass. (CONTINUED) THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN - Rev. 4/3/92 121-124. 164 CONTINUED: (2) 164 CELIA arrives where Tommy is standing. She looks at him a beat. Then a big smile. They kiss. CELIA Tommy Johnson. Kamikaze congressman. 165 EXT. CAPITOL STEPS - DAY 165 Tommy and Celia walk down the steps, arm in arm. CELIA I can't wait to see that tape you made. Tommy pulls it from his pocket, glances at it, and tosses it away. TOMMY Why? I bought it this morning. It's blank. As they continue down the steps, CAMERA CRANES UP to WIDE SHOT of the Capitol and the town beyond. FADE OUT. THE END