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- Rosebud...
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- Orson Welles:
A magician is just an actor.
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Just an actor playing
the part of a magician.
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00:01:27,040 --> 00:01:29,200
You know, one sunny morning
in Kenosha,
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a chubby little one, you know.
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- Simon Callow: Welles' family
background was complex.
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His parents broke up
when he was about seven,
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00:01:43,720 --> 00:01:47,529
and his mother
and he moved to Chicago.
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00:01:49,000 --> 00:01:53,801
She was something of
a social reformer
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00:01:53,880 --> 00:01:56,445
and a bit of
a cultural figure, too.
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- She used to take a long
piece of cord,
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00:01:59,880 --> 00:02:01,288
and she was
such a dignified lady
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00:02:01,360 --> 00:02:03,127
that if she would come
to the street comer
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00:02:03,200 --> 00:02:05,000
and say to a man,
"Will you hold this, please?"
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00:02:05,080 --> 00:02:07,644
And then go around to the other
side of the street corner
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00:02:07,720 --> 00:02:09,520
and find somebody and say,
'Would you hold this, please?"
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And then leave the two men
holding the cord.
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00:02:11,720 --> 00:02:14,328
So that was her idea
of a fun thing to do.
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00:02:14,400 --> 00:02:18,525
Very tall and handsome,
and she was a great beauty.
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00:02:18,600 --> 00:02:22,168
My father lived in Peking
for quite a long time,
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00:02:22,240 --> 00:02:23,604
and I spent five or six years there,
22
00:02:23,680 --> 00:02:25,360
or the greater part
of those years.
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00:02:25,440 --> 00:02:27,121
- His father was a businessman
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00:02:27,200 --> 00:02:30,605
who then went on
to become an alcoholic,
25
00:02:30,680 --> 00:02:32,284
a ambler,
and a womanizer.
26
00:02:32,480 --> 00:02:33,768
- He was just a playboy. -
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00:02:33,840 --> 00:02:35,924
He inherited some money,
and he spent it.
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00:02:36,000 --> 00:02:38,728
- And in the meantime,
his mother had taken up
29
00:02:38,800 --> 00:02:42,848
with this Hungarian doctor,
Maurice Bernstein,
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00:02:42,920 --> 00:02:45,320
a sort of-
very slippery character.
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00:02:45,400 --> 00:02:48,161
- Simon Callow:
Controlling, wheedling,
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00:02:48,240 --> 00:02:51,644
emotionally blackmailing
kind of a person.
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00:02:53,400 --> 00:02:55,724
- Mr. Bernstein?
- Yes, Mr. Kane.
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00:02:55,800 --> 00:02:58,768
- Mr. Carter, this is Mr. Bernstein.
- How do you do?
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00:02:58,840 --> 00:03:00,280
- Mr. Bernstein is
my general manager, Mr. Carter.
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00:03:00,360 --> 00:03:01,768
- Chris Welles Feder:
When his mother died,
37
00:03:01,840 --> 00:03:04,601
he was forced to make him
his legal guardian.
38
00:03:04,679 --> 00:03:10,408
- Simon Callow: He was,
from the earliest age, formed on,
39
00:03:10,480 --> 00:03:14,244
identified as being
remarkable and charming.
40
00:03:14,320 --> 00:03:17,485
His mother's position
was that a child had
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00:03:17,559 --> 00:03:19,284
to justify themselves
in the room.
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00:03:19,359 --> 00:03:21,040
You had to say
something interesting,
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you had to do something
extraordinary,
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00:03:22,720 --> 00:03:25,088
otherwise, you were
exiled to the nursery.
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00:03:25,160 --> 00:03:28,161
Welles was not about to spend
any time in the nursery.
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00:03:28,240 --> 00:03:30,564
- Orson Welles: I played the violin,
and I played the piano,
47
00:03:30,640 --> 00:03:33,880
and there's nothing more
hateful on earth.
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00:03:33,960 --> 00:03:35,488
I was one of those.
49
00:03:35,560 --> 00:03:36,923
And my mother,
50
00:03:37,000 --> 00:03:38,605
who was
a professional musician,
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00:03:38,679 --> 00:03:41,440
died when I was nine-
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00:03:41,520 --> 00:03:43,484
And I stopped playing
immediately.
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00:03:43,560 --> 00:03:45,447
As a kid, I was
moved around everywhere.
54
00:03:45,520 --> 00:03:46,644
I have lots of homes,
55
00:03:46,720 --> 00:03:49,601
but I would like
to have the one.
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00:03:51,760 --> 00:03:53,680
See, I suppose
it's Woodstock, Illinois,
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if it's anywhere.
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00:03:55,800 --> 00:03:57,448
I went to school there
for four years,
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00:03:57,520 --> 00:04:00,728
and if I try
to think of the...
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00:04:00,800 --> 00:04:02,163
home, it's that.
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00:04:08,439 --> 00:04:10,044
- Feder: I think
the most exciting thing
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00:04:10,120 --> 00:04:12,040
that ever happened
in Skipper's life
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00:04:12,360 --> 00:04:14,640
was the arrival of Orson Welles
at his school
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00:04:14,720 --> 00:04:17,481
because he had never
seen such a prodigy.
65
00:04:17,560 --> 00:04:19,808
- The kids,
of course, hated him.
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00:04:19,880 --> 00:04:21,888
- I must have been
intolerable as a child.
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00:04:21,960 --> 00:04:23,727
- He didn't want
to do anything.
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00:04:23,799 --> 00:04:26,800
He- he couldn't
play athletics,
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00:04:26,880 --> 00:04:28,047
he just was not athletic.
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00:04:28,120 --> 00:04:31,164
He was overweight,
even as a kid.
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00:04:31,240 --> 00:04:33,520
Skipper said,
"Okay, what we'll do
72
00:04:33,600 --> 00:04:34,888
"is have him do
what he wants,
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00:04:34,960 --> 00:04:36,607
Was just the Theatre.
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00:04:36,680 --> 00:04:38,928
- I played Mary,
the mother of Jesus,
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00:04:39,039 --> 00:04:41,484
at the age of 13.
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00:04:41,560 --> 00:04:43,960
Yes.
Very good in drag.
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00:04:46,839 --> 00:04:49,720
- Joanne Hill Styles:
He could talk about China,
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00:04:49,800 --> 00:04:51,447
I think he'd been
to China.
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00:04:53,480 --> 00:04:55,084
He could talk
about Shakespeare,
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00:04:55,200 --> 00:04:58,049
which- my father's
favorite author.
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00:04:58,120 --> 00:05:00,684
And he could talk
about the Bible.
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00:05:00,760 --> 00:05:03,008
At 11,
he could do all this.
83
00:05:03,080 --> 00:05:04,247
It's like...
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00:05:04,320 --> 00:05:08,161
Mozart playing music
at four years old,
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00:05:08,239 --> 00:05:10,400
you can't believe
it happens,
86
00:05:10,480 --> 00:05:11,768
but it does happen.
87
00:05:13,479 --> 00:05:16,644
But he was
without a doubt
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00:05:16,720 --> 00:05:18,804
the only person
I know who had
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00:05:18,880 --> 00:05:21,924
absolutely no
empathetic skills.
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00:05:22,000 --> 00:05:24,968
I told him just what
I thought about him.
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00:05:25,040 --> 00:05:27,288
He looked at me.
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00:05:27,360 --> 00:05:28,964
"Joanne...
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00:05:29,040 --> 00:05:33,241
everybody has their
little idiosyncrasies. "
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00:05:33,320 --> 00:05:36,288
This was a very
unusual boy.
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00:05:47,079 --> 00:05:50,964
- Man: This is truly where Orson
started his theatrical career.
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00:05:51,039 --> 00:05:52,720
He was putting on "Twelfth Night,"
he was putting on
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00:05:52,800 --> 00:05:54,568
a variety
of Shakespeare plays
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00:05:54,640 --> 00:05:57,728
when he was a child,
and he was Orson.
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00:05:57,800 --> 00:05:59,447
There's a warmth
that I think
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00:05:59,520 --> 00:06:01,648
much of the world
never experienced.
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00:06:01,719 --> 00:06:04,240
- Emcee: So it is a pleasure that
we here in the city of Woodstock
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00:06:04,320 --> 00:06:08,281
dedicate this stage
to an individual
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00:06:08,360 --> 00:06:11,961
who got it all started.
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00:06:12,039 --> 00:06:14,287
Even though he was
a humble person.
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00:06:17,720 --> 00:06:19,400
- "He made
his American debut
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00:06:19,480 --> 00:06:21,040
"as a professional
theater director
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00:06:21,120 --> 00:06:24,688
"upon this stage,
now named in his honor. -...
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00:06:24,759 --> 00:06:26,243
the Orson Welles Stage. "
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00:06:29,439 --> 00:06:31,960
- man: I feel his hand
on my shoulder.
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00:06:32,039 --> 00:06:34,724
- All: "Rosebud!"
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00:06:47,040 --> 00:06:49,243
- Simon Callow: He did a sort of deal
with Dr. Bernstein
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00:06:49,319 --> 00:06:51,687
that he would go
to university,
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00:06:51,760 --> 00:06:53,364
but that they would
let him go to Ireland
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00:06:53,439 --> 00:06:55,359
on a painting holiday.
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00:06:55,440 --> 00:06:58,648
That was what
he pretended he wanted.
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00:06:58,720 --> 00:06:59,920
- Orson Welles:
I'd come to Ireland
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00:07:00,000 --> 00:07:01,605
and found myself
in Dublin
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00:07:01,760 --> 00:07:03,408
without what are
technically referred to
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00:07:03,479 --> 00:07:04,559
as financial resources.
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00:07:04,640 --> 00:07:05,687
Oh, I had a few shillings,
121
00:07:05,760 --> 00:07:07,408
but I blew those
on a good dinner
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00:07:07,480 --> 00:07:08,604
and a ticket
to the theater.
123
00:07:08,679 --> 00:07:10,447
The theater was the Gate-
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00:07:10,520 --> 00:07:13,488
I was 16 years old,
my career, as you might say,
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00:07:13,560 --> 00:07:15,164
was at the crossroads.
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00:07:15,239 --> 00:07:17,760
- I saw this brilliant,
not necessarily an actor,
127
00:07:17,839 --> 00:07:20,447
but a brilliant
creature of 16
128
00:07:20,520 --> 00:07:22,124
telling us he was 19
129
00:07:22,239 --> 00:07:24,520
and telling us
he'd had lots of experience,
130
00:07:24,599 --> 00:07:26,519
which was obvious to us
he'd had none at all.
131
00:07:26,600 --> 00:07:28,248
- And just as-
for the fun of it,
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00:07:28,320 --> 00:07:30,807
I'd like to stay with them
and play a few leading roles.
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00:07:30,879 --> 00:07:32,963
They were nice enough
to pretend they were fooled,
134
00:07:33,040 --> 00:07:35,048
and they were
desperate enough for actors.
135
00:07:35,119 --> 00:07:37,847
They gave me a star part.
I began as a star.
136
00:07:39,200 --> 00:07:41,361
And I've been working my way
down slowly ever since.
137
00:07:42,679 --> 00:07:45,200
- Simon Callow: The parts got smaller
and smaller and smaller,
138
00:07:45,279 --> 00:07:47,004
and eventually Welles,
139
00:07:47,079 --> 00:07:49,840
after about nine months,
left and via London, perhaps,
140
00:07:49,920 --> 00:07:53,008
we're not sure about that,
went back to America.
141
00:07:53,079 --> 00:07:54,999
Went off again
on another trip,
142
00:07:55,080 --> 00:07:57,164
and than he came back
to Chicago
143
00:07:57,239 --> 00:07:59,727
and felt
very much at a loose end.
144
00:08:02,880 --> 00:08:04,560
- Joanne Hill Styles: He came
to the theatre festival.
145
00:08:04,639 --> 00:08:05,927
That's the last time
I knew him,
146
00:08:05,999 --> 00:08:07,560
in the theatre festival.
147
00:08:07,639 --> 00:08:10,204
One of the students,
he had a camera,
148
00:08:10,359 --> 00:08:14,080
and it just
fascinated Orson.
149
00:08:14,160 --> 00:08:17,804
I'm sure this guy was
not very knowledgeable,
150
00:08:17,880 --> 00:08:19,800
and Orson would
tell him what he'd want.
151
00:08:19,879 --> 00:08:21,363
First he'd say,
"We don't want it right here,
152
00:08:21,440 --> 00:08:23,644
we want you to zoom up,"
so they'd go this silly way
153
00:08:23,719 --> 00:08:25,564
up and down the stairs.
154
00:08:26,760 --> 00:08:29,247
- Orson Welles:
It's not a film at all.
155
00:08:29,319 --> 00:08:32,680
It was a little joke
one Sunday afternoon.
156
00:08:32,759 --> 00:08:35,007
We'd all seen either
Bu�uel or Cocteau
157
00:08:35,079 --> 00:08:36,924
or somebody's
surrealist movie.
158
00:08:36,999 --> 00:08:38,363
We said, "Let's make one. "
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00:08:38,440 --> 00:08:40,284
And from 2:00 in the afternoon
till 5:00,
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00:08:40,360 --> 00:08:42,967
we shot some dumb stuff.
161
00:08:53,920 --> 00:08:55,840
- Feder: My father was married
three times.
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00:08:55,919 --> 00:08:58,320
I was
his oldest daughter.
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00:08:58,399 --> 00:09:01,487
He had a daughter by
each of his three wives.
164
00:09:01,559 --> 00:09:03,043
My half-sister Rebecca,
165
00:09:03,120 --> 00:09:05,084
she was Rita Hayworth's
daughter,
166
00:09:05,160 --> 00:09:07,320
and then Beatrice was
the youngest daughter
167
00:09:07,400 --> 00:09:11,600
by Paola Mori, who was
an Italian countess.
168
00:09:11,679 --> 00:09:13,840
He was not really
a family man, you know?
169
00:09:13,919 --> 00:09:17,204
That's not where
his head was.
170
00:09:17,280 --> 00:09:19,528
His head was
entirely in his work,
171
00:09:19,600 --> 00:09:22,284
and I think having
wives and daughters
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00:09:22,359 --> 00:09:24,727
was actually
an encumbrance for him.
173
00:09:30,759 --> 00:09:34,960
- Welles had picked up
a huge amount of knowledge
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00:09:35,039 --> 00:09:36,119
about stagecraft,
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00:09:36,200 --> 00:09:38,448
added to what
he already knew.
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He plugged into
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00:09:40,079 --> 00:09:42,207
the absolute latest
developments in the theater,
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00:09:42,279 --> 00:09:43,927
and that meant, above all,
expressionism.
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00:09:44,000 --> 00:09:46,160
A very "now"
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00:09:46,239 --> 00:09:49,087
and aggressive
form of theater.
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00:09:49,159 --> 00:09:51,440
- He brought, in one word,
theatricality.
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00:09:52,839 --> 00:09:55,927
He united
the performance,
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00:09:55,999 --> 00:09:58,803
the script,
the music,
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00:09:58,879 --> 00:10:01,564
the lights,
the sound.
185
00:10:01,639 --> 00:10:03,887
As audience,
you had an experience
186
00:10:03,959 --> 00:10:06,240
you had with
no other director.
187
00:10:06,319 --> 00:10:10,487
I was six months older
than Orson, and I met him
188
00:10:10,559 --> 00:10:13,528
in his office
with John Houseman
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00:10:13,600 --> 00:10:15,848
who was Orson's partner
at that time.
190
00:10:15,919 --> 00:10:17,720
John Houseman had
great elegance,
191
00:10:17,799 --> 00:10:19,840
spoke beautifully.
192
00:10:19,920 --> 00:10:22,801
He had the one grey flannel suit
at the time,
193
00:10:22,879 --> 00:10:25,127
because nobody had
any money.
194
00:10:25,199 --> 00:10:27,764
The Federal Theatre
was a theater
195
00:10:27,839 --> 00:10:29,520
created by
the government,
196
00:10:29,599 --> 00:10:32,284
putting people to work
throughout the country.
197
00:10:32,359 --> 00:10:34,279
Orson and Houseman
198
00:10:34,359 --> 00:10:36,083
used it
to their advantage
199
00:10:36,159 --> 00:10:37,447
to create a theater.
200
00:10:37,519 --> 00:10:38,720
- Lay on, Macduff!
201
00:10:38,799 --> 00:10:40,808
- Announcer: The Negro Theatre unit
of the Federal Theatre Project
202
00:10:40,879 --> 00:10:42,407
produced a highly successful
version
203
00:10:42,479 --> 00:10:44,640
of Shakespeares
immortal tragedy, "Macbeth. "
204
00:10:44,719 --> 00:10:46,880
- Tyrant,
show thy face!
205
00:10:46,960 --> 00:10:48,324
- What is thy name?
206
00:10:53,800 --> 00:10:55,447
My name is Macbeth.
207
00:10:55,519 --> 00:10:57,199
- Orson Welles: There were
so many curtain calls,
208
00:10:57,279 --> 00:11:00,083
that finally
they left this curtain open,
209
00:11:00,159 --> 00:11:02,887
and the audience came up
on the stage.
210
00:11:02,959 --> 00:11:05,240
That was-
that was magical.
211
00:11:07,199 --> 00:11:09,360
- Norman Lloyd: There was
thunderous reaction to it
212
00:11:09,440 --> 00:11:11,448
in the audience.
Thunderous.
213
00:11:12,559 --> 00:11:14,164
Except for one critic,
214
00:11:14,240 --> 00:11:17,088
a very fine critic,
Percy Hammond.
215
00:11:17,159 --> 00:11:20,967
There were two
voodoo companies,
216
00:11:21,039 --> 00:11:23,320
and they were gain,
"Bom, bom, bom, bom,
217
00:11:23,399 --> 00:11:25,920
Percy Hammond,
ham, ham...
218
00:11:25,999 --> 00:11:28,640
Percy Hammond died
three days later.
219
00:11:28,719 --> 00:11:30,639
No, sorry, that was rude,
220
00:11:30,720 --> 00:11:32,160
I bee your pardon.
221
00:11:32,239 --> 00:11:33,963
- Lloyd: We all left
the Federal Theatre
222
00:11:34,039 --> 00:11:35,403
at a given point.
223
00:11:35,480 --> 00:11:38,284
Houseman and Welles left
because they weren't allowed
224
00:11:38,360 --> 00:11:39,767
to do "Cradle Will Rock. "
225
00:11:39,839 --> 00:11:42,688
They formed
the Mercury Theater.
226
00:11:42,760 --> 00:11:44,800
- Newscaster: In a single year,
the first in the life
227
00:11:44,879 --> 00:11:46,080
of the Mercury Theater,
228
00:11:46,159 --> 00:11:47,567
Orson Welles
has come to be
229
00:11:47,639 --> 00:11:50,324
the most famous name
of our time in American drama.
230
00:11:50,399 --> 00:11:52,767
Time Magazine declares,
"The brightest moon
231
00:11:52,839 --> 00:11:54,607
that has risen
over Broadway in years.
232
00:11:54,679 --> 00:11:57,320
- He was ruthless, tough,
disciplined.
233
00:11:57,399 --> 00:11:59,287
- Ruth Ford: We just worked
all the time, we worked until
234
00:11:59,360 --> 00:12:00,964
2:00 and 3:00
in the morning.
235
00:12:01,039 --> 00:12:03,319
- Julie Taymor: I don't think there are
rules for any of that.
236
00:12:03,399 --> 00:12:04,403
If that's what he needed,
237
00:12:04,479 --> 00:12:06,007
if that's when
his inspiration came
238
00:12:06,080 --> 00:12:07,040
and he thought
he would get
239
00:12:07,119 --> 00:12:09,039
the best out of
his performers...
240
00:12:09,159 --> 00:12:10,480
You know,
the crazy thing is
241
00:12:10,559 --> 00:12:12,479
it might be fine for him,
but if they're dragged
242
00:12:12,559 --> 00:12:13,847
out of bed
and are exhausted,
243
00:12:13,920 --> 00:12:16,320
I'd- they're slaves then,
you know what I mean?
244
00:12:16,399 --> 00:12:18,243
- Newscaster: Robert Benchley writes
in "The New Yorker, "
245
00:12:18,319 --> 00:12:19,639
The production at
the Mercury is,
246
00:12:19,719 --> 00:12:21,040
I should say,
just about perfect.
247
00:12:21,119 --> 00:12:23,280
Welles should feel
at home in the sky,
248
00:12:23,360 --> 00:12:26,044
the only limit which
his ambitions recognize. "
249
00:12:32,039 --> 00:12:35,640
- The play made
absolutely no sense
250
00:12:35,720 --> 00:12:37,040
without the Film.
251
00:12:37,119 --> 00:12:39,083
- The film could not
be shown in the theater,
252
00:12:39,159 --> 00:12:41,320
because there was no real
projection booth.
253
00:12:41,399 --> 00:12:44,880
- He is an arrogant-
- I am Orson Welles!
254
00:12:44,959 --> 00:12:46,203
And every single
one of you stands here
255
00:12:46,280 --> 00:12:47,568
as an adjunct
to my vision.
256
00:12:47,640 --> 00:12:49,123
You want a career
in the Mercury Theater
257
00:12:49,199 --> 00:12:51,207
and in everything else
I plan to do?
258
00:12:51,279 --> 00:12:53,079
Then remember
one simple rule.
259
00:12:53,159 --> 00:12:54,883
I own the store.
260
00:12:54,959 --> 00:12:56,639
- Newscaster: The Columbia Network
is proud to give
261
00:12:56,719 --> 00:12:58,366
Orson Welles
the opportunity
262
00:12:58,439 --> 00:13:00,448
to bring to the air
those same qualities
263
00:13:00,519 --> 00:13:03,281
of vitality and imagination
that have made him
264
00:13:03,359 --> 00:13:04,920
the most talked-of
theatrical director
265
00:13:04,999 --> 00:13:06,560
in America today.
266
00:13:06,639 --> 00:13:08,920
- Good evening,
this is Orson Welles,
267
00:13:08,999 --> 00:13:10,407
inviting you to listen now
268
00:13:10,479 --> 00:13:13,207
to one of the strangest
stories ever told.
269
00:13:13,280 --> 00:13:16,204
I'd been contributing
from my radio salary.
270
00:13:16,279 --> 00:13:18,680
I kept putting $1,000
or so every week,
271
00:13:18,759 --> 00:13:21,083
and we got all our plays
on before anybody else
272
00:13:21,159 --> 00:13:23,167
because I was doing
radio all day long.
273
00:13:23,239 --> 00:13:25,640
You out there! Look down!
274
00:13:25,719 --> 00:13:27,280
Behold!
275
00:13:27,359 --> 00:13:31,320
- Sound is the...
276
00:13:31,400 --> 00:13:35,721
first stirring
of the infant.
277
00:13:35,799 --> 00:13:39,246
Sounds have
a romance.
278
00:13:39,319 --> 00:13:41,480
Radio was a Medium,
279
00:13:41,559 --> 00:13:46,043
which employed
that magic.
280
00:13:46,119 --> 00:13:47,679
- Man: I don't like that literature
of yours going out
281
00:13:47,759 --> 00:13:49,679
all over the country
with my town's postmark on it.
282
00:13:49,759 --> 00:13:51,484
I don't like it to be
a return address
283
00:13:51,560 --> 00:13:53,524
for all that
anti-Semitic garbage.
284
00:13:53,599 --> 00:13:54,767
- He'd never rehearse.
285
00:13:54,840 --> 00:13:56,007
He'd walk in,
and they'd say,
286
00:13:56,080 --> 00:13:57,368
"Chinaman, 85 years old. "
287
00:13:57,559 --> 00:13:59,763
- Orson Welles character: I'm sorry,
sir, but my identity must be...
288
00:13:59,839 --> 00:14:01,563
I used to go
by ambulance from one-
289
00:14:01,639 --> 00:14:03,123
one radio station
to another because
290
00:14:03,199 --> 00:14:05,360
I discovered there was
no law in New York
291
00:14:05,439 --> 00:14:07,600
that you had to be sick
to travel in an ambulance.
292
00:14:07,679 --> 00:14:09,404
- Man:
Shadow. Why are you here?
293
00:14:09,479 --> 00:14:11,760
- I anticipated your
performance, Mr. Kent.
294
00:14:11,839 --> 00:14:13,444
- Interviewer: How did
"The Shadow" originate?
295
00:14:13,519 --> 00:14:14,763
- Was it a...
- Orson Welles: I don't know.
296
00:14:14,839 --> 00:14:16,564
- a show before you
took over the part?
297
00:14:16,639 --> 00:14:18,484
- No, no, I was the original
Lamont Cranston,
298
00:14:18,559 --> 00:14:20,927
as far as I know,
but I wouldn't want to...
299
00:14:20,999 --> 00:14:23,367
- But you didn't write that?
- Oh, no, my God,
300
00:14:23,439 --> 00:14:25,959
I didn't even know
how they came out.
301
00:14:31,479 --> 00:14:32,526
- Announcer: Ladies and gentlemen,
we interrupt
302
00:14:32,599 --> 00:14:33,723
our program of dance music
303
00:14:33,800 --> 00:14:35,088
to bring you
a special bulletin from
304
00:14:35,159 --> 00:14:36,720
the intercontinental
Radio News.
305
00:14:36,799 --> 00:14:39,003
At 20 minutes before
8:00 Central time,
306
00:14:39,079 --> 00:14:41,043
Professor Ferrell of
the Mount Jennings Observatory
307
00:14:41,119 --> 00:14:42,919
Chicago, Illinois,
reports observing
308
00:14:42,999 --> 00:14:45,322
several explosions
of incandescent gas
309
00:14:45,399 --> 00:14:48,203
occurring at regular intervals
on the planet Mars.
310
00:14:48,279 --> 00:14:50,079
- A lot of people just
accidentally tuned in
311
00:14:50,159 --> 00:14:51,687
to "The War of the Worlds"
while...
312
00:14:51,760 --> 00:14:53,440
the Jack Benny commercial
was on or something,
313
00:14:53,519 --> 00:14:55,124
and it freaked them out.
314
00:14:55,200 --> 00:14:57,644
It was the turning point
in Welles' career.
315
00:14:57,719 --> 00:14:58,963
- Male character: Something
smacked the ground,
316
00:14:59,040 --> 00:15:00,600
knocked me clear out of
my chair.
317
00:15:00,680 --> 00:15:02,840
- Interviewer: Well, were you
frightened, Mr. Wilmuth?
318
00:15:02,919 --> 00:15:04,643
- I reckon I was
kind of filed.
319
00:15:04,719 --> 00:15:05,963
- Were you aware of
the tenor that was going on
320
00:15:06,039 --> 00:15:07,239
throughout the nation?
- Oh, no, oh, no,
321
00:15:07,319 --> 00:15:08,879
of course not,
we did "Dracula,"
322
00:15:08,959 --> 00:15:11,087
and it seemed to me,
during "Dracula,"
323
00:15:11,159 --> 00:15:13,243
I had high hopes
that people would react
324
00:15:13,319 --> 00:15:15,447
as they do in a movie
of that kind,
325
00:15:15,519 --> 00:15:17,603
and I don't
know that they did.
326
00:15:17,679 --> 00:15:19,404
- What scared them is
very interesting.
327
00:15:19,479 --> 00:15:22,283
It was all done
as news reports.
328
00:15:22,359 --> 00:15:23,886
Until that Moment
329
00:15:23,959 --> 00:15:26,404
When the guy is describing
this horrible monster-
330
00:15:26,479 --> 00:15:28,366
"It's coming out,
oh, my God! Aah!"
331
00:15:28,439 --> 00:15:31,003
- man: Wait a minute,
something's happening.
332
00:15:31,079 --> 00:15:33,360
Some shape is rising
out of the pit.
333
00:15:33,439 --> 00:15:34,683
Aah!
334
00:15:34,759 --> 00:15:35,960
- And it went dead.
335
00:15:42,519 --> 00:15:45,006
The people in the booth
were going...
336
00:15:45,079 --> 00:15:47,360
And he just mute it.
337
00:15:47,439 --> 00:15:49,240
- Announcer: Ladies and gentlemen,
due to circumstances
338
00:15:49,319 --> 00:15:51,480
beyond our control,
we are unable to continue
339
00:15:51,559 --> 00:15:53,240
the broadcast from
Grover's Mill.
340
00:15:53,319 --> 00:15:55,087
- man: Citizens of the nation,
341
00:15:55,159 --> 00:15:57,046
I shall not try
to conceal
342
00:15:57,119 --> 00:15:58,679
the gravity
of the situation
343
00:15:58,759 --> 00:16:00,679
that confronts
the country,
344
00:16:00,759 --> 00:16:03,159
nor the concern
of your government
345
00:16:03,239 --> 00:16:06,523
in protecting the lives
and property of its people.
346
00:16:06,599 --> 00:16:09,927
- We will have to sit down
and think very carefully
347
00:16:09,999 --> 00:16:12,160
about future broadcasts.
348
00:16:12,239 --> 00:16:14,127
- Reporter: Have you made any specific
changes of any programs
349
00:16:14,199 --> 00:16:15,399
that were already scheduled,
such as next week's,
350
00:16:15,479 --> 00:16:16,723
for instance?
- No.
351
00:16:16,800 --> 00:16:18,600
- Police were already in
the control room
352
00:16:18,679 --> 00:16:21,440
during the broadcast,
not knowing who to arrest.
353
00:16:24,039 --> 00:16:25,927
- Male voice: Flash, country overrun
by men from Mars!
354
00:16:25,999 --> 00:16:27,603
Millions of Martians are
landing in our fields!
355
00:16:27,679 --> 00:16:29,763
Strange creatures are dropping
from the stratosphere!
356
00:16:29,839 --> 00:16:33,767
- M-m-m-m-m-men from Mars!
357
00:16:33,839 --> 00:16:37,199
- Orson Welles character: Army bombing
plane, V-8-43, off Bayonne, New Jersey,
358
00:16:37,279 --> 00:16:38,762
- Don't you think that
somebody here would have
359
00:16:38,839 --> 00:16:40,444
been able to gauge
the reaction
360
00:16:40,519 --> 00:16:43,127
which in fact has occurred
throughout the United States?
361
00:16:43,199 --> 00:16:46,287
- Well, every radio program tries
to be more dramatic than life.
362
00:16:46,359 --> 00:16:49,644
- Woman:
Oh, my gosh!
363
00:16:49,719 --> 00:16:51,279
- Man on radio: There's another
group of spaceships-
364
00:16:51,359 --> 00:16:53,368
of the alien ships, they're
coming out of the sky!
365
00:16:53,439 --> 00:16:55,599
- Woody Allen character narrating:
Despite his bravado all evening,
366
00:16:55,679 --> 00:16:58,047
Mr. Manulis panicked
and bolted out of the car.
367
00:16:58,119 --> 00:16:59,799
He was so frightened
by the reports
368
00:16:59,879 --> 00:17:01,483
of interplanetary invasion
369
00:17:01,559 --> 00:17:03,403
that he ran off,
leaving Aunt Bea
370
00:17:03,479 --> 00:17:05,727
to contend with
the slimy green monsters
371
00:17:05,799 --> 00:17:08,199
he expected to drop from
the sky at any moment.
372
00:17:08,279 --> 00:17:10,886
When Mr. Manulis called her
for a date the next week,
373
00:17:10,959 --> 00:17:12,160
she told my mother
to tell him
374
00:17:12,239 --> 00:17:13,602
she couldn't
see him anymore.
375
00:17:13,679 --> 00:17:15,284
She had married
a Martian.
376
00:17:15,359 --> 00:17:17,443
- Reporter, as bells ring:
I'm speaking from the roof
377
00:17:17,519 --> 00:17:19,887
of the broadcasting building,
New York City-
378
00:17:19,959 --> 00:17:22,000
the bells you hear
379
00:17:22,079 --> 00:17:23,563
are ringing to warn
the people
380
00:17:23,639 --> 00:17:26,443
to evacuate the city
as the Martians approach...
381
00:17:26,519 --> 00:17:29,203
- This is Orson Welles,
ladies and gentlemen.
382
00:17:29,279 --> 00:17:31,767
Out of character
to assure you
383
00:17:31,839 --> 00:17:34,959
that "The War of the Worlds
has no further significance
384
00:17:35,039 --> 00:17:37,843
than as the holiday
offering it was intended to be.
385
00:17:37,919 --> 00:17:40,559
- reporter:... crowds
like New Year's Eve in the city.
386
00:17:40,639 --> 00:17:44,360
- Orson Welles: In fact, we weren't
as innocent as we meant to be
387
00:17:44,438 --> 00:17:46,163
when we did
the Martian broadcast.
388
00:17:46,239 --> 00:17:48,399
We were fed up
with the way
389
00:17:48,479 --> 00:17:51,720
in which everything that
came over this new magic box,
390
00:17:51,799 --> 00:17:53,719
the radio,
was being swallowed.
391
00:17:54,879 --> 00:17:56,242
People, you know,
do suspect
392
00:17:56,319 --> 00:17:57,727
what they read
in the newspapers
393
00:17:57,799 --> 00:17:59,239
and what people tell them,
but when the radio came,
394
00:17:59,319 --> 00:18:01,523
and I suppose now,
television,
395
00:18:01,599 --> 00:18:05,287
anything that came through
that new machine was believed.
396
00:18:06,559 --> 00:18:08,567
I didn't go to jail...
397
00:18:08,639 --> 00:18:10,287
I went
to Hollywood.
398
00:18:13,479 --> 00:18:15,084
- James Naremore:
He had established a celebrity
399
00:18:15,158 --> 00:18:17,526
that made Hollywood have
an appetite for him.
400
00:18:17,599 --> 00:18:20,360
He was an extremely
successful and ambitious
401
00:18:20,439 --> 00:18:22,839
designer of conceptual
theater in New York.
402
00:18:22,919 --> 00:18:24,567
He had been on
the cover of Time magazine.
403
00:18:24,639 --> 00:18:26,767
He was an important
radio performer,
404
00:18:26,839 --> 00:18:29,643
which had made him
a worldwide celebrity
405
00:18:29,719 --> 00:18:31,323
and the studios saw
406
00:18:31,399 --> 00:18:32,807
that they could make
a buck from this.
407
00:18:38,439 --> 00:18:40,044
- Peter Bogdanovich:
RKO wanted him,
408
00:18:40,199 --> 00:18:41,727
and he kept
turning it down,
409
00:18:41,799 --> 00:18:44,167
and so every time
he turned it down,
410
00:18:44,238 --> 00:18:45,766
the contract would
get better,
411
00:18:45,839 --> 00:18:47,323
'cause he'd ask
for something
412
00:18:47,399 --> 00:18:48,719
that they just
wouldn't give him,
413
00:18:48,799 --> 00:18:51,003
and then they would
give it to him.
414
00:18:51,079 --> 00:18:53,163
- Orson Welles: When you honestly
didn't want to go,
415
00:18:53,239 --> 00:18:55,727
then- then the deals got
better and better.
416
00:18:55,799 --> 00:18:56,999
In my case,
I didn't want money.
417
00:18:57,079 --> 00:18:58,323
I wanted authority.
418
00:19:09,799 --> 00:19:11,327
- Orson Welles: There was this guy
with a beard
419
00:19:11,398 --> 00:19:13,559
who was going to do it
all by himself, you know?
420
00:19:13,639 --> 00:19:16,279
I represented
the terrible future
421
00:19:16,359 --> 00:19:19,403
of what was going to happen
to that town.
422
00:19:19,478 --> 00:19:20,962
- James Naremore:
His initial project was
423
00:19:21,039 --> 00:19:22,447
an adaptation
of "Heart of Darkness,"
424
00:19:22,519 --> 00:19:24,286
which he had done
on the radio.
425
00:19:24,359 --> 00:19:27,447
- Orson Welles character:... a black
and incomprehensible frenzy.
426
00:19:27,519 --> 00:19:29,964
- We were a bunch of 22-,
23-year-old kids, really,
427
00:19:30,038 --> 00:19:31,686
and we had- -
428
00:19:31,759 --> 00:19:33,439
moved in and taken over
this studio,
429
00:19:33,519 --> 00:19:35,199
and all these people were
looking around, wondering
430
00:19:35,279 --> 00:19:36,762
who the hell we were
and what did we think
431
00:19:36,839 --> 00:19:39,000
we were gonna be doing?
432
00:19:39,079 --> 00:19:40,727
- We were not
in a very strong
433
00:19:40,799 --> 00:19:43,003
financial situation
at the time.
434
00:19:43,078 --> 00:19:46,286
And we thought
this acquisition of Mr. Welles
435
00:19:46,358 --> 00:19:48,639
would have done it,
but it didn't.
436
00:19:48,719 --> 00:19:50,443
- Man: He wanted to shoot
the whole movie,
437
00:19:50,519 --> 00:19:53,083
more or less,
from the perspective
438
00:19:53,159 --> 00:19:54,763
of Marlowe,
the central character.
439
00:19:54,839 --> 00:19:56,683
So we didn't get
a close-up of Welles
440
00:19:56,759 --> 00:19:58,407
until pretty late
in the movie.
441
00:19:58,479 --> 00:20:00,607
There were no big
movie stars until then,
442
00:20:00,679 --> 00:20:02,326
and people wanted
to see Welles.
443
00:20:02,399 --> 00:20:04,964
And it was a film
about blackness,
444
00:20:05,039 --> 00:20:06,839
and RKO tried
to convince him
445
00:20:06,919 --> 00:20:09,963
Just to hire ordinary extras
in blackface in the background.
446
00:20:10,039 --> 00:20:12,439
But he wouldn't go with that.
447
00:20:12,519 --> 00:20:15,443
- Orson Welles: Not knowing
anything about it,
448
00:20:15,519 --> 00:20:18,007
there was
no basis for fear.
449
00:20:18,079 --> 00:20:20,479
In other words, if you're walking
along the edge of a cliff,
450
00:20:20,559 --> 00:20:22,839
and you don't know
it's the edge of a cliff,
451
00:20:22,919 --> 00:20:25,167
you have perfect
confidence.
452
00:20:32,718 --> 00:20:34,802
- Orson Welles: The first day
that I directed a film
453
00:20:34,879 --> 00:20:38,120
was the first day I had
ever been on a movie set.
454
00:20:38,198 --> 00:20:39,726
- The Union forever!
455
00:20:39,799 --> 00:20:41,686
- Be careful, Charles!
456
00:20:41,759 --> 00:20:43,243
Pull your muffler around
your neck, Charles.
457
00:20:43,319 --> 00:20:45,687
- Mrs. Kane, I think we shall have
to tell him now.
458
00:20:45,758 --> 00:20:47,406
- Yes.
459
00:20:47,479 --> 00:20:49,924
I'll sign those papers now,
Mr. Thatcher.
460
00:20:49,998 --> 00:20:52,519
- You people seem to forget
that I'm the boy's father.
461
00:20:52,598 --> 00:20:54,126
- It's going to be done exactly
the way I've told...
462
00:20:54,199 --> 00:20:55,966
- Steven Spielberg:
It's about courage and audacity
463
00:20:56,038 --> 00:20:57,958
and "I'm making this my way. "
464
00:20:59,079 --> 00:21:01,763
We're gonna see from one inch
to infinity in every shot.
465
00:21:01,839 --> 00:21:03,366
We're gonna
see ceilings, and...
466
00:21:03,438 --> 00:21:06,166
we're gonna tell
a very convoluted
467
00:21:06,239 --> 00:21:10,483
mystery story
about a man's life.
468
00:21:14,678 --> 00:21:16,239
It is just...
469
00:21:16,319 --> 00:21:19,168
one of the great movies
ever made.
470
00:21:19,239 --> 00:21:20,963
- I didn't know
what you couldn't do.
471
00:21:21,039 --> 00:21:24,847
I didn't deliberately set out
to invent anything.
472
00:21:24,919 --> 00:21:27,080
It just seemed
to me, "Why not?"
473
00:21:29,599 --> 00:21:31,803
- Simon Callow:
He grasped the medium
474
00:21:31,879 --> 00:21:34,247
with such brilliance,
enthusiasm,
475
00:21:34,318 --> 00:21:36,447
he completely mastered it.
476
00:21:36,519 --> 00:21:37,806
It's the first film
of somebody
477
00:21:37,878 --> 00:21:39,887
who had never
even acted in a movie.
478
00:21:39,959 --> 00:21:43,800
- I make no
campaign promises!
479
00:21:43,879 --> 00:21:46,563
Because,
until a few weeks ago,
480
00:21:46,638 --> 00:21:48,722
I had no hope of
being elected.
481
00:21:50,358 --> 00:21:52,203
- Orson Welles:
It was intended...
482
00:21:52,278 --> 00:21:54,482
consciously as a sort of
social document,
483
00:21:54,559 --> 00:21:56,523
as an attack on
the acquisitive society,
484
00:21:56,599 --> 00:21:57,679
but I didn't think that up
485
00:21:57,758 --> 00:22:01,119
and then try to find a story
to match the idea.
486
00:22:04,358 --> 00:22:07,207
- John Houseman: The picture was
about William Randolph Hearst
487
00:22:07,279 --> 00:22:09,723
and two or three other
newspaper barons,
488
00:22:09,799 --> 00:22:11,927
but the picture was
also about Orson.
489
00:22:11,999 --> 00:22:14,444
- You're a 24-year-old
novice director.
490
00:22:14,519 --> 00:22:15,807
This is
difficult material,
491
00:22:15,919 --> 00:22:17,163
maybe impossible.
492
00:22:17,238 --> 00:22:19,279
And old man Hearst is
gonna come down on us
493
00:22:19,359 --> 00:22:20,526
with all he's got.
494
00:22:20,599 --> 00:22:22,399
- Think of
the free publicity.
495
00:22:22,479 --> 00:22:25,523
- Kane: "I'll provide the people
of this city
496
00:22:25,598 --> 00:22:29,766
"with a daily paper that will
tell all the news honestly.
497
00:22:29,838 --> 00:22:31,159
I will also provide-"
498
00:22:31,238 --> 00:22:33,279
- That's the second sentence
you've started with "I."
499
00:22:33,359 --> 00:22:34,887
- People are gonna know
who's responsible.
500
00:22:36,278 --> 00:22:38,122
- John Houseman:
Basic script was
501
00:22:38,198 --> 00:22:40,162
a Herman Mankiewicz
script.
502
00:22:40,239 --> 00:22:43,404
A great deal
of that picture is,
503
00:22:43,479 --> 00:22:46,327
in every respect,
is Green's picture.
504
00:22:46,399 --> 00:22:47,839
- Orson Welles: One day
in the office they said,
505
00:22:47,919 --> 00:22:50,920
"There's a man called Toland
waiting to see you. "
506
00:22:52,799 --> 00:22:55,166
He was, of course,
the leading cameraman.
507
00:22:55,238 --> 00:22:57,726
He said, "I want
to make your picture. "
508
00:22:57,799 --> 00:22:59,927
And I said, "Well,
that's wonderful.
509
00:22:59,999 --> 00:23:02,519
Why? I don't know
anything about movies. "
510
00:23:02,599 --> 00:23:04,563
He says, "That's why
I want to do it. "
511
00:23:06,318 --> 00:23:08,479
Well, it was pretty much
like my...
512
00:23:08,559 --> 00:23:10,326
My beginnings
in the theater.
513
00:23:10,399 --> 00:23:12,079
I had the confidence
of ignorance.
514
00:23:21,599 --> 00:23:24,326
- William Friedkin:
It contains the very best
515
00:23:24,399 --> 00:23:28,404
of cinematography,
editing, lighting,
516
00:23:28,479 --> 00:23:31,043
performance,
screenwriting.
517
00:23:34,799 --> 00:23:36,840
It's a quarry for filmmakers.
518
00:23:37,998 --> 00:23:40,999
- It was obvious when you saw it,
it was a great picture,
519
00:23:41,079 --> 00:23:42,442
but that doesn't
always mean
520
00:23:42,518 --> 00:23:44,799
that it's gonna do
big money at the box office-.
521
00:23:44,878 --> 00:23:47,519
- Peter Bogdanovich: A lot of the
theater chains were afraid to book it
522
00:23:47,598 --> 00:23:49,562
because they were afraid
523
00:23:49,639 --> 00:23:51,603
their ads wouldn't run
in the Hearst papers.
524
00:23:51,679 --> 00:23:55,367
- I sometimes forget
that you're all Jews.
525
00:23:55,438 --> 00:23:58,046
Apparently, quite a number
of people forget,
526
00:23:58,119 --> 00:24:00,519
if they ever knew.
527
00:24:04,638 --> 00:24:07,487
See what you can do about
this "Citizen Kane" picture,
528
00:24:07,559 --> 00:24:08,803
will you, Louie?
529
00:24:12,079 --> 00:24:13,923
- Peter Bogdanovich: Orson said
he wanted to open it in tents
530
00:24:13,999 --> 00:24:15,003
all across the country.
531
00:24:15,079 --> 00:24:16,726
He'd say, "This is
the picture you... not-
532
00:24:16,799 --> 00:24:18,240
they won't let you see. "
533
00:24:18,318 --> 00:24:19,802
But RKO wouldn't
hear about it.
534
00:24:19,879 --> 00:24:21,362
- James Naremore: In the next
70- something years,
535
00:24:21,439 --> 00:24:24,003
it became one of the most
admired films ever made.
536
00:24:25,718 --> 00:24:30,322
- You can see a change
in films after "Kane. "
537
00:24:30,398 --> 00:24:32,482
I said, "Don't you think you
had a tremendous influence?"
538
00:24:32,559 --> 00:24:34,087
He said not really.
He said they didn't-
539
00:24:34,159 --> 00:24:35,719
They really weren't influenced
by anything important.
540
00:24:35,799 --> 00:24:38,603
There were just a lot
of ceilings and shadows.
541
00:24:38,679 --> 00:24:40,807
- Many people can agree,
it's just one of the great
542
00:24:40,879 --> 00:24:43,007
American experiences
in the cinema.
543
00:24:43,079 --> 00:24:44,923
- Welles as Kane:
Rosebud.
544
00:24:44,999 --> 00:24:46,482
- Orson Welles:
I'm ashamed of Rosebud.
545
00:24:46,559 --> 00:24:47,683
I think it's the...
546
00:24:47,759 --> 00:24:49,483
A rather tawdry device.
547
00:24:49,559 --> 00:24:51,403
It doesn't
stand up very well.
548
00:24:57,119 --> 00:25:01,047
- Orson Welles: Well, I've regretted
early successes in many fields,
549
00:25:01,118 --> 00:25:03,279
but I don't regret that
in "Kane"
550
00:25:03,358 --> 00:25:07,407
because it was the only chance
I ever had of that kind.
551
00:25:07,479 --> 00:25:10,163
I'm glad I had it
at any time in my life.
552
00:25:13,358 --> 00:25:15,846
I was spoiled
in a very strange way.
553
00:25:15,918 --> 00:25:17,762
I didn't know
what was ahead of me.
554
00:25:27,799 --> 00:25:30,319
- man narrating:
The magnificence of the Ambersons
555
00:25:30,399 --> 00:25:33,006
began in 1873.
556
00:25:33,078 --> 00:25:35,523
Their splendor lasted
throughout all the years
557
00:25:35,599 --> 00:25:37,246
that saw
their midland town
558
00:25:37,318 --> 00:25:40,406
spread and darken into a city.
559
00:25:40,478 --> 00:25:42,606
In that town, in those days,
560
00:25:42,678 --> 00:25:44,478
all the women
who wore silk or velvet
561
00:25:44,559 --> 00:25:47,047
knew all the other women
who wore silk or velvet,
562
00:25:47,119 --> 00:25:49,039
and everybody knew
everybody else's
563
00:25:49,118 --> 00:25:51,246
family horse
and carriage.
564
00:25:51,318 --> 00:25:53,446
- One of the reasons he liked
"Amberson" so much
565
00:25:53,518 --> 00:25:55,123
was 'cause
he wasn't in it.
566
00:25:55,198 --> 00:25:56,442
- Too slow for us nowadays.
567
00:25:56,518 --> 00:25:58,123
- Often, he was the-
you know, a name
568
00:25:58,198 --> 00:25:59,879
that he used
for himself in a movie,
569
00:25:59,958 --> 00:26:02,119
'cause he was
a name actor.
570
00:26:02,198 --> 00:26:04,599
As he said to me once,
he said,
571
00:26:04,679 --> 00:26:07,483
"I don't enjoy acting
as much as I should. "
572
00:26:09,998 --> 00:26:12,639
- Orson Welles: The real point
of "Ambersons,"
573
00:26:12,718 --> 00:26:15,762
everything that is
any good in it
574
00:26:15,839 --> 00:26:17,040
is that part of it
575
00:26:17,118 --> 00:26:19,803
which was really just
a preparation
576
00:26:19,878 --> 00:26:22,639
for the decay
of the Ambersons.
577
00:26:22,718 --> 00:26:24,126
- Pride of the town.
578
00:26:24,199 --> 00:26:25,966
- Hot and cold
running water?
579
00:26:26,038 --> 00:26:28,166
- Woman:
Upstairs and down.
580
00:26:28,238 --> 00:26:29,286
- Man: I want to look at that
581
00:26:29,358 --> 00:26:31,278
automobile carriage
of yours, Gene.
582
00:26:31,358 --> 00:26:32,525
- Franny, you'll catch cold!
583
00:26:32,598 --> 00:26:33,558
- Man: We're gonna ride
in that thing tomorrow.
584
00:26:33,639 --> 00:26:34,806
I want to see
if it's safe.
585
00:26:34,879 --> 00:26:35,926
- Good night, Isabella-
- Good night, Eugene.
586
00:26:35,999 --> 00:26:37,439
- You be ready at
ten minutes after 2:00.
587
00:26:37,518 --> 00:26:38,762
- No, I won't.
588
00:26:38,839 --> 00:26:40,127
- Yes, you will.
589
00:26:40,199 --> 00:26:41,562
Ten minutes after 2:00.
590
00:26:42,918 --> 00:26:45,002
- Yes, I will.
591
00:26:47,239 --> 00:26:49,487
- Get a horse, get a horse!
592
00:26:49,559 --> 00:26:51,479
Get a horse.
593
00:26:51,558 --> 00:26:52,562
- Look out, Lucy!
594
00:26:52,638 --> 00:26:53,598
- Oh!
595
00:26:53,679 --> 00:26:54,967
- Woman: What's happened to them?
596
00:26:55,039 --> 00:26:56,206
- Oh, George...
597
00:26:57,239 --> 00:27:00,283
- Orson Welles: A good film, I think,
should not be an illustrated,
598
00:27:00,358 --> 00:27:05,127
all-talking, all-movin
version of a printed work
599
00:27:05,199 --> 00:27:08,483
but should be itself,
a thin of itself.
600
00:27:08,558 --> 00:27:09,846
- George, you tried
to swing underneath me
601
00:27:09,918 --> 00:27:12,363
and break the fall for me
when you went over.
602
00:27:12,439 --> 00:27:14,567
I knew you were doing that.
It was nice of you.
603
00:27:14,639 --> 00:27:16,483
It wasn't much of
a fall to speak of.
604
00:27:16,559 --> 00:27:17,847
How about that kiss?
605
00:27:17,998 --> 00:27:20,366
- # Can hear them sigh
and wish to die #
606
00:27:20,438 --> 00:27:22,762
# And see 'em wink the other eye #
607
00:27:22,838 --> 00:27:26,199
# At the man who broke
the bank at Monte Carlo #
608
00:27:30,038 --> 00:27:33,443
- Orson Welles: About the time
Major Amberson dies,
609
00:27:33,518 --> 00:27:35,482
the picture starts to
become another picture,
610
00:27:35,558 --> 00:27:37,086
becomes their picture.
611
00:27:37,159 --> 00:27:38,719
An actual plot was changed.
612
00:27:38,799 --> 00:27:40,763
- Robert Wise: Well, I'm sorry
about that,
613
00:27:40,839 --> 00:27:41,918
'cause I was involved
in all the cuts,
614
00:27:41,998 --> 00:27:43,286
but it was one
of those circumstances
615
00:27:43,358 --> 00:27:44,362
that couldn't
be helped.
616
00:27:44,438 --> 00:27:45,726
He was in
South America
617
00:27:45,799 --> 00:27:47,163
making a film
for the government
618
00:27:47,238 --> 00:27:48,439
to help our war effort
619
00:27:48,519 --> 00:27:50,166
in that good neighbor
policy we had.
620
00:27:52,478 --> 00:27:54,562
The studio was very-
naturally, very upset.
621
00:27:54,638 --> 00:27:55,882
They had a lot of money
in this film,
622
00:27:55,958 --> 00:27:57,322
and they ranted
to get it out.
623
00:27:57,398 --> 00:27:58,642
Consequently,
we did cut
624
00:27:58,799 --> 00:28:00,883
about 25 or 30 minutes
of the original film,
625
00:28:00,958 --> 00:28:03,403
and we had to make
two or three or four
626
00:28:03,479 --> 00:28:05,683
new bridge scenes
to tie it together,
627
00:28:05,758 --> 00:28:07,122
and there was
a new ending shot.
628
00:28:07,199 --> 00:28:08,400
- How is Georgie?
629
00:28:08,478 --> 00:28:10,366
- He's going to be all right.
630
00:28:10,438 --> 00:28:11,486
Annie.
631
00:28:11,559 --> 00:28:13,687
I wish you could have
seen Georgie's face...
632
00:28:13,759 --> 00:28:14,959
- Orson Welles:
There's no scene in a hospital,
633
00:28:15,038 --> 00:28:18,039
nothing like that
ever happened.
634
00:28:18,118 --> 00:28:19,482
- I can only say that
all of us up here
635
00:28:19,558 --> 00:28:22,078
did the very best job
we could with the problem.
636
00:28:24,319 --> 00:28:25,966
- James Naremore: As one
important critic has said,
637
00:28:26,038 --> 00:28:27,838
RKO had hired Wells
638
00:28:27,918 --> 00:28:29,882
To make them
masterpieces,
639
00:28:29,959 --> 00:28:32,446
and he delivered
a masterpiece,
640
00:28:32,518 --> 00:28:34,002
and they didn't like it.
641
00:28:34,079 --> 00:28:35,562
- Orson Welles: The key long scene
at the end,
642
00:28:35,638 --> 00:28:36,839
Which was
Aggie Moorehead
643
00:28:36,918 --> 00:28:39,962
in a third-rate
lodging house,
644
00:28:40,038 --> 00:28:42,559
that was the best scene
in the picture.
645
00:28:42,638 --> 00:28:45,039
That was what
the picture was about.
646
00:28:45,118 --> 00:28:48,839
It's gone.
647
00:28:48,918 --> 00:28:50,402
I was sent
to South America
648
00:28:50,478 --> 00:28:54,362
by Nelson Rockefeller
and Jock Whitney.
649
00:28:54,438 --> 00:28:57,526
I was told that
it was my patriotic duty
650
00:28:57,598 --> 00:28:59,366
to go and spend
a million dollars
651
00:28:59,439 --> 00:29:03,160
shooting the Carnival
in Rio.
652
00:29:03,238 --> 00:29:05,399
They put it to me
that it would be
653
00:29:05,479 --> 00:29:08,240
a real contribution
to inter-American affairs,
654
00:29:08,318 --> 00:29:09,999
and so...
655
00:29:16,039 --> 00:29:18,243
Anything that I've done
in any medium,
656
00:29:18,318 --> 00:29:20,522
if it's ever been
any good,
657
00:29:20,598 --> 00:29:25,563
has been my way,
to quote the song.
658
00:29:30,998 --> 00:29:32,918
I was in terrible
trouble then.
659
00:29:35,198 --> 00:29:38,559
In the meantime,
RKO has now a new government,
660
00:29:38,638 --> 00:29:40,722
and they asked
to see the rushes
661
00:29:40,798 --> 00:29:42,642
of what I'm doing
in South America,
662
00:29:42,718 --> 00:29:46,079
and they see a lot of people,
black people,
663
00:29:46,158 --> 00:29:48,886
and they...
664
00:29:48,959 --> 00:29:51,163
made a great
publicity point
665
00:29:51,238 --> 00:29:52,963
of the fact that I had gone
to South America
666
00:29:53,038 --> 00:29:55,766
and thrown
all this money away.
667
00:29:55,838 --> 00:29:59,559
- RKO said, "Well, maybe
we'd better stop this. "
668
00:29:59,639 --> 00:30:01,647
- So I was fired from RKO.
669
00:30:08,559 --> 00:30:09,966
And its slogan for
that year
670
00:30:10,038 --> 00:30:12,003
printed on
every piece of paper
671
00:30:12,078 --> 00:30:14,119
that went out
from RKO was
672
00:30:14,198 --> 00:30:17,002
"Showmanship
Instead of Genius. "
673
00:30:17,078 --> 00:30:19,162
I really wouldn't want to try
674
00:30:19,238 --> 00:30:22,087
to edge my way into
an elevator
675
00:30:22,158 --> 00:30:25,006
that's for
geniuses only.
676
00:30:26,598 --> 00:30:28,518
- Julie Taymor: Sometimes you get
frustrated that
677
00:30:28,598 --> 00:30:31,325
people want to do things
to your projects,
678
00:30:31,398 --> 00:30:33,406
in theater or film,
'cause I've had both,
679
00:30:33,478 --> 00:30:35,246
and then
you have to fight,
680
00:30:35,318 --> 00:30:37,838
and I'm sure Orson Welles
had a lot of struggles,
681
00:30:37,919 --> 00:30:41,083
as we know,
and lost battles
682
00:30:41,158 --> 00:30:42,686
and hopefully
won a few.
683
00:30:42,758 --> 00:30:45,398
- He was a brilliant man,
he had a lot to offer,
684
00:30:45,478 --> 00:30:48,118
he made
two wonderful pictures,
685
00:30:48,199 --> 00:30:51,243
but he also...
686
00:30:51,318 --> 00:30:54,287
went bad after
the second picture.
687
00:30:54,359 --> 00:30:57,479
- Horrendous. I mean, there are some
who've committed suicide.
688
00:30:57,558 --> 00:31:00,766
- An Italian waiter came
and said to me in Italian,
689
00:31:00,838 --> 00:31:04,646
"Did you ever make a picture
after 'Citizen Kane'?"
690
00:31:07,238 --> 00:31:08,602
I didn't get a job
as a director
691
00:31:08,678 --> 00:31:10,326
for years afterwards.
692
00:31:11,718 --> 00:31:13,323
So then I did
"Jane Eyre. "
693
00:31:17,638 --> 00:31:18,839
EH!
694
00:31:26,879 --> 00:31:28,766
- Can I do anything?
- Stand out of the way.
695
00:31:28,838 --> 00:31:30,486
- I'm sorry I frightened
your horse.
696
00:31:30,558 --> 00:31:32,206
- Apologies won't
mend my ankle.
697
00:31:32,278 --> 00:31:33,445
Down, Pilot!
698
00:31:35,078 --> 00:31:36,486
- Orson Welles:
I was obsessed
699
00:31:36,558 --> 00:31:38,402
in my hot youth
700
00:31:38,478 --> 00:31:42,887
with the idea that
I would not be a star.
701
00:31:42,958 --> 00:31:45,402
I was in a position
to promote myself as a star...
702
00:31:45,478 --> 00:31:47,442
- Who's that?
- ... And I should've.
703
00:31:47,518 --> 00:31:49,166
I should've gone back
to New York
704
00:31:49,238 --> 00:31:52,446
and played Hamlet
and as long as it was going,
705
00:31:52,519 --> 00:31:54,199
I didn't-
I had this idea that
706
00:31:54,278 --> 00:31:56,843
I wanted to be known
as a director and that was it.
707
00:32:01,958 --> 00:32:04,206
The next picture I did do
was "The Stranger,"
708
00:32:04,278 --> 00:32:06,482
and I did that
to show people
709
00:32:06,558 --> 00:32:08,282
that I didn't glow
in the dark,
710
00:32:08,358 --> 00:32:10,682
that I could say
"action" and "cut"
711
00:32:10,759 --> 00:32:12,242
just like
all the other fellas.
712
00:32:19,478 --> 00:32:21,365
What is it, dear?
713
00:32:21,438 --> 00:32:22,846
- When you grew up in
that era, you thou ht-
714
00:32:22,918 --> 00:32:24,446
you saw movies for
the junk that they were,
715
00:32:24,518 --> 00:32:25,522
nobody took them
seriously.
716
00:32:25,598 --> 00:32:27,802
- You'll become
part of the crime.
717
00:32:27,878 --> 00:32:30,279
- But I'm already
a part of it.
718
00:32:30,358 --> 00:32:33,643
'Cause I'm a part of you.
719
00:32:33,718 --> 00:32:35,966
- And I now that
people dislike it,
720
00:32:36,038 --> 00:32:39,082
but I just love his love
of using the medium
721
00:32:39,158 --> 00:32:42,158
for all of its tricks
and playing with them.
722
00:32:42,238 --> 00:32:44,519
This is what
a studio movie could be.
723
00:32:48,158 --> 00:32:49,763
- It was supposed to be
a hammy performance.
724
00:32:49,838 --> 00:32:52,807
It wasn't
unconsciously so.
725
00:32:52,878 --> 00:32:54,798
That's all I can say
about that.
726
00:32:55,798 --> 00:32:57,326
- James Naremore:
They cut that one up, too.
727
00:32:57,398 --> 00:33:00,606
Welles was an ideological
challenge to Hollywood.
728
00:33:00,678 --> 00:33:02,719
He was simply not
a Hollywood filmmaker.
729
00:33:05,598 --> 00:33:07,398
- Peter Bogdanovich:
None of his pictures
730
00:33:07,478 --> 00:33:08,558
really received wide distribution
731
00:33:08,638 --> 00:33:10,319
except for
"The Stranger,"
732
00:33:10,398 --> 00:33:12,407
which was the only picture
of his that made any money.
733
00:33:12,478 --> 00:33:14,639
- It's not an accident
that it comes in a can.
734
00:33:14,718 --> 00:33:17,086
They welcomed the adventurer
735
00:33:17,158 --> 00:33:19,526
in the 19th century much more
than they do today.
736
00:33:19,598 --> 00:33:21,802
My kind of fella is
the real outsider.
737
00:33:31,318 --> 00:33:33,479
Good evening, everybody,
this is Orson Welles,
738
00:33:33,558 --> 00:33:35,086
the Mercury Wonder Show
broadcasting tonight from
739
00:33:35,158 --> 00:33:36,522
the Air Service
Command Training Center
740
00:33:36,598 --> 00:33:38,126
at Fresno, California.
741
00:33:39,998 --> 00:33:41,406
Last week,
an American president
742
00:33:41,478 --> 00:33:43,278
fell in the midst
of battle.
743
00:33:43,358 --> 00:33:44,646
- announcer: Guess who's taking Jack's place
744
00:33:44,718 --> 00:33:46,125
on the program tonight?
- man: Who?
745
00:33:46,198 --> 00:33:47,726
- Orson Welles,
that's who!
746
00:33:47,798 --> 00:33:49,358
Orson Welles!
747
00:33:52,598 --> 00:33:54,802
- Orson Welles: I did
"Around the World in 80 Days,"
748
00:33:54,878 --> 00:33:56,798
and it was, I think,
749
00:33:56,878 --> 00:33:58,362
the best thing I ever did
in the theater,
750
00:33:58,438 --> 00:33:59,921
but it was
a financial disaster.
751
00:33:59,998 --> 00:34:01,438
Before the opening
in Boston,
752
00:34:01,518 --> 00:34:04,366
the costumes were sitting
in the railway station,
753
00:34:04,438 --> 00:34:07,439
and there was
$55,000 to pay for them.
754
00:34:07,518 --> 00:34:10,486
And I was trying to think
who in Hollywood could send me
755
00:34:10,558 --> 00:34:12,086
$55,000...
756
00:34:12,158 --> 00:34:14,962
In the next three hours.
757
00:34:15,038 --> 00:34:17,482
I thought, "Harry Cohn. "
758
00:34:17,558 --> 00:34:19,642
Only one with
the courage to do it.
759
00:34:19,718 --> 00:34:22,086
I called him up, I said,
"I've got the greatest story
760
00:34:22,158 --> 00:34:23,325
you've ever read,"
and I turned
761
00:34:23,398 --> 00:34:24,925
the paperback around
762
00:34:24,998 --> 00:34:28,042
that the girl in the box office
was reading.
763
00:34:28,118 --> 00:34:29,798
It was called
"The Man I Killed. "
764
00:34:29,878 --> 00:34:32,442
And I says, "It's called
'The Man I Killed,'
765
00:34:32,518 --> 00:34:35,519
written by such and such,
a paperback, buy it!"
766
00:34:35,598 --> 00:34:39,526
I said, "You get me
$55,000 to Boston-"
767
00:34:39,598 --> 00:34:41,726
"And I will make it for you
if you'll send me
768
00:34:41,798 --> 00:34:43,522
$47,000 in two hours. "
769
00:34:43,598 --> 00:34:46,042
55,000 came.
770
00:34:46,118 --> 00:34:47,482
- Welles always liked
to pretend that he had
771
00:34:47,558 --> 00:34:49,566
absolutely no idea
that Harry Cohn
772
00:34:49,638 --> 00:34:51,482
had asked him to make
a movie with Rita Hayworth.
773
00:34:51,558 --> 00:34:52,998
He had no idea
what to do.
774
00:34:53,078 --> 00:34:55,119
The stage door keeper
of the theater that he was
775
00:34:55,198 --> 00:34:57,402
working in when he was doing
"Around the World"
776
00:34:57,478 --> 00:35:00,402
happened to be reading a book
called "The Lady from Shanghai. "
777
00:35:00,478 --> 00:35:01,766
- It's called
something or other,
778
00:35:01,838 --> 00:35:03,082
it wasn't
"Lady from Shanghai" then.
779
00:35:03,157 --> 00:35:04,641
- Sometimes he told
the story one way,
780
00:35:04,718 --> 00:35:05,962
and sometimes
he'd tell it another way.
781
00:35:06,037 --> 00:35:07,205
- It's all nonsense.
782
00:35:07,277 --> 00:35:08,478
- Maybe that comes from
one of those
783
00:35:08,558 --> 00:35:09,878
foreign language interviews
784
00:35:09,958 --> 00:35:11,922
where I pretend
I understand the question
785
00:35:11,998 --> 00:35:13,678
and say yes, you know?
786
00:35:27,798 --> 00:35:31,399
- host: We are bringing together,
for the first time on the air,
787
00:35:31,478 --> 00:35:34,086
one of Hollywood's best-known
married couples,
788
00:35:34,157 --> 00:35:36,405
Rita Hayworth and
Orson Welles.
789
00:35:36,478 --> 00:35:40,362
- Orson Welles:
I had divorced from Rita.
790
00:35:43,558 --> 00:35:46,362
She came to me and said,
"I want to make your picture. "
791
00:35:46,438 --> 00:35:49,122
- Welles would say anything
at any time
792
00:35:49,198 --> 00:35:51,763
if it sounded
good at the moment,
793
00:35:51,838 --> 00:35:54,239
and he often admitted
to that himself.
794
00:35:54,317 --> 00:35:55,801
- Orson Welles:
Harry sent for me and said,
795
00:35:55,878 --> 00:35:58,726
"I want you to do that
with Rita, for her sake. "
796
00:35:58,798 --> 00:35:59,922
- # Then don't... #
797
00:35:59,998 --> 00:36:01,286
- I was lucky enough
to be with her
798
00:36:01,358 --> 00:36:05,199
longer than any of
the other men in her life.
799
00:36:05,278 --> 00:36:06,599
She is a dear person,
800
00:36:06,678 --> 00:36:08,358
and she was
a wonderful wife
801
00:36:08,437 --> 00:36:11,722
and an extraordinary girl
in every way.
802
00:36:11,798 --> 00:36:14,559
- Hayworth character: There've been many
women, haven't there...
803
00:36:14,638 --> 00:36:16,558
- Welles character: Yes.
804
00:36:16,638 --> 00:36:19,006
- Orson Welles: I think
the first sex biologically
805
00:36:19,078 --> 00:36:20,366
is the female sex,
806
00:36:20,438 --> 00:36:22,446
and there are
many creatures
807
00:36:22,518 --> 00:36:25,279
in our world who
are women
808
00:36:25,358 --> 00:36:28,566
and only become male
as long as is necessary
809
00:36:28,638 --> 00:36:30,242
and then revert
to their original
810
00:36:30,318 --> 00:36:31,606
and superior condition.
811
00:36:31,678 --> 00:36:35,639
You know, I think we're
a kind of decoration.
812
00:36:35,718 --> 00:36:38,599
I think the basic
and essential human
813
00:36:38,678 --> 00:36:41,078
is the woman,
814
00:36:41,158 --> 00:36:42,686
and all that we're doing
815
00:36:42,758 --> 00:36:44,842
is trying to brighten up
the place
816
00:36:44,917 --> 00:36:47,678
because we've got to try
and justify our existence-.
817
00:36:47,758 --> 00:36:48,882
Look how little we do
818
00:36:48,958 --> 00:36:50,638
to keep
the race going.
819
00:36:50,718 --> 00:36:52,878
I've had a marvelous
sex life.
820
00:36:52,958 --> 00:36:55,206
- Dick Cavett: Is it too personal
to ask what age it started at?
821
00:36:55,278 --> 00:36:56,598
- Well, if I tell you,
you won't believe it,
822
00:36:56,678 --> 00:36:57,682
so I'd better not answer.
823
00:36:57,758 --> 00:37:02,679
- He was notoriously
flirtatious with both sexes.
824
00:37:02,757 --> 00:37:05,846
He used to love to
lie in a bath
825
00:37:05,917 --> 00:37:07,958
and do interviews
with his associates,
826
00:37:08,038 --> 00:37:09,566
which embarrassed
some of them
827
00:37:09,638 --> 00:37:11,242
and perhaps delighted others,
I don't know.
828
00:37:13,918 --> 00:37:15,762
I myself have
absolutely no evidence
829
00:37:15,838 --> 00:37:17,246
that Wells ever had
830
00:37:17,318 --> 00:37:19,205
any kind of sexual
relationship with a man,
831
00:37:19,278 --> 00:37:20,445
but he was
very, very conscious
832
00:37:20,518 --> 00:37:22,198
that it was something
that he could use.
833
00:37:22,278 --> 00:37:24,438
- Orson Welles: It's the business
of the director,
834
00:37:24,518 --> 00:37:26,963
is to carry on
a continual courtship
835
00:37:27,037 --> 00:37:29,198
with the people he sticks
in front of the lens.
836
00:37:29,278 --> 00:37:31,842
And when
you deal with stars,
837
00:37:31,918 --> 00:37:35,442
you know, real stars,
you have to...
838
00:37:35,518 --> 00:37:37,482
You have
to really make love.
839
00:37:47,278 --> 00:37:48,958
- Orson Welles character:
Personally, I don't like
840
00:37:49,038 --> 00:37:50,762
a girlfriend to have
a husband.
841
00:37:50,838 --> 00:37:53,565
If she'll fool a husband,
I figure she'll fool me.
842
00:37:53,637 --> 00:37:55,285
- Rita Hayworth character:
George.
843
00:37:55,358 --> 00:37:57,125
- James Naremore: Even though
this is a more conventional thriller
844
00:37:57,197 --> 00:37:59,565
with a movie star
at the heart of it,
845
00:37:59,638 --> 00:38:01,243
the film is much more
surrealistic,
846
00:38:01,317 --> 00:38:04,286
much more strange,
and all the more strange
847
00:38:04,358 --> 00:38:06,278
because, when the studio
doctored it,
848
00:38:06,358 --> 00:38:09,446
they put into it
these big close-ups
849
00:38:09,518 --> 00:38:10,642
of Rita Hayworth,
and they add
850
00:38:10,718 --> 00:38:12,485
to the surreal quality
of the film.
851
00:38:21,877 --> 00:38:24,365
- Welles character: I thought
it was me that was crazy.
852
00:38:24,438 --> 00:38:26,205
After what
I'd been through,
853
00:38:26,277 --> 00:38:31,285
anything crazy at all
seemed natural, but now...
854
00:38:31,357 --> 00:38:34,162
I was sane
on one subject, her.
855
00:38:34,237 --> 00:38:36,398
I knew about her.
856
00:38:36,478 --> 00:38:38,365
And I was the fail guy.
857
00:38:40,798 --> 00:38:42,359
- Martin Scorsese: He was not afraid
of being self-conscious
858
00:38:42,438 --> 00:38:44,686
with the camera.
859
00:38:44,758 --> 00:38:46,842
He did it with such conviction
and with such brilliance
860
00:38:46,918 --> 00:38:48,598
that you began to realize,
"Ah, I see, the camera moves. "
861
00:38:53,798 --> 00:38:57,006
- James Naremore: Bewildering,
astonishing things
862
00:38:57,078 --> 00:38:58,922
are happening
all the time,
863
00:38:58,998 --> 00:39:01,802
building up to the great
mirror maze at the end.
864
00:39:07,078 --> 00:39:09,238
- I knew I'd find
you two together.
865
00:39:09,318 --> 00:39:11,883
But you'd be foolish
to fire that gun.
866
00:39:13,918 --> 00:39:16,286
With these mirrors,
it's difficult to tell.
867
00:39:16,357 --> 00:39:19,282
You are aiming at me,
aren't you?
868
00:39:19,357 --> 00:39:21,725
I'm aiming
at you, lover.
869
00:39:21,798 --> 00:39:24,243
Of course, killing you
is killing myself.
870
00:39:46,237 --> 00:39:49,086
- Michael...
871
00:39:49,158 --> 00:39:51,286
Come back here.
872
00:39:51,358 --> 00:39:53,366
Michael.
873
00:39:53,438 --> 00:39:55,162
Please!
874
00:39:56,318 --> 00:39:58,566
- Simon Callow: This is one of
the great mysteries,
875
00:39:58,638 --> 00:40:02,042
why this extraordinarily
smart guy was outwitted
876
00:40:02,118 --> 00:40:04,366
by so much
less remarkable
877
00:40:04,438 --> 00:40:06,762
and intelligent people
so often.
878
00:40:06,837 --> 00:40:08,125
- MONEY-
879
00:40:12,157 --> 00:40:14,077
Macbeth!
880
00:40:14,158 --> 00:40:15,686
Beware MacDuff!
881
00:40:15,758 --> 00:40:19,042
Macduff!
Beware MacDuff!
882
00:40:20,797 --> 00:40:22,565
- I don't know what I haven't
done about this play
883
00:40:22,638 --> 00:40:24,678
except do it
as well as I'd like to.
884
00:40:24,757 --> 00:40:27,202
It's a great feeling
to be dealing with
885
00:40:27,277 --> 00:40:29,438
material which is
better than yourself.
886
00:40:29,518 --> 00:40:31,602
Answer me!
887
00:40:37,198 --> 00:40:40,438
- Witches: Double, double,
toil and trouble,
888
00:40:40,518 --> 00:40:44,087
fire burn
and cauldron bubble.
889
00:40:44,158 --> 00:40:46,045
- He had nothing.
The sets are bad.
890
00:40:46,118 --> 00:40:49,283
But the way that
he then had to light them
891
00:40:49,357 --> 00:40:52,839
and choreograph the camera
and the actors in those sets...
892
00:40:52,917 --> 00:40:56,082
It had
tremendous power.
893
00:40:59,158 --> 00:41:02,323
- Which of you
have done this?
894
00:41:02,398 --> 00:41:05,606
- Julie Taymor: Sometimes,
when you can do it all, you-
895
00:41:05,718 --> 00:41:07,126
you know, it's like
too much ice cream,
896
00:41:07,198 --> 00:41:09,206
too many flavors,
you can't even make a decision,
897
00:41:09,278 --> 00:41:12,759
but how you fill
the limitation
898
00:41:12,838 --> 00:41:14,878
shows the real artist
or not.
899
00:41:16,558 --> 00:41:17,878
- Jonathan Rosenbaum:
None of his Shakespeare films
900
00:41:17,958 --> 00:41:20,282
were ever really supported
by the critics.
901
00:41:20,357 --> 00:41:22,998
They complained about
the Scottish accents.
902
00:41:24,678 --> 00:41:28,606
- Knock, knock.
Never at quiet.
903
00:41:28,677 --> 00:41:29,921
The plague of these...
904
00:41:29,998 --> 00:41:31,406
- Rosenbaum: He had to do
all these changes
905
00:41:31,478 --> 00:41:34,566
in the soundtrack
and cut "Macbeth,"
906
00:41:34,638 --> 00:41:36,405
but he was the one
who did the cutting.
907
00:41:43,797 --> 00:41:48,805
- Orson Welles:
It was a big critical failure.
908
00:41:48,877 --> 00:41:50,722
It was the biggest critical
failure I ever had.
909
00:41:57,117 --> 00:41:59,126
- What is that noise?
910
00:42:06,998 --> 00:42:08,645
- Orson Welles:
I'm very happy in America,
911
00:42:08,717 --> 00:42:11,718
but it happens that America
is not as happy with me
912
00:42:11,798 --> 00:42:13,238
as I am with it.
- Muchas gracias, sexier.
913
00:42:13,318 --> 00:42:14,801
- Julie Taymor:
He was different.
914
00:42:14,878 --> 00:42:17,006
He was really
doing something
915
00:42:17,077 --> 00:42:20,678
so unique to his own
imagination,
916
00:42:20,758 --> 00:42:23,322
and whether that means
his films were successful
917
00:42:23,437 --> 00:42:24,758
is a whole
different matter.
918
00:42:24,838 --> 00:42:26,245
They are successful.
919
00:42:30,277 --> 00:42:32,798
- Like the fruit pickers,
I go where the work is.
920
00:42:37,797 --> 00:42:41,725
I don't think of myself
as in exile at all.
921
00:42:41,797 --> 00:42:44,198
In fact,
I've spent most of my life
922
00:42:44,277 --> 00:42:45,882
not quite unpacked.
923
00:42:48,718 --> 00:42:50,245
- Henry Jaglom: One of the things
that had driven him away
924
00:42:50,317 --> 00:42:52,762
was the McCarthy-in period.
925
00:42:52,838 --> 00:42:54,998
He was very messed up
by what was going on
926
00:42:55,077 --> 00:42:56,157
in America politically,
927
00:42:56,238 --> 00:42:57,798
had been a real
progressive, you know,
928
00:42:57,877 --> 00:43:00,081
and he was horrified.
929
00:43:02,397 --> 00:43:05,441
- He was never a communist,
but the FBI was following him,
930
00:43:05,517 --> 00:43:07,045
since "Citizen Kane,"
931
00:43:07,118 --> 00:43:09,246
when Hearst was
a friend of Hoover.
932
00:43:09,318 --> 00:43:11,806
- Orson Welles: I've been investigated
over and over again.
933
00:43:11,878 --> 00:43:14,846
It's one of our favorite
indoor and outdoor sports.
934
00:43:37,678 --> 00:43:38,878
Harry!
935
00:43:40,278 --> 00:43:42,242
- Rosenbaum: The most successful
thing he was ever part of,
936
00:43:42,317 --> 00:43:45,722
commercially, was offered
a percentage as part of the deal,
937
00:43:45,798 --> 00:43:47,839
but he couldn't afford it
because he needed the money,
938
00:43:47,917 --> 00:43:49,958
so he would have been
a wealthy man.
939
00:43:51,678 --> 00:43:53,445
- Look down there.
940
00:43:53,517 --> 00:43:55,885
Would you really feel
any pity if one of those dots
941
00:43:55,957 --> 00:43:57,844
stopped moving forever?
942
00:43:57,917 --> 00:44:01,005
If I offered you �20,000
for every dot that stopped,
943
00:44:01,077 --> 00:44:02,997
would you really, old man,
tell me to keep my money,
944
00:44:03,078 --> 00:44:04,965
or would you calculate
945
00:44:05,037 --> 00:44:06,957
how many dots you could
afford to spare?
946
00:44:07,038 --> 00:44:08,762
Free of income tax,
old man.
947
00:44:08,838 --> 00:44:11,118
- Rosenbaum: What's also kind of
interesting and ironic
948
00:44:11,197 --> 00:44:12,605
is that Harry Lime, for him,
949
00:44:12,678 --> 00:44:14,926
was the most detestable
character he ever played,
950
00:44:14,998 --> 00:44:16,481
but everybody else
loves Harry Lime.
951
00:44:17,797 --> 00:44:19,118
- Woman:
I have never in my life
952
00:44:19,197 --> 00:44:20,398
seen anything
in the same
953
00:44:20,478 --> 00:44:24,046
category of hideousness,
but I adore him!
954
00:44:28,597 --> 00:44:30,125
- Don't be so gloomy.
955
00:44:30,198 --> 00:44:32,282
After all,
it's not that awful.
956
00:44:32,357 --> 00:44:34,277
You know what
the fella says.
957
00:44:34,357 --> 00:44:36,244
In Italy, for 30 years
under the Borgias,
958
00:44:36,317 --> 00:44:38,957
they had warfare, terror,
murder, and bloodshed,
959
00:44:39,037 --> 00:44:40,565
but they produced
Michelangelo,
960
00:44:40,638 --> 00:44:42,558
Leonardo da Vinci,
and the Renaissance.
961
00:44:42,637 --> 00:44:44,885
In Switzerland,
they had brotherly love.
962
00:44:44,957 --> 00:44:47,522
They had 500 years
of democracy and peace,
963
00:44:47,597 --> 00:44:49,517
and what did
that produce?
964
00:44:49,597 --> 00:44:52,478
The cuckoo clock.
Solon, Holly.
965
00:44:52,558 --> 00:44:54,445
- Orson Welles:
A great many of us have been
966
00:44:54,517 --> 00:44:55,925
in Europe during
these last years.
967
00:44:55,998 --> 00:44:58,278
It's been a kind of frontier
for us in films,
968
00:44:58,357 --> 00:45:02,405
and it's a more anarchistic
and freer atmosphere.
969
00:45:02,477 --> 00:45:04,125
- Elvis Mitchell: You know, a lot of
people, I think, conceptually,
970
00:45:04,197 --> 00:45:06,042
like the idea of change,
971
00:45:06,117 --> 00:45:07,798
but they don't want
things to change.
972
00:45:07,877 --> 00:45:10,038
But Welles' impatience
was about that change,
973
00:45:10,118 --> 00:45:12,158
and his interest in
the Scottsboro Boys case
974
00:45:12,237 --> 00:45:13,842
and in early civil fights.
975
00:45:13,917 --> 00:45:15,161
Speaking out,
which you could only do
976
00:45:15,237 --> 00:45:16,645
if you were
an independent.
977
00:45:16,718 --> 00:45:18,201
- Orson Welles:
My own loyalty is greater
978
00:45:18,277 --> 00:45:21,125
to the idea of myself
as a member of the human family
979
00:45:21,197 --> 00:45:25,081
than it is to a- as a member
of any profession.
980
00:45:25,157 --> 00:45:28,158
I don't take art
as seriously as politics.
981
00:45:30,718 --> 00:45:34,078
- Rosenbaum: One of the great things
about Welles as a filmmaker
982
00:45:34,157 --> 00:45:36,044
is him capturing
the periods...
983
00:45:36,117 --> 00:45:38,757
of whenever
he was making the film,
984
00:45:38,837 --> 00:45:41,118
the paranoia of what
was going on in America.
985
00:45:41,197 --> 00:45:43,445
It's really reflected
in "Othello. "
986
00:45:43,517 --> 00:45:44,881
- Orson Welles:
Black Othello, the outsider,
987
00:45:44,958 --> 00:45:45,918
the mercenary, the foreigner,
988
00:45:45,997 --> 00:45:48,038
must feel
a certain insecurity
989
00:45:48,118 --> 00:45:51,599
when he contemplates
this curious conquest of his:
990
00:45:51,678 --> 00:45:53,838
The senator's daughter
who fled from her palace
991
00:45:53,917 --> 00:45:56,198
in the dead of night
to marry a black man-.
992
00:45:56,277 --> 00:45:59,125
- Man: It's partly a kind of an
atmosphere and a mood,
993
00:45:59,197 --> 00:46:01,326
but it's like a horror film.
994
00:46:09,638 --> 00:46:12,202
- Has he said anything?
- I know not what he-
995
00:46:12,277 --> 00:46:13,717
- What, what?
996
00:46:13,797 --> 00:46:15,684
- Lying.
997
00:46:17,237 --> 00:46:18,885
- Lie with her?
998
00:46:18,957 --> 00:46:22,646
- With her.
On her.
999
00:46:22,717 --> 00:46:23,961
What you will.
1000
00:46:25,997 --> 00:46:29,718
- Orson Welles: Came to Mogador on
the west coast of Africa to shoot.
1001
00:46:29,797 --> 00:46:31,881
We got a telegram-
Scalera, with whom I had
1002
00:46:31,957 --> 00:46:33,441
a contract to make
the picture,
1003
00:46:33,518 --> 00:46:34,522
had gone bankrupt.
1004
00:46:34,597 --> 00:46:36,801
We had no costumes,
nothing.
1005
00:46:36,877 --> 00:46:40,118
That was the big scene
of the murder of Rodrigo.
1006
00:46:40,197 --> 00:46:43,318
And what can you shoot
without costumes?
1007
00:46:43,398 --> 00:46:45,362
That's a Turkish bath.
1008
00:46:45,438 --> 00:46:49,606
Nothing was designed,
everything had to be found-.
1009
00:46:49,677 --> 00:46:50,998
We had to do it
1010
00:46:51,078 --> 00:46:52,245
with whatever money
I could raise
1011
00:46:52,318 --> 00:46:54,925
and stop until
I raised some more.
1012
00:46:54,997 --> 00:46:57,801
Now, that took almost
four years.
1013
00:46:57,877 --> 00:46:59,645
Now, there are still people
today who say,
1014
00:46:59,718 --> 00:47:01,038
"I don't want
to hire Welles as a director,"
1015
00:47:01,117 --> 00:47:03,681
it took him four years
to make 'Othello. '"
1016
00:47:04,997 --> 00:47:07,245
- Peter Bogdanovich: "Othello"
was his own production.
1017
00:47:07,637 --> 00:47:10,758
However, there are
various versions of it.
1018
00:47:10,837 --> 00:47:12,245
There's his version,
and then there's a version
1019
00:47:12,317 --> 00:47:13,845
that Beatrice redid.
1020
00:47:13,917 --> 00:47:16,165
- Called some friends
who were in the business,
1021
00:47:16,237 --> 00:47:18,081
the movie business,
and so I said,
1022
00:47:18,157 --> 00:47:20,558
"Where do you think
one could find, you know,
1023
00:47:20,637 --> 00:47:24,206
a negative or whatever is
left of 'Othello'?"
1024
00:47:24,277 --> 00:47:26,121
And they ended up
finding it
1025
00:47:26,197 --> 00:47:28,717
in some lab
in New Jersey.
1026
00:47:28,798 --> 00:47:30,926
It really was in
perfect condition.
1027
00:47:30,997 --> 00:47:32,677
- They made, I think,
a few mistakes.
1028
00:47:43,957 --> 00:47:45,398
- In June of 1955,
1029
00:47:45,477 --> 00:47:48,238
He finally got round
to nailing "Moby Dick. "
1030
00:47:48,317 --> 00:47:51,765
Of course, he'd appeared
in John Huston's movie of it.
1031
00:47:51,838 --> 00:47:54,806
He staged what he called
"Moby Dick Rehearsed" here.
1032
00:47:54,877 --> 00:47:58,281
It only ran for
three-and-a-half weeks,
1033
00:47:58,357 --> 00:48:00,441
but I think
it's one of the landmarks
1034
00:48:00,517 --> 00:48:02,361
in British theater
of the 1950s,
1035
00:48:02,437 --> 00:48:03,965
and it's certainly
a great landmark
1036
00:48:04,038 --> 00:48:05,762
in Wells' own life.
1037
00:48:05,837 --> 00:48:07,397
They'd filmed
a little bit of it.
1038
00:48:07,477 --> 00:48:09,441
The possibility is that
it was impounded
1039
00:48:09,518 --> 00:48:12,158
by the tax people here,
1040
00:48:12,237 --> 00:48:14,878
that it was lost,
that somebody stole it.
1041
00:48:14,957 --> 00:48:17,881
A very Wellesian episode
altogether.
1042
00:48:17,957 --> 00:48:20,085
- Hands off,
you two are of mankind!
1043
00:48:20,157 --> 00:48:22,645
Old Ahab stands alone
1044
00:48:22,717 --> 00:48:24,877
among the millions
of the peopled Earth,
1045
00:48:24,957 --> 00:48:27,402
nor gods nor men
his neighbors.
1046
00:48:27,477 --> 00:48:28,678
Cut, no good.
1047
00:48:31,917 --> 00:48:34,165
- Sir Peter Brook:
Television was the medium
1048
00:48:34,277 --> 00:48:37,081
for great freedom
and experiment.
1049
00:48:37,157 --> 00:48:38,881
We started working.
1050
00:48:38,957 --> 00:48:43,682
Both of us believed
that you don't hang on to any idea,
1051
00:48:43,757 --> 00:48:45,241
but the moment
that you'd had an idea,
1052
00:48:45,318 --> 00:48:46,845
and you begin to try it,
1053
00:48:46,917 --> 00:48:48,805
that leads to you think
of something else.
1054
00:48:48,877 --> 00:48:51,758
And then, as I was doing that,
turn around,
1055
00:48:51,957 --> 00:48:54,281
"Yes, Peter, but what if,
instead of that,
1056
00:48:54,357 --> 00:48:55,645
"we started
with him here,
1057
00:48:55,717 --> 00:48:57,726
and he leapt over
to that point?"
1058
00:48:57,798 --> 00:48:59,205
- Blow winds-...
1059
00:48:59,277 --> 00:49:03,402
- Orson suddenly took off
with tremendous passion.
1060
00:49:03,477 --> 00:49:04,678
- Rage... blow...
1061
00:49:06,877 --> 00:49:08,764
You cataracts
and hurricanoes!
1062
00:49:08,837 --> 00:49:10,757
- One thing one can
be sure is that
1063
00:49:10,837 --> 00:49:13,521
there wasn't before him
an Orson,
1064
00:49:13,597 --> 00:49:14,917
and there'll never
be a second.
1065
00:49:14,997 --> 00:49:20,082
- I think I made, essentially,
a mistake in staying in movies,
1066
00:49:20,158 --> 00:49:21,446
because I... but it...
1067
00:49:21,517 --> 00:49:23,122
It's a mistake
I can't regret,
1068
00:49:23,197 --> 00:49:25,238
because it's like saying,
1069
00:49:25,317 --> 00:49:27,358
"I shouldn't have stayed
married to that woman,
1070
00:49:27,437 --> 00:49:28,757
but I did
because I love her. "
1071
00:49:30,157 --> 00:49:32,002
- Julie Taymor:
In theater, you're in space,
1072
00:49:32,077 --> 00:49:34,118
and the lighting
can focus
1073
00:49:34,197 --> 00:49:35,845
where you want
the audience to look,
1074
00:49:35,917 --> 00:49:39,082
but, in general, the audience
can look anywhere they want.
1075
00:49:39,157 --> 00:49:41,121
The actual
complete manipulation
1076
00:49:41,197 --> 00:49:43,281
of the image is something
you can do in film.
1077
00:49:47,597 --> 00:49:51,241
- I can't change
this condition of love,
1078
00:49:51,317 --> 00:49:53,640
but I think I would be
better off without it.
1079
00:49:55,757 --> 00:49:57,481
- Orson Welles narrating:
On December 25th,
1080
00:49:57,557 --> 00:50:00,318
an aeroplane was sighted
off the coast of Barcelona.
1081
00:50:00,397 --> 00:50:02,481
It was flying empty.
1082
00:50:02,557 --> 00:50:04,837
This motion picture is
a fictionalized reconstruction
1083
00:50:04,917 --> 00:50:06,641
of the events leading up
1084
00:50:06,717 --> 00:50:08,397
to the appearance
of the empty plane.
1085
00:50:14,517 --> 00:50:16,558
- ... was talking to you,
what was it?
1086
00:50:16,637 --> 00:50:18,721
- ... it was just a name.
He was dying.
1087
00:50:18,797 --> 00:50:19,998
- Man:
What name was it?
1088
00:50:20,077 --> 00:50:21,245
- Arkadin.
1089
00:50:21,317 --> 00:50:24,919
- It's a story about a-
a high financier,
1090
00:50:24,997 --> 00:50:27,682
a man of
many countries
1091
00:50:27,757 --> 00:50:28,925
and three passports.
1092
00:50:28,997 --> 00:50:31,081
In the morning,
I think it's splendid,
1093
00:50:31,157 --> 00:50:33,405
in the evening,
I wonder.
1094
00:50:33,477 --> 00:50:36,358
- Woman: How much obligation
do you feel to a mass audience?
1095
00:50:36,437 --> 00:50:39,721
- I would love to have
a mass audience.
1096
00:50:39,797 --> 00:50:42,318
- I knew what I wanted.
1097
00:50:42,397 --> 00:50:44,317
That's the difference
between us.
1098
00:50:44,397 --> 00:50:48,041
- Did my poverty help
my creativity?
1099
00:50:48,117 --> 00:50:49,721
Uh, no.
1100
00:51:10,597 --> 00:51:13,445
Ladies and gentlemen,
please.
1101
00:51:13,517 --> 00:51:15,601
I must beg you
1102
00:51:15,677 --> 00:51:18,404
not to make
the slightest sound,
1103
00:51:18,477 --> 00:51:22,198
as the princess is in
a state of trance.
1104
00:51:23,637 --> 00:51:25,197
- Orson really,
it seems to me,
1105
00:51:25,277 --> 00:51:26,881
just wants to work.
1106
00:51:26,957 --> 00:51:30,045
But at the same time,
there is something in him
1107
00:51:30,117 --> 00:51:33,761
that drives him to alienate
the people with the money.
1108
00:51:33,837 --> 00:51:36,402
- Excuse me, sir?
1109
00:51:36,477 --> 00:51:38,801
- Yes?
1110
00:51:38,877 --> 00:51:41,245
- Well, I'm a young filmmaker
and a real bi fan.
1111
00:51:41,317 --> 00:51:44,601
I- I just wanted
to meet you.
1112
00:51:44,677 --> 00:51:46,761
- My pleasure,
I'm Orson Welles.
1113
00:51:46,837 --> 00:51:49,445
- I'm...
Edward D. Wood, Jr.
1114
00:51:52,116 --> 00:51:53,961
What you working on?
1115
00:51:54,036 --> 00:51:55,804
- Well, the financing
just fell through
1116
00:51:55,877 --> 00:51:57,601
for the third time
on "Don Quixote. "
1117
00:51:57,677 --> 00:52:00,197
I hate when that happens.
1118
00:52:00,277 --> 00:52:04,402
- Man: He had just done a picture
for Universal as an actor.
1119
00:52:07,197 --> 00:52:11,202
They asked him to play
the heavy in this thing.
1120
00:52:11,277 --> 00:52:14,245
He needed the money,
so he said okay.
1121
00:52:14,317 --> 00:52:16,358
- I said,
"Who's gonna direct it?"
1122
00:52:16,437 --> 00:52:17,964
And he says, "Well, we haven't
picked a director yet.
1123
00:52:18,036 --> 00:52:20,404
We have Orson Welles
to do the heavy, though. "
1124
00:52:20,477 --> 00:52:22,245
This was on
the long-distance phone,
1125
00:52:22,317 --> 00:52:25,285
and after
a static-filled pause,
1126
00:52:25,357 --> 00:52:28,477
I said, "Why don't you
have him direct it?
1127
00:52:28,557 --> 00:52:30,925
He's a pretty good
director, you know. "
1128
00:52:30,997 --> 00:52:33,038
And the reaction at first
1129
00:52:33,117 --> 00:52:34,917
was a prolonged silence
as though
1130
00:52:34,997 --> 00:52:37,878
I had suggested that
my mother direct the film.
1131
00:52:37,957 --> 00:52:39,365
- Ed...
1132
00:52:40,477 --> 00:52:41,481
- Yes?
1133
00:52:41,557 --> 00:52:43,881
- Visions are worth
fighting for.
1134
00:52:43,956 --> 00:52:48,398
Why spend your life making
someone else's dreams?
1135
00:52:48,477 --> 00:52:50,038
- I said, "I'll direct it,
1136
00:52:50,117 --> 00:52:52,081
"but if I also
get to write it.
1137
00:52:52,157 --> 00:52:54,165
Every word of it,
an entirely new script. "
1138
00:52:54,237 --> 00:52:55,241
They said yes.
1139
00:52:55,317 --> 00:52:56,878
- You won't have
any trouble with me.
1140
00:52:56,957 --> 00:52:59,597
- You bet your sweet life
I won't.
1141
00:52:59,677 --> 00:53:02,001
- Charlton Heston: "Touch of Evil"
is, of course, really
1142
00:53:02,076 --> 00:53:04,357
the story of the decline
and fall of Captain Quinlan,
1143
00:53:04,437 --> 00:53:05,725
Orson's part.
1144
00:53:05,797 --> 00:53:09,997
- Orson Welles: He's everything
we- we hate.
1145
00:53:10,077 --> 00:53:13,242
But he isn't what we hate,
it's his method,
1146
00:53:13,316 --> 00:53:15,957
and it's that ambiguity
1147
00:53:16,037 --> 00:53:17,957
which gives tension
to a story.
1148
00:53:21,117 --> 00:53:23,638
They loved the rushes.
1149
00:53:25,557 --> 00:53:28,121
Then they saw
a rough cut of it,
1150
00:53:28,197 --> 00:53:30,041
they were so horrified
that they...
1151
00:53:30,117 --> 00:53:33,402
wouldn't let me
in the studio.
1152
00:53:33,476 --> 00:53:34,960
I gave a dinner party
1153
00:53:35,037 --> 00:53:36,520
not long after
I started the picture
1154
00:53:36,597 --> 00:53:40,045
for all my old producer friends
and big star friends,
1155
00:53:40,117 --> 00:53:42,321
the old
Hollywood brigade.
1156
00:53:42,396 --> 00:53:43,804
I was a little late,
1157
00:53:43,877 --> 00:53:45,525
so they were all there
having their drinks on.
1158
00:53:45,597 --> 00:53:47,845
I came in,
in order to arrive in time
1159
00:53:47,917 --> 00:53:50,644
in my makeup
and costume.
1160
00:53:50,717 --> 00:53:52,245
And they all said,
"How are you, Orson?
1161
00:53:52,317 --> 00:53:54,117
You're looking great. "
1162
00:53:55,477 --> 00:53:57,638
It was too dark for them,
too strange.
1163
00:54:03,717 --> 00:54:06,641
- Welles had been
fired off the film,
1164
00:54:06,717 --> 00:54:08,517
kicked off the Lot.
1165
00:54:08,596 --> 00:54:10,757
He wrote
this 58-page memo
1166
00:54:10,837 --> 00:54:13,564
about what should
happen to the movie,
1167
00:54:13,637 --> 00:54:15,557
um, and pretty much,
1168
00:54:15,637 --> 00:54:19,642
Universal at the time
took the memo and tossed it.
1169
00:54:22,917 --> 00:54:24,925
It's not like with
"Magnificent Ambersons,"
1170
00:54:24,997 --> 00:54:26,765
as if we found
the missing last reel,
1171
00:54:26,836 --> 00:54:29,957
but the film became
more itself.
1172
00:54:30,037 --> 00:54:32,437
Orson,
above everything else,
1173
00:54:32,517 --> 00:54:35,278
was a master filmmaker
and knew exactly
1174
00:54:35,357 --> 00:54:37,244
how to make a film,
1175
00:54:37,317 --> 00:54:39,521
as it turned out,
from beyond the grave.
1176
00:54:43,797 --> 00:54:45,684
In Welles' memo,
1177
00:54:45,756 --> 00:54:48,321
he said two thins
about the opening shot.
1178
00:54:48,397 --> 00:54:51,485
He didn't want
titles over it,
1179
00:54:51,557 --> 00:54:54,001
and he wanted
a montage
1180
00:54:54,077 --> 00:54:55,877
of different
music tracks.
1181
00:55:00,436 --> 00:55:03,797
At that time, this was
seen as a B-movie.
1182
00:55:03,876 --> 00:55:06,124
It was very rare
that somebody
1183
00:55:06,196 --> 00:55:07,801
would not have titles
1184
00:55:07,877 --> 00:55:09,917
At the beginning
of a film in a B-movie.
1185
00:55:11,317 --> 00:55:13,281
So there they are,
walking through the town,
1186
00:55:13,357 --> 00:55:15,124
and oop,
there's that music,
1187
00:55:15,197 --> 00:55:18,045
and there's a car,
and, right now-
1188
00:55:18,116 --> 00:55:21,117
boonk!- that car
could've blown up.
1189
00:55:21,197 --> 00:55:23,041
Whereas- but if there are
titles over that,
1190
00:55:23,117 --> 00:55:24,917
you just know
it's not gonna blow up.
1191
00:55:24,996 --> 00:55:26,884
So by removing
the titles
1192
00:55:26,957 --> 00:55:29,761
and having this
sort of freeform music,
1193
00:55:29,837 --> 00:55:31,965
it puts a suspense
under this scene
1194
00:55:32,037 --> 00:55:35,245
that didn't
really exist before.
1195
00:55:35,317 --> 00:55:37,640
He'd spent those years
in radio doing
1196
00:55:37,716 --> 00:55:39,124
exactly this kind of stuff.
1197
00:55:39,197 --> 00:55:40,441
We did this in "American Graffiti,"
1198
00:55:40,517 --> 00:55:42,241
which was
the same kind of thing.
1199
00:55:42,317 --> 00:55:44,565
- George Lucas: What we called
"worldization" of the sound,
1200
00:55:44,637 --> 00:55:45,957
which is to make it
sound like it was
1201
00:55:46,037 --> 00:55:48,078
in the environment
in "American Graffiti,"
1202
00:55:48,156 --> 00:55:50,240
and having it pass by in cars
and that sort of thing,
1203
00:55:50,317 --> 00:55:53,525
which Welles had already
thought of in "Touch of Evil. "
1204
00:55:53,597 --> 00:55:54,918
I think both
Walter and I were
1205
00:55:54,996 --> 00:55:57,997
very charmed by that-
that whole concept.
1206
00:55:58,077 --> 00:56:02,277
He's definitely way ahead
of all the rest of us.
1207
00:56:07,557 --> 00:56:10,318
- Fell, Hank was a great
detective all right.
1208
00:56:10,396 --> 00:56:12,884
- And a lousy cop.
1209
00:56:12,957 --> 00:56:14,725
- Is that all you have
to say for him?
1210
00:56:15,996 --> 00:56:18,157
- He was some kind of a man.
1211
00:56:21,277 --> 00:56:23,797
What does it matter
what you say about people?
1212
00:56:31,277 --> 00:56:34,158
- Quinlan: Goodbye, Tana.
1213
00:56:34,236 --> 00:56:35,480
- Adios.
1214
00:56:35,557 --> 00:56:37,281
- Adios.
1215
00:56:38,356 --> 00:56:39,523
Wow, huh?
1216
00:56:39,596 --> 00:56:42,357
You know, Welles didn't even
want to do this movie,
1217
00:56:42,437 --> 00:56:44,281
but you know, sometimes
you do your best work
1218
00:56:44,357 --> 00:56:46,638
when you got a gun
to your head.
1219
00:56:48,557 --> 00:56:51,765
- Orson Welles: I do think working
for posterity is vulgar.
1220
00:56:55,636 --> 00:56:58,964
Because posterity is
just as big a whore
1221
00:56:59,037 --> 00:57:01,001
as the present.
1222
00:57:01,077 --> 00:57:05,125
- Filmmakers of today can do what
they do because Orson did it.
1223
00:57:05,197 --> 00:57:06,605
Every art form that I know
1224
00:57:06,677 --> 00:57:08,564
has somebody who
blazed new trails,
1225
00:57:08,637 --> 00:57:10,317
and their influence
starts being felt
1226
00:57:10,397 --> 00:57:11,805
about a generation later.
1227
00:57:11,877 --> 00:57:14,681
- Plato told us that
we should know ourselves,
1228
00:57:14,757 --> 00:57:18,117
and the object
of every artist,
1229
00:57:18,197 --> 00:57:20,281
good, bad or indifferent,
1230
00:57:20,357 --> 00:57:24,285
is a lifelong inquiry
into that subject,
1231
00:57:24,357 --> 00:57:28,121
and his work is
testimony to that effort,
1232
00:57:28,197 --> 00:57:31,045
but I'm in no position
to sum myself up.
1233
00:57:31,117 --> 00:57:32,765
- It's a peculiar thing.
When you have an artist
1234
00:57:32,837 --> 00:57:35,084
who works
so outside the box,
1235
00:57:35,156 --> 00:57:37,121
not everybody gets it
at the time.
1236
00:57:37,196 --> 00:57:41,005
- Do you know that I always
liked Hollywood very much?
1237
00:57:41,077 --> 00:57:42,637
It just wasn't reciprocated.
1238
00:58:02,836 --> 00:58:06,001
- Costa-Gavras:
He freed the directors
1239
00:58:06,077 --> 00:58:08,761
from the kind of static ways
1240
00:58:08,837 --> 00:58:11,041
they used to have
about the way you light,
1241
00:58:11,117 --> 00:58:12,961
about the way
you put your camera,
1242
00:58:13,037 --> 00:58:15,764
the way you have
the setting and so forth,
1243
00:58:15,837 --> 00:58:19,242
and it's very clear
in "The Trial," the Kafka.
1244
00:58:19,316 --> 00:58:20,844
He didn't do really Kafka.
1245
00:58:20,916 --> 00:58:22,957
He did
Orson Welles' Kafka.
1246
00:58:33,676 --> 00:58:35,563
- Orson Welles: I was living in a hotel
on Tuileries,
1247
00:58:35,636 --> 00:58:38,397
pacing up and down in my bedroom,
1248
00:58:38,476 --> 00:58:40,484
looking out the window.
1249
00:58:40,556 --> 00:58:42,356
And I'm not such a fool
1250
00:58:42,437 --> 00:58:45,164
as not to take
the moon very seriously,
1251
00:58:45,236 --> 00:58:47,484
and I saw the moon,
very large,
1252
00:58:47,597 --> 00:58:51,525
what we in America call
a harvest moon, enormous.
1253
00:58:51,597 --> 00:58:54,521
And then, miraculously,
two of them.
1254
00:58:54,597 --> 00:58:56,605
And on each moon,
there were numbers,
1255
00:58:56,677 --> 00:58:58,685
and I realized they were
the clock faces
1256
00:58:58,757 --> 00:59:01,005
of the Gare d'Orsay.
1257
00:59:01,077 --> 00:59:03,925
And I remembered that
the Gare d'Orsay was empty.
1258
00:59:03,996 --> 00:59:06,244
And at 5:30 in the morning,
I went downstairs,
1259
00:59:06,316 --> 00:59:08,357
got in a cab,
crossed the Seine,
1260
00:59:08,436 --> 00:59:12,081
and entered this empty
railway station
1261
00:59:12,157 --> 00:59:14,677
where I discovered
the world of Kafka.
1262
00:59:19,557 --> 00:59:23,441
- Orson fellas narrating: It has been
said that the logic of this story
1263
00:59:23,516 --> 00:59:26,037
is the logic of a dream.
1264
00:59:26,116 --> 00:59:27,360
- Come with me, Mr. K.
1265
00:59:44,316 --> 00:59:46,040
- Anthony Perkins:
Orson's view of Josef K.
1266
00:59:46,116 --> 00:59:49,160
Was that, far from being
the innocent victim
1267
00:59:49,236 --> 00:59:52,641
of bureaucracy that
Kafka had written that-
1268
00:59:52,716 --> 00:59:55,237
but, in Orson's version,
1269
00:59:55,316 --> 00:59:56,483
and I can hear him saying,
1270
00:59:56,556 --> 00:59:57,680
I can hear
his thundering voice,
1271
00:59:57,756 --> 00:59:59,316
"He's guilty as hell. "
1272
01:00:00,956 --> 01:00:02,801
- Costa-Gavras: He would like
to tell a story
1273
01:00:02,876 --> 01:00:06,478
to make a metaphor about
his vision of the world,
1274
01:00:06,556 --> 01:00:09,196
speaking about
how we can feel guilty
1275
01:00:09,276 --> 01:00:10,836
without being guilty.
1276
01:00:10,916 --> 01:00:13,361
- You came to see me
about this case, that's good.
1277
01:00:15,876 --> 01:00:18,920
- Orson Welles:
I saw it as a European story,
1278
01:00:18,996 --> 01:00:21,680
full of old European
bric-a-brac,
1279
01:00:21,756 --> 01:00:26,285
With IBM machines
lurking in the background.
1280
01:00:26,357 --> 01:00:28,124
- Costa-Gavras: You think
it's a major movie,
1281
01:00:28,196 --> 01:00:30,444
whatever the critics
said about it.
1282
01:00:32,636 --> 01:00:33,837
- There really wasn't
indie filmmaking
1283
01:00:33,917 --> 01:00:35,717
in the '40s, '50s,
1284
01:00:35,796 --> 01:00:37,684
you know, when Welles
was doing it.
1285
01:00:38,796 --> 01:00:39,756
He wasn't happy doing it.
1286
01:00:39,837 --> 01:00:40,884
He had no choice.
1287
01:00:41,916 --> 01:00:44,404
- Orson Welles: There's
a new moment in filmmaking.
1288
01:00:44,477 --> 01:00:46,637
It's not that we're better,
the filmmakers,
1289
01:00:46,716 --> 01:00:48,844
but that
the distribution system
1290
01:00:48,916 --> 01:00:50,204
has broken down a little,
1291
01:00:50,276 --> 01:00:53,920
and the public is
more open, more ready
1292
01:00:53,996 --> 01:00:55,000
for difficult subjects.
1293
01:00:55,076 --> 01:00:56,604
Imagine what
it means for me
1294
01:00:56,677 --> 01:00:58,237
to have had the chance
to make it.
1295
01:00:58,317 --> 01:01:00,445
Indeed, to have had
the chance to work.
1296
01:01:05,477 --> 01:01:07,681
- He was an unbeatable man.
1297
01:01:07,756 --> 01:01:09,044
You couldn't, you know, if-
1298
01:01:09,116 --> 01:01:10,600
Something didn't work,
1299
01:01:10,677 --> 01:01:12,957
he said, "Okay,
let's move forward,"
1300
01:01:13,036 --> 01:01:14,520
and he would do
another thing
1301
01:01:14,596 --> 01:01:16,037
and one other thing.
1302
01:01:16,116 --> 01:01:17,916
There was no way
of stopping him.
1303
01:01:20,636 --> 01:01:23,081
I said once to him,
"My God, you looked
1304
01:01:23,157 --> 01:01:24,324
wonderful in 'Jane Eyre!"
1305
01:01:24,397 --> 01:01:25,924
That's the first time
I saw him.
1306
01:01:25,996 --> 01:01:27,884
And he said, "Yeah,
1307
01:01:27,957 --> 01:01:31,197
but you should have seen
the corset I had. "
1308
01:01:31,276 --> 01:01:33,163
We are on
the Dalmatian Coast,
1309
01:01:33,236 --> 01:01:35,244
on the Adriatic.
1310
01:01:35,316 --> 01:01:37,717
Down there is
a small place
1311
01:01:37,796 --> 01:01:40,241
called Primosten where
we shot "Dead Reckoning,"
1312
01:01:40,317 --> 01:01:42,401
later entitled "The Deep,"
1313
01:01:42,477 --> 01:01:44,081
with Lawrence Harvey,
Jeanne Moreau,
1314
01:01:44,157 --> 01:01:45,640
Orson Welles, myself.
1315
01:01:45,716 --> 01:01:46,720
Jeanne Moreau
1316
01:01:46,796 --> 01:01:48,716
I was pretty girl
when I was young.
1317
01:01:48,797 --> 01:01:51,404
No woman ever looked
at me like this.
1318
01:01:51,476 --> 01:01:54,161
He said, "Jeanne,
I don't want to-
1319
01:01:54,236 --> 01:01:56,560
"I don't want to be rude,
but you're not the age
1320
01:01:56,637 --> 01:01:58,524
of playing
a young bride. "
1321
01:01:58,596 --> 01:02:00,560
Look, I don't care
what these people are
1322
01:02:00,636 --> 01:02:02,120
going to think of me.
1323
01:02:02,196 --> 01:02:03,484
I'm not in
the movie business,
1324
01:02:03,556 --> 01:02:06,001
I'm 72 years old,
I want to have a farm,
1325
01:02:06,077 --> 01:02:07,637
I dream of chickens,
literally,
1326
01:02:07,717 --> 01:02:09,801
and have a donkey
and a dog and so on,
1327
01:02:09,876 --> 01:02:12,604
so I'm going to tell anything
that comes into my mind.
1328
01:02:12,677 --> 01:02:16,605
I was in the elevator,
and Polanski stepped in,
1329
01:02:16,676 --> 01:02:18,476
and he said to me,
"You know,
1330
01:02:18,557 --> 01:02:21,044
"I was thinking
of using Orson,
1331
01:02:21,116 --> 01:02:23,561
"but I hear that
1332
01:02:23,637 --> 01:02:28,121
"he's late on the set,
that he's difficult.
1333
01:02:28,196 --> 01:02:30,083
I'm not very sure. "
1334
01:02:30,156 --> 01:02:31,640
I said,
"If you are not sure,
1335
01:02:31,717 --> 01:02:33,037
don't engage him. "
1336
01:02:33,117 --> 01:02:36,357
He would have been
the happiest man in the world
1337
01:02:36,436 --> 01:02:39,317
if Geraldine,
whatever her name is,
1338
01:02:39,397 --> 01:02:40,880
came and said, "Orson,
1339
01:02:40,956 --> 01:02:42,876
this is your son,"
you know?
1340
01:02:42,956 --> 01:02:45,324
I hear that the guy is
very good-looking
1341
01:02:45,396 --> 01:02:47,437
on top of everything,
it would be wonderful.
1342
01:02:49,957 --> 01:02:51,245
They were showing
Magnificent Ambersons“
1343
01:02:51,316 --> 01:02:52,800
in the middle
of the night.
1344
01:02:52,876 --> 01:02:54,840
I see the light,
1345
01:02:54,917 --> 01:02:57,045
I go to the living room,
1346
01:02:57,117 --> 01:02:58,841
and, just before
I open the door,
1347
01:02:58,916 --> 01:03:01,643
I see his reflection
in the mirror,
1348
01:03:01,716 --> 01:03:04,324
and I see him crying.
1349
01:03:04,396 --> 01:03:06,557
And I don't
open the door.
1350
01:03:07,797 --> 01:03:10,120
What's the use to cry?
I do cry enough for Orson.
1351
01:03:10,196 --> 01:03:12,684
I cry...
Too often.
1352
01:03:17,876 --> 01:03:20,441
But I also smile,
1353
01:03:20,516 --> 01:03:24,761
because I'm so happy
that I have known him.
1354
01:03:26,317 --> 01:03:28,640
- Orson Welles: I think man
is a crazy animal.
1355
01:03:30,996 --> 01:03:32,436
I think we are also-
1356
01:03:32,516 --> 01:03:34,557
I think we're also
marvelous people,
1357
01:03:34,636 --> 01:03:37,757
divine in our potentialities.
1358
01:03:38,956 --> 01:03:40,276
You see, there you are.
1359
01:03:40,356 --> 01:03:42,080
You can say anything
with passion and get a hand.
1360
01:03:48,556 --> 01:03:51,600
If you're going to try
to finance movies and live,
1361
01:03:51,676 --> 01:03:53,760
you have to earn
your money somehow.
1362
01:03:55,756 --> 01:03:58,037
Is there any man with
a decent regard for human life
1363
01:03:58,116 --> 01:03:59,437
and the slightest bit of heart
1364
01:03:59,517 --> 01:04:03,881
who doesn't understand it?
1365
01:04:03,956 --> 01:04:06,640
I would have sold my soul
to play the Godfather,
1366
01:04:06,716 --> 01:04:09,881
but I never get
those parts offered to me-.
1367
01:04:12,156 --> 01:04:14,164
20 million years ago,
1368
01:04:14,236 --> 01:04:17,760
an ape-like creature
inhabited the Earth.
1369
01:04:19,876 --> 01:04:22,080
I'm a kin actor,
maybe a bad one.
1370
01:04:22,156 --> 01:04:24,000
They weren't
necessarily the best actor,
1371
01:04:24,076 --> 01:04:26,084
they were the actor
who played the king.
1372
01:04:26,156 --> 01:04:28,120
- Aah!
- Aah!
1373
01:04:28,196 --> 01:04:31,164
- Mike Nichols knows
how to deal with actors.
1374
01:04:31,236 --> 01:04:33,036
Orson would
turn to Mike,
1375
01:04:33,117 --> 01:04:34,797
as, I guess, he did
to every director
1376
01:04:34,876 --> 01:04:36,677
and say things like,
1377
01:04:36,756 --> 01:04:38,361
"You're really gonna
do that shot
1378
01:04:38,436 --> 01:04:40,237
when you know
you're not gonna need it?"
1379
01:04:40,316 --> 01:04:43,404
- Knucklehead fool!
1380
01:04:43,476 --> 01:04:44,960
You empty-headed yokel!
1381
01:04:46,596 --> 01:04:47,840
- Richard Benjamin: You say,
"My God, I'm in a scene
1382
01:04:47,917 --> 01:04:49,521
"with Orson Welles,
there's an actual
1383
01:04:49,596 --> 01:04:51,079
"piece of film in my life
1384
01:04:51,156 --> 01:04:53,076
that has
Orson Welles in it. "
1385
01:04:53,277 --> 01:04:55,241
- I don't want the men
to pay any attention to me,
1386
01:04:55,316 --> 01:04:57,041
just carry on
as usual.
1387
01:04:57,117 --> 01:04:58,600
- Don't pay
any attention to Dad,
1388
01:04:58,676 --> 01:04:59,680
just carry on as usual.
1389
01:04:59,756 --> 01:05:00,803
- Will you clam up?
1390
01:05:00,876 --> 01:05:02,884
- Orson Welles character:
Money, money, money.
1391
01:05:02,956 --> 01:05:04,844
I never concern myself
with this madness.
1392
01:05:06,556 --> 01:05:08,685
- Elvis Mitchell: There's this complete
sort of self-knowledge
1393
01:05:08,756 --> 01:05:11,037
and almost the arrogance
of an athlete, like,
1394
01:05:11,116 --> 01:05:13,843
the ownership of
his body on camera
1395
01:05:13,916 --> 01:05:16,361
before he got to be, you know,
the size of a Buick.
1396
01:05:16,436 --> 01:05:19,557
- My salads are...
a bit complicated.
1397
01:05:19,636 --> 01:05:21,677
- But he would just
slice through.
1398
01:05:21,756 --> 01:05:22,957
- Dinner, ho, dinner!
1399
01:05:24,916 --> 01:05:26,324
Would you take
this away, please,
1400
01:05:26,396 --> 01:05:27,924
and... and bring me
1401
01:05:27,996 --> 01:05:29,763
The steak au poivre,
thanks a lot.
1402
01:05:29,836 --> 01:05:32,597
- When I watched
Orson Welles eat,
1403
01:05:32,676 --> 01:05:34,356
it was like...
1404
01:05:34,436 --> 01:05:36,596
somebody making love
to the food.
1405
01:05:36,676 --> 01:05:38,280
He really
loved to eat,
1406
01:05:39,077 --> 01:05:40,877
and you could see,
his eyes lit up.
1407
01:05:40,956 --> 01:05:42,756
When he put
that forkful in,
1408
01:05:42,836 --> 01:05:45,520
and his whole face was
like a sunshine.
1409
01:05:45,596 --> 01:05:46,884
- You think he'd
remember the lunch.
1410
01:05:46,956 --> 01:05:50,077
There was
a marvelous mousse.
1411
01:05:50,156 --> 01:05:53,037
Got any donuts
or sweet rolls?
1412
01:05:53,116 --> 01:05:55,396
- And he could
describe every dish,
1413
01:05:55,476 --> 01:05:56,677
the way it tasted.
1414
01:05:56,756 --> 01:05:58,524
- Welles: Schwartzw�lder Torte...
1415
01:05:58,596 --> 01:05:59,884
Kugel...
1416
01:06:02,796 --> 01:06:04,040
Caf� cr�me Torte.
1417
01:06:04,116 --> 01:06:06,157
- Obviously, when you looked at him
and said, you know,
1418
01:06:06,237 --> 01:06:08,277
this is not a guy
who is on a diet.
1419
01:06:08,356 --> 01:06:10,996
Welles:
1420
01:06:11,076 --> 01:06:12,277
...und Sachertorte.
1421
01:06:12,356 --> 01:06:14,724
How sweet it was-
1422
01:06:14,796 --> 01:06:18,604
- Even when he lost some idea
of himself physically...
1423
01:06:18,676 --> 01:06:20,924
- Overweight, me?
1424
01:06:20,996 --> 01:06:23,364
- The words still had
the same kind of precision
1425
01:06:23,436 --> 01:06:24,483
that his body once had.
1426
01:06:24,556 --> 01:06:27,196
- More...
1427
01:06:27,276 --> 01:06:29,163
Are you going to help me?
1428
01:06:32,196 --> 01:06:35,077
Have I your support,
or have I not?
1429
01:06:35,156 --> 01:06:37,360
- No, Your Grace.
1430
01:06:37,436 --> 01:06:39,280
I'm not going to help you.
1431
01:06:41,956 --> 01:06:45,437
- Then good night,
Master More.
1432
01:06:51,396 --> 01:06:52,879
- Simon Callow: You have to wait
quite a long time
1433
01:06:52,956 --> 01:06:54,844
before Welles makes
his masterpiece,
1434
01:06:54,916 --> 01:06:57,361
which in my view and the view
of many other people
1435
01:06:57,436 --> 01:07:00,284
is Falstaff,
the "Chimes at Midnight,"
1436
01:07:00,356 --> 01:07:02,517
which is, to me,
one of the great,
1437
01:07:02,596 --> 01:07:05,324
great achievements of filmmaking
in the 20th century.
1438
01:07:05,396 --> 01:07:08,724
- Falstaff!
Good night.
1439
01:07:08,796 --> 01:07:12,484
- Now comes in the sweetest
morsel of the night.
1440
01:07:12,556 --> 01:07:13,800
And we must dance.
1441
01:07:14,756 --> 01:07:17,004
- Joseph McBride: I saw it three times
in a row in one night
1442
01:07:17,076 --> 01:07:19,280
because I thought
I might never see it again,
1443
01:07:19,356 --> 01:07:21,920
so you had intellectuals
from the University of Chicago
1444
01:07:21,996 --> 01:07:23,197
and you had winos
off the street,
1445
01:07:23,276 --> 01:07:25,240
and they all loved the film.
1446
01:07:25,316 --> 01:07:27,084
- This chair shall be the state
1447
01:07:27,156 --> 01:07:29,284
and this cushion... my crown.
1448
01:07:36,356 --> 01:07:38,800
- Simon Callow: Welles had, by now,
mastered the art
1449
01:07:38,876 --> 01:07:40,720
of making independent films,
1450
01:07:40,796 --> 01:07:43,241
and making them in the way
that he wanted to make them
1451
01:07:43,316 --> 01:07:44,997
in this kind of
improvised way.
1452
01:07:46,596 --> 01:07:48,124
Although he had a script,
of course, for it,
1453
01:07:48,196 --> 01:07:50,476
but he didn't stick
very closely to the script.
1454
01:07:50,556 --> 01:07:52,717
Unless, of course,
it was Shakespeare's words.
1455
01:07:52,796 --> 01:07:56,124
- What is honor? Air.
1456
01:07:56,196 --> 01:07:58,324
A trim reckoning!
Who hath it?
1457
01:07:58,396 --> 01:08:01,440
He that died 0' Wednesday.
Doth he feel it? No.
1458
01:08:01,516 --> 01:08:03,196
'Tis insensible then?
Yea, to the dead.
1459
01:08:03,276 --> 01:08:05,437
But will it not live
with the living?
1460
01:08:05,516 --> 01:08:07,121
No. Why?
1461
01:08:07,196 --> 01:08:08,560
The traction will not suffering.
1462
01:08:08,636 --> 01:08:10,164
Therefore, I'll none of it.
1463
01:08:39,476 --> 01:08:42,040
- Orson Welles: Violence always
has been part of our story.
1464
01:08:42,116 --> 01:08:43,884
It is, you know,
I've seen it
1465
01:08:43,955 --> 01:08:46,443
in my own lifetime
long before this period,
1466
01:08:46,516 --> 01:08:49,277
and we certainly
read about it in history.
1467
01:08:49,356 --> 01:08:52,160
That's the way we won the
country and stole it away
1468
01:08:52,236 --> 01:08:54,123
from the Indians
and all the rest of it.
1469
01:09:01,356 --> 01:09:03,801
- fellas: If I wanted to, uh,
to get into heaven
1470
01:09:03,876 --> 01:09:06,276
on the basis of one movie,
1471
01:09:06,356 --> 01:09:08,397
that's the one
I would offer up,
1472
01:09:08,476 --> 01:09:11,924
because it is, to me,
the least flawed.
1473
01:09:11,996 --> 01:09:13,120
Let me put it that way.
1474
01:09:13,196 --> 01:09:16,284
- I banish thee,
on pain of death,
1475
01:09:16,356 --> 01:09:19,564
as I have done the rest
for my misleaders,
1476
01:09:19,636 --> 01:09:25,004
not to come near our person
by 10 mile.
1477
01:09:25,076 --> 01:09:26,440
- Simon Callow:
"Chimes at Midnight" is true,
1478
01:09:26,516 --> 01:09:28,240
through and through and through,
1479
01:09:28,316 --> 01:09:30,357
and is profound
and is movin
1480
01:09:30,436 --> 01:09:32,837
and contains an absolute essence
of Shakespeare
1481
01:09:32,915 --> 01:09:36,636
and an absolute essence
of Orson Welles.
1482
01:09:37,995 --> 01:09:39,556
- Falstaff?
1483
01:09:39,635 --> 01:09:42,920
- Falstaff is dead.
1484
01:09:56,396 --> 01:10:00,040
- Simon Callow:
It's human to the core.
1485
01:10:00,116 --> 01:10:04,241
- Jesus, the days
that we have seen.
1486
01:10:10,556 --> 01:10:11,876
- Stefan Drossler:
The Munich Film Museum
1487
01:10:11,956 --> 01:10:15,557
is part of the municipal museum.
1488
01:10:15,636 --> 01:10:18,363
We are very much caring
1489
01:10:18,436 --> 01:10:21,317
to keep the legacy
of Orson Welles.
1490
01:10:22,596 --> 01:10:25,203
All the material Orson had
1491
01:10:25,276 --> 01:10:26,924
was shipped to Munich.
1492
01:10:30,276 --> 01:10:32,196
- Sometimes I try to imagine
1493
01:10:32,276 --> 01:10:36,324
Orson having different bedrooms
in different motels and hotels,
1494
01:10:36,396 --> 01:10:39,724
and the doors to this room,
bedroom is locked,
1495
01:10:39,796 --> 01:10:42,720
and under the bed
are hidden,
1496
01:10:42,796 --> 01:10:45,436
you know,
boxes and boxes of film.
1497
01:10:48,556 --> 01:10:51,960
- Stefan Drossler: Some believe
these films look more amateurish
1498
01:10:52,036 --> 01:10:54,437
because they are not really
Hollywood productions.
1499
01:10:54,515 --> 01:10:56,676
Many others
see him as a hero
1500
01:10:56,756 --> 01:10:59,156
of the independent filmmaker.
1501
01:10:59,236 --> 01:11:01,843
The problem is only that, uh,
1502
01:11:01,916 --> 01:11:04,077
few of these films were
really finished,
1503
01:11:04,156 --> 01:11:08,161
that he still was working
and working and working on them.
1504
01:11:08,235 --> 01:11:09,643
- Pellegrina's dead.
1505
01:11:12,956 --> 01:11:15,640
I had no chance
to say good-bye.
1506
01:11:15,716 --> 01:11:17,964
Will you do that for me?
1507
01:11:18,036 --> 01:11:21,517
- Everybody who is
an intellectual artist
1508
01:11:21,596 --> 01:11:23,844
starts on many things
1509
01:11:23,916 --> 01:11:26,196
and sometimes
doesn't complete them.
1510
01:11:26,276 --> 01:11:29,320
- Since it's my own little picture
and I put my own money on it,
1511
01:11:29,396 --> 01:11:31,796
I don't know why
they don't bug authors
1512
01:11:31,876 --> 01:11:34,004
and say, "When are
you gonna finish 'Nelly,'
1513
01:11:34,076 --> 01:11:36,280
that novel you started
10 years ago?"
1514
01:11:36,355 --> 01:11:38,843
- If the wolf is
not really at the door,
1515
01:11:38,916 --> 01:11:41,764
it's a big temptation to say,
"Well, this isn't-
1516
01:11:41,835 --> 01:11:44,520
this isn't my best,
I'm gonna put it away. "
1517
01:11:44,595 --> 01:11:46,036
- Orson Welles narrating:
A newly-wedded couple
1518
01:11:46,115 --> 01:11:47,840
are here on their small yacht
1519
01:11:47,916 --> 01:11:50,360
cruising up
the west coast of Africa
1520
01:11:50,436 --> 01:11:52,444
on their way
to the Mediterranean.
1521
01:11:52,516 --> 01:11:53,957
Out in these waters,
1522
01:11:54,035 --> 01:11:56,763
they might expect
to be very much alone,
1523
01:11:56,836 --> 01:11:59,204
but there's someone else
out there.
1524
01:12:01,595 --> 01:12:05,763
- He said once, I'm not going to
call Don Quixote "Don Quixote. "
1525
01:12:05,835 --> 01:12:08,684
I'm going to call it 'When Are You
Going to Finish Don Quixote?"
1526
01:12:12,356 --> 01:12:14,636
- Stanley Kubrick had projects
that he never completed.
1527
01:12:14,716 --> 01:12:17,717
The difference is, Welles
actually got footage in the can,
1528
01:12:17,795 --> 01:12:19,520
as opposed to a number
of projects by people
1529
01:12:19,596 --> 01:12:23,043
in much better financial position
or industry position,
1530
01:12:23,115 --> 01:12:25,156
never even getting them
off the round.
1531
01:12:25,236 --> 01:12:27,843
- Man: Are you happy
when it's all done and cut
1532
01:12:27,915 --> 01:12:30,436
and goes out to be printed
and into the movie houses?
1533
01:12:30,515 --> 01:12:32,283
- No.
1534
01:12:32,356 --> 01:12:34,843
No, because you always hope
you can make it better.
1535
01:12:34,915 --> 01:12:36,879
- James Naremore:
I don't think it's a...
1536
01:12:36,956 --> 01:12:38,920
at all any failure
to want to finish
1537
01:12:38,996 --> 01:12:40,720
or be a fear of finishing
or whatever.
1538
01:12:40,796 --> 01:12:42,564
That sounds like some kind of
bizarre sexual malady.
1539
01:12:44,955 --> 01:12:46,843
- Eric Sherman: I don't know
why he didn't finish it,
1540
01:12:46,916 --> 01:12:49,000
and I never asked him.
1541
01:12:49,076 --> 01:12:51,399
But we have an unbelievable
body of work,
1542
01:12:51,476 --> 01:12:53,800
including the greatest
film on Shakespeare:
1543
01:12:53,876 --> 01:12:56,036
"Falstaff," "Chimes at Midnight,"
1544
01:12:56,116 --> 01:12:58,723
the short color film
"Immortal Story,"
1545
01:12:58,795 --> 01:13:00,595
one of the most
brilliantly shot films ever.
1546
01:13:02,635 --> 01:13:05,920
Film after film
was phenomenal.
1547
01:13:25,996 --> 01:13:28,319
- Henry Jaglom: The studios had
lost interest in him,
1548
01:13:28,395 --> 01:13:31,516
and he could put together his
projects in a more European way,
1549
01:13:31,596 --> 01:13:34,836
financially, getting bits
of money from here and there.
1550
01:13:34,916 --> 01:13:37,960
So it was comfortable for him to
be in Europe during that time.
1551
01:13:40,075 --> 01:13:42,956
- Orson Welles: The way I figure is
that you've only got so much luck,
1552
01:13:43,036 --> 01:13:45,524
and it doesn't matter
when it happens,
1553
01:13:45,596 --> 01:13:47,636
and I was incredibly lucky.
1554
01:13:54,916 --> 01:13:55,876
- Salud.
1555
01:13:58,516 --> 01:13:59,836
- So the central figure
in this story
1556
01:13:59,916 --> 01:14:01,083
is the fellow with,
you know,
1557
01:14:01,156 --> 01:14:02,357
who can hardly
see through
1558
01:14:02,435 --> 01:14:04,040
the bush of the hair
on his chest.
1559
01:14:05,276 --> 01:14:07,163
- reporters:
Mr. Welles! Mr. Welles, please!
1560
01:14:08,956 --> 01:14:10,396
Thank you!
1561
01:14:10,476 --> 01:14:13,160
- Oh, I'm gain to go on
being faithful to my girl-.
1562
01:14:13,235 --> 01:14:14,282
I love her.
1563
01:14:19,356 --> 01:14:21,800
In school,
you should be making movies.
1564
01:14:23,435 --> 01:14:25,923
Not letting the professor
tell you about
1565
01:14:25,995 --> 01:14:28,036
Eisenstein
and D.W. Griffith.
1566
01:14:39,636 --> 01:14:41,403
- 'Cause up to that time,
it was the seamless film,
1567
01:14:41,476 --> 01:14:43,517
in a way, um,
the hidden camera.
1568
01:14:43,595 --> 01:14:46,116
The obtr- the camera that you
couldn't tell was there.
1569
01:14:46,195 --> 01:14:48,596
So Welles was the one
to really break open,
1570
01:14:48,675 --> 01:14:50,443
open up the Pandora's box.
1571
01:14:50,516 --> 01:14:54,564
In a funny way, I guess, picking
up where silent films left off.
1572
01:14:58,515 --> 01:15:01,155
- Every single...
1573
01:15:01,235 --> 01:15:03,199
not just every scene,
1574
01:15:03,276 --> 01:15:05,884
but every shot has an idea.
1575
01:15:05,955 --> 01:15:07,800
There's a concept
1576
01:15:07,875 --> 01:15:11,597
and an idea being
executed at every second.
1577
01:15:16,195 --> 01:15:18,563
- Welles stands kind of
above everybody's work.
1578
01:15:18,636 --> 01:15:21,320
I think every filmmaker
has some relation with Welles,
1579
01:15:21,395 --> 01:15:24,996
if nothing else, you know,
he created the air we breathe
1580
01:15:25,076 --> 01:15:27,040
in that regard, you know?
1581
01:15:27,116 --> 01:15:29,244
He's sort of the patron saint
of indie filmmakers.
1582
01:15:35,316 --> 01:15:36,516
- Elvis Mitchell:
So much of what he did
1583
01:15:36,596 --> 01:15:37,556
came with quotation marks around it.
1584
01:15:37,635 --> 01:15:39,076
Postmodern.
1585
01:15:39,156 --> 01:15:41,643
And I think about just
the beginning of "F for Fake. "
1586
01:15:41,715 --> 01:15:44,596
It's just all about saying,
"This is what you're seeing
1587
01:15:44,676 --> 01:15:47,480
"and this is what I'm doing,
and this is what you're seeing,
1588
01:15:47,556 --> 01:15:48,800
but this is what I'm doing. "
1589
01:15:48,875 --> 01:15:52,357
That sort of
mirror-on-a-mirror effect.
1590
01:15:54,556 --> 01:15:56,836
- Orson Welles: It was a pretty great
experience to start making
1591
01:15:56,915 --> 01:15:59,523
yet another movie
with a storyline
1592
01:15:59,596 --> 01:16:01,516
rotten with coincidence.
1593
01:16:01,595 --> 01:16:05,556
For instance, that the author
of "Fake," a book about a faker,
1594
01:16:05,636 --> 01:16:08,080
was himself a faker
and the author of a fake
1595
01:16:08,156 --> 01:16:10,796
to end all fakes.
1596
01:16:10,876 --> 01:16:13,363
During the next hour,
everything you'll hear from us
1597
01:16:13,435 --> 01:16:16,240
is really true
and based on solid facts.
1598
01:16:16,315 --> 01:16:19,960
- Walter Murch: Not only are we
aware of the edits as they go by,
1599
01:16:20,036 --> 01:16:23,483
but he's showing the editing
process at the same time.
1600
01:16:23,555 --> 01:16:27,964
It's like watching
a talented juggler do his job.
1601
01:16:28,036 --> 01:16:30,556
- This is a film
about trickery.
1602
01:16:30,636 --> 01:16:32,720
Fraud.!
1603
01:16:32,796 --> 01:16:35,076
About lies.
1604
01:16:35,156 --> 01:16:37,043
Tell it by the fireside
1605
01:16:37,115 --> 01:16:39,156
or in a marketplace
or in a movie.
1606
01:16:42,556 --> 01:16:46,681
- Walter Murch: Editing is cinema
in a certain sense.
1607
01:16:46,755 --> 01:16:49,276
Because everything
is broken into bits,
1608
01:16:49,355 --> 01:16:51,723
you can have a great deal
of invention.
1609
01:16:55,876 --> 01:16:59,084
- Orson Welles:
I did promise that for one hour,
1610
01:16:59,156 --> 01:17:01,000
I'd tell you only the truth.
1611
01:17:01,076 --> 01:17:03,837
That hour,
ladies and gentlemen, is over.
1612
01:17:03,915 --> 01:17:07,484
For the past 17 minutes,
I've been lying my head off.
1613
01:17:12,596 --> 01:17:16,796
- Elvis Mitchell: That kind of
self-awareness is great for art.
1614
01:17:17,835 --> 01:17:20,562
He's part of that movement
that includes Picasso
1615
01:17:20,635 --> 01:17:22,403
and Duke Ellington,
all those artists
1616
01:17:22,476 --> 01:17:25,957
who were aware in a way that
artists had not been before.
1617
01:17:27,355 --> 01:17:29,123
- Orson Welles:
Our works are spared,
1618
01:17:29,196 --> 01:17:31,237
some of them
for a few decades,
1619
01:17:31,315 --> 01:17:33,356
or a millennium or two.
1620
01:17:33,436 --> 01:17:35,880
The treasures.
And the fakes.
1621
01:17:37,595 --> 01:17:39,799
Our songs.
1622
01:17:39,876 --> 01:17:45,157
Our songs
will all be silenced.
1623
01:17:45,236 --> 01:17:47,396
But what of it?
1624
01:17:47,475 --> 01:17:49,920
Go on singing.
1625
01:17:58,035 --> 01:18:01,036
- Wow, how are you?
1626
01:18:01,115 --> 01:18:02,916
Orson Welles,
ladies and gentlemen.
1627
01:18:04,795 --> 01:18:06,356
- Thank you.
1628
01:18:06,435 --> 01:18:08,563
Thank you very much.
1629
01:18:08,635 --> 01:18:09,999
- I...
- Thank you.
1630
01:18:10,076 --> 01:18:11,364
Thank you all very much.
1631
01:18:11,436 --> 01:18:13,203
- I don't believe this,
this is...
1632
01:18:13,275 --> 01:18:14,442
- Who is that?
- That's the, uh,
1633
01:18:14,515 --> 01:18:15,475
That's our director,
Mr. Welles.
1634
01:18:15,556 --> 01:18:16,919
- That... is a director?
- Yeah.
1635
01:18:19,396 --> 01:18:21,240
- Heh heh.
What?
1636
01:18:21,316 --> 01:18:22,799
I'm on my mark.
1637
01:18:24,196 --> 01:18:26,803
Yes, always.
1638
01:18:26,875 --> 01:18:28,163
Move your camera.
1639
01:18:39,235 --> 01:18:42,040
- He came back in the late '60s.
1640
01:18:42,115 --> 01:18:44,560
Films were beginning to be made
in a different kind of a way.
1641
01:18:44,636 --> 01:18:46,436
- The money guys didn't trust him,
1642
01:18:46,515 --> 01:18:49,320
and they had good reason
not to trust him.
1643
01:18:49,395 --> 01:18:52,800
It doesn't matter
how great the material is.
1644
01:18:52,875 --> 01:18:55,243
Ultimately, it has to...
1645
01:18:55,316 --> 01:18:58,524
It has to pay off
for somebody.
1646
01:18:58,596 --> 01:19:01,804
- We will sell no wine
before its time.
1647
01:19:03,435 --> 01:19:06,436
- Orson Welles: We know a little place
in the American far west
1648
01:19:06,515 --> 01:19:11,120
where Charlie Briggs chops up
the finest prairie-fed beef and takes-...
1649
01:19:11,195 --> 01:19:13,279
This is a lot of shit,
you know this?
1650
01:19:13,355 --> 01:19:15,920
Come on, fellas,
you're losing your heads.
1651
01:19:17,396 --> 01:19:18,836
- Henry Jaglom:
They all wanted to meet him,
1652
01:19:18,916 --> 01:19:20,399
they all wanted
to have lunch with him,
1653
01:19:20,475 --> 01:19:22,003
they all celebrated him.
1654
01:19:22,076 --> 01:19:23,364
And then somehow, you know,
1655
01:19:23,436 --> 01:19:25,323
this man is not gonna
be predictable.
1656
01:19:25,395 --> 01:19:27,915
Here's a scene
from one film
1657
01:19:27,995 --> 01:19:29,316
that Orson is just finishing,
1658
01:19:29,395 --> 01:19:31,840
called "The Other Side of the Wind. "
1659
01:19:31,915 --> 01:19:33,443
I must say,
it's a fascinating scene.
1660
01:19:33,515 --> 01:19:34,803
It's about a celebration
1661
01:19:34,875 --> 01:19:40,200
in honor of a famous movie
director who is not Orson.
1662
01:19:40,275 --> 01:19:41,880
- Paul Mazursky:
I get a phone call.
1663
01:19:41,956 --> 01:19:44,476
"Orson wants you
to do his picture. "
1664
01:19:44,556 --> 01:19:46,160
I said, "Orson Welles?
I don't know Orson Welles.
1665
01:19:46,235 --> 01:19:47,523
"He doesn't know me.
1666
01:19:47,635 --> 01:19:49,676
"L mean, I know
'Citizen Kane' is the-
1667
01:19:49,756 --> 01:19:52,560
"probably the best picture
ever made, but why is-
1668
01:19:52,636 --> 01:19:54,196
Are you fucking around with me?"
1669
01:19:58,676 --> 01:19:59,876
I knocked at the door,
1670
01:19:59,955 --> 01:20:03,796
and I figure some lackey
is gonna open the door.
1671
01:20:03,875 --> 01:20:06,199
The door opens and it's...
1672
01:20:06,275 --> 01:20:08,359
"Oh ho ho!
Oh ho ho ho ho!"
1673
01:20:09,475 --> 01:20:12,203
"Oh ho ho!
Ah ha ha ha ha.
1674
01:20:12,275 --> 01:20:15,002
"Paul Mazursky, come on in!
1675
01:20:15,075 --> 01:20:18,600
I'm making a film called
'The Other Side of the Wind. '"
1676
01:20:18,675 --> 01:20:20,400
- Orson Welles: We're going to shoot it
without a script.
1677
01:20:20,475 --> 01:20:22,036
- Man: Without a script?
1678
01:20:22,115 --> 01:20:24,877
- We're gonna make the picture
as though it were a documentary.
1679
01:20:24,955 --> 01:20:26,963
The actors are
going to be improvising.
1680
01:20:27,035 --> 01:20:31,083
- He started in 1970 and he worked
on it through his passing in '85.
1681
01:20:31,155 --> 01:20:34,680
I never saw Orson sleep.
1682
01:20:34,756 --> 01:20:36,916
- It was a stop-and-start
situation.
1683
01:20:36,995 --> 01:20:40,039
It seemed to me that every time
Orson got a little bit of money,
1684
01:20:40,115 --> 01:20:42,919
he would bring the cast back
and start shooting again.
1685
01:20:42,995 --> 01:20:45,243
- I'm still confused about
1686
01:20:45,316 --> 01:20:48,284
the area of the magician,
as director.
1687
01:20:48,355 --> 01:20:50,635
- This is crap!
This is intellectual bullshit!
1688
01:20:50,715 --> 01:20:52,679
- Orson Welles:
When I tell you that my partner
1689
01:20:52,755 --> 01:20:55,995
is the brother-in-law
of the late Shah of Iran,
1690
01:20:56,075 --> 01:20:57,723
you will understand
why we're having
1691
01:20:57,796 --> 01:20:59,323
a little legal difficulty.
1692
01:20:59,395 --> 01:21:01,239
- He owes me $25.
1693
01:21:01,315 --> 01:21:04,043
- Frank Marshall:
I sort of felt that we would just
1694
01:21:04,115 --> 01:21:06,035
keep making the movie
until he died.
1695
01:21:10,515 --> 01:21:13,920
- Let us raise
our cups, then,
1696
01:21:13,995 --> 01:21:19,124
standing as some of us do
on opposite ends of the river,
1697
01:21:19,196 --> 01:21:23,844
and drink together, to what
really matters to us all...
1698
01:21:23,915 --> 01:21:27,679
to our crazy
and beloved profession.
1699
01:21:27,755 --> 01:21:33,724
To the movies, to good movies,
to every possible kind.
1700
01:21:33,795 --> 01:21:36,240
- Peter Bogdanovich: There is
this terrible consolation of being
1701
01:21:36,315 --> 01:21:37,963
40 years ahead of your time.
1702
01:21:38,035 --> 01:21:40,283
I wish I'd be
on time sometimes.
1703
01:21:40,355 --> 01:21:44,043
The night he won the Oscar,
the special Oscar,
1704
01:21:44,115 --> 01:21:46,800
and he had asked John Huston
to pick it up for him.
1705
01:21:46,875 --> 01:21:51,404
- "Genius" is a word that
must be used very sparingly,
1706
01:21:51,475 --> 01:21:53,723
especially in this world
of films.
1707
01:21:53,795 --> 01:21:55,803
- He said,
"I'm- I'm not gonna go. "
1708
01:21:55,875 --> 01:21:57,119
I said, "Why not?"
and he said,
1709
01:21:57,195 --> 01:21:58,678
"They're not gonna
get that out of me. "
1710
01:21:58,755 --> 01:21:59,999
- On my way back to Ireland,
1711
01:22:00,075 --> 01:22:02,999
I'll stop in Spain
and give him this.
1712
01:22:03,076 --> 01:22:05,880
- We were sitting
at the Beverly Hills Hotel,
1713
01:22:05,956 --> 01:22:07,920
watching the Oscars,
and Orson says,
1714
01:22:07,995 --> 01:22:09,796
"Yeah, come on
right over, John!"
1715
01:22:11,275 --> 01:22:12,803
- Merv Griffin: You celebrated
a big birthday, didn't you?
1716
01:22:12,875 --> 01:22:14,599
- Orson Welles: I didn't celebrate it,
I just had it.
1717
01:22:15,955 --> 01:22:17,964
I used to pretend
it was my birthday
1718
01:22:18,035 --> 01:22:20,119
when I took a girl
out to dinner,
1719
01:22:20,195 --> 01:22:22,836
and then I'd have the waiter
bring a cake in
1720
01:22:22,915 --> 01:22:24,476
and sing "Happy Birthday,"
1721
01:22:24,555 --> 01:22:27,239
and I'd use that as an excuse
to extend the evening.
1722
01:22:27,315 --> 01:22:28,679
Aha...
1723
01:22:31,715 --> 01:22:36,200
- I have a sentimental
inclination toward hope.
1724
01:22:36,275 --> 01:22:39,036
I believe in bravery.
1725
01:22:39,115 --> 01:22:40,436
Worship it.
1726
01:22:40,515 --> 01:22:42,403
- Jeanne Moreau:
To me, Orson
1727
01:22:42,475 --> 01:22:47,079
is so much like a destitute king.
1728
01:22:47,155 --> 01:22:49,600
On this earth,
1729
01:22:49,675 --> 01:22:53,756
there's no kingdom
that is good enough
1730
01:22:53,835 --> 01:22:55,602
for Orson Welles.
1731
01:22:55,675 --> 01:22:57,443
- Merv Griffin: But you feel
wonderful, don't you?
1732
01:22:57,515 --> 01:22:58,999
- Oh, sure!
1733
01:23:00,715 --> 01:23:04,119
- As it must to all men,
death came to Orson Welles.
1734
01:23:04,195 --> 01:23:07,720
That, a paraphrase borrowed from
his own film, "Citizen Kane. "
1735
01:23:07,795 --> 01:23:10,043
- newscaster: Orson Welles told me
about a lunch he had recently
1736
01:23:10,115 --> 01:23:12,439
with director-producer
Steven Spielberg,
1737
01:23:12,515 --> 01:23:14,915
who had just purchased
the famous "Rosebud" sled
1738
01:23:14,995 --> 01:23:18,596
from "Citizen Kane"
for $45,000.
1739
01:23:18,675 --> 01:23:21,315
- But I said, "We burnt the sled,
Steven. "
1740
01:23:22,795 --> 01:23:26,363
That's why we enjoy life,
is that we know it's got to end.
1741
01:23:26,435 --> 01:23:29,284
- Newscaster:
Orson Welles was 70.
1742
01:23:35,795 --> 01:23:37,115
- Chris Welles Feder:
After my father died,
1743
01:23:37,195 --> 01:23:40,360
I got a call from my half-sister
Beatrice.
1744
01:23:40,435 --> 01:23:41,799
She and her mother Paola
1745
01:23:41,875 --> 01:23:44,756
were arranging a funeral
in Los Angeles,
1746
01:23:44,835 --> 01:23:48,884
and I was really devastated by
the place where it was held,
1747
01:23:48,955 --> 01:23:51,836
which was like
a horrible motel room.
1748
01:23:51,915 --> 01:23:56,640
Nothing had been done, I felt,
to truly honor my father.
1749
01:24:00,035 --> 01:24:01,955
- Oja Kodar:
He didn't want to be cremated.
1750
01:24:02,035 --> 01:24:04,196
He said, "I took so much
from this earth,
1751
01:24:04,275 --> 01:24:07,079
I should give it back,
at least, something-"
1752
01:24:07,155 --> 01:24:09,720
And, um, they didn't do it.
1753
01:24:19,995 --> 01:24:25,843
- I would like to do something
which would leave...
1754
01:24:25,915 --> 01:24:29,036
at least...
1755
01:24:29,115 --> 01:24:32,356
the art form concerned
or the profession
1756
01:24:32,434 --> 01:24:35,315
better for
my having done it...
1757
01:24:37,435 --> 01:24:43,000
...to use this medium for
something except entertaining.
1758
01:24:44,995 --> 01:24:46,959
I'd like to have been more
useful in the world,
1759
01:24:47,035 --> 01:24:48,519
and I hope I can be.
It's, uh...
1760
01:24:48,595 --> 01:24:51,596
You finally get to a point
where, uh...
1761
01:24:51,675 --> 01:24:54,599
art for art's sake
doesn't seem a good enough flag
1762
01:24:54,675 --> 01:24:57,119
to be marching under
sometimes.
1763
01:24:57,195 --> 01:24:59,203
- Interviewer:
What's a better flag?
1764
01:24:59,275 --> 01:25:02,396
- Well, you've got to believe in
something bigger than yourself.
1765
01:25:02,474 --> 01:25:03,958
- Interviewer:
Oh, we've run out of film.
1766
01:25:05,195 --> 01:25:06,483
- You had me-
- I must tell you-
1767
01:25:06,555 --> 01:25:07,679
- I had me riveted!
1768
01:25:09,715 --> 01:25:12,160
I loved every-
Don't cut a word out of that!
137318
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