{"id":"01KG07ACF37QCXZH7F6PVAZZXN","cid":"bafkreicvobggyp46zxq3vzfdtfgmx3umq6bbdgmmr6quf4hijqxzxvohsq","type":"chunk","properties":{"end_line":2969,"extracted_at":"2026-01-27T17:16:46.103Z","extracted_by":"structure-extraction-lambda","label":"Chunk 3","source_file":"01KFYTG9MG93RTB6YAW34V48XG","start_line":2922,"text":"  2797\tmovies, but they're certainly nothing to rave about. In the first place, I hate actors. They\n  2798\tnever act like people. They just think they do. Some of the good ones do, in a very slight\n  2799\tway, but not in a way that's fun to watch. And if any actor's really good, you can always\n  2800\ttell he knows he's good, and that spoils it. You take Sir Laurence Olivier, for example. I\n  2801\tsaw him in Hamlet. D.B. took Phoebe and I to see it last year. He treated us to lunch first,\n  2802\tand then he took us. He'd already seen it, and the way he talked about it at lunch, I was\n  2803\tanxious as hell to see it, too. But I didn't enjoy it much. I just don't see what's so\n  2804\tmarvelous about Sir Laurence Olivier, that's all. He has a terrific voice, and he's a helluva\n  2805\thandsome guy, and he's very nice to watch when he's walking or dueling or something,\n  2806\tbut he wasn't at all the way D.B. said Hamlet was. He was too much like a goddam\n  2807\tgeneral, instead of a sad, screwed-up type guy. The best part in the whole picture was\n  2808\twhen old Ophelia's brother--the one that gets in the duel with Hamlet at the very end--\n  2809\twas going away and his father was giving him a lot of advice. While the father kept\n  2810\tgiving him a lot of advice, old Ophelia was sort of horsing around with her brother,\n  2811\ttaking his dagger out of the holster, and teasing him and all while he was trying to look\n  2812\tinterested in the bull his father was shooting. That was nice. I got a big bang out of that.\n  2813\tBut you don't see that kind of stuff much. The only thing old Phoebe liked was when\n  2814\tHamlet patted this dog on the head. She thought that was funny and nice, and it was.\n  2815\tWhat I'll have to do is, I'll have to read that play. The trouble with me is, I always have to\n  2816\tread that stuff by myself. If an actor acts it out, I hardly listen. I keep worrying about\n  2817\twhether he's going to do something phony every minute.\n  2818\tAfter I got the tickets to the Lunts' show, I took a cab up to the park. I should've\n  2819\ttaken a subway or something, because I was getting slightly low on dough, but I wanted\n  2820\tto get off that damn Broadway as fast as I could.\n  2821\tIt was lousy in the park. It wasn't too cold, but the sun still wasn't out, and there\n  2822\tdidn't look like there was anything in the park except dog crap and globs of spit and cigar\n  2823\tbutts from old men, and the benches all looked like they'd be wet if you sat down on\n\n<!-- [Page 64](arke:01KFYTAC561Q4MR52D29SJ723K) -->\n  2824\tthem. It made you depressed, and every once in a while, for no reason, you got goose\n  2825\tflesh while you walked. It didn't seem at all like Christmas was coming soon. It didn't\n  2826\tseem like anything was coming. But I kept walking over to the Mall anyway, because\n  2827\tthat's where Phoebe usually goes when she's in the park. She likes to skate near the\n  2828\tbandstand. It's funny. That's the same place I used to like to skate when I was a kid.\n  2829\tWhen I got there, though, I didn't see her around anywhere. There were a few kids\n  2830\taround, skating and all, and two boys were playing Flys Up with a soft ball, but no\n  2831\tPhoebe. I saw one kid about her age, though, sitting on a bench all by herself, tightening\n  2832\ther skate. I thought maybe she might know Phoebe and could tell me where she was or\n  2833\tsomething, so I went over and sat down next to her and asked her, \"Do you know Phoebe\n  2834\tCaulfield, by any chance?\"\n  2835\t\"Who?\" she said. All she had on was jeans and about twenty sweaters. You could\n  2836\ttell her mother made them for her, because they were lumpy as hell.\n  2837\t\"Phoebe Caulfield. She lives on Seventy-first Street. She's in the fourth grade,\n  2838\tover at--\"\n  2839\t\"You know Phoebe?\"\n  2840\t\"Yeah, I'm her brother. You know where she is?\"\n  2841\t\"She's in Miss Callon's class, isn't she?\" the kid said.\n  2842\t\"I don't know. Yes, I think she is.\"","title":"Chunk 3"},"relationships":[{"peer":"01KG072EXBSV0AEAB8M118N27X","peer_label":"16","peer_type":"chapter","predicate":"in"},{"peer":"01KFXT0KM64XT6K8W52TDEE0YS","peer_label":"More Classics","peer_type":"collection","predicate":"collection"}],"ver":1,"created_at":"2026-01-27T17:16:46.868Z","ts":"2026-01-27T17:16:46.868Z","edited_by":{"method":"manual","user_id":"01KFF0H3YRP9ZSM033AM0QJ47H"}}