Little Miss Born-with-a-silver-spoon-in-her-mouth—hell, she’d been born with an entire service for eight!—was annoyed with him. Ten to one, she wasp.o.’ed because he was late.
a.2002, Lee Katz, as quoted in Aljean Harmetz,The Making of Casablanca: Bogart, Bergman, and World War II,[2] Hyperion (2002),→ISBN, page 87,
Lee Katz, who wroteThe Return of Dr. X and nearly a dozen other B movies at Warner Bros. in the late thirties, feels “particularly guilty” about that movie. “Jack Warner wasp.o.’ed atBogie for something or other,” says Katz, “and he forced him to take this role as the mad doctor. And Bogart did it with as good grace[sic] as he could have done.”
2003, William Rawlings,The Lazard Legacy[3], Harbor House,→ISBN, page143:
“Yeah, Carswell…, he wasp.o.’ed, too. I remember I ended up that weekend with everybody mad at me—Doc Lazard, Carswell, and now it looks like the widow Jennings, too.”