(PIANO)


GK: this portion of the show brought to you by the Cafe Boeuf Nashville, where the elite meet to eat...
(RESTAURANT AMBIENCE)
(FAST FOOTSTEPS)
TR: (EXUBERANT FRENCH)


GK: Antoine-- please. Don't.


TR (FRENCH): What? You do not wish me to kiss you on both cheeks?


GK: No.


TR (FRENCH): But monsieur. I am French--


GK: Look. You've kissed me on the cheek before and it was very nice but we're moving on, now, okay?


TR (FRENCH):Very well. Then cordial greetings, monsieur, and my sincere respects to your family and those whom you permit to be intimate with your cheeks.


GK: Thank you, Antoine.


TR (FRENCH): Come, I have saved for you a table in a secluded corner spot. (FOOTSTEPS)


GK: The cafe is busy tonight.


TR (FRENCH): Yes, people of Nashville are discovering French cooking and learning not to fear the unusual ingredient.


GK: Oh good. Unusual ingredients like what?


TR (FRENCH): The (FRENCH PHRASE, --LE COQ--)--


GK: It's something about chicken, right. The kidneys? The gall bladder? The lungs?


TR (FRENCH): Chicken feet. Boiled chicken feet with the (FRENCH).


GK: Oh good grief....


TR (FRENCH): You eat the fingers of the chicken, why not the feet?


GK: I'd like the boeuf, please.


TR (FRENCH): You are passing up a work of art -- a (FRENCH).


GK: A beef. Medium.
TR (FRENCH): Chicken feet de Provence, with prune pate between the toes and a gentle mist of coriander.


GK: Beef.


TR (FRENCH): A taste. Please.


GK: Beef steak.


TR (FRENCH): It is on the house.


GK: Let go of my shoulder.


TR (FRENCH): Okay. No chicken feet. Instead, I bring you the (FRENCH)


GK: Beef. Well done.


TR (FRENCH): I insist. (FRENCH)


GK: It's tripe, isn't it.


TR (FRENCH): Brains. Fried brains of the chicken. It's beautiful. (FRENCH)


GK: Steak.
(PIANO)


GK: That's the Cafe Boeuf. Where the elite meet to eat.