Every actor played it perfectly. it's just amazing. That's when movies were little physical action and lots of brains in dialog, every gesture from each actor just perfect.
Oh you ain't gonna do nothing, just stand there a shut up. What a scene. Gillespie realizes that he needs Tibbs and he won't even allow the brother to get his way. Great scene! What a movie, an important movie.
I just love the detail in this scene. Look at the tape patching up the worn-out leather chair. The constant very high level of acting is riveting. It's so good you could believe this is for real. Steiger is at the very height of his powers here!
Good observation. For me it was when she began to turn and stopped, because she caught “Officer Tibbs” starring at her out of her right eye, then slowly turned to face him. No words spoken between them. A powerful moment, shot without any dialogue. Perfection. The young actress was amazing in her movements throughout the scene. Hard to teach that level of non-verbal interaction.
Fantastic film. Definitely in my top 3. Tours de force by Rod Steiger and Sidney Poitier. Excellent acting all around by the supporting cast. Glad i have it on DVD.
I'm sure I share a non- guilty pleasure with fans of this film. I'll watch it over and over! Every character is superbly acted. A scene that isn't shown as much on TH-cam is the banker and the sheriff. " I'll write it on the head of a PIN! " is my favorite line.
This is one of all time favorite movies,the perception to detail is amazing , squeaky chair,tape on chair,even the owl song in the diner. Delores Purdy aka Quentin Dean received a golden globe for her incredible supporting role despite the fact she was on screen about ten minutes. even more intriguing is the fact she left motion pictures just two years later with no forwarding address. There seems to be virtually no record of her since.
Man, there are beautiful women, and then there are beautiful women who just exude an incredible ammount of sexuality. Ms, Dean was certainly one of THOSE women. Here's some more info on her, it's sad though: "Quentin Dean was born on July 27, 1944 in California as Quintin Corinne Margolin. She was an actress, known for In the Heat of the Night (1967), Will Penny (1968) and Stay Away, Joe (1968). She died on May 8, 2003 in Los Angeles, California,"
Logan Cody You could not have been more right about her sexuality, do you know any more about her life . It's always intrigued me why she would just leave acting at such a young age ,especially after that incredible portrayal o Delores.
puff adder I went on the Internet Movie Database (IMDB) website which usually has every bit of info there is on actors, directors, producers, etc. But, other than a few other TV roles, what I sent you was absoutly all they had on her. It's funny how her performance impresses you so much, you hope she gave up her career for a happy reason, like getting married and raising a family. But somehow I fear that's not the case.
Logan Cody Another thing about this talented girl (who bore a striking resemblance to Linda Ronstadt, by the way - I kept waiting for her to leap up and break into "Different Drum!"), was her range. Catch her guest appearance on "The Big Valley", as the oppressed, shy Betina. She's amazing. The ep is called "Journey into Violence." Not a shred of "sexuality" in this performance, although she is pretty, as always. Such a waste of talent.
Garyb3397 That just goes to show how wide a range she had as an actor. Again, I just hope if she decided to leave show business and assume a totally private life it was for a best case scenario.
you prolly dont care but does anyone know a tool to get back into an instagram account..? I stupidly forgot the password. I would appreciate any help you can give me!
Great casting ,,, everyone in this move is next level. Even the small roles everyone new they were a part of something great. Gave it everything they had.
I just love how Dolores makes a joke out of her dominating brother all during the interrogation and is so contemptuous in her taboo breaking with that guilty smile. Some acting
My god, what a knock-out, fearless performance from Quentin Dean -- I can't think of a young actress among the many young actresses today who could surpass that, and few -- if any -- who could touch it. And if the director, Norman Jewison, told her to slide down like that, stroke the seat of the chair and, every now and then, roll her eyes up to her interrogator, he deserves a share of credit too.
Speaking of Norman Jewison, he's woefully underrated and under-mentioned as one of our greatest film directors. His gift for storytelling this country's Southern culture is further expressed in his gem of a film, 'A Soldier's Story'...also with a bang-up cast of formidable actors.
@@ThomasFromTNmaybe--- just maybe, that the actors who did this movie actually were better than the majority of the so-- called actors of today. It's entirely possible--- think about it--- what has gotten better, since the time that this movie was made-- in all aspects of life. While there are some great actors today--- most everything/ everyone else is in the toilet.
@@Joe-d7m6k Yeah, no. You're just being nostalgic. There were plenty of hokey actors back in the 60s, as many as there are today. I can think of a few actresses today who would knock this scene out of the park just like Quentin did.
I first saw this movie in 1972.Quentin Dean (who played delores purdy)) was my motivation for finding this gorgeous poa) i met and married her carbon copy and 14 years later i was cleaned out more than a epa toxic waste site. i never said i was smart regarding women. i would do it all over again!
I love that slight giggle Delores' character lets out right after Gillespie tells her big brother to "just stand there and shut up", lol!!! I have a good feeling that wasn't supposed to happen like that, but I'm gald it did... >;-)
The acting is so good it doesn't appear that it's actors acting. Rod Steiger is one of my favourite actors R. I. P. & he like everyone else delivers a world class performance
I believe you mean that Carol O’Conner looks like Rod Steiger. The movie came first, then O’Conner was cast to play the High Sheriff for the TV show In The Heat Of the Night.
By now Virgil has Sheriff Gillespie's total respect. When he comes into the office, without knocking, it because by his aid the sheriff now considers him his equal, and his office almost as his own. It is a complete transformation from the first scene where they both appear in the office: Tibbs under arrest on suspicion of murder and Gillespie as the interrogator. When Dolores' brother looks down on Virgil and suggests he won't speak about the affair in front of Detective Tibbs, Gillespie looks up with an expression that speaks a great deal: "Is that right, son? So, YOU'RE going to tell me what you will and will not say in my own office, in front of a man whom I have come to respect and who is here to help you?" And then he actually tells him he'll stand there and shut up. This is why I like Sheriff Gillespie's character so much. He is not a racist against blacks so much as a man who grew up in the society, and who was willing to judge men individually. It's like he was waiting for someone to come to his town to shake it up.
And still, is 2022. The south is one screwed up area. But then there’s Idaho, Nebraska, Ohio, and all the midwestern States. Nobody seems to grow out of that RACIST Bubble.?
Jesus Christ, those are the noisiest chairs in film history. Oh and Delores Purdy has one of the most sensuous voices I've ever heard (when she's not yelling, that is).
Ironically that cop looks kind of like Caroll O'Connor. And they had a remake of this movie as a t.v series in the 80's with Caroll O'Connor as the lead cop.
Grand movie making of the highest degree, saw it in the Cinema back in the day and times were still tough when it was made! Clan murders etc. Sydney was the premier black actor of his day… Rod could act we all knew he could and there was this thought he had one good one performance left in the old leading man and boy did he let it out! It was a time when people were really passionate about equality and this was emblematic of the time!
this is one of the sexiest scenes in film i've ever seen. then its finished with the hilarious "he said that?". its so perfect. one of my favourite scenes in a film.
Film dates Sept. 26 to Nov. 1966 in Illinois (not Mississippi). Quentin Dean aka Dolores Purdy (1944--2003) was 22 playing a 16 year old. This scene is hilarious. I still don't get why she admitted she was pregnant while falsely naming Sam Wood as the father. Too bad Maury wasn't there . Because the real father was going to pay for her abortion; all she had to do was keep her mouth shut. I wonder what happened afterward. Probably gave it up for adoption.Just realized this scene is the only direct reference to the title.
Late reply, but it depends on how you define things I guess. The way I understood it in the old South, even within the Confederacy during the Civil War many people in the "old states" on the Atlantic coast considered themselves superior, and you have to remember that Alabama, Mississippi and Louisiana (with the notable exception of New Orleans itself) didn't have an old "aristocracy" like the one you could find in Virginia, Georgia and the Carolinas. So from that perspective you could consider them to be "more dixie", but Mississippi is probably as "deep south" as it gets, whatever meaning you would want to put into such a phrase.
@@mateuszmattias A Southern aristocracy , Carolina nobility . Many of the Carolina settlers arrived already possessed with titles including early governors, Sir John Yeamans and Sir Nathaniel Johnson. Ladies included Lady Rebecca Pratt Axtel and Dame Margaret Berringer, who married Gov. James Moore. The custom of the new “Carolina Aristocracy,” many of them from armigerous families, was to use their ancestral arms. It seems very English.
I get a laugh when Chalky tells Tibbs the place in town men go when they get a girl in trouble is the barber. Sensing a hot lead Tibbs asks why the barber, Chalky responds with a laugh, "To get his throat cut!"
At the beginning do you mean ? I was thinking it was the look of recognition that gets exchanged between coloured folk when one is passing as white . But i know nothing much about this movie although i could have gone to see it back in 67 ; and i don't think i would've appreciated it as a 13 year old . I also know little of the subtleties in American culture of this period . The Vietnam war spurred a cultural upheaval and heaps of other issues got thrown in .
Tibbs was clearly staring her down in regards to suspecting her role in the events that led to the murder, and Delores was meeting his suspicious gaze (although she doesn't know the exact cause of his suspicious gaze but she's a rebellious temptress so it doesn't matter much to her what the exact reason is either way) with a mocking contempt.
2:36 tipps looking like a real professional police officer hands in his pockets , i wonder if the director tells how to stand on each minute or are the actors who make choices on some occasions
Every actor played it perfectly. it's just amazing. That's when movies were little physical action and lots of brains in dialog, every gesture from each actor just perfect.
True. Some of the best character actors ever.
One of the best movies ever made! ❤❤❤❤
Oh you ain't gonna do nothing, just stand there a shut up. What a scene. Gillespie realizes that he needs Tibbs and he won't even allow the brother to get his way. Great scene! What a movie, an important movie.
Loved that as well. Gillespie was amazing.
Delores giggling after Gillespie puts her brother in his place was hilarious
Plus Gillespie knew that tibbs would whip his little white butt.lol
Sam was a freak.He took an under age girl to the cemetery for sex in a cop car but in the end we found out she was lying.
"I know the laws in the state of Mississippi thank you!
I just love the detail in this scene. Look at the tape patching up the worn-out leather chair. The constant very high level of acting is riveting. It's so good you could believe this is for real. Steiger is at the very height of his powers here!
What about the tape patching?
The tape patching was a made man so there was nothing Gillespie could do about it.lol
@@edwardmoore5325 the sound the chair makes when he reclines
Good observation. For me it was when she began to turn and stopped, because she caught “Officer Tibbs” starring at her out of her right eye, then slowly turned to face him. No words spoken between them. A powerful moment, shot without any dialogue. Perfection. The young actress was amazing in her movements throughout the scene. Hard to teach that level of non-verbal interaction.
I think they won an Academy Award for “sound”.
She acted the hell out of that scene!
Yes she did.
…yep, from the time she sat in that chair. You can hear the sound of the leather. The movie won an award for “sound”.
Fantastic film. Definitely in my top 3. Tours de force by Rod Steiger and Sidney Poitier. Excellent acting all around by the supporting cast. Glad i have it on DVD.
I'm sure I share a non- guilty pleasure with fans of this film. I'll watch it over and over! Every character is superbly acted. A scene that isn't shown as much on TH-cam is the banker and the sheriff. " I'll write it on the head of a PIN! " is my favorite line.
Love it when the Chief says ‘He said that?’ in unbelief as must admit it does sounds too good a line to come out of Woodsies mouth😂
This is one of all time favorite movies,the perception to detail is amazing ,
squeaky chair,tape on chair,even the owl song in the diner.
Delores Purdy aka Quentin Dean received a golden globe for her incredible supporting role despite the fact she was on screen about ten minutes. even more intriguing is the
fact she left motion pictures just two years later with no forwarding address.
There seems to be virtually no record of her since.
Man, there are beautiful women, and then there are beautiful women who just exude an incredible ammount of sexuality. Ms, Dean was certainly one of THOSE women.
Here's some more info on her, it's sad though:
"Quentin Dean was born on July 27, 1944 in California as Quintin Corinne Margolin. She was an actress, known for In the Heat of the Night (1967), Will Penny (1968) and Stay Away, Joe (1968). She died on May 8, 2003 in Los Angeles, California,"
Logan Cody You could not have been more right about her
sexuality, do you know any more about her life . It's always intrigued
me why she would just leave acting at such a young age ,especially
after that incredible portrayal o Delores.
puff adder I went on the Internet Movie Database (IMDB) website which usually has every bit of info there is on actors, directors, producers, etc. But, other than a few other TV roles, what I sent you was absoutly all they had on her. It's funny how her performance impresses you so much, you hope she gave up her career for a happy reason, like getting married and raising a family. But somehow I fear that's not the case.
Logan Cody Another thing about this talented girl (who bore a striking resemblance to Linda Ronstadt, by the way - I kept waiting for her to leap up and break into "Different Drum!"), was her range. Catch her guest appearance on "The Big Valley", as the oppressed, shy Betina. She's amazing. The ep is called "Journey into Violence." Not a shred of "sexuality" in this performance, although she is pretty, as always. Such a waste of talent.
Garyb3397 That just goes to show how wide a range she had as an actor. Again, I just hope if she decided to leave show business and assume a totally private life it was for a best case scenario.
‘I know what the law is in the state of Mississippi THANK YOU”
Great line!
Well parts of them....he's taking a course and he's only on book 1of 50
You just stand there and shuddup … brilliant!
@@cherryrotella3714 love that part to. God rod Stieger can act his butt off. Great dialog by the writter as well.
Her eyes and cheek bones make her look like am American Indian. Wouldn't be surprised if she was one or more likely was mixed!
Rod Steiger's Oscar for this film can be seen in each scene.
Yes lawdie, in every squeak of the chair
Nah
you prolly dont care but does anyone know a tool to get back into an instagram account..?
I stupidly forgot the password. I would appreciate any help you can give me!
@Gary Alden instablaster ;)
Funniest part of the scene is 3:35 when Gillespie goes....'He said that!??'
Even stupid Sam has hidden talents!
🤓
Great casting ,,, everyone in this move is next level. Even the small roles everyone new they were a part of something great. Gave it everything they had.
And then some!!!!
You ain’t never lied about that !!!
"I KNOW THE LAWS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI!"
Simple, direct writing; clear delivery without any fuss.
Was there, a pause, “thank you.!” It was in several times. Almost as an alternative to FU.
One of my favorite lines from this film
"You ain't gunna do nothin, just stand there and shut up" (then giggles) LOL!! Robert at 67.
Dolores has some epic high beams.
Yes she does
Spitfire nosecones
If you ve got the missle shes. Got the silo
@@edwardmoore5325 Hahahahaha!
Her cups runneth over !!
I just love how Dolores makes a joke out of her dominating brother all during the interrogation and is so contemptuous in her taboo breaking with that guilty smile. Some acting
Yeah that gal seen moreNUTS than a can of planters. More poles than a stripper dontcha know 😅
Fantastic Scene from one of the greatest films of all time Period!!!!!
One of my personal favorites. I got it in 4K awhile back and it looks fantastic!
My god, what a knock-out, fearless performance from Quentin Dean -- I can't think of a young actress among the many young actresses today who could surpass that, and few -- if any -- who could touch it. And if the director, Norman Jewison, told her to slide down like that, stroke the seat of the chair and, every now and then, roll her eyes up to her interrogator, he deserves a share of credit too.
"I can't think of a young actress among the many young actresses today who could..." the "Back When" trope Rides Again.
Speaking of Norman Jewison, he's woefully underrated and under-mentioned as one of our greatest film directors. His gift for storytelling this country's Southern culture is further expressed in his gem of a film, 'A Soldier's Story'...also with a bang-up cast of formidable actors.
BS
@@ThomasFromTNmaybe--- just maybe, that the actors who did this movie actually were better than the majority of the so-- called actors of today. It's entirely possible--- think about it--- what has gotten better, since the time that this movie was made-- in all aspects of life. While there are some great actors today--- most everything/ everyone else is in the toilet.
@@Joe-d7m6k Yeah, no. You're just being nostalgic. There were plenty of hokey actors back in the 60s, as many as there are today. I can think of a few actresses today who would knock this scene out of the park just like Quentin did.
I first saw this movie in 1972.Quentin Dean (who played delores purdy)) was my motivation for finding this gorgeous poa) i met and married her carbon copy and 14 years later i was cleaned out more than a epa toxic waste site. i never said i was smart regarding women. i would do it all over again!
Memories are irreplaceable
That's called puppy love leading to a dog's life.stay safe people.writing this in January 2022.
@@edwardmoore5325 you got that right. I aint dumb, but i get stupid sometimes.
It's happened to a lot a men over the ages. Wasn't your fault. You survived and it made you stronger.
Every actor in this film was brilliant!
Is one of the greatest movies ever made.
Mississippi has laws?
"You ain't gonna did nothing, you'll just stand there and shut up" 😂
Epic
Dolores was so fine!
Man Dolores was severely retarded .
Steiger must have had a sore jaw for months after this movie
All that gum chewing
And stomach acid for drinking those Dr. Peppers. 🤢
Nah...the gum saw his face and started chewing itself.
A directing genius move. It made the character of Gillespie more real. More human.
I love that slight giggle Delores' character lets out right after Gillespie tells her big brother to "just stand there and shut up", lol!!! I have a good feeling that wasn't supposed to happen like that, but I'm gald it did...
>;-)
It cracks me up how Sidney Poitier dips out after she says she's pregnant
Thats all he needed to know at that point..
The acting is so good it doesn't appear that it's actors acting. Rod Steiger is one of my favourite actors R. I. P. & he like everyone else delivers a world class performance
I never get sick of these scenes. 👍🇨🇦❤️
One of my all time favorite movies...in the top 10 for sure.
:22. This part threw me because of how Tibbs is looking at her. And she looks at him like she isn't even scared!
He looked at her like some especially interesting thing pulled off a corpse during an autopsy. Something that could answer a question or two.
@@hlcepeda brilliantly put!
It is a seductive stare she gives him. No doubt she finds him attractive.
Rod Steiger was the best movie actor of his time...and there were some good ones back then.
George C. Scott was originally considered for the Sheriff Gillespie part.
Am I the only one, who noticed that rod steiger, looks like Carrol O'Connor?
Yes he does. I've been comparing the both of them.
I believe you mean that Carol O’Conner looks like Rod Steiger. The movie came first, then O’Conner was cast to play the High Sheriff for the TV show In The Heat Of the Night.
By now Virgil has Sheriff Gillespie's total respect. When he comes into the office, without knocking, it because by his aid the sheriff now considers him his equal, and his office almost as his own. It is a complete transformation from the first scene where they both appear in the office: Tibbs under arrest on suspicion of murder and Gillespie as the interrogator. When Dolores' brother looks down on Virgil and suggests he won't speak about the affair in front of Detective Tibbs, Gillespie looks up with an expression that speaks a great deal: "Is that right, son? So, YOU'RE going to tell me what you will and will not say in my own office, in front of a man whom I have come to respect and who is here to help you?" And then he actually tells him he'll stand there and shut up. This is why I like Sheriff Gillespie's character so much. He is not a racist against blacks so much as a man who grew up in the society, and who was willing to judge men individually. It's like he was waiting for someone to come to his town to shake it up.
Rod steiger was really good in every scene.
That's why he earned an Academy Award.
3:20
Forget Lawremce of Arabia.
Cinematography at its best!
That is a chilly, mischievous look in Delores' eyes at :30.
That's the look that got Emmett Till and thousands of other Black men lynched.
Peepin sam was a owl on the prowl....lol
+Dre Cool Correction, he was a FOUL owl on the prowl
The whole story of segregation in the south, or the sequel to it, is very realistically portrayed in this excellent movie.
And still, is 2022. The south is one screwed up area. But then there’s Idaho, Nebraska, Ohio, and all the midwestern States. Nobody seems to grow out of that RACIST Bubble.?
You ain’t gonna do nothing. You’re gonna sit there and shut up. 😂😂
4:42 Mr. Tibbs has heard enough.
Jesus Christ, those are the noisiest chairs in film history.
Oh and Delores Purdy has one of the most sensuous voices I've ever heard (when she's not yelling, that is).
Ironically that cop looks kind of like Caroll O'Connor. And they had a remake of this movie as a t.v series in the 80's with Caroll O'Connor as the lead cop.
Grand movie making of the highest degree, saw it in the Cinema back in the day and times were still tough when it was made! Clan murders etc. Sydney was the premier black actor of his day… Rod could act we all knew he could and there was this thought he had one good one performance left in the old leading man and boy did he let it out! It was a time when people were really passionate about equality and this was emblematic of the time!
4:42 ight imma head out
Mississippi sure hasn’t changed much, has it?
This scene…this actress…stellar performance. I only wished she had had a bigger career.
I loved watching this movie with my eyeballs and hearing it with my earballs!!!
you can feel the heat and the tension in this movie so atmospheric it feels like your there.
That director dealt with uppity teenage daughters.
I laugh every time I see the look Steiger gives to Tibbs and the brother at 3:35. " He said that?! "
I noticed when he said that also. Always thought it was funny.
Maybe the most important film of the 20th century.
Excellent movie.
The TV series was good, although that was made in the 80s and was more of a mystery/crime drama.
Every inch of this scene was superb. They don’t make movies like this anymore. Everything now a days is like watching a high school play.
That dude ain't moving Tibbs any kind of way lol.
Wow! The Pointer Sisters way back in 1967.
🤓
This is a legendary film.
Dolores is looking at Virgil the way she sees every man,he wants her.
Great acting all around in that scene.
delores' brother,forget his name played a role as johnny costas on 'mission impossibel'
Was she wearing an egg carton under that top?
Perhaps the best scene in the movie! It captures the essence of the racial and class divide at the time and unfortunately today!
this is one of the sexiest scenes in film i've ever seen. then its finished with the hilarious "he said that?". its so perfect. one of my favourite scenes in a film.
Katherine Meara Rod Steiger is hilarious."He said that".
@@johnkent6572 and what about that stare (26 sec) she gives to Mr. Tibbs. Intense!
Film dates Sept. 26 to Nov. 1966 in Illinois (not Mississippi). Quentin Dean aka Dolores Purdy (1944--2003) was 22 playing a 16 year old. This scene is hilarious. I still don't get why she admitted she was pregnant while falsely naming Sam Wood as the father. Too bad Maury wasn't there . Because the real father was going to pay for her abortion; all she had to do was keep her mouth shut. I wonder what happened afterward. Probably gave it up for adoption.Just realized this scene is the only direct reference to the title.
Maury was only 27 at the time of filming! 😂
Is state of Mississippi more dixie than other southern states?
Late reply, but it depends on how you define things I guess. The way I understood it in the old South, even within the Confederacy during the Civil War many people in the "old states" on the Atlantic coast considered themselves superior, and you have to remember that Alabama, Mississippi and Louisiana (with the notable exception of New Orleans itself) didn't have an old "aristocracy" like the one you could find in Virginia, Georgia and the Carolinas. So from that perspective you could consider them to be "more dixie", but Mississippi is probably as "deep south" as it gets, whatever meaning you would want to put into such a phrase.
You betcha..and dont you mess with Texas..
@@mateuszmattias A Southern aristocracy , Carolina nobility . Many of the Carolina settlers arrived already possessed with titles including early governors, Sir John Yeamans and Sir Nathaniel Johnson. Ladies included Lady Rebecca Pratt Axtel and Dame Margaret Berringer, who married Gov. James Moore. The custom of the new “Carolina Aristocracy,” many of them from armigerous families, was to use their ancestral arms. It seems very English.
Quentin Dean died: May 9,2003, age 58.
she did a big valley episode,really a damn good actress
What did she die from?
@@angelajohnson6659 cancer 😪
She kinda look like Karen Carpenter.
Quentin Dean, Katherine Houghton, Judy Geeson... Sidney worked with some hotties, no?
Rod Steiger - amazing actor.
Somebody tell Jerry Lee Lewis what the age of consent is.
😂😂😂
That cool marble...love it.
"Ever stretch out on a tombstone, Dolores?"
I get a laugh when Chalky tells Tibbs the place in town men go when they get a girl in trouble is the barber. Sensing a hot lead Tibbs asks why the barber, Chalky responds with a laugh, "To get his throat cut!"
The eye exchange between Tibbs and Delores Purdy is pretty intense. What was that all about?
That was about her wanting to try a Black man. That's the same look that got many a man like Tibbs lynched.
I don't think so it was a look of surprise and defiance cause she was surprised to see a black man in that position.
At the beginning do you mean ? I was thinking it was the look of recognition that gets exchanged between coloured folk when one is passing as white . But i know nothing much about this movie although i could have gone to see it back in 67 ; and i don't think i would've appreciated it as a 13 year old . I also know little of the subtleties in American culture of this period . The Vietnam war spurred a cultural upheaval and heaps of other issues got thrown in .
Tibbs was clearly staring her down in regards to suspecting her role in the events that led to the murder, and Delores was meeting his suspicious gaze (although she doesn't know the exact cause of his suspicious gaze but she's a rebellious temptress so it doesn't matter much to her what the exact reason is either way) with a mocking contempt.
@@michaelcorbidge7914 Dolores wasn't colored
"Ah went fo' a rad with hayim. . ."
We've got puffies!
Delores Purdy is the reason this whole thing happened.
Rod and Sidney What performances
Gillespie's chair couldn't have creaked any more.
She’s going to take someone’s eye out with those
lol
A sordid peyton place type story
Still bit of humour offsets the drama
Wonder how many more women
Sam was involved with on his rounds
Quentin Dean is so hot. She’s a dead ringer for Natalie Wood
No .... she's dead. 2003
He said that?
If that girl was 16 at the time the shot that movie ,I am Mickey Mouse!
Quentin Dean was twenty three when that film was made.
I'm laughing at the chewing gum sheriff 😅 his nerves bad 😅😅
3:34 Lol. The guy playing her brother gets very uncomfortable winces and shifts his body after that bit of information.
you stopped it too early. The last lines werent delivered.
I love Gillespie's, "whadels,whadels, whadels."
To the Sheriff he's a n....but he's my n.....You can't tell him what to do.
What puzzles me is how did Tibbs connect her to the murder
Classic scene
Quentin Dean...A mystery as to what became of her!
Sadly, she passed away from cancer, aged fifty nine in 2003 in Los Angeles. Her real name was Corrine Margolin.
@@cliffwheeler7357 i wonder if she was related to Stuart margolin who played angel on the Rockford files?
2:36 tipps looking like a real professional police officer hands in his pockets , i wonder if the director tells how to stand on each minute or are the actors who make choices on some occasions
* Tibbs.
This movie is awesome
You cut it short. You should have left in what the brother said to Gillespie.
Rod Steiger was amazing
Yes, your right, she does remind you of Karen Carpenter, Natalie woods…. No!
We have come a long way since then but still a great way to to go for love for everyone for justice and justice ❤️❤️❤️🇨🇦
"Courtney!..get your ass in heh-ya!!"
Her opening scene wasn’t bad either!