Cheaper By The Dozen Script

Cheaper by the Dozen is a 2003 American comedy film about a family with twelve children. The story is unrelated to the book of the same title.

  1. Cheaper By The Dozen 1950 Script
  2. Cheaper By The Dozen Script Play
  3. Cheaper By The Dozen Script Joe Scales
  4. Cheaper By The Dozen
Directed by Shawn Levy, Written by Craig Titley, Sam Harper, Joel Cohen, & Alec Sokolow

No! No, no! No, no, no!

Strangely, for a movie targeting families, Cheaper by the Dozen 2‘s script seems obsessed with cleavage.Mostly that of Jimmy’s young wife, Sarina. The camera stares as she offers an obvious double entendre, spreading her arms wide and inviting the Bakers into her home by saying, “Welcome to the Boulders.”. CHEAPER BY THE DOZEN Frank B. Ernestine Gilbreth Carey The hilarious, heartwarming classic about America’s best-loved family. CHAPTER 1 Whistles and Shaving Bristles Dad was a tall man with a large head, jowls, and a Herbert Hoover collar. He was no longer slim; he had passed the two-hundred-pound mark during. Cheaper by the Dozen. Adapted by Christopher Sergel From the book by Ernestine Gilbreth Carey; Full Length Play, Comedy; 9M, 7F; ISBN: C18 'Being allowed the privilege to direct Cheaper by the Dozen has been one of my most rewarding theatrical experiences.' Lori David, Director, Grey Lite Theatre, April 1992. Cheaper by the Dozen is a 1950 American family comedy film based upon the autobiographical book Cheaper by the Dozen (1948) by Frank Bunker Gilbreth Jr. And Ernestine Gilbreth Carey. The film and book describe growing up in a family with twelve children, in Montclair, New Jersey. The title comes from one of Gilbreth's favorite jokes, which.

Tom Baker[edit]

  • You soaked his underwear in meat. That is so wrong. Funny, but wrong.
  • All right, enough is enough! You're slacking on your chores, you're fighting at school, things are out of control! As of this moment, you are all grounded!
  • What's grounded?! I'll tell you what grounded is, except for attending games, you go to school, you come home from school, you do your chores, you do your homework, you go to bed, and that's it!!
  • Get my kids and meet me at my house. Ready? Break!
  • (On the phone trying to get a babysitter) How many? Well, when you get over here we can just count 'em up! (Next call) How many kids do I have? Twelve. But one doesn't live with me, and one you never see 'cause he's so mad! (Next call) Just... just... just twelve. (Next call) Hello! I'll just hang up on myself.
  • If I screw up raising my kids, nothing I achieve will matter much.
  • You have a dark gift, Sarah Baker.

Kate Baker[edit]

  • I guess you could say that when Tom and I left Midland we had a mess of theories about how to raise children. We still have a mess of children, but no theories. Sure, 12 is still our number. It's the number of months my book was on the bestseller list. It's the number of job offers Tom turned down before we found one close to home. And each day it's the number of times I'm thankful there's such a thing as family.

Dialogue[edit]

Tom: You were checking me out, weren't you?
Kate: Yes, I was. You got a problem with that?
Tom: Twelve kids later and we still got the heat!
Kate: Whoo!

Cheaper By The Dozen 1950 Script

Kate: Sarah, your suspension from lacrosse for excessive force has been lifted, so you're going today.
Sarah: Yes!
Kate: Henry, you have band practice, all right? I cleaned your clarinet. Please don't play with your food in your mouth again. Kim and Jessica, your teacher called and has made a request that you do not correct her in front of the class. Mike, you have show-and-tell today. And please, honey, remember that body parts do not count. Kyle and Nigel, you have a dentist appointment at 3:00, so you're going to work with Dad.
Nigel and Kyle: Yeah! (yell)
Tom:(yells)
Tina Shenk: Is Jake your only child?
Kate: Oh, no. We have 12.
Tom: I couldn't keep her off me.
Charlie: Did I mention I don't like you very much?
Tom: Yeah, you mentioned that.
Charlie: Then I'm good.
Hank: It's getting so as I can hardly go out in public any more. I mean, really, between the autograph hounds and the paparazzi...
Kate: Autographs and everything? I mean, just the one commercial, and you have paparazzi?
Hank: Yeah. I've never actually seen them, but, you know, they hide in the bush and they get their shot.
Cheaper By The Dozen Script
Mark: Have you seen my frog, Dad?
Tom: Sorry, Charlie... er, Nigel... Kyle.
Mark: It's Mark.
Tom: I knew that.
Jake: Dude two words: need new skates.
Kate: Dude three words: Paper route. (computer receives a message. Reads Nora's message) 'Hi, can't make dinner. Hank and I are moving into our new apartment. Love, Nora.'
Mark: Have you seen Beans, Mom?
Kate: No.
Cheaper By The Dozen ScriptCheaper By The Dozen Script
Nora: Oh, honey, they were just welcoming you into the family.
Hank: They just set me on fire.
Nora: Just your pants.
Hank: Sure, last time, it was my pants, but what if next time it's my face? This is how I get the jobs!
Tom: (On the phone) Hello, my name is Tom Baker and I'm interested in hiring a domestic helper...I have twelve children. (Pause) Actually I am serious. (Later calling another housekeeper) Just twelve...(Different call) Twelve...(Calling another babysitter) There is only two...uh...plus ten. (Another call) Well, there's twelve but one doesn't live with me and another you will never see because he is so mad! (Another call) How many kids? Well how about when you get here let's count them up? (Later) UHH...A dozen?! (He scratches off about 25 babysitting businesses and hangs his phone up about 10 times; later on a call) Just...just twelve. (Another call) Hello? I'll just hang up on myself...(He angrily hangs up his phone and bows his head in frustration)
[Tom has the kids gathered in the living room for having fights at school and not doing any chores around the house]
Tom:[angrily] All right, enough is enough. You're slacking on your chores, you're fighting at school, things are out of control. As of this moment, you are all grounded.
Mike: What's grounded?
Tom: What's grounded? I'll tell you what grounded is. Except for attending games, you go to school, you come home from school, you do your homework, you do your chores, you go to bed, and that's it.
Sarah: But that--
Tom: Oh, yes, Sarah, I know, that sucks, but that's the way it is!
Jake: Does this mean we can't go to Dylan's birthday party?
Tom: That's exactly what it means.
Kim: But we bought his presents already!
Tom:YOU ARE GOING TO MISS IT!!!!!!!!!!!!!![the kids are shocked into silence] Now, go to bed! [he Baker kids head their rooms, upset]
Sarah:[After knocking on the door to tell the other children the plan] I'm going to Dylan's birthday party. Who's with me?
The Baker Kids: Yeah!
(The children climb out of the window and bring presents to Dylan to enter the party without Tom noticing that they climbed out of the window and went to Dylan's birthday party)
Tina: Hi...oh! (the Baker kids gave each present to Tina)
Mark: Brazilian Mud Viper. She gets one live rat a week. (gives it to Tina).
Jake: Hey, Dylan. Wanna play catch with the football I got you?
Dylan: Uh, my nanny'd have to check with my dad... who'd have to check with my mom who would say it was an inappropriate use of free time.
Jake: Hmm. Sounds like a yes to me. Go get it, Mike.
(Mike runs to the present counter to get Jake's present, which knocks the snake that was in Mark's present)
Tom:[to Football players] Get my kids and meet me at the house. Ready? Break!
[The football players begin to catch the Baker kids, one by one, and Tom sees Sarah in the bounce house]
Tom: Sarah Baker! Off now!
Sarah: No way!
Tom: Don't make me come up there!
[Sarah becomes shocked about her father trying to catch her in the bounce house and Tom goes into the bounce house to catch her, but ends up failing to catch her and the football players knock someone with an air tank and the air tank presses on the bounce house, causing it to over-inflate. Tom realizes the bounce house is about to explode]
Person in the bounce house: Oh, my God! It's gonna blow!
[The bounce house explodes as Tom, Sarah and the other people are launched into the air. The football players catch Sarah and the other kids. Dylan sees Tom falling towards him and screams as Tom lands on him, offscreen. Cut to Dylan being carried on a gurney at the hospital, with a black eye, chipped tooth and broken arm]
Dylan: It was my best birthday ever, Coach.
Tina:[angrily] Your children are never playing with Dylan again!
Tom: Sorry about your arm, Dylan.
(As Tina and Dylan head to the Hospital room and leave Tom, Tom hears his cell phone and gets a call from Shake)
Tom: Hello, Shake.
Shake: Any idea what this could do to my program? Don't speak. Listen. I don't want the players at your house, and I don't want your kids in the department.
(Tom turns off his cell phone and becomes depressed and sees the Newspeople)
Newsman: There he is! Coach! Coach! How will this impact Saturday's game? Coach, what do you have to say to reports that you're simply spreading yourself too thin?
Nigel: Come on, Dad, don't hide in the closet!
Kyle: Take it like a MAN!
[The twins smash an axe through the closet door]
Tom: I'd just hate to break that up.
Dozen
Mark: Mom, Beans is dead.
Sarah: Nobody cares about your stupid frog right now, FedEx, okay?
Mark: (Annoyed and irritated) Stop calling me that! (charges at her, causing the whole family to start a heated argument)
Kate: Don't you dare call him that!
Tom: All right! Hey!
Kate: Stop! Stop!
Cameraman 1: What's the name of this segment again?
Cameraman 2: Uh, 'One Big Happy Family'?
Cameraman 1: Okay, I'm calling Oprah's family right now.
Hank: All I'm saying is families are inevitable. It's like death or taxes.
Nora: Does that mean you don't want children?
Hank: Chil...?
Kate: Leave him alone!
Hank: Hello! Look at these-- They're monsters! Honey, you can't want this. That's why you're with me.
Tom: Nora! Come on! We need you down here!
Lorraine: You're stepping on me! You're messing my hair! Stop!
Kate: Nigel, get off your brother's head!
(Nora comes downstairs)
Mark: Get off me! Nobody cares about me!
Nora: Mark.
Mark: Nobody cares about me!
Nora: (tries to comfort Mark) Mark, what's going on? (Mark runs upstairs in despair) Mark! Mark!
Sarah and Lorraine: What are you talking about?!

Cast[edit]

The Baker Family[edit]

Dozen
  • Steve Martin as Tom Baker
  • Bonnie Hunt as Kate Baker
  • Piper Perabo as Nora Baker
  • Tom Welling as Charlie Baker
  • Hilary Duff as Lorraine Baker
  • Kevin Schmidt as Henry Baker
  • Alyson Stoner as Sarah Baker
  • Jacob Smith as Jake Baker
  • Forrest Landis as Mark Baker
  • Liliana Mumy as Jessica Baker
  • Morgan York as Kim Baker
  • Blake Woodruff as Mike Baker
  • Brent Kinsman as Nigel Baker
  • Shane Kinsman as Kyle Baker

Others[edit]

Cheaper By The Dozen Script Play

  • Paula Marshall as Tina Shenk
  • Alan Ruck as Bill Shenk
  • Steven Anthony Lawrence as Dylan Shenk
  • Richard Jenkins as Shake McGuire
  • Ashton Kutcher as Hank
  • Tiffany Dupont as Beth
  • Cody Linley as Quinn
  • Jared Padalecki as an unnamed bully
  • Dax Shepard as a member of the camera crew
  • Regis Philbin as Himself
  • Kelly Ripa as Herself
  • Frank Welker as Gunner (voice)

External links[edit]

Cheaper By The Dozen Script Joe Scales

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Cheaper By The Dozen

Cheaper by the Dozen Script Order Now

Suppose you're an attractive high school girl and you're not only a member of a large and unique family but your father is, in fact, one of the great pioneers of industrial efficiency. Then suppose he decides, for no apparent reason, to apply his unorthodox methods to you and to the rest of your big family. The results are terribly embarrassing, funny andeit must be admittedeextremely effective! To Anne, however, the chief effect seems to be that of making them seem ridiculous to everyone else at schooleespecially to the boys! Dad pushes ahead with better organization for his large and delightful family. He puts up a chart for the young people to initial after completing each household task, uses a rung as an imaginary bathtub to demonstrate how to take a really efficient bath and appoints a utilities officer to levy fines on wasters of electricity. While the situations are often uproarious, there's a serious reason. Dad has a heart condition which he's keeping secret. The children don't understand them. Anne, the oldest, rebels. Both Dad and she are miserable at the lack of understanding between them. Then in a deft and moving scene, Dad becomes aware of how much Anne has grown up. If we had to choose from among all our publications the one show most likely to delight an audience, this play would be our choice. One int. set.
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