Orson Welles Recounts Crossing Paths With Hitler And Churchill! | The Dick Cavett Show
ฝัง
- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 2 ก.พ. 2025
- Orson Welles tells stories of crossing paths with high-profile people, from Winston Churchill to Adolf Hitler.
Orson Welles' interviews don't come short of name drops!
Date aired - July 27th, 1970 - Orson Welles
---
For clip licensing opportunities please visit www.globalimag...
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 #OrsonWelles #WinstonChurchill #AdolfHitler #1970s #CitizenKane #TouchOfEvil #Directors #Films #WorldWarII #Jewish
Orson Welles' interviews don't come short of name drops!
I doubt he met Hitler, he was way too young, about 15, when his story would have taken place, odd..
😂
@@augustintamard3850 after his father passed away when he was 15, Welles inherited a bunch of money and went to travel to Europe by himself, started his career in theatre in Ireland, travelled to North Africa, and married. all of this happened while he was still in his teenage years
in fairness he did try to steer the conversation away from celebrity names
@@augustintamard3850 Welles was notorious for telling tall stories.
Orson Welles looks so modern and contemporary in this video. It's crazy to hear him talk about people he met in the 1930s and 1940s, while dressed like he could be alive today.
When he spoke about meeting the lady in her mid 90s who'd been a young " hostess" during the American Civil War knowing Lincoln and Welles own great, great grandfather ..... holy moley.
To think he was bprn in 1915..
voorster achternaam OW is obviously a serial liar he is too young to have met these people and even if he was old enough I still don't believe him
@@TheSolidheroes It's 2020. My grandfather was born in 1864. Does that make me a liar?
@@TheSolidheroes dude, he died in 1985 at 70, he was one of the youngest and most prolific cinema directors, he was travelling all around tge world and he spent a lot of time in germany in the 30s, around the time the nazis started becoming powerful..
Notice how the audience don't whoop every 5 seconds. A different time when conversation was interesting and people were famous for doing something notable.
The audience did what they told them to do, just like today.
@@stefan1024 Right? That still supports my point.
Also, audiences only gave standing ovations at the end of an extraordinarily good performance. Today, standing ovations are given for nothing at all, merely for a celebrity walking onstage. They have become as worthless as a kindergarten diploma.
@Dorset Deb Oh no, friend, white baby boomers did it to themselves, and then raised these snowflakes. You can't force people to abandon their values, if they actually have them.
@Mr Zeus Accurate summary of pop culture.
i nearly expected him to say “ah, julius ceasar, lovely fellow. i met him once during my trip to rome. truly a shame what happened to him”
you are a legend
OW talking about FDR, Churchill & Hitler sounds like Eddie Izzard making a joke. Lovely chap.
That Brutus, what a back-stabber, huh?
Interesting, wouldn’t it be wonderful to travel back 2080 years and meet Julius Caesar 😉
Exactly correct considering he was only 5 when Hitler was coming up. He would have only been hitting puberty when Hitler came into power. So he really expects people to believe he was hiking and having dinner with and exploring the world at 5.
The thing I like and admire about Dick Cavett is that he actually lets his guests speak and not constantly interrupting them when they speak. The talk show hosts these days can learn a lot from Cavett.
The talk show hosts back then could have learned a lot from Cavett.
This was a truly talking show
One of THE great shows!
Johnny Carson as well.
You have to understand, though, that people back then could actually talk eloquently about their experiences. Many talk show hosts today have to step in because their guests are functionally illiterate halfwits, and are incapable of carrying the conversation.
As a European I find it fascinating how the talk show host is still alive who talked to Orson Welles about talking to a Lady who had known personally all the great personalities of the Civil War who must in turn have known personally some of the founding fathers... Thats basically Your entire history in the span of 4 generations.
@@johnbull1568 I was not aware, thanks! Being born to a 63 year old dad and later at the age of 75 becoming a dad yourself is just cheating the floating gap ;)
@@MrRookie1981 I had to wrap my head around it tbh, the numbers seem nonsensical, which they are lol. I'm 48, and my grandfather was slightly too young to serve in WWII, so the idea that a person who is still alive has a grandfather that was President nearly 200 years ago is plain nuts.
@@johnbull1568 well, Im almost 40, and my grandfather was my age when he got drafted into WW II in 1940, so I am literally familiar with the concept of stretched generations, but your example is much more bizarre ^^
@@MrRookie1981 Yes, when your grandfather would've died a half-century before you're born, it's not as tight of a connection as it would otherwise seem to be.
awesome comment
Who needs cable when you have thousands of hours of VERY HIGH quality interviews like this one. Just WOW!
Same here
This was on cable wasn't it ?
It’s all a script. Either way it theatre
@@sadderbythecloud there was no cable TV back then. You had the big 3 networks; NBC, ABC and CBS. That's it.
You said it Superma...uhhh..., I mean Clark.
He has unmatched charisma. He talks in such unique way where he controls the conversation very tightly, yet remains very friendly at the same time. And it's honest friendliness. I have never seen anyone do that in such way before.
Very true. This is why I love watching Orson's interviews because he possessed a wealth of knowledge, and charisma that you don't see in many famous Hollywood people.
Orson is one of the truly greatest personalities to have walked this earth. His warmth, insights, irony, sense of adventure, embrace of life in all it's mad unpredictability is just too much to take in all at once. Just by listening to his tales I feel elevated to a better place temporarily.
Well said and agreed.
@Little Ghost Films - beautiful homage/comment. Btw his Venice anecdote reminded me of the time [33 years ago] when my Type A ex and I were walking in the Cinqueterre and we ran into our hosts' sweet neighbor, Bruno. It tickled me that he stopped every few minutes to tell us a story [and no doubt to catch his breath] thus annoying my ex who wanted to cover all five towns on foot that day. He nearly blew a gasket when the man took us on a tour of his family's ancient fruit grove on the way. Bruno recalled visiting Venice after the war where he encountered Mr. Welles sitting on the steps of the Doges palace and the latter telling him the story of the scorpion and the frog.
Agreed! I could listen to him talk for hours on end. Doesn't hurt that he has one of the most wonderful speaking voices of all time
Agreed. I'd recommend you listen to his radio dramas from the late 1930s. The Mercury Theatre on the Air. Truly magnificent radio from a forgotten age.
Hemingway had the same type of charm.
Welles was a natural born story teller and Dick Cavett the most subtle but effective interviewer,
Donal Casey such a shame you don’t see show host like him now .
"My camera was angled so he didn't know he was being photographed into anybody's film of memory." What a sentence!
And he liked young boys it seemed,we never got to see that footage from orson
Van Halen, not Van Haggar
Right! When i heard that I thought " I want to talk like that"
@@SundayGravy812 I understood that reference
I think he said "filmic memory" which means the same thing, and of course is no less impressive.
"The man sitting next to me was Hitler. And he made so little impression on me that I can't remember a second of it."
What a comment.
Who knows if Welles was right, but as the man usually did, he presents a miniature thesis to Cavett here: that there was not really an Adolf Hitler as history knows him until thousands of people were already saluting him. They provided Hitler, even to Hitler.
@@MegaZeta interesting comment. Carl Jung said something very similar as well.
@@nicktrice4921 Jung said it was impossible to be friends with Hitler, because Hitler was not a real person so to speak, only the reflection of (the dark part) of his nation.
He couldn't met Hitler. Hitler hadn;t been in Austria till 1938.
@@MegaZeta Great comment.
Holy smokes - what a timeless interview. History being told by a historical figure.
She was delicious
Every episode of The Dick Cavett Show captures history like no other show.
Absolutely... one could even say Orson Welles was creating history here.
@williambauscher9296 that's exactly what he was doing, lying. To believe an actor without evidence is foolish, they are liars. So much of the history of Germany in that era is... lies and fabrications to cover the true murderous evil of the allies.
He had no respect for philosophy. I never realized how foolish Orson was until I watched this interview.
The fact that this was filmed 50 years ago, amazes me for some reason.
Amazing isn’t it! Also, 2001: a space odyssey was made in 1969?!?
C K crazy how some of the best movies of all time were made in the early eras of cinema
@@ck891 Made from 1965 to 1968. Released in 1968.
@@jamesanthony5681 that’s very true. I did actually know that, don’t know why I didn’t just say that in the first place...
Edit: my god though, ‘65 that’s truly amazing
What amazes me more is your poor grammar.
The intelligence of Orson Wells is staggering. Every sentence, every single word is so well thought out as he speaks.
He read everything.
He’s not dumb, but more than anything he’s articulate.
Thats not intelligence. Thats pedigree. Welles was american aristocracy on both parents.
@@mskidi It's both, actually: intelligence and pedigree. Orson read books and knew Shakespeare as a young boy.
The old abdicator, Edward V111, had pedigree - looked good, carried himself and spoke reasonably well - but behind those words was a bleeding idiot. The 'Duke of Dumb', as Mordecai Richler once referred to him.
Exactly! Same thing with Maya Angelou
Welles's command of the English language is amazing.
When Welles says he’d ran away to the theatre to avoid getting an education, at Harvard, there’s something left unsaid, namely, that to be a serious stage actor during his time meant committing vast tracts of Shakespeare and the classics to memory, for life.
Churchill himself won two Nobel Prizes: peace and literature, despite being a calamitous failure at school in particular and education in general. He’d read. Voraciously.
Then define "Mahahaha" for me.
"Command" is an excellent choice of words.
One gets the impression that the language wouldn't dare not do his bidding.
Him and Peter Ustinov. I could listen to them for hours.
Fo sho
I am so happy we had Dick to talk to all these people and have it all recorded. People actually had real conversations with him. Dick is still the master of the " talk show " in my mind.
Ridgefield Tigers 🐅
Agreed.
I cant imagine any of todays batch doing this, it would be a terrible conversation.
True but Tom Snyder did some really great interviews also ... and there's one of them here with Orson Welles also
@@gardensofthegods Yep. I used to watch Tom too.
Orson was ahead of his time you could feel it, he speaks as if he is still alive today, he doesnt sound outdated or old.
It’s striking indeed that his manner and speech seem ageless fifty years hence when Welles was a man who deeply despised the evolution of modernity becoming evident during his time.
@@michaeljames4904 Yes! Welles is most charming, when he speaks of gentlemen, and geniuses, with a reverence which indicates, he didn't fully grasp that his dues were paid forward, in both of those clubs!
Even more than that he seems timeless. Like he could fit into any point in history and make it work.
@@logansowers1674it's a rare quality. He was a master of voice and inflection. Hands down the greatest speaker of his time. He was a Shakespearean actor.
This is literally worthy of a time capsule. This is iconic, culturally significant.
Agreed. How could you not be impressed?
Why?
it's just a theater actor fabulist making up stories.
@@jimjoe9945 if you don't know by now there's no use in telling you!
Dick Cavett's interviews are often included in Criterion Collection releases, so they in fact already are!
I love how the audience is so quiet that it seems like Welles is just chilling with Cavett and telling him cool things about his youth.
They were in the presence of greatness and didn't want to miss anything
for a few minutes I wondered whether there was even an audience at all.
You just can't beat a well spoken person where their speech flows so easily into your ears that comprehension is a delight rather than a chore.
What a great way to put it, “making comprehension a delight rather than a chore” I’ll remember that one
O'Biden and Kamala have entered the chat.
Dick Cavett's fashion: 1970
Orson Welles fashion: 2019
Man Ahead of His Time...........In so many Ways............ Old World Manners an Gentleman.... though........which is very rare in 2019..........
Cavett's fashion (but for the 1970s longer sideburns) is classic educated gentleman's ... perhaps until the 2020 Brooks Brothers bankruptcy.
Orson wore black, which was a slimming color - and never out of fashion - because Welles was, how shall we say, VERY heavy? Cavett looks somewhat contemporary in his clothes, and he dressed at a time before the wide ties and wide lapels and ugly browns came out in men's fashion not too long after this.
Fashion is a tyrant whom the wise ridicule and obey. - Ambrose Bierce Cavett is just about sophisticated enough to see the silliness of the current fashion, and yet be very up to date. Wells is older and not so much ahead of the times as above it all. Cavett seemed almost taken aback by Well's description of Hitler, as if Wells' sophistication catches him off guard.
Too right. Amazing.
I could listen to Orson Welles talk all day. He is so interesting.
That's also because he happened to have one of the greatest voices ever.
There's something characteristic of people of that generation , perhaps because they grew up in a time when people of all classes were taught to speak and use language properly.
One of the most creative minds of the 20th Century. Citizen Kane was voted greatest motion picture of all time for a very good reason. He was genius.
Think of how talented he was... he made Citizen Kane when he was only 25 years old. And many people for many years considered it the best movie ever made.
@@amerispunk His cinematic contributions greatly influenced many. He was ground-breaking for his time.
The original “most interesting man in the world,” Mr. Orson Welles. What a true intellect.
Yessss
He's got nothing on peter ustinov
@@sirhiss5915 Ustinov.........Quite the Interesting Gentleman.......Could listen all day.......
He’d be great in those commercials
"His beard alone has experienced more than a lesser man's entire body."
One of the best interviews I have ever seen.
To have a beer with this man would be life changing.
I totally agree, would you mind if I bring my friend Peter Ustinov along he's got a few good stories to tell.?
Yes, exactly one beer and no talking.
Or me smoking a blunt and him smoking cigars would be amazing.
I would love to share a bottle of Paul Maison with him
People in Hollywood are great at making up stories and telling them. Very entertaining- just don’t believe half of what they tell you!
70s are an awesome time. Modern enough to have tv shows like this but old enough that people who knew/worked with the leaders of the Second World War were not just alive but still able to get around and give interviews. Absolutely amazing
Yeah, they are better in memory. Nostalgia makes you forget how truly awful the 1970s were.
Also the Hollywood stars from the Golden Era. There was a nostalgia moment in the early '70's, and many of the great stars were "re-discovered" while fortunately, many were still alive. On one of Cavett's shows, the guests were Janis Joplin and Gloria Swanson!
Yes, my thoughts exactly. Such a bizarre time
The 1970’s was the apotheosis of civilization. Not to quote he who shall not be named, but I got a feeling when he says make America great again, this is what he’s talking about.
Can't help but admire the pace. No rushing...Just a smooth flow of conversation.
Yes absolutely.
.....could NT finish interview-too slow
I think that's mostly due to Dick Cavett's excellent ability to actually listen to his guests, and not interrupt them.
@@stephenfiore9960 loves himself much.
OW - "Can I tell a little story about him?" (Marshall) DC - "Certainly." The appropriate response. Otherwise we'd have never heard the response. What a gem.
This conversation just confirms why Orson Welles was considered a genius. He's an awesome storyteller! And that story about Churchill was hilarious! :D
Rock music rock music
The Churchill story is a Richard Burton story that Welles stole and told about himself.
@@Jim-Tuner or that Burton stole from Welles, and told about himself, perhaps.
@@tylercass2584 Burton told it first and Burton has a better reputation by far than Welles in terms of making things up.
He's an Orson storyteller
Welles was quite a storyteller. I didn't realize just how good an interviewer Cavett was. He just asked a question and Welles took it from there. This is what an interview should be. Welles is that guy whom you could have a conversation for hours and never be bored. Love this video.
So many things are so fake now its sad and frightening.
Dick Cavett was a great interviewer. He knows implicitly when to ask a question, when to stay quiet, and when to encourage his guest. This is like a conversation between two great friends I feel privileged to have witnessed.
A 12 minute interview with true stories of such gravity as to put a year's worth of modern television to shame. What a life of clarity and perspective.
About three hours an interview too short
Stunning. Orson Welles ought to have won an Academy for his performance on this interview alone...what a raconteur! - an absolute delight. People like that don’t exist anymore. Imagine having Welles as a dinner companion: oh, the stories...
@Dorian Philotheates
Bro is that your real name? By all the elder gods of yore that is an almost impossibly cool & powerful name!
Robert Deskins - Ha! 🙂Thanks; I was named after my grandfather and he, after his grandfather before him. The last name is derived from the toponym of our ancestral village in the prefecture of Doris in Central Greece (the original homeland of the ancient Dorians, who gave it its name).
He was the best .
This is masterful acting
There is a book called “My Lunches with Orson” that’ll satisfy what you’re talking about in the last sentence.
Not to be forgotten, we'll never see and hear another Polymath like Orson Welles again.
We would be lucky if we did
@@arriuscalpurniuspiso Our cultural/educational system won't support it, sadly. :(
@@AAZEDLARC look how Hollywood ran Welles out of town. They wouldn't finance his work. Also Marlon Brando. And you look at movie stars today. They sign studio contracts that tell them what they can and cannot say in the media.
I was struck with the impression, after stumbling across this interview the other day, of how close it is to perfection. Intelligent interviewer questions his articulate guest who has mingled with major historical figures, and the guest is humbly forthright and honest. I'm just a young pup at 63, but for now this is the most fascinating interview I've ever seen, and the final story is the superb send off. Thank you Mr. Cavett and staff for sharing this historical document.
I have been enthralled with great interviews for a long time. Orson Welles, one of the best. I will never forget how in his Paris interview he said how much ignorance helped his creativity. Find this interview if you haven't watched it yet. I suffer now because I am around people who are formulaic in their approach and they suffocate me. It's time a new blank sheet of paper.
Well Hitchens is my favourite interviewee for his knowledge, wit, anecdotes and subject matter of the role of religion on humankind and the critical right to freedom of speech (caveat would be that he went off the rails supporting the US proxy wars of the early part of the 21st century). However this guy is very genuine and humble and it produces a nice, leisurely productive chat show exchange. Certainly amusing last story about Churchill.
I agree ... Also try watching Michael Parkinson interview Peter Ustinov
Being suspicious about philosophy is the most philosophical thing you can do
Jay Amen!
Touche!
Yes because Philosophy is not science.
Philosophy is the basis of science (and scientific method) and cornerstone of all civilization, especially Western civilization.
Philosophy is sometimes blind to the biases of its western, rationalist foundations. Disciplines like cultural anthropology have challenged some deeply ingrained ways of thinking that have become institutionalized in philosophy
I could sit and listen to him talk for hours. He had a storybook sound to his rich and beautiful voice. Orson Welles was a truly talented man.
You can’t handle the facts
This is the first time I’ve actually had taken the time to listen to Orsen Wells. I was fascinated by every word. When he stood up at the end, laughter burst out of me like I haven’t done in ages.
Can you imagine Jimmy Fallon falling over with laughter every twenty seconds? Ugh. This one interview is more important than ALL of Facebook.
Lmao, they would never talk on Fallon he would have Orson playing a trivia game while the roots played covers of Rihanna songs.
Ok boomer
@Gubba Bump ok boomer
OK BOOMER
he's so fake.
"Desperate not to be educated, I went into theater." The most succinct definition of actors and entertainers ever given.
No, it isn't. Welles was too modest to say that he'd actually received a first-rate education at his school. He continued his education in the theatre.
No, to be uneducated go into politics.
Orson read everything and anything from a very early age.
Welles consumed knowledge but mostly food.
@@claudiodominguez. I think it's clear he consumed equal amounts of both. ;)
That last story about Churchill bowing to him was freaking hilarious 😂
even better when you know that Orson Welles spent most of his life scrounging for financing of his film projects
i dont think it actually happend like that. He just made this story up in my opinion. Maybe he met Churchill in a hotel but thats all. Churchill was five years dead in that time (when this interview was aired) so noone could prove him wrong anyway. I met few people like Orson Welles and they like to be in center of attention. They make up funny stories very often even borrowing them from other people. Also this story with Hitler is most likely not true. I guess he was in Austria in that time and maybe one of his friends or tutors met Hitler but i dont think he personally met him.
Didn't notice. Switched off already by that time. The guy is a narcissistic fabricator.
@@erfgtdsfsdf6993 okay, mr. Random Internet guy
@@seethoseareyourtearsman.1758 Russians say "Trust, but verify." You can apply it to this interview.
Of the 100,000 videos I’ve seen on TH-cam, this is the greatest, so well spoken, so ahead of his times. 1970 but sits there looking like he’s in 2020. What he’s seen, done and experienced. Not a single minute of this you get derailed or bored, the world would never appreciate this sort of intelligence, just remarkable. Any students looking to do a piece on someone historic, here’s the man to choose!
I cannot imagine a conversation like this occurring today anywhere on the planet.
Well Cavett was on Seth Meyer recently and it basically went just like this.
@Anton Boludo from the little I've seen, no he can't.
Anton Boludo Jordan is a phony
Anton Boludo Owen Benjamin has proved his point on Jordan.
So right Anton but has he the humour and wit?
This was riveting. I feel like my vocabulary went up 80% in 12 minutes.
Indubitably.
These shows come from a time when both education and intellect (and the application of both) was not considered "Toxic" somehow, as it seems to be today.
Agreed!
How dumb were you before watching this? I shudder at the thought.
Clikt in bcuz I knew sumdumF was gunna hav2 make a retahd'd crak - I aints disgaMcperntd
As time goes on, I appreciate Dick Cavett's interviews more and more, especially if I attempt to watch some of the current late night talk show interviews.
Current ones are so insipid.
Yes, especially the one with Eddie Murphy.
Understatement: love DC
The odious Jimmy Fallon springs to mind.
He had some good ones with Katharine Hepburn, Welles, Robert Mitchum. He did a series of interviews with Jonathan Miller around 1980-1985 that were very good.
Amazing writer. Great voice, great story teller, extremely articulate, an intellectual, cultured, human.
The story about Churchill had me in stitches, it’s like a comedy sketch. The way he tells the story paints a perfect scene in my mind.
I've heard so many great Churchill stories. Not heard that one before though. lol
This man has a voice & cadence that would convince me the earth was under assault from indigenous creatures that inhabit mars.
He would have surely convinced me, too. In fact, he did convince a good number of fellow citizens of his.
hwoods01 😆
hwoods01 hahahahaha good one 👍
He has an interesting accent.
good one
We would never see an interview like this today. A well spoken guest and an interviewer who seemed interested in the answers to his questions and who also gave the impression that he had all day to hear those answers. It was a different age...
The majority of viewers lack the attention span required to sit through this interview.
Russell Brand
You can still find such things if you know where to look. Peter Robinson From "Uncommon Knowledge" by the Hoover Institute is an excellent interviewer and has had some fantastic interviews over the years.
....Joe Rogan.....
He is more of a journalist than a comedian. Difference in talk shows these days. I would imagine 60 minutes these days but not long enough for a full interview.
I always have deep respect for people who stood up for what was right when it wasn't fashionable to do so, Long live Orson Welles
He stuck his neck out for Isaac Woodard and called for justice when he didn't need to, he spent 4 consective Sunday broadcasts talking about it exclusively. Orson was a good man :)
“My camera was angled so he didn’t know he was getting photographed in anybody’s film of memory”. Drop the Mic.! Orson Welles the greatest storyteller of all time. the greatest director , producer, actor , cameramen , screen writer , and crew of his own life. Making all of us citizens of Wells As he was Shakespeare himself coming to life .Oscars , all around .
That phrase about memory knocked me out. Genius!
The ending to his last story about Churchill had me laughing so hard. I would have loved to talk with Mr. Wells.
Chad Townsend Mr Welles.
Such a great story
Maybe you will one day, this mans definitely in heaven
Yeah, I don't often find things funny but that was hilarious!
Chad Townsend ~ Yeah,
Check out the amazing documentary footage called =
“Churchill’s War!”
By David Irving
You Won’t Be Disappointed !
This is one of the most fascinating interviews I've ever listened to.
Basically boring
I wish the world still had characters like Orson Welles, and a new generation of interviewers like Dick Cavett.
It's wonderful to watch an actual conversation. We so rarely see those any more.
That's why I love Christopher Hitchens and Joey Diaz.
Joe Rogan Show, you can watch or listen real conversations there
The entertainers back in the day lived very interesting lives!
@Big Bill O'Reilly 100% podcasts are great and provide massive amounts of long-form conversations.
People no longer have the mental capacity to undestand more than one sentence without foul language. Threw my TV out 4 years ago, the best thing I've done since 1979!
I like how Orson calls his eyes his "camera" and his memory a "film".
I like how you reminded us. Velly niiice.
Keepin Mahprivacy a 2nd grade allegory. How grossly elementary
@@70mjc The only thing second grade here is your attitude.
Ah, you are so much more advanced I guess. How many Academy Award winning films have you written and directed?
@Mind Control Experiments Wow, you noticed.
I grew up on this era of television when talk shows were truly interesting, entertaining and not to be missed, especially with a guest like Orson Welles.
So you're like 100? Jk
Probably the most interesting interview I've ever watched. How refreshing to listen to someone intelligent who has something to say, and says it well.
I punched him once, but i admit he took it gracefully, a true gentleman.
He was so refreshing even ten pints of cider have no quality Street on legs! Thank you sir, i take a bow, you must admit though, i have talent.
Im waiting!
Im waiting!
Still waiting sir! Only gentlemen like me will wait for recognition , you like that word?
What a fascinating man Orson Welles was. Yet he speaks of other men with admiration, and a lost generation of great men. Today, there is hardly a man alive that could compare with such character.
I disagree
I can't think of anyone today who has his eloquence and way with words
Could listen to him speak for hours. Thanks for the video.
he did have quite a voice
The same can be said for Dick. This video can both excite me and lullaby me to sleep
Listen to the war of the worlds, goes on for a while XD
*....I Can Lie My Ass Off Too....*
Definition of charisma
Love listening to Orson tell his stories, always creates a perfect mind picture
He's greta to listen to- but he never stops lying. None of this is true.
I guess that was his special talent wasnt it? So good, the public went into a hysteria believing aliens had invaded our land
@Benny Hill no, I wasn't becasue i was playing golf with Stalin, in those days.
@Benny Hill very ruthless golf player- not a nose bleeder, if he got his nose in front.
Of course it's all made up, this is Orson Welles we're talking about.
"She was a great certainly as... Churchhill, as Roosevelt..." what a remarkable statement from a great man. To have been able to have known historical movers and shakers and to have had the experience of coaxing an old lady into telling her old memories of people long dead. If I had known Orson Welles - or if you had met him - he might have related to me, or you, too as just another human walking the earth, living life.
I had no idea Orson Wells was so humble and self-deprecating.
Yes, he could play that role well from time to time.
What an American original, though.
He often said that his success was due to luck.
"There is no justice. People just get good luck or bad luck."
@Agent J Cool -- I wasn't complaining about anything. I wasn't being sarcastic about him being an American original. I love his work, and his interviews. But let's not pretend he was humble in all settings, because that's just not supported by the facts.
@Agent J "Dip shits dispense unwanted, unqualified advice." You're not my life coach; you're an internet stranger. We're done here.
only in his elder years
I fall more and more in love with Orson Wells every time I watch his interviews. What a great man. Well spoken. Remarkable story teller. Strong and kind and considerate and thoughtful. No ego. Beautiful person. RIP.
After watching this interview..I watched it again and I suspect I will repeat that ritual from time to time. I want to be reminded of the wonder of intellect and how respectful it is to listen without interrupting. Tremendous stories what hero’s.
I thought I was the only one doing this :D
I agree it was heartwarming
Let Fallon, Leno, Corden and Ferguson have their shows but there needs to be a separate format with a silent audience and educated conversation where people just tell stories uninterrupted for minutes on end
An excerpt from one of the greatest conversations in late-night talkshow history, between one of the greatest hosts, and one of the greatest guests.
I could listen to this man forever, what a treasure he was. You notice how still the audience is, Even if there is laughter it cuts off so as to not miss a syllable of what he would say next
I remember as a kid in the seventies seeing people on chat shows like Welles,Peter Ustinov,James Cagney,Bette Davis,James Stewart, etc etc.Amazing stars who had great stories to tell and kept the viewers engrossed.Im glad I can remember those great programmes.
I love how he speaks. His voice is captivating. Could listen to him all day.
I’ve never seen Cavett so happy as when Welles asks whether his host would mind if he recounted a story... Dick just sits back and grins and hands over the stage. The perfect guest.
I must say Cavett is such a great interviewer he lets his guests speak and makes it all about them. I think he's even better than Michael Parkinson for doing that. Orson Welles must have been a gift of an interview.
right, like he's reciting a play or doing theatre.
The story of the General and the young soldier is true leadership on display. That General tended to his troop first. That soldier was more important than what the General and Mr. Wells were doing at that moment. As a veteran myself that story warmed my heart. Respect.
"my camera was angled so he didn't know he was being photographed in somebody's film of memory", what a line
“I feel that anthropology is only at it’s beginning, you know, and that philosophy is at really at it’s end”
Oh, how true you were
"...That day at lunch I came with the financier again and Mr. Churchill rose...and bowed." I laugh harder every time I hear him say that. One of the greatest true stories ever.
It is total bullshit. Great to listen to. But it is BS.
Never let the truth get in the way of a good story. Something Welles lived by
A host allowing the guest to speak. And an audience doing the same.
How times have changed.
I keep hearing about references about Johnny Carson, but Dick Cavett is an excellent interviewer and asks his guests intelligent and sincere revealing questions.
Each possessed a speaker's traits admirable in their own respect.
Watching this I realise how far we've fallen.
I know right? We went from two *amazing* world wars to nothing but skirmishes. Fingers crossed we'll have another big war soon so people can look back on us as worthy of existence.
I agree 👍 People had manners and class back then.
@@TheRightLadder You're a stupid individual aren't you? You wouldnt recognise intelligent discourse from one of the 20th century's cultural giants if it ran you over.
how dare you . you forget about the real house wives of new jersey
@@TheRightLadder He was talking about this TV program, Orson Welles and the calibre of the conversation you attention-seeking dolt.
Orsen Welles is one of those people who can make any story absolutely interesting.
He also was witness to many world events and met many important people in the day.
Loved every movie this man was associated with.
When you're in the presence of greatness. The best thing you can do is close your mouth and listen.
Wow, shortest 12 minute clip on TH-cam.
Still worth it.
The way he shapes his sentences and wording is astounding. Such an awesome story teller.
He shapes them exactly like Gore Vidal or vice versa. Both from affluent, well educated families, you could say some type of american aristocracy, both very fond of themselves.
Every time I thought "Well, I've heard what I came to hear," he pulls me back in to hear the next story.
What an interesting conversationalist.
"A gentleman; an institution that is sadly no longer with us."
Oh Lord, that hit me.
its not for lack of trying either. You can TRY to be a gentleman these days but most often it is taken as meaning something else. The kind gesture has indeed been laid off. For it no longer can even be a kind gesture without further implication. We've learned to distrust each other. Always looking for a hidden meaning or motive. Suspicious of everyone. So fuck 'em all! Unfortunately.
Me too
The gentleman was highly dependent on an underlying moral social structure. I wouldn't go as far as to say we have a chicken or the egg issue, but for the gentleman to make a return, we have to address the personal meaning, and the common values that our social ties are built upon.
@@JonnyUnderrated when the concept of "lady" died, the gentleman died soon after. Being a lady and being a gentleman is the upper echelons of a society who understands its role and purpose. There was the woman and the bloke before it. No we evolved to no roles or identity, and that won't end well for society as a whole.
@@julianmarco4185 We didn't evolve into no roles. When one chooses no role for themself, they will act like one with no role....and teach their child the same. To be a "lady" or "gentleman" requires no defined role...only the individual's choice to be one.
I could listen to Orson Welles talk for hours and hours. Absolutely fascinating individual.
I am 43 how have i managed to miss this,
You could sit and listen for hours.
Of the classic talk show s I've seen, Dick Cavett has to be my favorite because it's actually a *talk* show.
Dick sits & talks with the guest, doesn't cut them off, doesn't clog up the interview with stupid jokes, & waits for them to finish before asking the next question.
The audience is great too. As far as I can tell, they aren't being told to react, they do it naturally.
"I knew Napoleon too. Short, angry man but a genius."
haaa right on
Extraordinary. If only chat shows were still like this.
@Brandon MartinFor example?
@Brandon Martin Inside T A S is for me hit or miss depending upon the guest but I take your point. Cheers!
And that's why I hate TV
@@balthiersgirl2658Plenty of reasons to;-)
@@mikesmith-pj7xz Graham Norton has his moments.
The story he relates about Churchill is one of my all time favourites. Welles is sometimes thought of as a 'storyteller' but this vignette rings absolutely true.
When he said “anthropology” my heart skipped a beat! I so admire him, and I dropped out of college after taking 4 semesters of only anthropology courses 🤣🤣
I wonder if the interviewer knew what Anthropology is about.
Orson Welles is one of those people who have amazing charisma and ability to just freeze u with their speech
He was rather arrogant and probably didn't think much of many around them. Likely a run of the mill selfish narcissist. Hollywood certainly has no shortage of those.
You are not nice.
@@hanorabrennan8846 Orson Wells was not nice. This is a known fact.
@@Bonzi_Buddy Yes, he's an actor.. going by the narrative of Hollywood, we all know who controls Hollywood, and MSM, and banks, government....
@@Bonzi_Buddy thats true, but it doesn't contradict what i say. lot of bad and awful people are very charismatic
He’s that friend who always has a story to “one up” any story you’re trying to tell.
And the damnable thing is that he can do it every time! :-D
Yes, but it wouldn't be born of insecurity, which is the usual impulse.
And you wouldn’t be threatened in the slightest every time he did.
And effortlessly, as well, of course. Never trying so hard that it could come off as desperate. Simply because he HAS those stories.
But his stories really did one up ours and you got the feeling that if he did one up you, you would let him.
This has got to be one of the best uses of youtube - to see old heroes of the past. Cavett just puts out a topic and allows time for guest to speak. amazing to see.
what a masterful and spellbinding storyteller. even if you don't care about his story you can't stop listening.
He's such a captivating and witty person, I could listen to his stories for hours Thanks for sharing.
I consider Orson Wells to be the greatest story teller of the 20th century. Truly a remarkable man.
If this is anything to go by then he was certainly one of its biggest liars.
Such a good interview. Back in the day it was often like this, a proper discussion between two bright people
Incredible that next year this interview will be 50 years old, this was only 25 years after ww2
And to think his War of the Worlds broadcast was over 80 years ago...
Yes. I was thinking recently about something I'd forgotten. When I was growing up in the UK in the 1960s almost every single male adult you met or read about had WW2 service of one kind or another. It was so all pervasive that you hardly gave it a second thought.
So to us ww2 would’ve happened in ‘95
"Im suspicious of philosophy....is kind of at it's end."
Wow..when Orson speaks the truth it feels like the weight of immense anchor. Wonderful interview!
im not too sure what he meant by that but it sure sounds deep.
I wished he went further on about why he's interested in anthropology, because it seems at it's end now too.
What an erudite and cultured person Orson Wells was. Pure class!
Name dropper supreme is what he was, he is a bluffer , no class no, culture, he ended up a cheap seller of his previous self.
@kurgan I just found some marbles with your name on them, will post them back to you.
@@kevinmadden1152 go for a walk Kevin, life is passing you by.
@@kevinmadden1152 ...let me guess you're a homosexual transsexual who voted for Hilary and thinks pedophilia should be legalized.
Also a drunk, but I agree with you.
I watched this back in the day. I love Cavett. His style was 2nd to none and also makes me realize his style is not unlike Joe Rogan's sit and chat. It's shows this is still the best way to interview. So glad they posted Cavett's interviews. Classic stuff.