This was just brilliant ! Thank you for bringing Rupert to the podcast!
@ColinBarnes-h6sАй бұрын
Such a great an entertaining conversation. Rupert is full of insight and clear thinking. This is how I want the world to be.
@abbygilmore1325Ай бұрын
Ahh, a director.
@HayleyAMathiason25 күн бұрын
Thank you. I very much enjoyed this and I am going to purchase Rupert's new book for my Christmas reading. 📚📖
@benw-king338025 күн бұрын
Thankyou. I read this when I was about eighteen. It is a fantastic book, brilliantly written by Mr Niven and full of the kind of charm and wit that has all but disappeared from our daily interactions.
@walkingstick6655Ай бұрын
Both Niven's bios, including Bring on The Empty Horses, are wonderful. He had an insanely full and interesting life.
@maryannrosas843512 күн бұрын
I laughed my heart out reading these books about 20 years ago.
@riverman4987Ай бұрын
Superb, I especially love your filmed outings, of course. Rupert's readings are beyond excellent - please bring him back for a Valley of the Dolls episode.
@abbygilmore1325Ай бұрын
Don’t know how long ago, but his WDYTYA was wonderful. Just caught it on KZbin, which brought me this and another wonderful podcast to dive into. Seems to be a deep end, here.
@jasonbruder9110Ай бұрын
Thank you for sharing this absolutely delightful discussion. Niven is well worth a read and I look forward to seeing which other dusty tomes you resurrect.
@barblc320225 күн бұрын
My first experience of this book is my sister reading it and laughing out loud. I had never seen anyone laugh out loud while reading a book before.
@markwardel6751Ай бұрын
Fabulous stuff!
@stephenfermoyle45785 күн бұрын
and BRING ON THE EMPTY HORSES. DAVID NIVEN'S books are amazing i read them in college
@elizabethcollins6309Ай бұрын
Rupert is fabulous ❤❤❤
@leonie56311 күн бұрын
Rupert has a great radio voice too for perhaps history, biographies or children's stories. Moonrise Kingdom/Grand Budapest Hotel type stories.
@jf8559Ай бұрын
Excellent! Thank you!
@no.7593Ай бұрын
Super discussion. Thank you!
@JosephinejefferiesАй бұрын
Read Moons a Balloon early seventies and have kept it by me since. Niven was the image of my father and vice versa. Pun intended. I enjoyed this podcast. Nice one.
@katiee263Ай бұрын
Thanks for this! I discovered “The Moon’s a Balloon” and “Bring on the Empty Horses” when I was probably a bit too young to be reading them (12… maybe 13… anything in the bi-monthly pile of literary booty mom brought home from the library in our household was encouraged reading if it appealed), and I LOVED them. They arrived in the same pile as Jean Shepherd’s then-newly-published “In God We Trust: All Others Pay Cash” memoir (the book that the “A Christmas Story” film was later culled from). That was a great week of reading for a bored bookish kid who loves a little bawdy/irreverent humor - I laughed through the lot. If Rupert has a penchant for reading biographies (especially Hollywood-related ones), may I suggest Joseph Egan’s book on Mary Astor, “The Purple Diaries”? I randomly stumbled upon the audio version of it, and (despite not necessarily being a particularly avid Astor devotee before that point) walked away from it absolutely fascinated with her. So much so that I immediately sought out the print version of her autobiography, “My Story” (I think reading them in that order worked well), and then a few months later I read her other one, “Life on Film”. Usually after reading a famous-folk bio, at some point I realize that I’m not really interested any longer and that I’ve had entirely TOO much of that unremarkable or annoying person’s life in my head… skimming ensues somewhere around the halfway point to just get through, and am ultimately relieved to escape their twaddle… not so with Astor, much to my surprise. Her writing voice was, for me, satisfying enough that I plan to delve into the fiction novels that she went on to write later in life (which were received very well when released, and purportedly stand on their own independent of her status as a celebrity). Thanks again, and be well!
@iainsmyth2835Ай бұрын
There he was, galumping along behind the conga line to nirvana :D. Rupert with his turn of phrase is cut from the same cloth as Niven.
@ozzy-o8215Ай бұрын
The Bad and The Beautiful is a brilliant film about the Studio System - Kirk Douglas on top form.
@laura7marian5Ай бұрын
Eeeeeeek! They have faces! (Okay, I knew Rupert did.)
@andrewwhite3793Ай бұрын
Spencer Tracy and Dorothy Lamour were one of the 2 best biographies I read. Tracy was riddled by catholic guilt and Lamour was very down to earth.
@abbygilmore1325Ай бұрын
Mom met David Niven in Gstaad. My brother broke his collarbone the first day out, so she took him shopping. He tugged at her sweater directing her attention to an old man trying to ask him something. Niven mistook him for a German. Mom turned to find the man whose book she had just read asking about her son’s welfare and lost her words. He was in Gstaad while they were filming Pink Panther and incredibly kind. We rented a chalet Dad shared with members of his tactical nuke squadron, so on the next visit I met Fran Jefferies in the bathroom. Now, this is weird, because the two celebs were not in The Return of the Pink Panther, just the best one, but I guess anyone who could would escape to the top of this Mad Mad World and party until the whole thing pops. Fran told me she kissed Elvis! The next visit, my girls and I fell into some mud and caught the attention of the grandson of Dietrich! It was end of season, he was lonely and invited us to our favorite place for dinner and drinks. Mom had the chops, but I was obviously not meant for that scene. She passed him a few hundred marks under the table to apologize for all the American ugliness. We teased him mercilessly because we looked at all of them as old, or tied to something that was dying, like the old film industry. Took awhile to appreciate them for what they really were. Wait, was that Jefferies or Tony Basil, Mickey? Getting old, too. Niven was wonderful in Death on the Nile. The best Hastings ever.
@jamesrowe3606Ай бұрын
We know now that "Missy" was Vivien Leigh, although Niven included enough red herrings in writing about the incident to obscure her identity. It was a very sad episode and reflects the impossible demands the Studios imposed on their stars.
@Robutube1Ай бұрын
As you probably know, Vivien Leigh's last years were dogged by her worsening bipolar disorder. Such beauty, such tragedy.
@jamesrowe3606Ай бұрын
@Robutube1 It's a terrible affliction and one that unfortunately I have some experience of within my own family.
@Robutube1Ай бұрын
@@jamesrowe3606 I'm sorry to learn that James, it is indeed a most dreadful condition.
@chrissiesofranec3183Ай бұрын
The eye of the Devil. What a movie.. david Niven ,Sharron Tate. Debra Kerr
@ColinBarnes-h6s8 күн бұрын
I noticed that your copy of The Moon's a Balloon was read in the bath and the pages are swollen with soapy water.
@ericbenjamin290810 күн бұрын
The theme music is off-putting...but lovely discussion.