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Great memorable quotes and script exchanges from the Driving Miss Daisy movie on Quotes.net.
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Daisy Werthan: [ Hoke and Daisy are driving to Boolie and Florene's for a Christmas party. Daisy, a Jew, is annoyed at the extraneous Christmas light displays] Everybody's wishing the Georgia Power Company a Merry Christmas. Hoke Colburn: I bet Miss Florene got 'em all beat with the new house.
The quote from Driving Miss Daisy, "You have a way of seeing the good in people, Miss Daisy. It's a rare gift," encapsulates the central theme of the movie and Miss Daisy's character. Throughout the film, Miss Daisy develops a unique ability to look beyond people's flaws and find their inherent goodness.
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[after Florene storms out when Katie Bell makes a mistake]Don't worry, Katie Bell, it's not quite the end of the world.[Calling after Hoke as he drives away with Miss Daisy] Goodbye! Good luck! [To himself] Good God.[Hoke and Idella are walking to Daisy's house and notice Boolie's car in the driveway]Hoke Colburn: Now what do you suppose he's doin' here this early in the morning?Idella: Dunno... can't be good, I promise you that![Hoke walks in, Boolie and Daisy are there to confront him about a missing can of salmon]Hoke Colburn: Morning, Miss Daisy. I think it's gettin' ready to clear up out there! Oh, 'scuse me, Mr. Werthan!Boolie Werthan: Hoke, I think we're gonna have to have a little talk.The comedy that won a Pulitzer Prize.The funny, touching and totally irresistable story of a working relationship that became a 25-year friendship.Driving Miss Daisy quotes at the Internet Movie DatabaseDriving Miss Daisy at Rotten TomatoesA man loses control of his car, which smashes in a tangle of bushes at the park and leaves Daisy miraculously unharmed. Her worried son Boolie finds her a personal driver, a fifty-year-old black man called Hoke Colburn.
Driving Miss Daisy is a heartfelt and poignant play by playwright Alfred Uhry. Set in the American South during the mid-20th century, the story follows the unlikely friendship between an elderly white Jewish widow, Daisy Werthan, and her African American chauffeur, Hoke Colburn.