-
Richard Burton On His Humble Welsh Upbringing | The Dick Cavett Show
Richard Burton discusses his poor upbringing in Wales, and his family connection to the coal mines.
Date aired - 8/4/1980 - Richard Burton
#RichardBurton #DickCavett
For clip licensing opportunities please visit https://www.globalimageworks.com/the-dick-cavett-show
Dick Cavett has been nominated for eleven Emmy awards (the most recent in 2012 for the HBO special, Mel Brooks and Dick Cavett Together Again), and won three. Spanning five decades, Dick Cavett’s television career has defined excellence in the interview format. He started at ABC in 1968, and also enjoyed success on PBS, USA, and CNBC.
His most recent television successes were the September 2014 PBS special, Dick Cavett’s Watergate, followed April 2015 by Dick Cavett’s Vietnam. He has appeared in movies, tv specials, tv c...
published: 27 Apr 2020
-
The Richard Burton Interview on Parkinson (COMPLETE)
Michael Parkinson looks back at his unique interview with talented and troubled film star Richard Burton. Back in 1974, Burton was battling against alcoholism and had spent six weeks in hospital for treatment prior to the interview. Parkinson persuaded him to talk candidly about his career, love life and drink problems.
published: 21 Jan 2013
-
Hollywoods' Iconic Couples Documentary: Elizabeth Taylor & Richard Burton
The most talked about couple of the 1960's: Elizabeth Taylor & Richard Burton, made dozens of films together, and even walked down the aisle, and, out the divorce court twice! This is the tale of this legendary couple.
Director & Writer : Bertrand Tessier
Follow us on social media :
https://www.facebook.com/CultCinemaClassics
https://www.instagram.com/cultcinemaclassics
https://www.twitch.tv/cultcinemaclassics
published: 22 Jul 2021
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Richard Burton on The Dick Cavett Show July 1980 (FULL) PLUS Cavett's reminiscence of the interview.
**BE SURE TO CHECK OUT "Richard Burton, when will they make a film about the legendary actor? at http://www.facebook.com/pages/Richard-Burton-when-will-they-make-a-film-about...
He was sitting in front of his dressing room mirror after a tiring performance of "Camelot," removing his make-up for the who knows how many thousandth time. Paler, with the greasepaint cleansed from the famous face, he managed to look, simultaneously, handsome, vibrant and worn.
"Richard has been entertaining the idea of doing your show, Mr. Cavett," a man who appeared to be both valet and companion said.
"And letting the idea entertain him," the Welshman intoned in that unmistakable voice.
In fact, Richard Burton was still pondering whether to do my show, and it was thought that my visiting him backstage inf...
published: 11 Jul 2012
-
Hamlet "To be or not to be" - Richard Burton (1964)
Richard Burton's "Hamlet", directed by John Gielgud, produced by Alexander H. Cohen. Filmed live on Broadway in 1964 and released to theaters in Electronovision. It was the longest running "Hamlet" in Broadway history. Act 3, Scene 1. Richard Burton and Linda Marsh
published: 28 Jul 2009
-
richard burton talking about alcohol addiction
from the dick cavett show.
A candid interview with Richard Burton from 1977, in which he discusses his alcoholism and acting career.
In a clip from Larry King Live taped in 2007, Robin Williams opens up on his alcohol addiction and going through rehab.
published: 20 Sep 2016
-
Richard Burton – In From The Cold? The World Of Richard Burton (Full Film) | Tony Palmer Films
More Tony Palmer Films: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL7OR_i0hEHMVn7Zp5_DMWVL3Nv2sOWTxf
SUBSCRIBE: https://www.youtube.com/user/GonzoMusicTV/featured?sub_confirmation=1
“Few great actors in my experience have been so unfairly represented in the public image. Drunk, a wastrel, uncontrollable, unprofessional, besotted with glamour and wealth - these are just a few of the more generous epithets dumped on Richard Burton.
I had the privilege of knowing him well but only at the end of is life, and the only thing I hold against him was that he ‘stole’ the best assistant I ever had and made her his last wife, who gave him so much comfort and tenderness in the final years of his tempestuous and tormented existence. And fortunately, as it turned out, I made this film in 1988 just in time ...
published: 05 Jul 2018
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Top 10 Richard Burton Movies of All Time
In this video, we will show you a top 10 list of the best Richard Burton movies ever made. Check out more great content from Stream TV on our official YouTube channel.
Subscribe and ring the bell to get notified!
Song : Noel Malekar - Voice of Prayer (No Copyright Music)
Video Link: https://youtu.be/TSpEjSoiZ6c
Channel Link: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCJkKx-mTqoqjZPno7MbFKhA
published: 27 Dec 2020
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Elizabeth Taylor on Richard Burton - His Importance As An Actor And Why He Must NEVER Be Forgotten
Taken from Taylor's 2002 interview with Barbara Walters which aired on ABC's 20/20 program.
published: 10 Aug 2013
-
Richard Burton 1977 Interview.
A candid interview with Richard Burton from 1977, in which he discusses his alcoholism and acting career.
published: 05 Nov 2013
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Richard Burton - The War of the Worlds
This is the Jeff Wayne musical version of The War of the Worlds.
I have edited out all of the songs in order to have the incredible voice of Richard Burton's narration of the story in one continuous flow.
published: 20 Jun 2014
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The Medusa Touch (1977) Richard Burton, Lino Ventura, Thriller
The telekinetically gifted poet Richard Burton swings himself up to be God's envoy. Satire, horror and science fiction in a psychological thriller.
published: 23 May 2020
18:18
Richard Burton On His Humble Welsh Upbringing | The Dick Cavett Show
Richard Burton discusses his poor upbringing in Wales, and his family connection to the coal mines.
Date aired - 8/4/1980 - Richard Burton
#RichardBurton #Dic...
Richard Burton discusses his poor upbringing in Wales, and his family connection to the coal mines.
Date aired - 8/4/1980 - Richard Burton
#RichardBurton #DickCavett
For clip licensing opportunities please visit https://www.globalimageworks.com/the-dick-cavett-show
Dick Cavett has been nominated for eleven Emmy awards (the most recent in 2012 for the HBO special, Mel Brooks and Dick Cavett Together Again), and won three. Spanning five decades, Dick Cavett’s television career has defined excellence in the interview format. He started at ABC in 1968, and also enjoyed success on PBS, USA, and CNBC.
His most recent television successes were the September 2014 PBS special, Dick Cavett’s Watergate, followed April 2015 by Dick Cavett’s Vietnam. He has appeared in movies, tv specials, tv commercials, and several Broadway plays. He starred in an off-Broadway production ofHellman v. McCarthy in 2014 and reprised the role at Theatre 40 in LA February 2015.
Cavett has published four books beginning with Cavett (1974) and Eye on Cavett (1983), co-authored with Christopher Porterfield. His two recent books -- Talk Show: Confrontations, Pointed Commentary, and Off-Screen Secrets (2010) and Brief Encounters: Conversations, Magic moments, and Assorted Hijinks(October 2014) are both collections of his online opinion column, written for The New York Times since 2007. Additionally, he has written for The New Yorker, TV Guide, Vanity Fair, and elsewhere.
#thedickcavettshow
https://wn.com/Richard_Burton_On_His_Humble_Welsh_Upbringing_|_The_Dick_Cavett_Show
Richard Burton discusses his poor upbringing in Wales, and his family connection to the coal mines.
Date aired - 8/4/1980 - Richard Burton
#RichardBurton #DickCavett
For clip licensing opportunities please visit https://www.globalimageworks.com/the-dick-cavett-show
Dick Cavett has been nominated for eleven Emmy awards (the most recent in 2012 for the HBO special, Mel Brooks and Dick Cavett Together Again), and won three. Spanning five decades, Dick Cavett’s television career has defined excellence in the interview format. He started at ABC in 1968, and also enjoyed success on PBS, USA, and CNBC.
His most recent television successes were the September 2014 PBS special, Dick Cavett’s Watergate, followed April 2015 by Dick Cavett’s Vietnam. He has appeared in movies, tv specials, tv commercials, and several Broadway plays. He starred in an off-Broadway production ofHellman v. McCarthy in 2014 and reprised the role at Theatre 40 in LA February 2015.
Cavett has published four books beginning with Cavett (1974) and Eye on Cavett (1983), co-authored with Christopher Porterfield. His two recent books -- Talk Show: Confrontations, Pointed Commentary, and Off-Screen Secrets (2010) and Brief Encounters: Conversations, Magic moments, and Assorted Hijinks(October 2014) are both collections of his online opinion column, written for The New York Times since 2007. Additionally, he has written for The New Yorker, TV Guide, Vanity Fair, and elsewhere.
#thedickcavettshow
- published: 27 Apr 2020
- views: 568663
37:55
The Richard Burton Interview on Parkinson (COMPLETE)
Michael Parkinson looks back at his unique interview with talented and troubled film star Richard Burton. Back in 1974, Burton was battling against alcoholism a...
Michael Parkinson looks back at his unique interview with talented and troubled film star Richard Burton. Back in 1974, Burton was battling against alcoholism and had spent six weeks in hospital for treatment prior to the interview. Parkinson persuaded him to talk candidly about his career, love life and drink problems.
https://wn.com/The_Richard_Burton_Interview_On_Parkinson_(Complete)
Michael Parkinson looks back at his unique interview with talented and troubled film star Richard Burton. Back in 1974, Burton was battling against alcoholism and had spent six weeks in hospital for treatment prior to the interview. Parkinson persuaded him to talk candidly about his career, love life and drink problems.
- published: 21 Jan 2013
- views: 998354
51:44
Hollywoods' Iconic Couples Documentary: Elizabeth Taylor & Richard Burton
The most talked about couple of the 1960's: Elizabeth Taylor & Richard Burton, made dozens of films together, and even walked down the aisle, and, out the divor...
The most talked about couple of the 1960's: Elizabeth Taylor & Richard Burton, made dozens of films together, and even walked down the aisle, and, out the divorce court twice! This is the tale of this legendary couple.
Director & Writer : Bertrand Tessier
Follow us on social media :
https://www.facebook.com/CultCinemaClassics
https://www.instagram.com/cultcinemaclassics
https://www.twitch.tv/cultcinemaclassics
https://wn.com/Hollywoods'_Iconic_Couples_Documentary_Elizabeth_Taylor_Richard_Burton
The most talked about couple of the 1960's: Elizabeth Taylor & Richard Burton, made dozens of films together, and even walked down the aisle, and, out the divorce court twice! This is the tale of this legendary couple.
Director & Writer : Bertrand Tessier
Follow us on social media :
https://www.facebook.com/CultCinemaClassics
https://www.instagram.com/cultcinemaclassics
https://www.twitch.tv/cultcinemaclassics
- published: 22 Jul 2021
- views: 139139
1:59:26
Richard Burton on The Dick Cavett Show July 1980 (FULL) PLUS Cavett's reminiscence of the interview.
**BE SURE TO CHECK OUT "Richard Burton, when will they make a film about the legendary actor? at http://www.facebook.com/pages/Richard-Burton-when-will-they-mak...
**BE SURE TO CHECK OUT "Richard Burton, when will they make a film about the legendary actor? at http://www.facebook.com/pages/Richard-Burton-when-will-they-make-a-film-about...
He was sitting in front of his dressing room mirror after a tiring performance of "Camelot," removing his make-up for the who knows how many thousandth time. Paler, with the greasepaint cleansed from the famous face, he managed to look, simultaneously, handsome, vibrant and worn.
"Richard has been entertaining the idea of doing your show, Mr. Cavett," a man who appeared to be both valet and companion said.
"And letting the idea entertain him," the Welshman intoned in that unmistakable voice.
In fact, Richard Burton was still pondering whether to do my show, and it was thought that my visiting him backstage informally might help.
I tried to imagine what fears or hesitations Burton might have about appearing with me. Could he be afraid that the rich voice, those rugged good looks, the manly erotic charm, the hypnotic blue eyes, the articulacy, the fine wit and the ready storehouse of classical and modern literary quotations and allusions were not quite enough to qualify him for sitting next to Cavett? (Did anyone think, just now, that I was describing myself?)
Could he really think that maybe a boy from Nebraska — who had only been to Yale and not, as he had, Oxford — might outshine all those charms? As my Aunt Eva would say, "The very idea!"
Hoping for the effect of light humor, I said, "I hope I don't frighten you, Mr. Burton."
"No, Mr. Cavett, you do not. I do that to myself."
I liked him immensely.
Even under regression hypnosis, Richard would probably not have recalled how we had briefly met about a quarter of a century earlier when only one of us had a familiar name, but more of that anon.
Memories of that night backstage: Richard's expertly flipping a single, long Marlboro — the mendaciously advertised "light" version — from its box, contemplating it for a moment in a manner that brought to mind an actor holding Yorick's skull, and saying, as if a little embarrassed to be lighting up, "Looks like these lethal goddamn things will be with me to the end of my days."
"And hastening them," I decided not to say. Later, with us knowing each other better, he wouldn't have minded and would have had a wry response.
Then came the best thing.
Leaving the theater by the stage door required crossing the wide New York State Theater stage. The "Camelot' sets had been struck for the night and the house and stage were dark; dark except for the murky bulb in a cage on a stand downstage center — the thing known in the theater world as "the ghost light," an aptly named light that somehow manages to make a vast, dark space seem darker and spookier than it would with no light at all.
What happened next was in the too-good-to-be-true category. Burton stopped near the light, his coat draped over one shoulder, gazed out at the empty house, tilted his head back and, with the famous, full chiming resonance, began, "O for a Muse of fire, that would ascend / The brightest heaven of invention . . . " — and went right on through that ringing prologue to "Henry the Fifth" (known to actors as "Hank Cinq").
Goose flesh manifested.
He was standing no more than a yard from me, and I thought, "Talk about front-row seats!" Unforgettable.
Maybe our meeting did the trick. A day or two later, Burton agreed to do the show. But, sadly, requested that there be no studio audience. I felt sorry for a bunch of strangers I would never meet who would never know what they missed.
You can do a good show without an audience, but I knew from experience that audiences sometimes buoyed guests who at first feared them.
"What if I made a deal with you?" I dared. "Since they already have their tickets, why don't we start with them and if you feel uncomfortable we'll tell them there's a technical problem and we have to stop for that day and see them out?"
This gambit could accomplish one of two things: (a) he would feel sorry for the disappointed folks and relent, or (b) I would learn how to say "bugger off" in Welsh.
He accepted the offer.
Category:
Entertainment
Tags:
richard burton interview dick cavett elizabeth taylor wales mining alcoholism acting liz
https://wn.com/Richard_Burton_On_The_Dick_Cavett_Show_July_1980_(Full)_Plus_Cavett's_Reminiscence_Of_The_Interview.
**BE SURE TO CHECK OUT "Richard Burton, when will they make a film about the legendary actor? at http://www.facebook.com/pages/Richard-Burton-when-will-they-make-a-film-about...
He was sitting in front of his dressing room mirror after a tiring performance of "Camelot," removing his make-up for the who knows how many thousandth time. Paler, with the greasepaint cleansed from the famous face, he managed to look, simultaneously, handsome, vibrant and worn.
"Richard has been entertaining the idea of doing your show, Mr. Cavett," a man who appeared to be both valet and companion said.
"And letting the idea entertain him," the Welshman intoned in that unmistakable voice.
In fact, Richard Burton was still pondering whether to do my show, and it was thought that my visiting him backstage informally might help.
I tried to imagine what fears or hesitations Burton might have about appearing with me. Could he be afraid that the rich voice, those rugged good looks, the manly erotic charm, the hypnotic blue eyes, the articulacy, the fine wit and the ready storehouse of classical and modern literary quotations and allusions were not quite enough to qualify him for sitting next to Cavett? (Did anyone think, just now, that I was describing myself?)
Could he really think that maybe a boy from Nebraska — who had only been to Yale and not, as he had, Oxford — might outshine all those charms? As my Aunt Eva would say, "The very idea!"
Hoping for the effect of light humor, I said, "I hope I don't frighten you, Mr. Burton."
"No, Mr. Cavett, you do not. I do that to myself."
I liked him immensely.
Even under regression hypnosis, Richard would probably not have recalled how we had briefly met about a quarter of a century earlier when only one of us had a familiar name, but more of that anon.
Memories of that night backstage: Richard's expertly flipping a single, long Marlboro — the mendaciously advertised "light" version — from its box, contemplating it for a moment in a manner that brought to mind an actor holding Yorick's skull, and saying, as if a little embarrassed to be lighting up, "Looks like these lethal goddamn things will be with me to the end of my days."
"And hastening them," I decided not to say. Later, with us knowing each other better, he wouldn't have minded and would have had a wry response.
Then came the best thing.
Leaving the theater by the stage door required crossing the wide New York State Theater stage. The "Camelot' sets had been struck for the night and the house and stage were dark; dark except for the murky bulb in a cage on a stand downstage center — the thing known in the theater world as "the ghost light," an aptly named light that somehow manages to make a vast, dark space seem darker and spookier than it would with no light at all.
What happened next was in the too-good-to-be-true category. Burton stopped near the light, his coat draped over one shoulder, gazed out at the empty house, tilted his head back and, with the famous, full chiming resonance, began, "O for a Muse of fire, that would ascend / The brightest heaven of invention . . . " — and went right on through that ringing prologue to "Henry the Fifth" (known to actors as "Hank Cinq").
Goose flesh manifested.
He was standing no more than a yard from me, and I thought, "Talk about front-row seats!" Unforgettable.
Maybe our meeting did the trick. A day or two later, Burton agreed to do the show. But, sadly, requested that there be no studio audience. I felt sorry for a bunch of strangers I would never meet who would never know what they missed.
You can do a good show without an audience, but I knew from experience that audiences sometimes buoyed guests who at first feared them.
"What if I made a deal with you?" I dared. "Since they already have their tickets, why don't we start with them and if you feel uncomfortable we'll tell them there's a technical problem and we have to stop for that day and see them out?"
This gambit could accomplish one of two things: (a) he would feel sorry for the disappointed folks and relent, or (b) I would learn how to say "bugger off" in Welsh.
He accepted the offer.
Category:
Entertainment
Tags:
richard burton interview dick cavett elizabeth taylor wales mining alcoholism acting liz
- published: 11 Jul 2012
- views: 651228
6:14
Hamlet "To be or not to be" - Richard Burton (1964)
Richard Burton's "Hamlet", directed by John Gielgud, produced by Alexander H. Cohen. Filmed live on Broadway in 1964 and released to theaters in Electronovision...
Richard Burton's "Hamlet", directed by John Gielgud, produced by Alexander H. Cohen. Filmed live on Broadway in 1964 and released to theaters in Electronovision. It was the longest running "Hamlet" in Broadway history. Act 3, Scene 1. Richard Burton and Linda Marsh
https://wn.com/Hamlet_To_Be_Or_Not_To_Be_Richard_Burton_(1964)
Richard Burton's "Hamlet", directed by John Gielgud, produced by Alexander H. Cohen. Filmed live on Broadway in 1964 and released to theaters in Electronovision. It was the longest running "Hamlet" in Broadway history. Act 3, Scene 1. Richard Burton and Linda Marsh
- published: 28 Jul 2009
- views: 644654
9:23
richard burton talking about alcohol addiction
from the dick cavett show.
A candid interview with Richard Burton from 1977, in which he discusses his alcoholism and acting career.
In a clip from Larry ...
from the dick cavett show.
A candid interview with Richard Burton from 1977, in which he discusses his alcoholism and acting career.
In a clip from Larry King Live taped in 2007, Robin Williams opens up on his alcohol addiction and going through rehab.
https://wn.com/Richard_Burton_Talking_About_Alcohol_Addiction
from the dick cavett show.
A candid interview with Richard Burton from 1977, in which he discusses his alcoholism and acting career.
In a clip from Larry King Live taped in 2007, Robin Williams opens up on his alcohol addiction and going through rehab.
- published: 20 Sep 2016
- views: 50978
2:01:14
Richard Burton – In From The Cold? The World Of Richard Burton (Full Film) | Tony Palmer Films
More Tony Palmer Films: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL7OR_i0hEHMVn7Zp5_DMWVL3Nv2sOWTxf
SUBSCRIBE: https://www.youtube.com/user/GonzoMusicTV/featured?...
More Tony Palmer Films: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL7OR_i0hEHMVn7Zp5_DMWVL3Nv2sOWTxf
SUBSCRIBE: https://www.youtube.com/user/GonzoMusicTV/featured?sub_confirmation=1
“Few great actors in my experience have been so unfairly represented in the public image. Drunk, a wastrel, uncontrollable, unprofessional, besotted with glamour and wealth - these are just a few of the more generous epithets dumped on Richard Burton.
I had the privilege of knowing him well but only at the end of is life, and the only thing I hold against him was that he ‘stole’ the best assistant I ever had and made her his last wife, who gave him so much comfort and tenderness in the final years of his tempestuous and tormented existence. And fortunately, as it turned out, I made this film in 1988 just in time to capture on film all his surviving siblings (he was the 12th of 13 children), especially his eldest sister, Cecilia or ‘Cis’ who, after the death of his mother when he was 2, brought him up. What I learned from them was the horror of working down the coal mines, as their father had done, and the determination of the young Welsh-speaking Richard that this world would never be his fate. And later, as his fame and wealth increased, he never forgot this extended family; indeed, at one point he has over 30 family members on his ‘payroll’.
But this ‘escape’ from the mining community of Pontrhydyfen in South Wales came at a considerable price. First, his father (Walter Jenkins) effectively ‘sold him’ (money changed hands) to the local schoolmaster, Philip Burton, who altered young Richard’s name in an attempt to adopt him. Second, his prestigious talent and good looks propelled him into a world wholly alien. That he was transformed from a scruff who earned money by collecting lumps from the scrap heaps around his village into one of the most famous actors in the world before he was 30, is nothing short of miraculous.
But, as he told me, he hated his voice, hated his face, hated everything about himself. Not disliked, but hated. As the great American director (Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?) Mike Nichols tells us in the film, “Richard was a man cut off from his past, a man for whom ‘seeming’ became more real than ‘being’. But as an actor who had ‘wasted’ his talent? Virginia Woolf?, The Spy Who Came From The Cold, The Robe, Equus, Becket, Look Back In Anger, Hamlet, Wagner, 1984 - nearly 100 films. Few other screen actors could boast such monumental, iconic performances. Brando, Clint Eastwood, Olivier….? He is their equal.
Paradoxically for someone who lived most of his life in the public eye, he was shy, deferential, courteous and absurdly generous. As Brook Williams, his godson, says in the film: “if Richard passed through your life, even if you had only worked with him for a day or even half a day, he lit something in you that I don’t think ever goes out. “Yes he was wild, passionate, literate, incredibly well read (he once boasted he could recite any of Shakespeare’s Sonnets by heart, backwards!!! And he could!) and riddled with self doubt. Like all very great actors, he identified with the characters he played, simply because they spoke for him. In Equus, Dysart (Burton) at the end of the play (film) stares defiantly at the camera and attempts to sum up himself and his life. I find myself agreeing with every word.
“My desire might be to make of this boy an ardent husband, a caring citizen, a worshipper of an abstract and unifying God. My achievement, however, is more likely to have made a ghost. I’ve healed the rash on his body; I’ve erased the welts cut into his mind. But I doubt he will be left with much passion. He will most probably, be without pain. For me, however, it never stops. Why me? Why me? First, account for me.”
My film made at his widow’s request, is a small celebration of an extraordinary man whom I had the privilege to know.” - Tony Palmer
Includes extracts from:
Cleopatra
The Spy Who Came In From The Cold
The Robe
My Cousin Rachel
Anne of the Thousand Days
Equus
Becket
Camelot
Hamlet
Where Eagles Dare
The Last Days of Dolwyn
Prince of Players
Alexander the Great
Wild Gees
Look Back In Anger
The Taming of the Shrew
Who’s Afraid Of Virginia Woolf?
Dr Faustus
Wagner
1984
With
SALLY BURTON
ELIZABETH TAYLOR
KATE BURTON
PHILIP BURTON
LAUREN BACALL
JOE MANKIEWICZ
MIKE NICHOLS
ROBERT HARDY
SIR JOHN GIELGUD
CLAIRE BLOOM
EMLYN WILLIAMS
BROOK WILLIAMS
JOHN NEVILLE
WILLIAM SQUIRE
CECILIA JAMES
HILDA OWEN
VERDUN JENKINS
DAVID ARTHUR JENKINS
MARIAN MASTROIANNI
RHIANON TROWELL
NEVILLE COGHILLE
MELVYN BRAGG
Directed & Edited by TONY PALMER
Photographed by NIC KNOWLAND & SIMON ARCHER
Sound recorded by JOHN MURPHY & mixed by AAD WIRTZ
Music by BENJAMIN BRITTEN JANACEK, MONCAYO & HENRY PURCELL
FIND OUT MORE:
Gonzo Multimedia: http://www.gonzomultimedia.co.uk/
Gonzo Multimedia FB: https://www.facebook.com/Gonzo-Multimedia-304756449589666/
Tony Palmer: http://www.tonypalmer.org/
https://wn.com/Richard_Burton_–_In_From_The_Cold_The_World_Of_Richard_Burton_(Full_Film)_|_Tony_Palmer_Films
More Tony Palmer Films: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL7OR_i0hEHMVn7Zp5_DMWVL3Nv2sOWTxf
SUBSCRIBE: https://www.youtube.com/user/GonzoMusicTV/featured?sub_confirmation=1
“Few great actors in my experience have been so unfairly represented in the public image. Drunk, a wastrel, uncontrollable, unprofessional, besotted with glamour and wealth - these are just a few of the more generous epithets dumped on Richard Burton.
I had the privilege of knowing him well but only at the end of is life, and the only thing I hold against him was that he ‘stole’ the best assistant I ever had and made her his last wife, who gave him so much comfort and tenderness in the final years of his tempestuous and tormented existence. And fortunately, as it turned out, I made this film in 1988 just in time to capture on film all his surviving siblings (he was the 12th of 13 children), especially his eldest sister, Cecilia or ‘Cis’ who, after the death of his mother when he was 2, brought him up. What I learned from them was the horror of working down the coal mines, as their father had done, and the determination of the young Welsh-speaking Richard that this world would never be his fate. And later, as his fame and wealth increased, he never forgot this extended family; indeed, at one point he has over 30 family members on his ‘payroll’.
But this ‘escape’ from the mining community of Pontrhydyfen in South Wales came at a considerable price. First, his father (Walter Jenkins) effectively ‘sold him’ (money changed hands) to the local schoolmaster, Philip Burton, who altered young Richard’s name in an attempt to adopt him. Second, his prestigious talent and good looks propelled him into a world wholly alien. That he was transformed from a scruff who earned money by collecting lumps from the scrap heaps around his village into one of the most famous actors in the world before he was 30, is nothing short of miraculous.
But, as he told me, he hated his voice, hated his face, hated everything about himself. Not disliked, but hated. As the great American director (Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?) Mike Nichols tells us in the film, “Richard was a man cut off from his past, a man for whom ‘seeming’ became more real than ‘being’. But as an actor who had ‘wasted’ his talent? Virginia Woolf?, The Spy Who Came From The Cold, The Robe, Equus, Becket, Look Back In Anger, Hamlet, Wagner, 1984 - nearly 100 films. Few other screen actors could boast such monumental, iconic performances. Brando, Clint Eastwood, Olivier….? He is their equal.
Paradoxically for someone who lived most of his life in the public eye, he was shy, deferential, courteous and absurdly generous. As Brook Williams, his godson, says in the film: “if Richard passed through your life, even if you had only worked with him for a day or even half a day, he lit something in you that I don’t think ever goes out. “Yes he was wild, passionate, literate, incredibly well read (he once boasted he could recite any of Shakespeare’s Sonnets by heart, backwards!!! And he could!) and riddled with self doubt. Like all very great actors, he identified with the characters he played, simply because they spoke for him. In Equus, Dysart (Burton) at the end of the play (film) stares defiantly at the camera and attempts to sum up himself and his life. I find myself agreeing with every word.
“My desire might be to make of this boy an ardent husband, a caring citizen, a worshipper of an abstract and unifying God. My achievement, however, is more likely to have made a ghost. I’ve healed the rash on his body; I’ve erased the welts cut into his mind. But I doubt he will be left with much passion. He will most probably, be without pain. For me, however, it never stops. Why me? Why me? First, account for me.”
My film made at his widow’s request, is a small celebration of an extraordinary man whom I had the privilege to know.” - Tony Palmer
Includes extracts from:
Cleopatra
The Spy Who Came In From The Cold
The Robe
My Cousin Rachel
Anne of the Thousand Days
Equus
Becket
Camelot
Hamlet
Where Eagles Dare
The Last Days of Dolwyn
Prince of Players
Alexander the Great
Wild Gees
Look Back In Anger
The Taming of the Shrew
Who’s Afraid Of Virginia Woolf?
Dr Faustus
Wagner
1984
With
SALLY BURTON
ELIZABETH TAYLOR
KATE BURTON
PHILIP BURTON
LAUREN BACALL
JOE MANKIEWICZ
MIKE NICHOLS
ROBERT HARDY
SIR JOHN GIELGUD
CLAIRE BLOOM
EMLYN WILLIAMS
BROOK WILLIAMS
JOHN NEVILLE
WILLIAM SQUIRE
CECILIA JAMES
HILDA OWEN
VERDUN JENKINS
DAVID ARTHUR JENKINS
MARIAN MASTROIANNI
RHIANON TROWELL
NEVILLE COGHILLE
MELVYN BRAGG
Directed & Edited by TONY PALMER
Photographed by NIC KNOWLAND & SIMON ARCHER
Sound recorded by JOHN MURPHY & mixed by AAD WIRTZ
Music by BENJAMIN BRITTEN JANACEK, MONCAYO & HENRY PURCELL
FIND OUT MORE:
Gonzo Multimedia: http://www.gonzomultimedia.co.uk/
Gonzo Multimedia FB: https://www.facebook.com/Gonzo-Multimedia-304756449589666/
Tony Palmer: http://www.tonypalmer.org/
- published: 05 Jul 2018
- views: 117089
11:24
Top 10 Richard Burton Movies of All Time
In this video, we will show you a top 10 list of the best Richard Burton movies ever made. Check out more great content from Stream TV on our official YouTube c...
In this video, we will show you a top 10 list of the best Richard Burton movies ever made. Check out more great content from Stream TV on our official YouTube channel.
Subscribe and ring the bell to get notified!
Song : Noel Malekar - Voice of Prayer (No Copyright Music)
Video Link: https://youtu.be/TSpEjSoiZ6c
Channel Link: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCJkKx-mTqoqjZPno7MbFKhA
https://wn.com/Top_10_Richard_Burton_Movies_Of_All_Time
In this video, we will show you a top 10 list of the best Richard Burton movies ever made. Check out more great content from Stream TV on our official YouTube channel.
Subscribe and ring the bell to get notified!
Song : Noel Malekar - Voice of Prayer (No Copyright Music)
Video Link: https://youtu.be/TSpEjSoiZ6c
Channel Link: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCJkKx-mTqoqjZPno7MbFKhA
- published: 27 Dec 2020
- views: 3666
12:19
Richard Burton 1977 Interview.
A candid interview with Richard Burton from 1977, in which he discusses his alcoholism and acting career.
A candid interview with Richard Burton from 1977, in which he discusses his alcoholism and acting career.
https://wn.com/Richard_Burton_1977_Interview.
A candid interview with Richard Burton from 1977, in which he discusses his alcoholism and acting career.
- published: 05 Nov 2013
- views: 78835
42:56
Richard Burton - The War of the Worlds
This is the Jeff Wayne musical version of The War of the Worlds.
I have edited out all of the songs in order to have the incredible voice of Richard Burton's na...
This is the Jeff Wayne musical version of The War of the Worlds.
I have edited out all of the songs in order to have the incredible voice of Richard Burton's narration of the story in one continuous flow.
https://wn.com/Richard_Burton_The_War_Of_The_Worlds
This is the Jeff Wayne musical version of The War of the Worlds.
I have edited out all of the songs in order to have the incredible voice of Richard Burton's narration of the story in one continuous flow.
- published: 20 Jun 2014
- views: 180385
1:49:01
The Medusa Touch (1977) Richard Burton, Lino Ventura, Thriller
The telekinetically gifted poet Richard Burton swings himself up to be God's envoy. Satire, horror and science fiction in a psychological thriller.
The telekinetically gifted poet Richard Burton swings himself up to be God's envoy. Satire, horror and science fiction in a psychological thriller.
https://wn.com/The_Medusa_Touch_(1977)_Richard_Burton,_Lino_Ventura,_Thriller
The telekinetically gifted poet Richard Burton swings himself up to be God's envoy. Satire, horror and science fiction in a psychological thriller.
- published: 23 May 2020
- views: 20567