Dustin Hoffman has himself told the story many times, and it's obvious that he was impressed and amused by the comment "why don't you try acting?"
@1Phepsi4 жыл бұрын
Dustin Hoffman tells the story kzbin.info/www/bejne/iaSad2t4eNeBsJI
@redfive58563 ай бұрын
Olivier then added, "I'm one to talk"
@NB-xq4qt7 жыл бұрын
Olivier said it with tongue firmly in cheek.....he had great respect of actors like Hoffman...and other American actors...
@NB-xq4qt3 жыл бұрын
@@jlim003 BS..he loved Hoffman like a son...learn your history
@MouthBreatherGaming3 ай бұрын
This whole bit here is ridiculous.
@Mark-Smeaton Жыл бұрын
I'll always love Dustin for being honest & unpretentious enough to clarify this: he had indeed been awake two days but not doing anything so noble as trying to "live the part". He'd simply been partying too hard at Studio 54 , probably doing coke (it was the 1970s , after all). Olivier was being almost paternal, not critical .
@NormBa3 ай бұрын
Hoffman? Unpretentious? Olivier was deriding exactly that, Hoffman's pretentiousness.
@ppuh6tfrz6463 ай бұрын
I don't believe Hoffman. I think he's just trying to make out that the exchange with Olivier had nothing to do with acting technique.
@robertandrew57683 ай бұрын
@@NormBaI pity your ignorance about acting.
@chirola99233 ай бұрын
Studio 74 wasn't a nightclub yet
@HoldenNY223 ай бұрын
I never heard him say this. Where is your proof of what you said- Mark-Smeaton?
@barryhopwood61727 жыл бұрын
Hoffman tells the true story of the Olivier incident in his interview at the Actors Theatre. It seems there was a lot of respect between the two of them.
@furdiebant6 жыл бұрын
Barry Hopwood poor cover job on his part
@degsbabe5 жыл бұрын
Hoffman worshipped him. Look at the clip where Olivier received his AFI award. Hoffman was watching him adoringly from behind the curtain.
@That_Random_Bloke6 жыл бұрын
Daniel Day-Lewis is unfair to Olivier here and doesn’t seem to know the whole story. Hoffman later said that after he asked him the famous question, Olivier said the following: “He laughed, because he said, you know, 'I'm one to talk.' And then he was actually the first one that told me about risking his life every night jumping whatever it was 20 feet in the last act of Hamlet. And the truth of it is I didn't just stay up three days and three nights for the scene; it was a good excuse, because these were the days of wine and roses in Studio 54”
@jessica54974 жыл бұрын
ddl was not unfair ... he replied with the information he was given, if anyone was unfair it was the interviewer who made this argument and anecdote
@That_Random_Bloke4 жыл бұрын
Jessica It’s a pretty famous story. And he made similar comments re Olivier on the Parkinson show. But I still think DDL is a great actor
@mick2spic2 жыл бұрын
“Wine and roses in Studio 54” is that slang for quaaludes and cocaine?
@garyspence21283 ай бұрын
Don't be snitching, now. Wine coolers, margaritas, and nose candy. It was the 80's after all...
@That_Random_Bloke3 ай бұрын
@@garyspence2128 Sorry Gal, my bad 😂
@loge102 жыл бұрын
Totally agree about everything he said about Laughton and his approach to acting- and his brilliance at doing this.
@Canadian_bear3 ай бұрын
Olivier once said that Charles Laughton was a genius of an actor. That is one tip of the hat in respect
@Cognaxance3 ай бұрын
Rumor are Charles Laughton was a feces eater. He liked sh!t sandwiches.
@defiverr46973 ай бұрын
Laughton was, yes. But the grandaddy of them all is Brando. The line before and the line after is drawn by Brando.
@garyhambleton23743 ай бұрын
I never witnessed an actor, other than Laughton, who seemed to enjoy acting so much. He reveled in the process and execution. The characters he portrayed just oozed out of his pores and shined through his face. He was completely absorbed and present in the moment. Such a wonderful treat to behold.
@edmoore21 күн бұрын
Ustinov suggests a very unhappy relationship between them on Spartacus.
@nonplayerzealot45 жыл бұрын
Interestingly enough, his role of Szell the Nazi dentist was his last role for which he got an Oscar nod, whatever your like or disdain of the Oscars might be. Both he and Hoffman were fantastic in those roles, no matter what their methods.
@daljeetnagra37162 жыл бұрын
He was nominated for best actor in The Boys from Brazil. Which was made after Marathon Man.
@redward19652 ай бұрын
@@daljeetnagra3716Yes, quite right.
@specknacken65072 жыл бұрын
"My dear boy why don't you just try acting?" Jared Leto: "What?"
@PakRT483 ай бұрын
Joaquin Phoenix: "Huh?"
@MouthBreatherGaming3 ай бұрын
@@PakRT48 Spot on to both!
@kamuelalee3 ай бұрын
Olivier and Hoffman had great respect for one another.
@wegotlumpsofitroundtheback50653 ай бұрын
couldn't agree with him more about Laughton. Hands down my favorite film actor.
@elpulpo8003 ай бұрын
Incredible in Mutiny on the Bounty. Incredible.
3 ай бұрын
It´s rare to see Day-Lewis giving an interview and talking about his craft. He is amazing.
@MouthBreatherGaming3 ай бұрын
He's a vacuous narcissist like most in Hollywood.
@mdarrenu3 ай бұрын
@@MouthBreatherGaming My former high school teacher had a non-speaking role in Lincoln - but he was on the set a lot - and he had nothing good to say about the way Day-Lewis treated everybody. Not to spread gossip - but my teacher is the last person to say something negative about someone and it was that bad.
@MouthBreatherGaming3 ай бұрын
@@mdarrenu My response was crude but I think we give the actors far too much credit, and have always appreciated great writing and directing, and sadly writing is almost non-existent these days. I raved about his performance in 'Lincoln' but I separate the performance from the person and watching this interview I was honestly surprised just how full of himself he seems, start to finish. My gut tells me he had to restrain from taking a shot at Brando in the end. Something about the way it came off.
@balkee426 жыл бұрын
Ive watched quite a few Laughton performances lately and i agree with DDL. U cant take your eyes off the guy. He was a genius
@chriswainwright50704 жыл бұрын
Olivier was the greatest ever
@jessesmith23563 жыл бұрын
Witness for the prosecution, can't look away lol
@ruly81533 жыл бұрын
I don’t know if he was the best actor of that time Alec Guinness was pretty great
@ohen Жыл бұрын
Definitely see the only film Laughton has directed called The Night of the Hunter, if you have not already done so.
@balkee42 Жыл бұрын
@@ohen i have. Brilliant
@laurelaltman61383 ай бұрын
William Goldman who wrote the film remembered Olivier suffering from cancer and Hoffman demanding take after take in a terribly cold and damp location. So much for his method.
@viz87462 ай бұрын
Every time I think of that movie, I remember I'm running short on Sensodyne.
@leonardodalongisland2 ай бұрын
I was in a film (The Hanoi Hilton) working a scene with David Soul and Paul Le Matt and the scene took place after we (prisoners) were running-so we were supposed to be out of breath. The guy I was teamed up with and I decided to do fast push ups and jumping jacks-to get out of breath...Soul and La Matt walked over, asked what we were doing-we told them and (I forget which one) said, (those exact same words) "Why don't you try 'acting."
@markduffy37173 ай бұрын
Olivier of course had his own 'method'. Archie Rice and Szell are jaw-dropping performances.
@acriticwithoutacause89833 жыл бұрын
people seem so mad at Daniel here. He responded to the story as presented to him & it wasn't mentioned that Oliver was joking or not. In another interview he said things better. It doesn't matter who is doing what. If it works for Oliver, great. If method works for Daniel & Dustin so be it.
@MouthBreatherGaming3 ай бұрын
Stop worshipping these tarts and you'll see them for what they are.
@324cmac3 ай бұрын
Was Olivier really a joking kind of guy?
@324cmac3 ай бұрын
I think we all know the method works for Daniel. To me, Daniel and Christian Bale are two of the greatest actors of all time.
@wreckim3 ай бұрын
I'm not mad, but I am surprised. DL made a very strong judgment about an actor widely considered the greatest to ever do his craft; maybe on film it might be DL or Brando etc.. But that comment would have been better answered as a proposed question to Olivier posthumously..."If he were here right now, I'd ask him if maybe ....." etc.. IMO, DL was disrespectful, and I am actually quite surprised.
@trajan757 жыл бұрын
Lewis and the interviewer both got the story wrong. Listen to the real story in Dustin Hoffman's real story. Never accept a hearsay version of anyone's statement.
@gardensofthegods6 жыл бұрын
John Barone Can you tell us where the real story is... I'm not going to ask you to send a link because on another Channel today the owner of that channel said that he had to personally go in and unblock someone because when people send links they automatically are coming up as spam
@sukhdeepbutty23995 жыл бұрын
@@gardensofthegods inside the actors studio and also his masterclass.
@gardensofthegods5 жыл бұрын
@@sukhdeepbutty2399 thank you so much... I did finally get to see that.
@TheBigMclargehuge4 жыл бұрын
Hoffman's story is just as well false.
@trajan754 жыл бұрын
@@TheBigMclargehuge Could be.
@JonniePolyester Жыл бұрын
At first glance I did think that was David Byrne 😂… The story about Hoffman staying up for 48 hrs was that he was actually partying at Studio 54 - unfortunately Studio didn’t open until April 1977 and MM wrapped in 1976 but to be fair Hoffman could’ve easily been thinking of another of the many NYC nightclubs of that era.
@jessica54974 жыл бұрын
I think the comment section who is missing the point, Daniel responded from the information he was given, in addition to responding in a way that made sense of what happened earlier and after that excerpt in the interview, which was about whether he "He exaggerated in his method"
@mappingoutthesky4 жыл бұрын
He says Olivier didn't get the point... But he doesn't explain the point.
@UncleFishbits6 ай бұрын
This bothers me quite a bit. LOL
@williamwilson64993 ай бұрын
Yes, he did. Go back and listen.
@dcollins8503 ай бұрын
The point is that he didn’t understand the method of totally involving oneself in the character.
@johnmc38623 ай бұрын
Doesn’t have to.
@georgerebic12403 ай бұрын
He also said Laughton was remarkable but could remark on him
@syedsaadjameel46 жыл бұрын
DDL: "Brando, the God of all of them....R.I.P."
@nicholasvalentino43782 жыл бұрын
I remember this quote verbatum from my theatre 101 class about 20 years ago. Always stuck with me and I've been a bit prejudice against method acting ever since
@jaceconverse63372 күн бұрын
The director of the movie said that Olivier never said that directly to Hoffman. He said that Olivier was not well and they had to reshoot the is it safe scene because of the condition of Hoffman's eyes after he was awake for a couple days. Olivier said to Schlesinger, "Why doesn't he just act". That is the director's version. There is a clip from an interview with Charley Rose on you tube if you want to check it out. i
@bardoface3 ай бұрын
Actors like Olivier know how to most of their acting with their voice. It’s efficient and effective.
@CarSVernon3 күн бұрын
and so missed.
@lewistaylor19653 ай бұрын
Hoffman and Olivier were undoubtably good friends throughout 'Marathon Man' you can see clearly in the documentary....The famous 'Why don't you just try acting' quote I believe was more banter between the two that was a usual part of their relationship than serious...Olivier often had a twinkle in his eye in the documentary
@Autostade672 ай бұрын
i wish more people understood that Day-Lewis' enigmatic 'retirement' was an act of grace from possibly the last truly graceful actor (by this I mean an actor with global fame): art is an action not an activity and when one senses that one no longer has - or for the time being is eluded by - an inherent sense of action, then one must stop. We delude ourselves that forms of artistry are infinite - in scope and in length. Whether or not Day Lewis will return is irrelevant: he has already completed the final journey.
@FogatasNorteñas8 жыл бұрын
he just stands up for method actors...
@izzonj7 ай бұрын
I've probably seen every one of DDL's films but if I passed him on the street I probably wouldn't recognize him. He begins his characters and his own self becomes invisible
@maxmax-eq5hp3 ай бұрын
Olivier was probably the greatest stage actor of his generation…but film acting is quite a lot different…🤗
@danbaron90943 ай бұрын
I think the story about Olivier and Hoffman is wrong. The story I heard was that Hoffman was trying to get into character and kept running around the block to look sweaty, look tired from running, etc... You kept telling the director that he needed to do another lap around the block, and this happened multiple times. In the meantime, Olivier was waiting for Hoffman to do the scene. Olivier got tired of hearing Hoffman say that he needed to run just one more lap because he didn't feel in character yet, to which Olivier famously said: "My boy, have you ever tried acting?"
@TheVaughan57 жыл бұрын
I agree with Day-Lewis about Charles Laughton. Olivier was of course great in many roles but could also be a bit hammy at times. Laughton was the supreme professional, unlike today's "stars" who rely more on looks than talent, what Laughton lacked in looks he more than made up with a talent which for sure has been equaled but probably never surpassed.
@BillyButcher90 Жыл бұрын
Marilyn Monroe called Laughton the "sexiest man [she] had ever seen".
@xplaybwoix3 ай бұрын
1.29- This is fascinating . Out of all those actors , DDL picks out Charles Laughton who was not a method actor . He’s clearly Ddl’s biggest inspiration and he could be talking about himself in a way . And talks about him in a interesting way ‘ He didn’t make a besutiful sound , he certainly didn’t make a beautful picture ‘ I’m not sure I understood . His speaking voice was on par with anyone. Laughton was the blueprint . Doing so much understated work in the 30’s/40’s way before Brando etc
@MerkinMuffly7 жыл бұрын
Olivier was the best pure actor ever, none of that method acting crap and don't get me started about how he could act circles around any of the actors then and now on the stage. Don't get me wrong, Daniel Day-Lewis is 2nd best actor ever, but I don't don't consider that acting, when you become the role.
@peterh13537 жыл бұрын
Remember Olivier did Shakespeare twice a day on stage on matinee days. Some of his plays were three hours long. Othello twice in one day! Day-Lewis couldn't stand the pace of small parts on the stage. He was a lightweight. All we can say - at best - was that he was the best of the current lightweights.
@renjay37437 жыл бұрын
You missed the point of difference he was making. He mentioned the difference between film acting and stage acting and yes he called Brando god. But for why and what? Because he was the best there ever has been at doing both.
@warrenbfeagins7 жыл бұрын
LMFAO!!!!!!!! OK, gotcha.
@lucaspatrickjones877 жыл бұрын
maybe he was fine and important for the time; but the idea that acting excellence stops at him is absolutely laughable
@shadowxlink1235 жыл бұрын
MerkinMuffly Olivier was great but he was much more theatrical. While guys like Brando and Clift brought a greater sense of realism which was due to the method approach
@jerrycaddie8383 ай бұрын
For any Actors Dustin Hoffman himself on the JAMES LIPTON interview, said that this story is false. He was "Up for 3 days" preparing for the role wink wink. What he meant was he was partying at Studio 54 and the Times article took liberties to pretend like he meant "Method Acting". Method acting is a myth. Do the work and enjoy the art
@guyburgwin56753 ай бұрын
Nice to hear an appreciation of Laughton. I thought he was lost and forgotten.
@garyspence21283 ай бұрын
Witness for the Prosecution and Hunchback of Notre Dame...just an amazing actor.
@danbaron90943 ай бұрын
Laughton stole the movie Spartacus. "You've come to teach!"
@2msvalkyrie5292 ай бұрын
Olivier as Crassus...?
@spamskanal7 жыл бұрын
Don't you think he was joking? At least a bit? He must have know something about 'becoming the character' himself, but was a little more professional about terminating it as well. Daniel Day Lewis sounds as if reinventing the wheel.
@Halbared3 ай бұрын
I've seen a video where Hoffman says the story is untrue.
@garyspence21283 ай бұрын
Confirmed the incident, but put a different spin on it. Don't add to any confusion, sir.
@Halbared3 ай бұрын
@@garyspence2128 Told it how it was; which contradicts the confusion caused by how it's usually portrayed by those who didn't get it from the horse's mouth, like this feller.
@PaulJones-i7k4 күн бұрын
The story is not true. Olivier said it to John Schlesinger the director tells it differently. He said " I didn't really get the look of shock from Dustin in the close up for the shots when Olivier says"is it safe" he apologised to Olivier and said he'd have to reshoot the scenes close ups and Olivier said to John Schlesinger " Oh , why doesn't he just act". It was changed by Joan Plowright
@hackbritton32333 ай бұрын
It's a craft and talent that many take to seriously.
@banquo606152 ай бұрын
This is one of those sentences where it very much matters whether you meant to write “to” or “too.”
@Artiej0hn02 ай бұрын
If one is going to speak of Brando and of Olivier, then it should be known that Olivier was a great admirer of Brando and vice versa. Find the Dick Cavett interview of Laurence Olivier where he speaks glowingly of Marlon Brando. Read accounts of Brando's preparation for the role of Marc Antony and how he consulted Olivier and listened to his Shakespeare recordings.
@tiffsaver3 ай бұрын
I'm so glad that Daniel gave such high praise to Charles Laughton. From The Hunchback of Notre Dame, to Witness for the Prosecution, to Spartacus, there was none better.
@wreckim3 ай бұрын
He was brilliant as Cap. Bligh too.
@tiffsaver3 ай бұрын
@@wreckim He's great in EVERYTHING.
@jeff3168 жыл бұрын
I like Daniel Day-Lewis, but he conveys here as being a bit arrogant and unable to accept someone else's opinion and/or criticism, and Laurence Olivier was one of the greats in acting. Lighten up, Daniel.
@TheTrueObelus7 жыл бұрын
I've only seen Olivier in a few films (Spartacus, Boys from Brazil, Clash of the Titans) but I always thought he was excellent. I'm sure there are lots of method actors that stink and lots who aren't method that also stink. I have the sneaky suspicion that there a few different paths to being a good actor but to be a star requires something innate.
@petermcgill15597 жыл бұрын
disagree
@ranaawais42417 жыл бұрын
Nice video. You may also want to checkout the review of marathon man on my blog at *bryanreviews. com/marathon-man-review/* Thanks, Ingamar.
@MerkinMuffly7 жыл бұрын
Olivier was only a fair film actor, are you kidding me? 10 Oscar nominations says that was just an ignorant statement. Olivier, pound for pound the best actor ever.
@praxisaesthetics4347 жыл бұрын
Olivier's film acting did not do him justice, he was not well suited to the medium. What do you think "Method Acting" is?
@keithwald53493 ай бұрын
Trying to rank actors can be fun but never really conclusive. In any case, I think that one may argue about other actors possibly being as good as Daniel Day-Lewis, but I don't think there is any actor better.
@wesb81592 жыл бұрын
Olivier was on the record saying that he thought Marlon Brando was an incredible talent, a star if there was ever one(Dick Cabot show)
@edmundmcgrath2133 ай бұрын
Cabbage
@christopherchadwick26593 ай бұрын
Daniel Day Lewis just spoke for five minutes without making a point.
@Xelanderthomas3 ай бұрын
the interviewer thought was going to be in Oliver's camp - i think was surprised when Lewis was kind of critical of Sir Larry
@TheJazz615 жыл бұрын
Truth is always in the middle,if you don't bath don't sleep,don't eat for four days,it is easier to "act" that part! But if i am watching a movie and i feel emotions ,i do not think if it is a method acting or else.....
@aq8033 ай бұрын
Oliver tried something similar in Quo Vadis with Laughton. Laughton told the director he couldn't really get a hold on the character of Nero. Oliver said" Why don't I read the dialogue for you dear boy and you'll understand it better" He proceeded to read the script and when he finished he turned to Laughton and said" Now dear boy do you understand?" Laughton looked at him and said "I understand less now"
@inisipisTV3 ай бұрын
Olivier and Laughton are not in Quo Vadis. Peter Ustinov played Nero in that film. I think you confused it with Spartacus, where Olivier and Laughton plays General Crassus and Senator Gracchus respectively. Also, Laughton is nearly a decade older than Olivier, so I doubt he'd call Laughton "dear boy" , specially since, Lawrence greatly respect Charles Laughton.
@aq8033 ай бұрын
@@inisipisTV you are correct it was Spartacus, Oliver did refer to a lot of people by calling them "Dear boy" many actors have remarked on this. Laughton could take offence easily and he believed Oliver was being patronising towards him . Oliver was extremely ambitious and did have a tendency to be almost dictatorial. He never really got along with Sir John Gielgud as he saw him as a competition. Gielgud had a wonderful speaking voice and Oliver was always slightly jealous of him. Gielgud was aware of this and mentioned it in an interview to his amusement.
@Artiej0hn02 ай бұрын
Dictatorial ? Not according to Alan Bates. Bates had only positive comments about being directed by him.
@spanishpeaches29303 ай бұрын
Olivier also said the Jean Alexander was the best actress in the UK. If you kmow, you know.
@Artiej0hn02 ай бұрын
When you make a film about Abraham Lincoln, play the title role, and the thing that people most seem to talk about is what you did while the cameras weren't rolling, what does that say?
@michaelmcdonagh26465 жыл бұрын
It was great seeing Daniel Day Lewis walk the streets of Richmond, Virginia in 2012, during the shooting of the movie “Lincoln .” I especially loved seeing him dressed as Lincoln, “acting” like Lincoln but picking up a prescription for Daniel as Lincoln, all at the CVS on Broad Street. My only question is: is that legal? I’m an actor, also. If you go to dinner as your character and have other cast members call you be your character’s name, you are a pretentious little girl. Method acting, bull. He mentioned Brando as a “god”. Brando was a nut job that couldn’t or wouldn’t learn his lines. They had to write all his dialogue down on cue cards for him to do his scenes. Here’s his “method” - LAZINESS.
@tonyt.r.53135 жыл бұрын
THANK YOU! Honestly, thank you.
@ruly81533 жыл бұрын
He only did that later in his career
@mick2spic2 жыл бұрын
Brando did not especially like acting, especially his later years where he didn’t want to learn his lines. But if you can’t recognize his skills as an actor then you are bit blind. His laziness in not wanting to learn lines doesn’t somehow erase his all time movie acting roles or anything. They’re still here, but who knows maybe your acting roles dwarf his.. ;)
@garyspence21283 ай бұрын
@Michaelmcdonagh Who the hell are you? And who do you think you are to question the greatest American actor? On stage or screen. Don't want to waste any more time on a drunken troll, but just list your acting credits if you dare to respond. Otherwise, take a hike!
@ppuh6tfrz6463 ай бұрын
@@garyspence2128 Give over, you sad, sorry, pompous sack of 💩
@gideonpepys3 ай бұрын
Film lasts forever. You can’t ‘live’ a character for a months-long theatre run, you go crazy. But for a movie? Why not?
@oneblueorange3 ай бұрын
He's right about Laughton
@WILLIAM1690WALES2 ай бұрын
Michael Caine, while working with Olivier told a story between takes, Michael was in his trailer watching Wimbledon Olivier knocked on the door and said how can you do that Michael between takes I have to remain in the character Michael then said I know my lines I’m just relaxing and Olivier found this very difficult to accept but from then on joined him in his trailer, relaxing and watching the tennis?
@MahmoudIsmail1988.4 жыл бұрын
Olivier created way more truthful profound mesmerizing timeless moments in his acting and more organic vital stunning moving characters than all these self-indulgent self-important fragile pretentious actors combined..
@dsbnh4 жыл бұрын
No, he didn't.
@MahmoudIsmail1988.4 жыл бұрын
@@dsbnh and you are clueless
@dsbnh4 жыл бұрын
@@MahmoudIsmail1988. Shut up you philistine.
@MahmoudIsmail1988.4 жыл бұрын
@@dsbnh Thank you Canaanite!!
@dsbnh4 жыл бұрын
@@MahmoudIsmail1988. Simpleton.
@usedscar2 ай бұрын
Dustin Hoffman isn't a "New York ethnic actor" he was born and raised in LA!
@HobokenSquatCobbler3 ай бұрын
Ultimately who cares what technique a particular actor uses to bring out their best performance? Method acting can be extreme, but this is *art* not an efficiency contest. If the director, fellow actors and crew are willing to accept the challenges introduced by a colleague using "The Method" then they've made their choice.
@ironmanjakarta86013 жыл бұрын
Who's the interviewer, looks familiar.
@staxmantim3 ай бұрын
The interviewer’s point about the difference between American vs. British actors may have been true decades ago, but has ever watched Gary Oldman or Christian Bale?
@Chris-o9n7p3 ай бұрын
didn't happen like that. Real story - Hoffman didn't sleep for three days and that meant during the close ups he had no 'life' in his eyes... do they had to reshoot it... watching the rushes with the Director was John Schliesenger, and he commented to him in a throw away fashion, "Why doesn't he try acting." Olivier respected and like Dustin and vice versa.
@Tom-V4 жыл бұрын
No way is this man trying to say what Laurence Olivier understands...
@dsbnh4 жыл бұрын
DDL is a better film actor than Olivier.
@JM-fs3cg4 жыл бұрын
dsbnh Undoubtedly. But overall Olivier was much better as an actor than Daniel .
@dsbnh4 жыл бұрын
@@JM-fs3cg No.
@JM-fs3cg4 жыл бұрын
dsbnh By far. Olivier was the greatest theatrical actor ever, and he was also amazing in the cinema without even big try.
@dsbnh4 жыл бұрын
@@JM-fs3cg Olivier was an awful cinematic actor and the theatre left him behind by the 1970s. His performances have aged horribly.
@Baz-Ten3 ай бұрын
Let's not forget that it's the *interviewer* who's telling the story here. A wind up if ever there was one.
@rigsby14543 ай бұрын
Hoffman loved Olivier and has always told this story in a jokey way.
@furdiebant7 жыл бұрын
Loughton was known as an incredibly insecure and sensitive man.
@praxisaesthetics4347 жыл бұрын
perhaps the source of his talent?
@loge102 жыл бұрын
Extremely - and I think it did fuel his art.
@spockboy3 ай бұрын
Being British, Day-Lewis (one of the finest actors alive today) should understand that the comment was likely a joke, completely in line with renown dry British humour.
@redlaw87603 ай бұрын
Daniel Day Lewis is arguably the greatest actor in the history of films.
@xanthromera3 ай бұрын
I agree. Every time someone talks about De Niro being the greatest of all time, I think of Daniel Day-Lewis.
@tonypassaretti2 ай бұрын
@@xanthromera Two greats but De Niro has more great movies.
@movid3 ай бұрын
Hoffman and director Schlesinger have both said this is an exaggeration story by the newspapers 😊 maybe Hoffman was covering 😂 himself. According to Schlesinger (interview on YT), he had to reshoot some close-ups of Dustin in the dental scene I believe, because he had his eyes closed or something similar. As we know, Olivier was struggling at the time with his disease, that's when he allegedly said the famous sentence
@Francis-m2d3 ай бұрын
Olivier was not being judgmental...after asking Dustin why he didn't just try acting, he added that he too at one time, had run himself into the ground for a scene...
@324cmac3 ай бұрын
And who was Olivier to tell another actor how they should do the work? Whatever gets each individual actor where they need to go to play their role should be respected as long as they consider the other actors as well.
@mobiz7113 ай бұрын
Daniel Day is the GOAT in my opinion, completely subjective debate, but I will NEVER understand the respect Brando gets, he would chomp scenes, and never brought a naturism to his work that other great method actors do. That emperor is naked!
@sorscha13083 ай бұрын
It's actually only partly true and taken completely out of context. Hoffman himself says that and that it was a joke and taken as a joke by him. He and Olivier had a very good, respectful working relationship, according to him - and he was there, so i'll take his version.
@fungiblenonsense2 ай бұрын
The story is mistold. Get it from the director, John Schlesinger. kzbin.info/www/bejne/n6XdZp53p6xoaZo It's not simply about method acting. Dustin exhausted himself to the point he could not emote. There was nothing left to bring out the character; nothing in his eyes. They had to reshoot. This is different from method actors being difficult to work with-that's seems not to be rare. There are many odd situations where "Just try acting" might improve the experience though one might question if the method improves the product. Jodi Foster didn't speak to Anthony Hopkins outside of the takes. Meryl Streep felt obligated to distance herself from the cast of The Devil Wears Prada. That had a negative impact on her experience. Could Andy be intimidated by Miranda without Anne being intimidated by Meryl? Meryl says she feels she missed out on the fun.
@jamesbracht48813 ай бұрын
His name is Laurence Olivier, not Laurence Oliver
@massgeneral98733 ай бұрын
love those "new york ethnic actors"
@bb11111163 ай бұрын
Several comments in this thread make various attempts to downplay the core of what Daniel Day-Lewis is getting at with his defense of the method. Regarding the Oliver/Hoffman story, it does not matter that they were friendly, or that they thought their conversation was a joke. DDL gets to the heart of the matter about the divide between the method and the older acting establishment. Several others in the old guard from the UK or Hollywood have either directly criticized the method or have described acting in very simple terms implying that the method is not necessary. In the end, with the expansion of film acting, the method has become dominant in the US and in much of Europe. The reason for that is the point that DDL was trying to make.
@CraigHocker3 ай бұрын
Day-Lewis should have known that Olivier was kidding Hoffman AND he was fully aware of the things he did in the name of acting on stage that were of the same kind. It says more about Day-Lewis that his response takes the story at face value. Charles Laughton was okay but not in Olivier's class.
@theonlyantony4 жыл бұрын
It was an Olivier joke. Relax
@mikeellis60773 ай бұрын
DDL a man so comfortable in his own skin and dead right about Laughton
@WalterLiddy4 жыл бұрын
The story is inaccurate, but it illuminates a certain type of debate.
@paulaharrisbaca48513 ай бұрын
If you've ever seen the clips from the never finished "I, Claudius" with Charles Laughton, he was very much an early Method actor. He irritated his directors. Many actors felt acting was more of a trade or an entertainment, and not something as important as an art. Directors and actors like Olivier want to be efficient, not waste time, and have respect for the other actors and actresses instead of making them wait around. It was a craft, not an art. Laughton, in the one movie he directed, "Night of the Hunter" was absolutely cherished by the actors in the film. He was patient and kindly, and kept the budget down, as I recall. Actors who can just remember their lines and jump into the part are craftsman. kzbin.info/www/bejne/q4HJZZ6Yj6uHZ5Isi=nXOviBhSPKu4FRkP&t=1487 This is the thing about Laughton that bothered his fellow performers, like Merle Oberon....
@graniteman623 ай бұрын
The golden age actors hated method acting, they came from learn ur lines, show up and perform. I'm sure they were exhausted by my method actors who didn't turn off, great actor Brian Cox said it's not difficult, no ur craft, be prepared, simple.
@ppuh6tfrz6463 ай бұрын
I think Day-Lewis is the one who's missing the point here. It was a lighthearted quip from Olivier telling Hoffman that there's a much easier alternative.
@garyspence21283 ай бұрын
Don't challenge another master of the craft, whoever you are. And I've seen Marathon Man. Hoffman and Olivier are both excellent, no matter what path they took to get there. Daniel has also proven his mastery. Nuff said...
@ppuh6tfrz6463 ай бұрын
@@garyspence2128 Don't lecture me when you haven't read my comment properly, whoever you are... 'Hoffman and Olivier are both excellent, no matter what path they took to get there.' *EXACTLY!!!* And Olivier was lightheartedly pointing out that there is a much easier path. *DO YOU GET IT NOW???* (FFS...)
@inisipisTV3 ай бұрын
@@garyspence2128I don't question DD skill and his abilities, which are phenomenal. I question his understanding of the context of the story, which in an Hoffman's interview was friendly jest by two friends, after Dustin has been actually partying for 48 hours straight, not really doing the "method" thing. Sir Lawrence is very much aware of the Stanislavski, a method of acting really made for theatre, specially Sir Lawrence is one of the first to truly bring Shakespeare's work onto the big screen. I think Daniel-Day was being too defensive on the Method way of acting, that it's bordering on insecurity, when he shouldn't be, considering his great ability. Perhaps, he's more into giving the audience, who we can assume are ignorant on the teachings, a more basic understanding of the technique so they can understand better, and not as a direct opinion on the story.
@stevegordon84743 ай бұрын
Brilliant analysis of method acting by naming Charles Laughton as an early forerunner. The difference between Olivier and Hoffman in terms of acting styles is craft vs reality. Method tries to make the process of acting as real as possible not just a well-crafted guise.
@BansheeMilk3 ай бұрын
When was this?
@ericblair60463 ай бұрын
Daniel Day Lewis remains the greatest actor of his generation. I would LOVE to hear he and Olivier chatting about acting. I suspect they would disagree wildly, and have enormous respect for each other (and would laugh at non-actors who “take sides” on the issue).
@jimreadey48373 ай бұрын
Who the hell is Laurence *_Oliver?_*
@TheOsfania3 ай бұрын
Acting is work?
@chfr9272 ай бұрын
How many films have you acted in or film sets have you worked on? It’s physically and emotionally demanding with brutal hours. So yeah.
@HoldenNY222 жыл бұрын
Daniel Day Lewis didnt laughat the Dustin Hoffman comment like the INterviwer and many in the Audience. That is because DDL would have done the same exact thing that Dustin Hoffman did
@merlinsrobe46216 жыл бұрын
Daniel Day Lewis isn’t an actor, he’s an “over-actor”. He can do larger than life, but he has trouble with true to life.
@youngbuck93145 жыл бұрын
Merlins Robe you should check out my beautiful laundrette
@xensonar96524 жыл бұрын
Nonsense.
@shinchan___43 жыл бұрын
Really u think he's an overactor 😂 wtf have you watched Lincoln?
@merlinsrobe46213 жыл бұрын
@@shinchan___4 you’re seriously holding up his performance in Lincoln as an example of true to life acting? I don’t know what to say.
@shinchan___43 жыл бұрын
@@merlinsrobe4621 watch any other too my left foot and there will be blood and phantom thread And gangs of New York . He's not an overactor at all. And many method actors(if you mean method can't be true to life) are great like Gary Oldman who's very real and naturalistic , Marlon Brando ofc , robert De niro Al Pacino many more . You might be saying that ddls performances are overdone but no mate like in there will be blood the whole time is realistic except that bowling scene but that's the point the man was supposed to go crazy you know what I mean.
@frankserum48947 жыл бұрын
with brando not lewis
@drbenway6126 жыл бұрын
Christian Bale’s performance in The Fighter is the best I have ever seen.
@ruly81533 жыл бұрын
Lol
@Talisman092 жыл бұрын
@@ruly8153 What's the best performance you've ever seen?
@Hugh_Morris Жыл бұрын
@@ruly8153 answer him you rascal
@JDogTBD4 ай бұрын
Don't you dare disrespect me!@@Hugh_Morris
@tallsmile283 жыл бұрын
DDL is just sticking up for his method acting approach. There are many ways to skin a cat.
@ppuh6tfrz6463 ай бұрын
Exactly.
@redram51505 жыл бұрын
Came here for an anecdote and instead I am treated to pompous, dreary, egotistical personal theories about “the process”. Day-Lewis is a serviceable actor. However, I am bored hearing so many gush over someone worshipped for the hammiest over acting
@melvert333 ай бұрын
Charles Laughton directed his only film Night of the Hunter and it was so panned at the time he never directed again, it's now considered a classic film. Shame.
@ixopo67154 жыл бұрын
If only Lord Olivier was still alive and then he could have benefited from the advice of Mr Day-Lewis.