I think he's saying that you are not "doing" anything, you're listening-- in that you are getting the vibe and thinking about it, and when you speak it's only because you have to (because you have a line!--ha ha). you strip away the fidgeting and mumbling and fussing. Harder (for me anyway) than stage.
@Lamp304 сағат бұрын
A divided personality absolutely. Marilyn Monroe was extremely childish, extremely petty, extremely petulant and difficult to work with, and was also extremely jealous of Sir Laurence Olivier.
@martacoresgarcia8 сағат бұрын
He is a living Legend;with few others , very few.He got retired from cinema last year I think.Thanks to your huge contribution to cinema.❤BEST wishes from Spain.Ever.
@pillettadoinswartsh497412 сағат бұрын
6:05 - I love how the bass (tuba?) player works his way through the first verse, not knowing where it's going, and then by the second verse, has it absolutely perfect. That's a real musician. In the movie: kzbin.info/www/bejne/imepkp9mm8Z1pcksi=FPFagl5Znb9qRtzR&t=387
@AhJodie18 сағат бұрын
This is a wonderful interview!
@samroscov501321 сағат бұрын
Marilyn was over rated. Her movies were all the same...half naked dumb blonde. Now she is more famous for banging the Kennedys than for any movie she made
@smadafКүн бұрын
Part of why his singing sounds high in the clip from the '30s is the incompatibility of 24-frame-per-second film and 25-frame-per-second PAL television: the simplest analog solution is to play the film at 25 fps, which increases the speed of action, speech, and music, and the pitch of all sounds, by a bit over 4%-and that is what was done here.
@Johnconno2 күн бұрын
He's the only man I've ever seen who could be that fat without seeming to be that fat. If that makes a blind bit of sense.
@Melissa-h4z5o2 күн бұрын
❤ Willow ❤
@TobyRossFun3 күн бұрын
A Model not an Actress
@RickB17923 күн бұрын
Tom Snyder sucked. Go find the Dick Cavett interviews with Alfred.
@TentacleOne4 күн бұрын
The charisma of Caine really sucks you in. I had no intention to watch the whole master class but here we are.
@nunya52704 күн бұрын
What a fantastic lesson in film acting!!! Wow!!! Thank you so much for uploading and sharing!!! God bless you!!!🙏
@DivestedConfessions5 күн бұрын
I think that was an emotionally intelligent take on her. He showed great compassion and realism and he’s the first person I remember saying that she should’ve just been a model. She was a personality, but she was not a great actress. Anybody who says she was is lying.
@macp60335 күн бұрын
So was Orson Welles? He doesn't look like him.
@susanmarie22315 күн бұрын
Great insight!
@brogsbunny5 күн бұрын
Creep!
@angelopaoletti47685 күн бұрын
I already knew about the haughty attitude of the great actor, moreover "Sir"... but only because of the title, given to him by Queen Elizabeth, like hundreds of other people, because for the rest he remains a despicable misogynist, who even after who has been missing for some time, manages to try to humiliate her, with his caustic English humor? He should thank Milton H. Greene, who founded M.Monroe Productions, with the diva, for giving him the opportunity to step out of the dusty shoes of "busy theater actor" and take on those of a new character, in a bittersweet comedy. I wonder if he had such an opinion of Marilyn, why did he accept? His delays were well known, as was his forgetting of the text. (side effects of sleeping pills to sleep with pills to stay awake?) What sense does it make to define her as a model, who through someone's fault was forced to become an actress? But what do you know, was he a seer as well as a mega theater star? Among Marilyn's films, it is the one I love least, precisely because despite having founded her own production company, she is given yet another role as an airhead... which she plays at her best, because she is the master of the craft, but despite all that all she wanted was to act in dramatic films. In "Your Mouth Burns" she is very good in her role, without sequins, and tight in her dress. The basic problem is that they have always made her insecure. Just look at that pig A. Miller, what role he gives her in "The Misfits"... a hysterical freak... and he was her husband by the way. I'm sorry that she wasn't able to get dramatic roles, I think she would have given a lot. R.I.P.
@44johnson446 күн бұрын
so glad I stumbled upon this. Peter Sellers is my all time favorite. It hurt so bad when we lost him.
@GyorgyGezaMeszaros-l5i6 күн бұрын
I am reminded of something MM wrote on a napkin and eventually gave to Norman Mailer: "Help, help, help. I feel life coming closer, when all I want to do is die." She was sexy, intellegent, and extremely undervalued, and underappreciated. Still is, in my opinion. Her untimely death, be it murder, accidental, or even suicide was, is, will always be --- a tragedy!
@papalaz44442446 күн бұрын
Her mother was schizophrenic, unfortunately,
@susydyson17506 күн бұрын
A gréât interview !
@marcusaurelius91238 күн бұрын
To have such interviews captured for posterity on KZbin is truly marvellous
@Concreteforest1118 күн бұрын
🤍
@harredondo19 күн бұрын
God sees it. That is our hope for eternity. This isn’t the end.
@mariusstrmglendrange24119 күн бұрын
❤
@guidoberetta968010 күн бұрын
Weinstein ......... how he can use the word " fair " ............. he is a rapist and sadistic man!!!!
@guidoberetta968010 күн бұрын
What a wonderfull performace he did !!! Great, great, great !!!
@DanielS1029110 күн бұрын
I love how Michael is trying to tell the guy over and over again to relax, stop 'acting' and presenting information to a group and instead speak casually and more intimately as to a friend, but the guy just keeps doing the same thing, just slightly quieter each time.
@florentg762711 күн бұрын
Thank you
@user-cl3tq3pj7u11 күн бұрын
Messner ultra sportlich,Geschichte n Weltmeister
@packing99911 күн бұрын
Has anyone got any sausages?
@brucelawson64213 күн бұрын
A true gentleman. 😊
@johnrider570113 күн бұрын
Peter Sellers a comedy genius who left us way too soon.
@inkonmyhands13 күн бұрын
I initially thought this was Richard Feynman. They look so alike!
@sallyclay197413 күн бұрын
She never played any other character, then her sex pot self. She didn't have to act. She was created byHollywood, to always be a sex symbol
@justmemimi733813 күн бұрын
Tony Randall wasn’t fond of MM. He wasn’t mean when talking about her, but dismissive: , alluding to her instability and the way in which she kept so many people waiting for hours, and so forth. She would have been a terribly frustrating person to work with. Excellent insight from Laurence Olivier.
@CarmenRizzo-k8q13 күн бұрын
Her life was cut short ,she wanted too be a. Serious actress
@jurgenwimmershoff233814 күн бұрын
Er ist großartig und Isabella eine ganz besonders schöne Frau
@Karen-nn6kg15 күн бұрын
All things said, I happen to love that movie. I think she gave one of her finest performances, in fact. The both of them.
@MapleSyrupPoet15 күн бұрын
I blew my nose 👃 a few minutes ago ...I enjoy blowing my nose ...do you enjoy blowing your nose?
@JohnJenkins-l4p16 күн бұрын
He would have been a great man too know ,not because of his fame,but the emience personal growth gained by learning from his experiences.
@ferleiva708016 күн бұрын
We all know the only reason On The Waterfront won those Oscars was because it was a glorification of informers at the height of the McCarthy era, putting the Unions in place of Communism. Brando cheered on winning his first Oscar, but later on he must have realized the movie was being used to bully things he could have stood for. Hence his future disdain for the award and his choice of rebellious characters, revolutionary people and scrpts with a political agenda like Queimada, which in turn led to him being blacklisted and heavily criticized for a time. An ostracism not unlike that of Orson Welles after daring to make Citizen Kane.
@etoneetone17 күн бұрын
hihi
@kronos538517 күн бұрын
I'm surprised Tom didn't mention the famous reason for Hitch's fear of cops. As I child, Hitch did something wrong and his father took him to the police station and asked them to lock him up, which they did. He wasn't in jail for long ( possibly only minutes) but this is the origin of his fear.
@Catfordprepper66517 күн бұрын
My mate, undiagnosed schizophrenic at the time, put on Hamlet. He saw the bowler haircut, and he was gone. Had to go in the garden. Never seen anyone giggle like that. Olivier was at his hilarious best. Two years later my mate was in Strange ways where he was diagnosed. He thought a bank teller laughed at his hair and jumped him. Hair Hair!
@PlatoCave18 күн бұрын
Master of accents. What a great accomplished actor and a lovely human being.
@simpdown140418 күн бұрын
Reading his book now and watching this video is amazing!
@chuckselvage315718 күн бұрын
Peter Sellers was a very talented comedian and actor RIP. Thanks for sharing.