My mother's father had his education interrupted by WWII (a Jewish guy in Poland: he and his brother fled to the USSR, then fled the USSR after the war--along with around 10 million other people); he, too, read his way through the Encyclopedia Britannica. Interesting to hear Connery did the same. Connery was and is a highly intelligent guy. Not sure he gets enough credit for that -- and entirely self-educated. At his AFI he noted his biggest break was learning how to read. He made a very good documentary on labor relations in Scotland back in the 60s. I wish he'd made more. Very smart guy.
They sure have some great ones: David Hume, Adam Smith, James Hutton, James Clerk Maxwell, Connery...and many more. Every culture has its greats, of course. But not every culture has invented scotch! :) If Covid ever ends, Scotland is high on the list for me and my wife. (As a boy, I was convinced the Loch Ness Monster existed...until a paleontologist friend of my father noted that a glacier had covered the loch for, like, a long time. Longer than a plesiosaur could hold its breath.)
I think Connery is easily the best Bond so I have no bias against him. But you don't hear of any of the other Bonds publicly complaining about their pay. Only Connery and he was very well paid for the films. In fact, he successfully renegotiated his contract on at least two occasions before he made You Only Live Twice. Broccoli and Saltzman didn't have to agree to that. From what I've read, Connery wanted them to cut him in as a producer with a percentage of the profits. This would have effectively meant that they would be paying Connery an enormous amount of money out of their own pocket when they were the ones who took the initial financial risk on the franchise. That was never going to happen. Connery was reportedly offered an astronomical $5.5 million to do Live and Let Due but he turned it down. I think the producers treated him very well but Connery wanted just more.
@@ricogomez4020 The producers were never going to do that. But if Connery would have stayed in the role if he had been made a partner then his complaints that playing Bond was killing him as an actor would be viewed as lies. Maybe they were lies and he just wanted more money. But then again he is rumoured to have turned down $5.5 million to do Live and Let Die. It's difficult to know what Connery's reasons were.
I never knew why the Bond producers didn't just give Sean Connery the one million dollars for another Bond film and then make a bunch of money off it instead of George lazenby Bond 🎰
They did. Connery was already reported to have been paid $750,000 and 25% of the worldwide merchandising profits for You Only Live Twice. This totalled $1 million. When he came back to do Diamonds Are Forever (and sleepwalked through the film) he was paid $1.25 million plus 12.5% of the US gross, not the net... *THE GROSS!* So he was paid another $1.25 million for *EVERY* $10 million that the film took at the US box office. United Artists also agreed to finance two films of Connery's choosing within a certain budget. I think Connery was treated very, very well but he had a reputation for being very difficult when it came to money.
Glad you are watching..I do not have access to the date unless the technician who recorded it from the live show put date on label. This is from late 1970's
@@Billboggs MY FAVORITE WAS WHEN YOU INTERVIEWED YUL BRYNNER. I LOVE HOW CANDID THAT INTERVIEW WAS. AS IF YOU COULD ASK HIM ANYTHING AND ANSWERED IT WITH ENTHUSIASM AND GREAT CONVICTION. AND HIS PRESENCE WAS MAGNETIC, WAS INTERESTING TO LISTEN TO EVERY WORD HE SAID. I MUST HAVE WATCHED IT A HUNDRED TIMES. THAT INTERVIEW WAS A SORT OF BRIEF BIOGRAPHY OF YUL. BY THE WAY SHOUT OUT FROM HERE IN THE PHILIPPINES. HAVE A GREAT DAY BILL💖💖💖💖
@@vixercrouchrichter Given that it's mentioned during the interview that The Next Man had been released the previous day then it shouldn't be too difficult to work out the date of this interview.
I hear ya, but most of the interruptions were forms of that kind of meant-to-be-supportive "yes, uh-huh" thing. You're right: that should be suppressed. I do it too much, too! You mean to be supportive of the point but it'd be better to keep quiet. :) It's a surprisingly hard thing to be a good TV interviewer -- a good interviewer, period. Patience and preparation are absolutely key.
Listening is key as well. I have interviewed hundreds of people, and you are there to hear the interviewee speak. Particularly in this case, we want to hear Sean Connery!
The fact he was a loner and not really happy stuck in a large group is part of what made him the perfect James Bond.
Love Sean Connery. Doesn’t seem to have the pretentious airs that many other actors exhibit.
A voice like velvet beautiful
Coolness Personified
The Man Who Would Be King I love you Sean
Makes me proud to be Scottish, RIP to the great man.
My mother's father had his education interrupted by WWII (a Jewish guy in Poland: he and his brother fled to the USSR, then fled the USSR after the war--along with around 10 million other people); he, too, read his way through the Encyclopedia Britannica. Interesting to hear Connery did the same. Connery was and is a highly intelligent guy. Not sure he gets enough credit for that -- and entirely self-educated. At his AFI he noted his biggest break was learning how to read. He made a very good documentary on labor relations in Scotland back in the 60s. I wish he'd made more. Very smart guy.
Connery was 46 back then. He looked at least 10 years older. It's true that 20 years later he looked the same...
Yuy
I didn't know that Will Ferrell was a talk show host when he was young...
THIS IS GREAT ............. THANKS
Born under a lucky star! Scotland's greatest export are it's people.
Except rangers
They sure have some great ones: David Hume, Adam Smith, James Hutton, James Clerk Maxwell, Connery...and many more. Every culture has its greats, of course. But not every culture has invented scotch! :) If Covid ever ends, Scotland is high on the list for me and my wife. (As a boy, I was convinced the Loch Ness Monster existed...until a paleontologist friend of my father noted that a glacier had covered the loch for, like, a long time. Longer than a plesiosaur could hold its breath.)
I did his own lucky star...
The host looks like a cross between Ben Stiller and Will Ferrel.
That's funny!
You are so right!
Best James Bond 1930-2020
RIP
If the producers would have paid him what he was worth think of how many more Bond films he might have done 🎥
I think Connery is easily the best Bond so I have no bias against him.
But you don't hear of any of the other Bonds publicly complaining about their pay.
Only Connery and he was very well paid for the films.
In fact, he successfully renegotiated his contract on at least two occasions before he made You Only Live Twice.
Broccoli and Saltzman didn't have to agree to that.
From what I've read, Connery wanted them to cut him in as a producer with a percentage of the profits.
This would have effectively meant that they would be paying Connery an enormous amount of money out of their own pocket when they were the ones who took the initial financial risk on the franchise.
That was never going to happen.
Connery was reportedly offered an astronomical $5.5 million to do Live and Let Due but he turned it down.
I think the producers treated him very well but Connery wanted just more.
I wonder if that would be true. Had they made Sean a partner in the franchise he could have done till 1985.
@@ricogomez4020 The producers were never going to do that.
But if Connery would have stayed in the role if he had been made a partner then his complaints that playing Bond was killing him as an actor would be viewed as lies.
Maybe they were lies and he just wanted more money.
But then again he is rumoured to have turned down $5.5 million to do Live and Let Die.
It's difficult to know what Connery's reasons were.
@@ppuh6tfrz646 Had Connery played Bond till 1985 he would have been super rich and still would have had a great career in the 90s'.
I never knew why the Bond producers didn't just give Sean Connery the one million dollars for another Bond film and then make a bunch of money off it instead of George lazenby Bond 🎰
They did.
Connery was already reported to have been paid $750,000 and 25% of the worldwide merchandising profits for You Only Live Twice.
This totalled $1 million.
When he came back to do Diamonds Are Forever (and sleepwalked through the film) he was paid $1.25 million plus 12.5% of the US gross, not the net... *THE GROSS!*
So he was paid another $1.25 million for *EVERY* $10 million that the film took at the US box office.
United Artists also agreed to finance two films of Connery's choosing within a certain budget.
I think Connery was treated very, very well but he had a reputation for being very difficult when it came to money.
BILL PLEASE INCLUDE THE AIR DATE OF EACH INTERVIEW.
Glad you are watching..I do not have access to the date unless the technician who recorded it from the live show put date on label.
This is from late 1970's
@@Billboggs MY FAVORITE WAS WHEN YOU INTERVIEWED YUL BRYNNER. I LOVE HOW CANDID THAT INTERVIEW WAS. AS IF YOU COULD ASK HIM ANYTHING AND ANSWERED IT WITH ENTHUSIASM AND GREAT CONVICTION. AND HIS PRESENCE WAS MAGNETIC, WAS INTERESTING TO LISTEN TO EVERY WORD HE SAID. I MUST HAVE WATCHED IT A HUNDRED TIMES. THAT INTERVIEW WAS A SORT OF BRIEF BIOGRAPHY OF YUL. BY THE WAY SHOUT OUT FROM HERE IN THE PHILIPPINES. HAVE A GREAT DAY BILL💖💖💖💖
Thank you..please follow me @realbillboggs..keep watching!@@vixercrouchrichter
@@vixercrouchrichter Given that it's mentioned during the interview that The Next Man had been released the previous day then it shouldn't be too difficult to work out the date of this interview.
@@ppuh6tfrz646 THE NEXT MAN is a good date movie. It's about a female hitman who is waiting for the yes word to kill Sean Connery's character.
Maybe that interviewer could quit freaking interrupting and talking over him for cripey sake!
I hear ya, but most of the interruptions were forms of that kind of meant-to-be-supportive "yes, uh-huh" thing. You're right: that should be suppressed. I do it too much, too! You mean to be supportive of the point but it'd be better to keep quiet. :) It's a surprisingly hard thing to be a good TV interviewer -- a good interviewer, period. Patience and preparation are absolutely key.
Listening is key as well. I have interviewed hundreds of people, and you are there to hear the interviewee speak. Particularly in this case, we want to hear Sean Connery!
I watched you kill someone in a movie James Bond,, in a elevator...It was too real. You we're older, what movie was that? Very believable!
Diamonds are Forever
@@W67w It's as if that guy has never heard of Google...
Scotland forever, but taxes never again!!!
To British government he would to Scottish Government independent Scottish government if he was still alive.
He paid hundreds of thousands in uk taxes and released his tax returns to the media to prove it.
If only he still had a full thick head of hair. He would look so much better and younger.
the interviewer does sean looks better than him
His eyebrows got thinner with age
Depends on the makeup man. In 1983 NEVER SAY NEVER Sean had thin but in 1986 they were thick for HIGHLANDER.
sean conery is surprisingly dull like the most of us
I imagine he could spell.