04x14 - Courage

Episode transcripts for the TV show "The Wonder Years". Aired: January 1988 to May 1993.*
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04x14 - Courage

Post by bunniefuu »

♪ What would you do
if I sang out of tune? ♪

♪ Would you stand up
and walk out on me? ♪

♪ Lend me your ears,
and I'll sing you a song ♪

♪ I will try not to
sing out of key, yeah ♪

♪ Oh, baby, I get by ♪
- ♪ by with a little help
from my friends ♪

-♪ All I need is my buddies ♪

-♪ High with a little
help from my friends ♪

-♪ I'm sayin' I'm gonna get higher ♪ - ♪
try with a little help from my friends ♪

-♪ Whoa-oa-oa-oa ♪

-♪ Oh, oh, oh, oh ♪

-♪ Somebody who
knows quite sure ♪

♪ Baby ♪

-♪ By with a little
help from my friends ♪

-♪ Said I'm gonna make
it with my friends ♪

-♪ Try with a little
help from my friends ♪

-♪ Oh, I'm gonna
keep on trying ♪

-♪ High with a little
help from my friends ♪

♪ I'm gonna keep on
trying now, baby ♪

-♪ Ooh, ooh, ooh ♪

[Leroy anderson's "the
syncopated clock" plays]

-Over the course of
the average lifetime,

You meet a lot of people.

Some of them stick with
you through thick and thin.

Some weave their
way through your life

And disappear forever.

But once in a while,
someone comes along

Who earns a permanent
place in your heart.

Someone like, say...

-Hi, kevin.

- Miss hasenfuss,
my dental hygienist.

-Hi, miss hasenfuss!

-I'm ready for you now.

-Actually, she was more
than just my dental hygienist.

-So, have we been brushing?

-You bet. Every day.

-Let's take a look.

-Our relationship went beyond

Lower incisors and upper
bicuspids and dental floss.

She was someone I
could really talk to.

-[Muffled] so, how
are you doing?

-Oh, busy. You?

-Well... You know.

-Open.

-She smelled like ivory
soap and herbal shampoo,

And knew all the
right things to say

To make a man
feel like... A man.

-Spit.

-And even though we
only met twice a year,

It was pretty clear
we had something...

Special.

-Last one. Say "che-e-e-se!"

-[Muffled] che-e-e-se.

[Mechanical whirring]

-Here, we'll let the
doctor take a look at these.

But I'm sure they'll be perfect.

As usual. [Chuckles]

-But it wasn't until
the x-rays were over

And the big lead bib came off

That our relationship
really came alive.

-So, how's school going?

-Oh, great! I graduate
ninth grade this year.

-Really? That's quite
an accomplishment.

-Well, you know...

-We shared things,
man to woman...

Woman to man.

-You know... I've never really
told anybody this before...

But...

Promise you won't laugh?

-Uh, no.

I-i mean, yes. I promise.

-I've always thought I'd like
to go back to school some day.

-Really?

-I think so.

There's only so far in life
you can go cleaning teeth,

You know what I mean?

-Oh! Oh, of course.

-But I'd never have the courage.

All those tests.

Tests scare me.

-God, was she cute!

-Well, you know, tests
really aren't so bad.

I mean, I've taken
a bunch of tests.

I bet you'll do fine.

-Hmm. You really think so?

-Oh, absolutely. No
question about it.

-Thanks for the
vote of confidence.

But I think I'm just not a
very courageous person.

Not like you.

-[Gulps]

-And there you had it.
Total mutual admiration.

I admired her for her, uh...

-I saved you the blue one.

- Toothbrushes...

-Thanks.

-And she admired
me for my courage.

-What's the matter? You chicken?

[Farting sound]

- Courage in ninth grade
being a relative thing.

-No, I'm not chicken.
I'm just not crazy.

-He's chicken.
[Both cluck mockingly]

-Come on, guys.
Knock it off, will you?

-Look, all he has to
do is slip this thing

Onto mr. Gardenia's
chair in study hall.

It'll be a riot!

-Yeah, well, maybe I
don't think it's so funny.

[Both cluck mockingly]

-You guys, leave him alone.

If he doesn't want to do
it, he doesn't want to do it.

- Yeah.
- Okay, then. You do it.

-Well, why don't you
do it? It's your idea.

[Both cluck mockingly]

-At 14, true heroism has
less to do with actual logic

And more to do
with pure stupidity.

-Okay. I'll do it.

But you guys have
to do it next time.

- Yes! Yes!
- All right!

- Yes!
- You guys are
completely idiotic.

-Maybe so.

But I wasn't the kind of guy
to shrink from a challenge.

I was a man of action.

-Hey, butthead.

-A man with a brother.

-Hasenfuss called.

-A man who got phone calls
from his dental hygienist.

-She did? What'd she say?

-What do I look like,
your secretary?

She said she wanted to
see you this afternoon.

-Now, since I wasn't
due for a checkup

For another six months,

This could only mean one thing.

[Farting noise]

[Laughter]

It had to be personal.

-Boy, you got here fast.

-Oh. I was just in
the neighborhood.

[Panting]

Did you... Want me?

-Kevin... I have
something to tell you,

And I'm not quite sure
how you're gonna take it.

-Maybe not.

But standing there, the
possibilities seemed endless.

-What is it?

-You have a cavity.

You're gonna have
to see dr. Tucker.

[Mechanical whirring]

[Hinge creaks]

-Okay. Let's have a look-see.

Open.

Pick.

[Metal scrapes]

Thank you.

Wider.

[Gasps] hasenfuss, look at this.

Just as I thought. Cavity.

Lower second bicuspid.

Big sucker.

-Now, a word of
explanation here.

I'd never had a cavity before.

Still, under miss hasenfuss'
watchful eye, I figured,

How bad could it be?

[Electricity crackles]
- aaah!

Aah!

-Oh.

Is that sensitive?

-Yeah.

-Good.

-Kevin, are you all right?

- [Panting]
- of course I wasn't.

But then, I did have an
image to maintain here.

-Fine. It was... Fine.

I-it was... It was just a...

A charley horse.

In my leg.

-Well, you sure were
brave. A lot braver than me.

That cavity looked
pretty serious.

I probably would have
jumped out of my skin.

-Nah, it was nothing.

-After all, that smile
was reward enough

For a few moments of agony.

Especially now
that it was all over.

-Make an appointment
on your way out.

-An appointment?

-Well, that sucker's
not getting any smaller.

We're gonna have
to drill it and fill it.

[Chuckles] book
him, hasenfuss. Next!

-Was this guy joking?
No way I was coming back.

-How's wednesday sound?

-Fine.

-A cavity? Oh, honey,
that's too bad.

-She didn't know the half of it.

-Well, I suppose that's why
we have dentists, don't we?

I'm sure dr. Tucker will
take good care of you.

-Thanks, mom.

-But it wasn't dr. Tucker
I was worried about.

It was looking like
a craven coward

In front of miss hasenfuss.

-[Belches]

-It was time to seek help...

From the grand poobah
of tooth decay himself.

-Wayne... You go to
dr. Tucker a lot, don't you?

-None of your business.

-Well, when you do,

And he, you know,
fills a cavity...

Does it hurt much?

-Nah.

He gives you novocaine.

-Of course! Novocaine!

-And that works?

-Sure. You don't feel a thing.

Once you get past
that needle. [Shudders]

-What needle?

-The big one. 'Bout the
size of a telephone pole.

See, he jams the thing
right into your gums!

Then all you hear are sounds.

Crunch! cr*ck!

Zzzz! Zzzz! Zzzz!

Then you feel tooth
fragments flying everywhere!

Oh, and then there's
that unbelievable smell.

Got to be sure you
don't gag or something.

And other than that...

It's a piece of cake.

-That guy. What a kidder.

-Are we ready?

-I think so.

[Chainsaw revs]

-Open wide!

[Laughs evilly]

[Chainsaw revs]

This may...

Sting a little.

[Laughs evilly]

-Help! Help me!

Uh-oh!

-Oh! Is that sensitive?

[Laughs evilly]

-Miss hasenfuss!

-♪ Actin' funny but
I don't know why ♪

-And I thought you
were a man of courage.

-♪ 'Scuse me while
I kiss the sky ♪

-[Sighs]

-[Panting]

[Crickets chirping]

-Fortunately, by the next day,

I'd pretty much managed
to calm my fears.

-[Panting]

-Hi, kevin. You ready?

-Uh... I think so.

-Sure. Nothing to
worry about here.

Just a simple, little filling.

-Miss hasenfuss...

-Something wrong?

-No.

It's just...

-Who was I kidding?

I had to tell her...
Tell her I was scared.

Maybe she'd respect
me for my honesty.

-It's just...

There was this fire.

-Fire?

-Yeah.

Yeah, at my house,
so I got to go.

-Oh. I-i hope nobody was hurt.

-No! No, nobody was
hurt. I just have to go now.

Right now.

[Siren wails]
- there. Grace under pressure.

[ Man screams in distance]

-Do you suppose
that was squasnick?

-I don't know.

I don't know what to think.

-The night of the great
dentist-office bailout,

I faced a sobering truth.

-You scared, kid?

-I wonder if we can take it.

All the way, I mean.

-I had fled in the
face of battle,

In front of miss hasenfuss.

I was... A coward.

-It's the fear of being afraid

That frightens me
more than anything else.

-Just remember what
the old man told you.

-I was unworthy
of my proud lineage.

-Dad?

-Hmm?

-You were in combat, right?

-Sure. I was in combat.


-Were you scared?

-Well... I don't know
if I'd call it scared.

We had a job to
do, and we did it.

-Fear has nothing
to do with cowardice.

A fellow is only yellow

When he lets his
fear make him quit.

-You know, when you're
out there in the trenches

And the smoke is
stinging your nose,

And the b*ll*ts are zipping
past your head like flies...

You don't have
time to be scared.

-And that's when it hit me.

If my father was that brave,
then maybe I had it in me, too,

Somewhere down deep.

-There's only one thing that
ever scared the pants off me.

-What's that?

-The dentist.

[b*mb whistling]

[expl*si*n]

-I was left with one option...
Hide among women who shop.

-Honey, is something wrong?

-No. No.

-Oh, it's your tooth, isn't it?

-No. I-i-it's nothing, really.

-Now, how long did you
say it would take dr. Tucker

To recover from
that ski accident?

-Oh, what tangled webs we weave.

-Mom, I got to go get some...

- Butter.
- Butter.

-Price check

On a 5-pound bag
of dog food, please.

-Face it. I was a
man on the run.

Running from fear, humiliation.

Running from...

-Kevin! Hi!

- Hasenfuss.

-Uh...

-Jennifer! Hi!

-Mrs. Arnold. Hello.

-Oh, my gosh, here they came...

The woman I'd lied to

And... The woman I'd lied to.

[Train whistle blows]

The rock and the hard place.

-How've you been?

-Fine. You?

-Good. Look at all those books!

-Yeah, I've been kind
of reading up on things.

I've been thinking about
taking some classes, but...

I'm not sure,

Even though kevin
tells me I should.

Right, kevin?
- Oh.

-[Chuckles]

-But I'm afraid I'm just
not as brave as he is.

-Ouch.

-Anyway, I can't stop to chat.

I have to be getting
back to the office.

-Uh-oh.

-Dr. Tucker's office?

-I was trapped, like a
rat in a ski accident.

- But I thought...
- Mom?

-It was time for some
subtle creative thinking.

-Uh, you know, she's got
to get back to the office.

And... You know, there's
gonna be traffic getting home.

And have you seen the lines
at those checkout counters?

-Oh. Well, I guess
we really should go.

-I'm sure we'll bump
into each other again.

-Phew. I was out of
there. Free and clear.

-Oh, and kevin, don't forget to
reschedule your appointment.

And I'm so sorry about the fire.

-A fire?

[Alarm blaring,
alarm bells ringing]

-So much for the best-laid
plans of mice and men,

Particularly mice with mothers.

There was no putting this off.

It was act now
or face the chair.

-[Humming]

-Dr. Tucker?

I'm kevin arnold...

Your patient?

-Is this an emergency?

-Well, kind of.

See, I need to make
an appointment.

-Well, speak to hasenfuss.
She keeps the books.

-Well, that's kind
of the problem.

You see, I was wondering

If someone else could
assist with the filling.

-What's wrong with hasenfuss?

-Well, nothing. Nothing
at all. She's great.

I-it's just...

I'd just... Rather have
someone else, that's all.

-Well. She's off tuesdays.

Why don't you
come by about 4:00?

-Thanks.

-You're the customer.
[Chuckles]

-And it was done.
I'd been spared.

-Dr. Tucker?

You won't tell her, will you?

That I didn't want her there?

-Doctor, i-i forgot
to remind you

You have a 9:00
tomorrow morning.

I have to be getting
back to work.

-The next few days,

I guess you could say I
was kind of off my game.

Maybe it was my tooth.

Maybe it was something else.

All I knew was...

[Door opens]

-Kevin arnold?

-Here.

- Oral hygiene was never
gonna be the same again.

-I'm ready for you now.

-The thing is, even
though I knew

Miss hasenfuss
wouldn't be around,

I could almost see her there,

In that room where we'd
shared our hopes and dreams.

-Kevin. Hi.

-You're here?

-Did you come for your filling?

-Yeah.

-Good. You should
get that taken care of.

-Listen... Miss hasenfuss.

-I took your advice.

Um, I'm leaving.

-What?

-My god. She was taking
this harder than I'd thought.

-Why?

-I'm going back to
school full time,

To become a dentist. [Chuckles]

I think, maybe, for children.

I mean, now's as good
a time as any, right?

[Chuckles] oops.

I guess I'm kind of nervous.

I'm sure you'll do just fine.

-Yeah.

-Hey.

I'll take all my kids to you.

-[Chuckles] promise?

-And at that moment,

I learned a little something
about fear and courage.

If this woman was brave
enough to take life by the horns...

Maybe I could too.

-Miss hasenfuss?

I, uh... I have this filling.

Would you assist?

[Leroy anderson's "the
syncopated clock" plays]

-In the end, that appointment
wasn't any big deal after all.

In fact, it was kind of a
nice way to say farewell.

And sure, maybe it
was the novocaine

Coursing through my
98-pound body, but I could swear

Miss hasenfuss
had a tear in her eye.

And when it was all over,

There was nothing
left to say but...

-Don't forget to brush.

-[Slurred] you, too.

-I never saw miss hasenfuss
again after that day.

But I like to think that
filling meant as much to her

As it did to me.

It's funny, but even now,

Whenever I pass a
professional building,

I can't help but
look for her name...

And remember.

Good night, miss hasenfuss...
Wherever you are.
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