Read the following scene from The Little Foxes. BEN. (very jovial) I suppose I have been. And why not? Horace has done Hubbard Sons many a good turn. Why shouldnāt I be anxious to help him now? REGINA. (laughs) Help him! Help him when you need him, thatās what you mean. BEN. What a woman you married, Horace. (Laughs awkwardly when HORACE does not answer) Well, then Iāll make it quick. You know what Iāve been telling you for years. How Iāve always said that every one of us little Southern businessmen had great thingsā(Extends his arm)āright beyond our finger tips. Itās been my dream: my dream to make those fingers grow longer: Iām a lucky man, Horace, a lucky man. To dream and to live to get what youāve dreamed of. Thatās my idea of a lucky man. (Looks at his fingers as his arm drops slowly) For thirty years Iāve cried bring the cotton mills to the cotton. (HORACE opens medicine bottle). Well, finally I got up nerve to go to Marshall Company in Chicago. What would be similar about a stage and a film interpretation of this scene?
A. Viewers would have to infer the emotions and motivations of Ben and Regina.
B. Viewers would have to envision the physical descriptions of Ben and Regina.
C. Viewers would have to imagine the few props being used by Ben and Regina.
D. Viewers would have to visualize the actions and movements of Ben and Regina.