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John Huston, Peter Bogdanovich and Oja Kodar in Orson Welles’ The Other Side of the Wind
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John Huston, Peter Bogdanovich and Oja Kodar in Orson Welles’ The Other Side of the Wind

Source: chainedandperfumed.com

    • #The Other Side of the Wind
    • #Orson Welles
    • #John Huston
    • #Peter Bogdanovich
    • #Oja Kodar
  • 1 week ago
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A couple years ago I was lucky enough to acquire the Steenbeck that once belonged to Orson Welles and his editor Gary Graver. It had languished in a dark, dusty storage unit deep in the San Fernando Valley. It is fully functional and carries the cinematic history of very special hands working magic upon it. I decided to give it a proper home so other filmmakers could at least see the behemoth of analog editing in person. I asked Jacob Rosenberg at Bandito Brothers if they would be interested in displaying it at their offices in Culver City. He graciously agreed that a historic relic of its stature should at least see the light of day and allowed me to position it in their post production offices. It carries with it an aura of days gone by and everyone that passes by it wants to know its history. Few if any films are cut on Steenbecks anymore…but if the need arises…this legendary six-reel beauty sits at the ready. —Vashi Nedomansky

FILMING OTHELO by Orson Welles

Source: vashivisuals.com

    • #Orson Welles
    • #Gary Graver
    • #editing
    • #film editing
    • #Vashi Nedomansky
  • 1 week ago
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The Complete Citizen Kane (1991, BBC). The most complete investigation in the origins and making of one of the most important films in cinema history. This excellent documentary was created as an Arena Special and includes interviews with Welles from BBC interviews in 1960 and 1982. It also includes an interview with Pauline Kael discussing her controversial “Raising Kane” article. The finest most insightful work ever done to date on Citizen Kane.

With thanks to Citizen Welles
All the essential documentaries on Orson Welles, including Orson Welles: The Paris Interview (1960), Filming ‘The Trial’ (1981), The Battle Over Citizen Kane (1996), Shadowing the Third Man (2004), Orson Welles: The One-Man Band (1995), With Orson Welles: Stories from a Life in Film (1990), Filming ‘Othello’ (1978), F for Fake (1973), Orson Welles with French film school students, Orson Welles “Its All True” Citizen Kane and RKO, and seven-minute video of a very young-looking Welles (he was 23 at the time) addressing an onslaught of press members on October 31, 1938, the day after The War of the Worlds broadcast.
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The Complete Citizen Kane (1991, BBC). The most complete investigation in the origins and making of one of the most important films in cinema history. This excellent documentary was created as an Arena Special and includes interviews with Welles from BBC interviews in 1960 and 1982. It also includes an interview with Pauline Kael discussing her controversial “Raising Kane” article. The finest most insightful work ever done to date on Citizen Kane.

With thanks to Citizen Welles

All the essential documentaries on Orson Welles, including Orson Welles: The Paris Interview (1960), Filming ‘The Trial’ (1981), The Battle Over Citizen Kane (1996), Shadowing the Third Man (2004), Orson Welles: The One-Man Band (1995), With Orson Welles: Stories from a Life in Film (1990), Filming ‘Othello’ (1978), F for Fake (1973), Orson Welles with French film school students, Orson Welles “Its All True” Citizen Kane and RKO, and seven-minute video of a very young-looking Welles (he was 23 at the time) addressing an onslaught of press members on October 31, 1938, the day after The War of the Worlds broadcast.

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    • #The Complete Citizen Kane
    • #Citizen Kane
    • #orson welles
    • #The essential documentaries
  • 1 week ago
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Heart of Coppola: A mix of Orson Welles’ reading of Heart of Darkness, Apocalypse Now and the documentary Hearts of Darkness: A Filmmaker’s Apocalypse

    • #francis ford coppola
    • #apocalypse now
    • #orson welles
  • 1 month ago
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Orson Welles briefly talking about the supposed link between violent entertainment and actual violence. Part of the Talk collection. A collection of BBC programmes where celebrated interviewers try to get behind the public mask of some of the most influential figures of the 20th century.

Source: afflictor.com

    • #Orson Welles
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It’s All True (1993). A documentary about Orson Welles’s unfinished three-part film about South America.


The history behind Orson Welles’ planned third feature, after his debut (which we all know the name of) and during his troubled post-production on Magnificent Ambersons and role in Journey into Fear, is as fascinating and miraculous as the footage still salvaged. Welles was sent down to make a “good-will” doc on a carnival in Rio. When he got there, he was over-whelmed with the “humanity” of the people, and got pieces of footage whenever he was awake during the time of the carnival. He also filmed footage on a sound-stage (one of his few times to work with color) of the people in their celebration. But as he focused a crucial part of his documentary on a story he read on Time, about four impoverished, immensely courageous fishermen wanting to see their government and sailing hundreds of miles over two months on a raft to do so, the plug was pulled on the film. Apparently the studio, which switched hands (hence, the Ambersons situation), didn’t like what Welles’ was showing them, which was a bunch of dailies without the essential musical element. So, Welles, not fazed by the rumors that he was partying the whole time with the Brazilian brethren, did what any creative genius would do — he went from being a wunderkind in Hollywood to a Guerilla filmmaker along the high seas.

It’s All True, the original title of the scrapped-by-the-studios project, is put into two parts, and while it resonates with the kind of movie-doc exposition of Lost in La Mancha in the first part, the second part is simply put, Wellesian. Richard Wilson (once Welles’ assistant), Bill Krohn, and Myron Meisel, gather up interviews with the real locals from the time, or relatives, and put together a sort of video history on the tale of the Jangadeiros, and Welles’s impact on the people (many of whom never saw a movie before). First, there are wonderful, if all-too-brief, clips of an unfinished part of the documentary called “My Friend Bonito”. Then, we get to see an inside look at how the (un-true) rumors of Welles’ debauchery that supposedly ruined the project, ironically, forced Welles’ to cut corners to get his vision done - which becomes more intense after the original leader of the fishermen, Jacare, dies in a drowning accident. There are interesting interviews as well with Welles and his collaborators. Some of this is rather adulatory, but it’s also enthralling as a trip into a time capsule, and into a director’s process (i.e. using an extremely limited budget to finish the film).

And the second part of the film is, aside from the part on the film’s checkered history, is a unique example of history itself. “Four Men on a Raft”, Welles’ silent-film dramatization of the events as detailed in the Time article, is for me one of the greatest silent films never seen. Like in Citizen Kane, he uses some of his trademarks, like inventive low-angles and deep focus, but as well he implements such a heavy documentary style (some have said it’s “Eisenstein-like”, which I can see since it concerns a story of the working people against the fascist-types), it’s no less than one of Welles’ most daring feats as a director. Although this version has no audible dialog (people talk, no voices), and unlike many other silent-films there are no inter-titles explaining what they say. On top of that, there is a musical score provided by Jorge Arrigada that is rousing and pretty appropriate for the tones and sections of the film, but is arguably not what Welles’ might have used. What is extraordinary about this kind of dramatized (and I say dramatized because there is an added love story in the mix, not based on truth) film is that it’s the precursor to neo-realism that barely saw the light of day.

It’s amazing that by himself, Welles’ managed to form together his own sort of storytelling style in what remains of his film, that is very simplistic and completely with non-actors, and makes it work as a remarkable piece of art. The camera just watches things happen, and how it watches is all the more special in how Welles, with his cinematographer George Fanto, uses as much expressionism as naturalism in the compositions. Bottom line, this one part of the film is as courageous as the people who inspired it, and as a piece of film history, It’s All True successfully provides insight and enjoyment. After all, what better way to showcase Orson’s passion for life and film with a Samba! —MisterWhiplash
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It’s All True (1993). A documentary about Orson Welles’s unfinished three-part film about South America.

The history behind Orson Welles’ planned third feature, after his debut (which we all know the name of) and during his troubled post-production on Magnificent Ambersons and role in Journey into Fear, is as fascinating and miraculous as the footage still salvaged. Welles was sent down to make a “good-will” doc on a carnival in Rio. When he got there, he was over-whelmed with the “humanity” of the people, and got pieces of footage whenever he was awake during the time of the carnival. He also filmed footage on a sound-stage (one of his few times to work with color) of the people in their celebration. But as he focused a crucial part of his documentary on a story he read on Time, about four impoverished, immensely courageous fishermen wanting to see their government and sailing hundreds of miles over two months on a raft to do so, the plug was pulled on the film. Apparently the studio, which switched hands (hence, the Ambersons situation), didn’t like what Welles’ was showing them, which was a bunch of dailies without the essential musical element. So, Welles, not fazed by the rumors that he was partying the whole time with the Brazilian brethren, did what any creative genius would do — he went from being a wunderkind in Hollywood to a Guerilla filmmaker along the high seas.

It’s All True, the original title of the scrapped-by-the-studios project, is put into two parts, and while it resonates with the kind of movie-doc exposition of Lost in La Mancha in the first part, the second part is simply put, Wellesian. Richard Wilson (once Welles’ assistant), Bill Krohn, and Myron Meisel, gather up interviews with the real locals from the time, or relatives, and put together a sort of video history on the tale of the Jangadeiros, and Welles’s impact on the people (many of whom never saw a movie before). First, there are wonderful, if all-too-brief, clips of an unfinished part of the documentary called “My Friend Bonito”. Then, we get to see an inside look at how the (un-true) rumors of Welles’ debauchery that supposedly ruined the project, ironically, forced Welles’ to cut corners to get his vision done - which becomes more intense after the original leader of the fishermen, Jacare, dies in a drowning accident. There are interesting interviews as well with Welles and his collaborators. Some of this is rather adulatory, but it’s also enthralling as a trip into a time capsule, and into a director’s process (i.e. using an extremely limited budget to finish the film).

And the second part of the film is, aside from the part on the film’s checkered history, is a unique example of history itself. “Four Men on a Raft”, Welles’ silent-film dramatization of the events as detailed in the Time article, is for me one of the greatest silent films never seen. Like in Citizen Kane, he uses some of his trademarks, like inventive low-angles and deep focus, but as well he implements such a heavy documentary style (some have said it’s “Eisenstein-like”, which I can see since it concerns a story of the working people against the fascist-types), it’s no less than one of Welles’ most daring feats as a director. Although this version has no audible dialog (people talk, no voices), and unlike many other silent-films there are no inter-titles explaining what they say. On top of that, there is a musical score provided by Jorge Arrigada that is rousing and pretty appropriate for the tones and sections of the film, but is arguably not what Welles’ might have used. What is extraordinary about this kind of dramatized (and I say dramatized because there is an added love story in the mix, not based on truth) film is that it’s the precursor to neo-realism that barely saw the light of day.

It’s amazing that by himself, Welles’ managed to form together his own sort of storytelling style in what remains of his film, that is very simplistic and completely with non-actors, and makes it work as a remarkable piece of art. The camera just watches things happen, and how it watches is all the more special in how Welles, with his cinematographer George Fanto, uses as much expressionism as naturalism in the compositions. Bottom line, this one part of the film is as courageous as the people who inspired it, and as a piece of film history, It’s All True successfully provides insight and enjoyment. After all, what better way to showcase Orson’s passion for life and film with a Samba! —MisterWhiplash

    • #It's All True
    • #Orson Welles
    • #The essential documentaries
  • 1 month ago
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Other Side of the Wind — John Huston & Orson Welles.
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Other Side of the Wind — John Huston & Orson Welles.

    • #Other Side of the Wind
    • #John Huston
    • #Orson Welles
  • 1 month ago
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Orson Welles removes his makeup on the set of Citizen Kane.
Notebook:

Cinephilia & Beyond has an amazing find: the complete collection of Orson Welles’ Sketch Book: “a series of six short television commentaries by Orson Welles for the BBC in 1955. Written and directed by Welles, the 15-minute episodes present the filmmaker’s commentaries on a range of subjects. Welles frequently draws from his own experiences and often illustrates the episodes with his own sketches.”

All the essential documentaries on Orson Welles, including Orson Welles: The Paris Interview (1960), Filming ‘The Trial’ (1981), The Battle Over Citizen Kane (1996), Shadowing the Third Man (2004), Orson Welles: The One-Man Band (1995), With Orson Welles: Stories from a Life in Film (1990), Filming ‘Othello’ (1978), F for Fake (1973), Orson Welles with French film school students, Orson Welles “Its All True” Citizen Kane and RKO, and seven-minute video of a very young-looking Welles (he was 23 at the time) addressing an onslaught of press members on October 31, 1938, the day after The War of the Worlds broadcast.
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Orson Welles removes his makeup on the set of Citizen Kane.

Notebook:

Cinephilia & Beyond has an amazing find: the complete collection of Orson Welles’ Sketch Book: “a series of six short television commentaries by Orson Welles for the BBC in 1955. Written and directed by Welles, the 15-minute episodes present the filmmaker’s commentaries on a range of subjects. Welles frequently draws from his own experiences and often illustrates the episodes with his own sketches.”

All the essential documentaries on Orson Welles, including Orson Welles: The Paris Interview (1960), Filming ‘The Trial’ (1981), The Battle Over Citizen Kane (1996), Shadowing the Third Man (2004), Orson Welles: The One-Man Band (1995), With Orson Welles: Stories from a Life in Film (1990), Filming ‘Othello’ (1978), F for Fake (1973), Orson Welles with French film school students, Orson Welles “Its All True” Citizen Kane and RKO, and seven-minute video of a very young-looking Welles (he was 23 at the time) addressing an onslaught of press members on October 31, 1938, the day after The War of the Worlds broadcast.

Source: tsutpen.blogspot.com

    • #Orson Welles
    • #Citizen Kane
    • #Orson Welles shedding Charles Foster Kane (1941)
  • 2 months ago
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The complete collection of episodes from “Orson Welles’ Sketch Book”, including the hard to find final episode.


Orson Welles’ Sketch Book is a series of six short television commentaries by Orson Welles for the BBC in 1955. Written and directed by Welles, the 15-minute episodes present the filmmaker’s commentaries on a range of subjects. Welles frequently draws from his own experiences and often illustrates the episodes with his own sketches.
Episodes:
“The Early Days” — Welles discusses his early days in the theatre. (First broadcast 24 April 1955.)
“Critics” — Welles discusses his love-hate relationship with critics. (First broadcast 8 May 1955.)
“The Police” — Welles relates the story of Isaac Woodard, a decorated black World War II veteran who was blinded in a brutal 1946 beating by South Carolina police. Welles first told the story in July 1946 on his radio show, Orson Welles Commentaries (ABC), and made the case a focus of his weekly broadcasts throughout September 1946. Welles’s comments on his BBC-TV series foreshadow a speech made in Touch of Evil (1958): “I’m willing to admit that the policeman has a difficult job, a very hard job. But it’s the essence of our society that a policeman’s job should be hard. He’s there to protect the free citizen, not to chase criminals — that’s an incidental part of the job.” (First broadcast 22 May 1955.)
“Houdini/John Barrymore/Voodoo Story/The People I Missed” — Several anecdotes from Welles. (First broadcast 5 June 1955.)
“The War of the Worlds” — Welles recounts the story of the famous 1938 Mercury Theatre broadcast that was mistaken by many listeners for a real Martian invasion, and the mass panic caused. (First broadcast 19 June 1955.)
“Bullfighting” — Commentary includes the true story of Bonito the bull, a story written for the screen by Robert Flaherty that Welles filmed in 1942. It was to make up the first third of his unfinished film, It’s All True. (First broadcast 3 July 1955.)

With thanks to Citizen Welles
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The complete collection of episodes from “Orson Welles’ Sketch Book”, including the hard to find final episode.

Orson Welles’ Sketch Book is a series of six short television commentaries by Orson Welles for the BBC in 1955. Written and directed by Welles, the 15-minute episodes present the filmmaker’s commentaries on a range of subjects. Welles frequently draws from his own experiences and often illustrates the episodes with his own sketches.

Episodes:

  • “The Early Days” — Welles discusses his early days in the theatre. (First broadcast 24 April 1955.)
  • “Critics” — Welles discusses his love-hate relationship with critics. (First broadcast 8 May 1955.)
  • “The Police” — Welles relates the story of Isaac Woodard, a decorated black World War II veteran who was blinded in a brutal 1946 beating by South Carolina police. Welles first told the story in July 1946 on his radio show, Orson Welles Commentaries (ABC), and made the case a focus of his weekly broadcasts throughout September 1946. Welles’s comments on his BBC-TV series foreshadow a speech made in Touch of Evil (1958): “I’m willing to admit that the policeman has a difficult job, a very hard job. But it’s the essence of our society that a policeman’s job should be hard. He’s there to protect the free citizen, not to chase criminals — that’s an incidental part of the job.” (First broadcast 22 May 1955.)
  • “Houdini/John Barrymore/Voodoo Story/The People I Missed” — Several anecdotes from Welles. (First broadcast 5 June 1955.)
  • “The War of the Worlds” — Welles recounts the story of the famous 1938 Mercury Theatre broadcast that was mistaken by many listeners for a real Martian invasion, and the mass panic caused. (First broadcast 19 June 1955.)
  • “Bullfighting” — Commentary includes the true story of Bonito the bull, a story written for the screen by Robert Flaherty that Welles filmed in 1942. It was to make up the first third of his unfinished film, It’s All True. (First broadcast 3 July 1955.)

With thanks to Citizen Welles

    • #Orson Welles' Sketch Book
    • #Orson Welles
    • #The essential documentaries
  • 2 months ago
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strangewood:

Orson Welles presents Robert Bresson and Andrei Tarkovsky with Best Director honors at the 1983 Cannes Film Festival.

Source: strangewood

    • #Orson Welles
    • #Robert Bresson
    • #Andrei Tarkovsky
    • #Cannes Film Festival
    • #Pearls of cinematic memorabilia
  • 2 months ago
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Orson Welles as director, collection of (45+) original still photos from Citizen Kane, Magnificent Ambersons, and Macbeth. Several feature Orson Welles directing as well as performing.

Orson Welles interview with Michael Parkinson on the BBC in 1974. You can find some excerpts from a portrait here (“O.W. On His Life & Movie Making”):

With thanks to Ambrose Heron @filmdetail

Watch all the essential documentaries on Orson Welles, including Orson Welles: The Paris Interview (1960), Filming ‘The Trial’ (1981), The Battle Over Citizen Kane (1996), Shadowing the Third Man (2004), Orson Welles: The One-Man Band (1995), With Orson Welles: Stories from a Life in Film (1990), Filming ‘Othello’ (1978), F for Fake (1973), Orson Welles with French film school students, Orson Welles “Its All True” Citizen Kane and RKO, and seven-minute video of a very young-looking Welles (he was 23 at the time) addressing an onslaught of press members on October 31, 1938, the day after The War of the Worlds broadcast.

Source: bid.profilesinhistory.com

    • #Orson Welles
    • #Interviews with Directors
    • #The essential documentaries
  • 3 months ago
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From the early days of silent movies to the end of the ‘Studio System’, this collection of radio interviews from the BBC Archive uncovers the story of Hollywood movie-making’s formative years. Legendary actors and directors reveal in their own words how it felt to be a part of a ‘golden age’ of film production. Combining BBC radio broadcasts and unedited interviews (many available in full for the first time), BBC Archive go behind the scenes of Tinseltown and relive some of the greatest adventures of the silver screen.

  • Frank Capra recalls his remarkable career. He talks candidly about his time at the studios on Gower Street, his relationship with Columbia boss Harry Cohn and the inner workings of the ‘studio system’.
  • Alfred Hitchcock speaks to Anthony Friese-Greene about the use of music in his movies. The director discusses the ‘screaming violins’ that made ‘Psycho’ so memorable, the electronic sound-scapes he commissioned for ‘The Birds’ and Herbert Bath’s score for Hitchcock’s first sound picture, ‘Blackmail’.
  • Charlie Chaplin answers questions about his career. Joining him for this discussion are film producer Michael Balcon, actor John Mills and critics Dilys Powell and Paul Holt. Chaplin refutes the claim that he is a ‘genius’, although the panellists insist that he probably is. He stresses the importance of music in film-making and laments the loss of magic in modern cinema.
  • Boris Karloff pays tribute to the role that changed his life, the monster in James Whale’s 1931 version of ‘Frankenstein’.
  • Orson Welles is quizzed about his forthcoming film, which is based on one of William Shakespeare’s plays. The interviewer, Nancy Wise, can be heard over the telephone.
  • Howard Hawks, the director of ‘Scarface’ (1932) and ‘Gentlemen Prefer Blondes’ (1953), talks about Marilyn Monroe, the role of producers and writers, and his working relationship with Samuel Goldwyn. He also shares his thoughts on the ‘studio system’, current cinema productions and the early days of Hollywood.
  • Henry Fonda shares memories of his friend and one-time agent, Leland Hayward. He reveals the importance of the agent in negotiations and explains Hayward’s connections to many of the major players in the American movie industry, such as James Stewart, Ginger Rogers and Fred Astaire.
  • Billy Wilder conversation covers many topics, including the rise of Hitler, the rate of film production during Hollywood’s peak, the ‘star system’, the advent of corporate-driven television and the state of the US economy. He goes into detail about the ‘tightly run fortresses’ of studio heads Louis B Mayer, Harry Cohn and Samuel Goldwyn and speculates on how the movie moguls would have coped with the lack of censorship visible in modern pictures.
  • Joseph Mankiewicz speaks dismissively about modern movies. He goes on to talk about censorship in the early days of Hollywood, the difficulties he found in working with Darryl F Zanuck on ‘Cleopatra’ (1963) and who really has the last word on a picture’s final cut.
  • William Wyler was the director of classics such as ‘Wuthering Heights’ (1939), ‘Mrs Miniver’ (1942) and ‘Ben-Hur’ (1959). In this unedited recording, he talks about a life in the movie business that started with an invitation from a distant cousin to visit the USA from his home in Alsace and would eventually see him nominated for a record 12 Academy Awards for Best Director. Wyler recalls working as an office boy at Universal’s New York headquarters, the two-reel silent Westerns on which he learnt his craft and his rise through the studios of Universal, Samuel Goldwyn and Louis B Mayer. He also discusses his relationships with both stars and producers over a unique, 45-year period of US movie history.
  • John Huston talks about fighting with Errol Flynn, his preference for ‘stories to do with men’ and what the medium of film means to him. He also touches on his relationships with his father (the actor Walter Huston) and his own children, and recalls his time as a down-and-out living on the streets of London.
  • Charlton Heston looks back on his career, with a specific focus on the 1950s and the end of the ‘studio system’. He mentions some of the directors he worked with during that time, including Cecil B DeMille, who cast him in ‘The Greatest Show on Earth’ (1952), George Stevens, William Wyler and Orson Welles, who worked both in front of and behind the camera in ‘Touch of Evil’ (1958).
  • Miklos Rozsa’s music has been used in countless films and TV programmes, from the spiralling strings of Alfred Hitchcock’s ‘Spellbound’ (1945) to the melodramatic ‘Dum de dum dum’ sting of ‘Dragnet’ (1954). In this interview, he talks about some of the battles he faced in convincing directors of the importance of music, and shares his secrets for creating the perfect score.
  • Joan Fontaine talks about parties, famous Hollywood producers and working with a reluctant Laurence Olivier on ‘Rebecca’ (1940).
  • Jack Lemmon talks about catching the acting bug as a child, the films and directors he admires the most and how Walter Matthau is his favourite leading lady.
  • Kirk Douglas discusses the strong influence of his father and his upbringing on his life and career. He also shares his views on women’s liberation, relates anecdotes about his son Michael and friend Marlene Dietrich, and highlights the significance of ‘Spartacus’ (1960) and ‘One Flew over the Cuckoo’s Nest’ (1975).
  • Tony Curtis talks about his relationship with Marilyn Monroe, his string of affairs and marriages, and the pressures exerted by the ‘studio system’ on the stars. He also discusses his devastating slide into cocaine and alcohol addiction during the 1970s and the success of ‘The Persuaders!’, the TV crime drama series he made with Roger Moore in the UK in 1971.

For more visit: BBC Archive

Source: BBC

    • #Alfred Hitchcock
    • #Frank Capra
    • #Charlie Chaplin
    • #Boris Karloff
    • #Orson Welles
    • #Howard Hawks
    • #Henry Fonda
    • #Billy Wilder
    • #Joseph Mankiewicz
    • #William Wyler
    • #John Huston
    • #Charlton Heston
    • #Miklos Rozsa
    • #Joan Fontaine
    • #Jack Lemmon
    • #Kirk Douglas
    • #Tony Curtis
    • #Interviews with Directors
    • #BBC Archive
  • 4 months ago
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The Dean Martin Celebrity Roast was a series of comedy specials that began in 1974 (as The Dean Martin Show) and ran until 1984, with 54 being aired altogether. Hosted by the perpetually pickled Dean Martin, the format is based on the “roasts” held by the New York Friars Club, where a particular celebrity is insulted and humiliated, all in good fun of course, before getting the chance to turn the tables. This istallment, which aired on February, 19 1976, features Muhammad Ali as the Man of the Hour/object of derision, with a line up of roasters including Orson Welles, Howard Cosell, Billy Crystal, Wilt Chamberlain, Sherman Helmsley and Nipsey Russell.

Muhammad Ali’s birthday. I saw “Rocky II” at his side. He reviewed Apollo Creed’s fighting for me. bit.ly/wmfSIz

— Roger Ebert (@ebertchicago) January 17, 2013

Source: networkawesome.com

    • #Muhammad Ali
    • #The Dean Martin Celebrity Roast
    • #Dean Martin
    • #Orson Welles
  • 4 months ago
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Orson Welles speech at the American Film Institute (1975).
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Orson Welles speech at the American Film Institute (1975).

    • #Orson Welles
  • 4 months ago
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Orson Welles talks about making fun of Ernest Hemingway.

“We had a very strange relationship.”

Here is the longer version of this interview:

With thanks to biblioklept

Source: biblioklept.org

    • #Orson Welles
    • #Ernest Hemingway
    • #Interviews with Directors
  • 4 months ago
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