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Would you like to inspect the original subtitles? These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:15,287 --> 00:00:18,406 (WIND WHISTLES) 2 00:00:27,340 --> 00:00:30,460 (GENTLE MUSIC) 3 00:00:32,679 --> 00:00:35,799 (SLOW, MUFFLED BREATHING) 4 00:00:45,275 --> 00:00:48,395 (MUSIC BUILDS) 5 00:00:51,156 --> 00:00:52,699 (STATIC ON RADIO) 6 00:00:52,699 --> 00:00:54,409 MAN ON RADIO: Well, now, the Himalay as... 7 00:00:54,409 --> 00:00:55,952 (STATIC) 8 00:00:55,952 --> 00:00:58,246 MAN ON RADIO: Well, we introduce to you this morning 9 00:00:58,246 --> 00:01:01,875 Ed Hillary, a very interesting personality in the alpine world. 10 00:01:01,875 --> 00:01:04,169 Good morning, Ed. EDMUND HILLARY: Good morning. 11 00:01:04,169 --> 00:01:06,588 How many attempts have been made on Everest altogether? 12 00:01:06,588 --> 00:01:08,715 Well, there have been at least 10. 13 00:01:08,715 --> 00:01:10,592 Well, why have the others failed? 14 00:01:10,592 --> 00:01:13,595 A combination of circumstances which hasn't been right. 15 00:01:13,595 --> 00:01:16,014 Well, do you think it's possible to climb Everest? 16 00:01:16,014 --> 00:01:18,266 Yes, I definitely think it's possible to climb it 17 00:01:18,266 --> 00:01:21,186 and, well, I'm sure it will be done some day. 18 00:01:21,186 --> 00:01:24,306 (RADIO STATIC) 19 00:01:33,448 --> 00:01:38,745 MAN: It's only 60 years ago, but it was a completely different world, 20 00:01:38,745 --> 00:01:41,164 and the idea that you would be the first man 21 00:01:41,164 --> 00:01:43,583 to stand on the highest point on earth 22 00:01:43,583 --> 00:01:47,415 is a quest, a romantic quest, 23 00:02:00,058 --> 00:02:03,186 MAN 2: There was a real race on for the world's highest peak, 24 00:02:03,186 --> 00:02:04,980 And it wasn't just Britain, 25 00:02:04,980 --> 00:02:07,065 There were other nations in the queue, 26 00:02:07,065 --> 00:02:12,320 This really was Britain's last chance to grab this great prize, 27 00:02:12,320 --> 00:02:15,440 (RISING MUSIC) 28 00:02:22,289 --> 00:02:25,740 MAN: Nobody knew if someone could survive at 29,000 feet, 29 00:02:26,793 --> 00:02:31,372 Like the guys going into space, you know, you 're breaking frontiers, 30 00:02:33,592 --> 00:02:38,263 MAN 2: There is a physiologic limit of what human beings can take, 31 00:02:38,263 --> 00:02:40,140 I'm sure they didn't want to die, 32 00:02:40,140 --> 00:02:44,220 but you 're taking risks in which death is one of the outcomes, 33 00:02:52,986 --> 00:02:55,311 MAN: You are going into the unknown, 34 00:02:56,364 --> 00:02:58,491 Could it be done? 35 00:02:58,491 --> 00:03:02,988 Back in 1953, it was a great big question mark, 36 00:03:12,297 --> 00:03:15,417 EDMUND HILLARY: I think it's all really a matter of challenge, 37 00:03:17,302 --> 00:03:20,639 Not so much challenge only with the mountain, 38 00:03:20,639 --> 00:03:23,683 but challenge with oneself, 39 00:03:23,683 --> 00:03:28,605 seeing if you can force yourself to overcome your fears 40 00:03:28,605 --> 00:03:32,275 and hopefully, ultimately, get to the top, 41 00:03:32,275 --> 00:03:35,395 (WONDROUS MUSIC) 42 00:03:57,759 --> 00:04:00,131 (NEWSREEL FANFARE) 43 00:04:01,179 --> 00:04:03,056 VOICEOVER: Members of the British Everest expedition 44 00:04:03,056 --> 00:04:05,016 have begun assembling on the Subcontinent 45 00:04:05,016 --> 00:04:06,768 where deputy leader Major Wylie 46 00:04:06,768 --> 00:04:09,062 is looking forw ard to the adventure to come. 47 00:04:09,062 --> 00:04:11,356 We are very pleased that the first stage 48 00:04:11,356 --> 00:04:14,192 of our journey to Mount Everest is over. 49 00:04:14,192 --> 00:04:16,736 We are now off tow ards the hills. 50 00:04:16,736 --> 00:04:19,531 If we get some fine weather tow ards the end of May 51 00:04:19,531 --> 00:04:21,533 just before the monsoon arrives 52 00:04:21,533 --> 00:04:24,202 we should have a chance of getting to the top. 53 00:04:24,202 --> 00:04:27,322 (FANFARE CONTINUES) 54 00:04:31,251 --> 00:04:34,371 (PENSIVE MUSIC) 55 00:04:46,600 --> 00:04:49,055 (MEN CHATTER INAUDIBLY) 56 00:04:57,444 --> 00:05:00,155 The first time I joined up with the expedition 57 00:05:00,155 --> 00:05:02,990 was at the British Embassy in Kathmandu, 58 00:05:04,075 --> 00:05:08,538 We had 13 Western members of the expedition, 59 00:05:08,538 --> 00:05:12,452 John Hunt, a senior army officer, was expedition leader, 60 00:05:13,501 --> 00:05:15,629 I'd really never heard of John Hunt before 61 00:05:15,629 --> 00:05:18,583 and the first time I met him was in Kathmandu, 62 00:05:19,633 --> 00:05:23,011 MAN: I was very keen to have people I knew already 63 00:05:23,011 --> 00:05:25,889 so I had big question marks about Ed, 64 00:05:25,889 --> 00:05:28,391 I can only say that from the moment I met Ed 65 00:05:28,391 --> 00:05:31,937 I knew that here was somebody who would be a dominating influence, 66 00:05:31,937 --> 00:05:35,103 He was a tower of strength, 67 00:05:36,816 --> 00:05:39,027 MAN ON RADIO: Mr Hillary, as a matter of interest, 68 00:05:39,027 --> 00:05:40,946 how long have you been climbing? 69 00:05:40,946 --> 00:05:42,697 EDMUND HILLARY: Well, I've been climbing, I suppose, 70 00:05:42,697 --> 00:05:44,908 for altogether about 10 years. 71 00:05:44,908 --> 00:05:47,702 And how many trips have you done out of New Z ealand climbing? 72 00:05:47,702 --> 00:05:51,118 I have already had a couple of expeditions to the Himalay a. 73 00:05:54,376 --> 00:05:57,420 INTERVIEWER: You were quite strictly brought up, weren't you? 74 00:05:57,420 --> 00:05:59,839 EDMUND HILLARY: I was brought up during the Depression 75 00:05:59,839 --> 00:06:04,916 and my family was pretty short on cash during that period, 76 00:06:06,846 --> 00:06:10,058 I was just a rough old country boy, as it were, 77 00:06:10,058 --> 00:06:12,102 INTERVIEWER: A beekeeper, A beekeeper, 78 00:06:12,102 --> 00:06:16,565 lused to wander around our farm dreaming about great adventures 79 00:06:16,565 --> 00:06:19,519 and climbing mountains and all that sort of thing, 80 00:06:21,403 --> 00:06:23,196 INTERVIEWER: What a contrast between 81 00:06:23,196 --> 00:06:25,073 beekeeping on the one hand and climbing mountains, 82 00:06:25,073 --> 00:06:26,658 EDMUND HILLARY: Oh, not really, 83 00:06:26,658 --> 00:06:28,285 In the beekeeping, I was constantly 84 00:06:28,285 --> 00:06:31,371 lugging around 80-pound boxes of honey, 85 00:06:31,371 --> 00:06:34,624 And my brother was also doing beekeeping, and we competed, 86 00:06:34,624 --> 00:06:36,710 And I think the sense of competition 87 00:06:36,710 --> 00:06:39,995 carried on to my mountaineering activities, 88 00:06:48,221 --> 00:06:53,132 MAN: Well, the party were first all together as a team in Kathmandu, 89 00:06:54,603 --> 00:06:57,814 Before us we had 17 days of marches to Tengboche, 90 00:06:57,814 --> 00:07:00,566 which is where we were going to place our first base camp, 91 00:07:04,195 --> 00:07:06,448 We had to cross a succession 92 00:07:06,448 --> 00:07:08,575 of high ridges and deep valleys, 93 00:07:08,575 --> 00:07:10,452 We could really get gradually fit 94 00:07:10,452 --> 00:07:15,114 and - most important - get to know each other as a team, 95 00:07:26,426 --> 00:07:29,429 MAN: Everything had been calculated to the last detail - 96 00:07:29,429 --> 00:07:32,349 7,5 tons of material, 97 00:07:32,349 --> 00:07:35,727 443 packages, all numbered, 98 00:07:35,727 --> 00:07:40,354 and the contents of each listed down to the last matchbox or needle, 99 00:07:43,652 --> 00:07:45,528 EDMUND HILLARY: It is a team expedition 100 00:07:45,528 --> 00:07:48,399 and it's very much in the form of a pyramid of effort, 101 00:07:49,449 --> 00:07:52,485 13 Western members of the expedition, 102 00:07:53,536 --> 00:07:56,081 30 permanent high-altitude Sherpas, 103 00:07:56,081 --> 00:08:00,001 These are men who will be carrying loads for us to great altitudes, 104 00:08:00,001 --> 00:08:02,963 Some 600 Nepalese porters 105 00:08:02,963 --> 00:08:06,545 carried loads across country into our climbing regions, 106 00:08:11,721 --> 00:08:13,515 MAN: Because there had been no less 107 00:08:13,515 --> 00:08:16,059 than seven British attempts on the mountain, 108 00:08:16,059 --> 00:08:19,771 we felt that by right, the mountain should be climbed by Britain 109 00:08:19,771 --> 00:08:22,023 and by extension the British Commonwealth, 110 00:08:22,023 --> 00:08:26,528 The Swiss so nearly got to the summit in 1952, 111 00:08:26,528 --> 00:08:28,863 The Americans were waiting in the wings, 112 00:08:28,863 --> 00:08:31,283 And so there was huge pressure on John Hunt 113 00:08:31,283 --> 00:08:37,155 with this colossal expectation that this quest had to succeed, 114 00:08:42,085 --> 00:08:44,212 INTERVIEWER: Mr Hillary, how many New Z ealanders 115 00:08:44,212 --> 00:08:46,006 are in this year's expedition? 116 00:08:46,006 --> 00:08:49,624 EDMUND HILLARY: Well, only two of us. There's George Lowe and myself. 117 00:08:50,677 --> 00:08:52,762 MAN: George Lowe and my father were great friends, 118 00:08:52,762 --> 00:08:56,141 They had climbed extensively in the Southern Alps of New Zealand, 119 00:08:56,141 --> 00:08:58,393 They were very good climbers together 120 00:08:58,393 --> 00:09:01,394 and had a tremendous rapport, 121 00:09:07,444 --> 00:09:10,530 MAN 2: We had 18 days of trekking 122 00:09:10,530 --> 00:09:13,658 and during that period of getting to know one another 123 00:09:13,658 --> 00:09:16,202 there was always a little bit of a funny edge 124 00:09:16,202 --> 00:09:18,491 towards the New Zealanders, 125 00:09:19,956 --> 00:09:23,877 Both Ed and I had been to ordinary high schools, 126 00:09:23,877 --> 00:09:26,671 They, of course, the greater number of them, 127 00:09:26,671 --> 00:09:29,341 had been to public schools, 128 00:09:32,469 --> 00:09:35,920 We did come from a different background, there was no doubt, 129 00:09:47,901 --> 00:09:49,653 HUNT: Kathmandu is only about 130 00:09:49,653 --> 00:09:51,776 4,000 feet above sea level, 131 00:09:52,822 --> 00:09:56,026 The foot of Everest is about 18,000, 132 00:09:57,369 --> 00:09:59,663 Our 17 days approach march 133 00:09:59,663 --> 00:10:02,123 was an essential part of my policy 134 00:10:02,123 --> 00:10:03,997 of acclimatisation, 135 00:10:06,169 --> 00:10:08,964 MAN: The whole thing is a race against time, 136 00:10:08,964 --> 00:10:12,676 There was a constant fear that the monsoon would come, 137 00:10:12,676 --> 00:10:14,427 So that's why John Hunt said, 138 00:10:14,427 --> 00:10:19,307 "We want to be in a position to climb Everest on May 15," 139 00:10:19,307 --> 00:10:23,562 The later in May, the more likely that the monsoon would arrive, 140 00:10:23,562 --> 00:10:25,887 It's always a race against time, 141 00:10:30,485 --> 00:10:34,990 EDMUND HILLARY: As we got steadily higher, our excitement increased 142 00:10:34,990 --> 00:10:39,034 and more and more great peaks were coming into view, 143 00:10:40,412 --> 00:10:46,001 And over it all towered the summit pyramid of Everest 144 00:10:46,001 --> 00:10:48,879 only 20 miles away, 145 00:10:48,879 --> 00:10:52,424 but still 20,000 feet above us, 146 00:10:52,424 --> 00:10:55,802 INTERVIEWER: Mr Hillary, you started climbing in New Z ealand, didn't you? 147 00:10:55,802 --> 00:10:57,721 EDMUND HILLARY: Oh, yes, I started in New Z ealand. 148 00:10:57,721 --> 00:11:00,591 (ROMANTIC MUSIC ON NEWSREEL) 149 00:11:04,769 --> 00:11:07,480 NEWSREEL ANNOUNCER: And there's Mount Cook, the 'Cloud Piercer', 150 00:11:07,480 --> 00:11:11,276 reaching majestically skyw ard for over 12,000 feet. 151 00:11:11,276 --> 00:11:13,153 EDMUND HILLARY: A friend and I decided 152 00:11:13,153 --> 00:11:15,311 to have a short trip to Mount Cook, 153 00:11:16,406 --> 00:11:22,245 The closer we got, the more impressed I was with the magnificent mountains, 154 00:11:22,245 --> 00:11:24,122 NEWSREEL ANNOUNCER: Those jagged peaks there 155 00:11:24,122 --> 00:11:27,954 provide the real alpinist with some of the best climbing outside Europe. 156 00:11:29,711 --> 00:11:33,632 EDMUND HILLARY: That night, inside the Hermitage where I was staying, 157 00:11:33,632 --> 00:11:35,425 two young men came in, 158 00:11:35,425 --> 00:11:41,223 I heard the whisper go around - "They have just climbed Mount Cook," 159 00:11:41,223 --> 00:11:44,351 These chaps were really living, 160 00:11:44,351 --> 00:11:47,812 I felt, "What a hopeless life I lead, 161 00:11:47,812 --> 00:11:52,273 "no great adventures, nothing particularly exciting," 162 00:11:56,029 --> 00:12:00,987 And that's when I decided that I was going to take up mountaineering, 163 00:12:09,668 --> 00:12:11,920 HUNT: Well, after 17 days 164 00:12:11,920 --> 00:12:17,543 our caravans arrived at the Monastery of Tengboche at over 12,000 feet, 165 00:12:22,222 --> 00:12:24,558 PETER HILLARY: Once they got up to Tengboche Monastery 166 00:12:24,558 --> 00:12:26,846 it's getting pretty cold, 167 00:12:29,312 --> 00:12:32,941 The low-country porters largely only had cotton clothes 168 00:12:32,941 --> 00:12:36,069 so they get paid off and they return to their villages 169 00:12:36,069 --> 00:12:39,485 and Sherpa porters take over, 170 00:12:41,324 --> 00:12:43,577 The Sherpas who stay on the expedition 171 00:12:43,577 --> 00:12:46,371 might have had previous experience of climbing, 172 00:12:46,371 --> 00:12:48,915 although not many did, 173 00:12:48,915 --> 00:12:51,084 Tenzing was an exception to that 174 00:12:51,084 --> 00:12:53,378 in that he did have quite a lot of experience, 175 00:12:53,378 --> 00:12:55,463 In fact, he really had more experience 176 00:12:55,463 --> 00:12:57,954 at climbing on Mount Everest than anyone else, 177 00:13:02,012 --> 00:13:04,764 MAN: Without the Sherpas you can't climb Everest 178 00:13:04,764 --> 00:13:06,508 and my father was the head man, 179 00:13:09,769 --> 00:13:11,563 People respected him, 180 00:13:11,563 --> 00:13:16,640 They knew that he had been climbing Everest with foreigners since 1935, 181 00:13:17,736 --> 00:13:20,405 You know, he'd been up six times already, 182 00:13:22,616 --> 00:13:25,076 EDMUND HILLARY: I knew Tenzing by repute, 183 00:13:25,076 --> 00:13:27,579 You know, he'd done a lot of mountaineering 184 00:13:27,579 --> 00:13:30,624 and I knew he was very highly regarded, 185 00:13:30,624 --> 00:13:34,711 But I wasn't able really to communicate well with him, 186 00:13:34,711 --> 00:13:39,871 His English was very limited and my Nepali was very limited, 187 00:13:40,926 --> 00:13:45,801 He had a flashing smile, absolutely charming smile, 188 00:13:48,266 --> 00:13:51,267 It was impossible not to like him, 189 00:13:55,190 --> 00:13:58,235 In the next fortnight, we had a period of training 190 00:13:58,235 --> 00:14:02,279 and testing ourselves and our equipment at altitudes, 191 00:14:03,823 --> 00:14:06,993 MAN: Well, in 1953, getting to the summit of Everest 192 00:14:06,993 --> 00:14:11,702 in terms of physiologic capability was a big unknown, 193 00:14:13,541 --> 00:14:16,957 It was like sending somebody into space, 194 00:14:20,507 --> 00:14:23,677 They knew from altitude experiments in chambers 195 00:14:23,677 --> 00:14:25,554 that altitude can make you seize 196 00:14:25,554 --> 00:14:29,057 and one of the ideas was that people would haemorrhage in their brains 197 00:14:29,057 --> 00:14:31,844 because their blood vessels would be so dilated, 198 00:14:33,061 --> 00:14:37,355 There were lots of reasons to think that there might be a stroke, 199 00:14:39,901 --> 00:14:43,068 Nobody knew whether or not it could really be done, 200 00:14:51,496 --> 00:14:55,542 MAN: When Ed was heading up the mountain in 1953, 201 00:14:55,542 --> 00:14:59,170 13 people had already died on the mountain 202 00:14:59,170 --> 00:15:02,424 and I think that for anyone who would be climbing at that time 203 00:15:02,424 --> 00:15:05,677 it would be something of a daunting statistic - 204 00:15:05,677 --> 00:15:10,422 13 deaths and zero summits at that point, 205 00:15:34,998 --> 00:15:37,250 HUNT: Now, about six miles up from Tengboche 206 00:15:37,250 --> 00:15:39,336 looking north is the Khumbu Glacier 207 00:15:39,336 --> 00:15:41,546 where we were to place our main base camp 208 00:15:41,546 --> 00:15:43,753 for the attack on the mountain, 209 00:15:50,347 --> 00:15:54,100 This icefall was to be our next great obstacle 210 00:15:54,100 --> 00:15:56,508 and I sent a party to explore it, 211 00:15:57,687 --> 00:16:01,149 Ed Hillary led this first party, 212 00:16:01,149 --> 00:16:04,269 (EERIE MUSIC) 213 00:16:13,161 --> 00:16:16,032 EDMUND HILLARY: The Western Cwm is guarded by a great icefall,,, 214 00:16:21,211 --> 00:16:26,288 ,,a tumbled mass of ice dropping 2,500 feet to the Khumbu Glacier, 215 00:16:28,927 --> 00:16:30,887 We first had to discover whether it 216 00:16:30,887 --> 00:16:32,963 was possible to ascend this icefall, 217 00:16:37,519 --> 00:16:39,938 The icefall was a constant hazard 218 00:16:39,938 --> 00:16:43,149 and we had no alternative but to make a route through country 219 00:16:43,149 --> 00:16:47,194 which we knew to be unjustifiable in the ordinary alpine climb, 220 00:16:52,242 --> 00:16:55,990 MAN: It's like a waterfall that's come off and has frozen, 221 00:16:57,789 --> 00:17:01,209 The weight of the glacier above them is shoving, 222 00:17:01,209 --> 00:17:03,700 It's all a jumble of ice, 223 00:17:06,256 --> 00:17:10,719 It is unstable objective danger 224 00:17:10,719 --> 00:17:12,877 that you have no control over, 225 00:17:17,017 --> 00:17:22,224 Crazy! My God, You 're dumb to be going up a route like that, 226 00:17:23,565 --> 00:17:27,942 But you just can't go any other way but through the icefall, 227 00:17:33,617 --> 00:17:37,203 MAN 2: In '52, the Swiss went up the icefall 228 00:17:37,203 --> 00:17:40,407 and said, "It's a thing that's always on the move," 229 00:17:43,084 --> 00:17:46,880 And it's a dangerous place for that reason, 230 00:17:46,880 --> 00:17:51,257 More people are killed in the icefall than anywhere else on Everest, 231 00:17:53,220 --> 00:17:56,339 (CREAKING AND CRACKING) 232 00:18:01,019 --> 00:18:05,232 It's immense, It's 2,500 feet high, 233 00:18:05,232 --> 00:18:08,932 And we had to go up the middle of it, 234 00:18:14,574 --> 00:18:17,744 MAN 2: Ed Hillary, George Lowe, Mike Westmacott and myself 235 00:18:17,744 --> 00:18:20,872 were the four of us chosen to make the first route through 236 00:18:20,872 --> 00:18:23,410 in a week or five days if we could,,, 237 00:18:24,751 --> 00:18:27,337 ,,and then of course to make it safe 238 00:18:27,337 --> 00:18:29,714 by a lot of step-cutting, a lot of fixed ropes 239 00:18:29,714 --> 00:18:32,551 so that eventually it would be possible 240 00:18:32,551 --> 00:18:37,711 for loaded porters to carry the stores safely through it, 241 00:18:39,349 --> 00:18:42,469 (TENSE MUSIC) 242 00:18:58,577 --> 00:19:00,537 WESTMACOTT: The icefall was a dangerous place 243 00:19:00,537 --> 00:19:03,164 because things did collapse without warning 244 00:19:03,164 --> 00:19:06,865 and if you were in the way, it was a thoroughly bad thing, 245 00:19:17,512 --> 00:19:19,386 (CRACKING) 246 00:19:28,690 --> 00:19:30,859 BAND: You had these great towers of ice 247 00:19:30,859 --> 00:19:33,820 and great lumps and strips the size of a row of cottages 248 00:19:33,820 --> 00:19:36,821 that could slump down at any moment, 249 00:19:40,702 --> 00:19:44,403 We gave names to the more dangerous parts, 250 00:19:46,166 --> 00:19:48,418 There was Mike's Horror, Hillary's Horror, 251 00:19:48,418 --> 00:19:53,709 an area called the Nutcracker, the Atom Bomb area, 252 00:19:57,552 --> 00:19:59,262 WESTMACOTT: There are certain,,, 253 00:19:59,262 --> 00:20:01,014 ,,what climbers call objective dangers 254 00:20:01,014 --> 00:20:03,303 which basically you can't do much about, 255 00:20:05,602 --> 00:20:08,805 There's also a risk of falling into a crevasse, 256 00:20:10,565 --> 00:20:14,277 BAND: We had these light aluminium ladders about six feet long 257 00:20:14,277 --> 00:20:17,729 which we could bolt together across the crevasses, 258 00:20:25,705 --> 00:20:27,499 And there were so many crevasses 259 00:20:27,499 --> 00:20:30,334 that we soon ran out of all the ladders we had, 260 00:20:32,087 --> 00:20:35,090 So we had to send down to where the nearest trees grew, 261 00:20:35,090 --> 00:20:37,133 which would be about three days' walk away, 262 00:20:37,133 --> 00:20:42,092 to cut small tree trunks to make little log bridges, 263 00:20:43,139 --> 00:20:45,713 (WOOD CREAKS) 264 00:20:48,728 --> 00:20:51,398 And you balanced as well as you could, 265 00:21:04,869 --> 00:21:09,448 For us, it was clearly going to be the only way to climb Everest, 266 00:21:13,753 --> 00:21:16,298 CONEFRE Y: Ed Hillary wanted to please, 267 00:21:16,298 --> 00:21:18,675 He wanted to be on the summit team, 268 00:21:18,675 --> 00:21:21,344 He would've known that only a few people 269 00:21:21,344 --> 00:21:23,471 would get a chance to go for the summit 270 00:21:23,471 --> 00:21:26,308 so from very early on he wanted to impress John Hunt 271 00:21:26,308 --> 00:21:29,352 and he felt there was time pressure on him 272 00:21:29,352 --> 00:21:32,223 to recce the icefall to get it prepared, 273 00:21:43,658 --> 00:21:46,244 PETER HILLARY: My father was never afraid of hard work, 274 00:21:46,244 --> 00:21:49,497 but part of that was to cover I think what Dad felt 275 00:21:49,497 --> 00:21:54,124 were a lot of psychological or emotional inadequacies, 276 00:21:56,922 --> 00:21:59,925 He had been raised with high expectations 277 00:21:59,925 --> 00:22:02,260 and they sent him off to Auckland Grammar School 278 00:22:02,260 --> 00:22:04,585 two years too young, 279 00:22:05,680 --> 00:22:08,475 EDMUND HILLARY: I was only 11 years old 280 00:22:08,475 --> 00:22:11,226 and I was rather terrified, really, 281 00:22:12,354 --> 00:22:14,231 When lunchtime came, 282 00:22:14,231 --> 00:22:16,316 I would go out the back of the school 283 00:22:16,316 --> 00:22:19,815 and there were a whole lot of ants living there, 284 00:22:20,904 --> 00:22:23,448 When I first went to Auckland Grammar, 285 00:22:23,448 --> 00:22:26,983 the only friends I really had were the ants, 286 00:22:30,997 --> 00:22:35,375 I was a dreamer until I started climbing, 287 00:22:44,761 --> 00:22:48,515 HUNT: The icefall was really chaotic 288 00:22:48,515 --> 00:22:50,350 and yet they forced a way 289 00:22:50,350 --> 00:22:54,561 and Ed's job of route finding was a particularly good show, 290 00:22:57,357 --> 00:22:58,984 BAND: The New Zealanders 291 00:22:58,984 --> 00:23:01,528 had a lot more snow and ice climbing experience 292 00:23:01,528 --> 00:23:04,239 than the average European climber 293 00:23:04,239 --> 00:23:08,034 because their mountains are very like the Himalayas in miniature, 294 00:23:08,034 --> 00:23:11,154 (SOARING MUSIC ON NEWSREEL) 295 00:23:14,708 --> 00:23:16,918 NEWSREEL ANNOUNCER: The Southern Alps - 296 00:23:16,918 --> 00:23:19,254 the great mountain tangle which sprawls northw ards 297 00:23:19,254 --> 00:23:22,623 in an almost unbroken chain of rock and ice. 298 00:23:30,724 --> 00:23:32,601 INTERVIEWER: Well, Ed, how do the Southern Alps 299 00:23:32,601 --> 00:23:34,227 compare with the Swiss Alps? 300 00:23:34,227 --> 00:23:36,104 That's where the English climbers get their training. 301 00:23:36,104 --> 00:23:38,315 EDMUND HILLARY: Here in New Z ealand, with our terrific glaciation, 302 00:23:38,315 --> 00:23:41,026 a greater amount of our climbing is done on snow and ice - 303 00:23:41,026 --> 00:23:43,111 in many w ays very similar to the Himalay a. 304 00:23:43,111 --> 00:23:44,988 They're rather different from the Swiss Alps 305 00:23:44,988 --> 00:23:47,949 where the predominant feature for climbing is rock. 306 00:23:47,949 --> 00:23:51,411 NEWSREEL ANNOUNCER: Mount Aspiring, New Z ealand's Matterhorn - 307 00:23:51,411 --> 00:23:53,872 a shark's tooth of a mountain whose dangerous slopes 308 00:23:53,872 --> 00:23:56,207 demand skill and careful climbing. 309 00:23:56,207 --> 00:23:57,834 EDMUND HILLARY: Our New Z ealand mountains 310 00:23:57,834 --> 00:23:59,874 are really a wonderful training ground for the Himalay a. 311 00:24:03,089 --> 00:24:06,927 VENABLES: Kiwis have that tough resilience 312 00:24:06,927 --> 00:24:09,137 so I think that the younger British climbers 313 00:24:09,137 --> 00:24:10,847 were somewhat in awe 314 00:24:10,847 --> 00:24:16,304 of these formidable Kiwis brought in to reinforce the team, 315 00:24:24,444 --> 00:24:26,238 HUNT: Now, the next big doubt 316 00:24:26,238 --> 00:24:28,740 was regarding the lip of the coomb itself 317 00:24:28,740 --> 00:24:30,614 at the very top of the icefall, 318 00:24:31,701 --> 00:24:35,865 You see, there was an enormous, gaping crevasse, 319 00:24:38,166 --> 00:24:40,622 Could we get into the coomb? 320 00:24:46,132 --> 00:24:48,301 PETER HILLARY: The decision on who would be going 321 00:24:48,301 --> 00:24:50,095 all the way to the top 322 00:24:50,095 --> 00:24:53,012 was very much the leader's prerogative, 323 00:25:00,105 --> 00:25:03,191 John Hunt would evaluate the team 324 00:25:03,191 --> 00:25:05,480 throughout the course of the expedition, 325 00:25:10,740 --> 00:25:12,450 So there was a fair amount of 326 00:25:12,450 --> 00:25:15,370 sort of posturing and positioning going on 327 00:25:15,370 --> 00:25:19,082 as people tried to put themselves in the best light 328 00:25:19,082 --> 00:25:21,205 for that sort of opportunity, 329 00:25:27,382 --> 00:25:29,175 BAND: I think amongst the British 330 00:25:29,175 --> 00:25:31,261 there wasn't any particular jockeying for position, 331 00:25:31,261 --> 00:25:35,056 but I think our two New Zealanders, Hillary and Lowe, 332 00:25:35,056 --> 00:25:36,766 were perhaps rather more straightforward 333 00:25:36,766 --> 00:25:39,055 in wanting to get as high as possible, 334 00:25:50,488 --> 00:25:53,617 They were the sort of colonials that would make good 335 00:25:53,617 --> 00:25:56,036 and we were perhaps a little bit more inhibited - 336 00:25:56,036 --> 00:25:59,372 the public school type that wouldn't push our way forward 337 00:25:59,372 --> 00:26:02,124 unless Hunt had said, "Look, you 're the chap to do it," 338 00:26:03,168 --> 00:26:07,005 EDMUND HILLARY: I'd always hoped that George Lowe and I 339 00:26:07,005 --> 00:26:10,091 would be the final summit pair, 340 00:26:10,091 --> 00:26:13,511 but there was no time that John Hunt, our leader, 341 00:26:13,511 --> 00:26:19,142 wanted to have two New Zealanders stand on top of Mount Everest, 342 00:26:19,142 --> 00:26:21,853 So I had to look around and find someone 343 00:26:21,853 --> 00:26:26,100 who was as fit as I was and who could do a good job, 344 00:26:27,150 --> 00:26:30,021 Tenzing was that person, 345 00:26:36,243 --> 00:26:39,694 MAN: Nobody alive had more experience of Everest, 346 00:26:42,499 --> 00:26:45,043 He really understood the value of it 347 00:26:45,043 --> 00:26:47,712 and how it could change his life, 348 00:26:48,964 --> 00:26:51,716 Tenzing had been very, very poor, 349 00:26:51,716 --> 00:26:53,927 He had struggled, 350 00:26:53,927 --> 00:26:56,846 He wanted his children to go to good schools, 351 00:26:56,846 --> 00:27:00,392 He wanted more for them than he'd had, 352 00:27:00,392 --> 00:27:04,140 Tenzing understood what climbing Everest meant, 353 00:27:08,567 --> 00:27:12,821 My father was a bit of an anomaly as far as a Sherpa goes 354 00:27:12,821 --> 00:27:16,356 because he always wanted to climb Everest, 355 00:27:19,327 --> 00:27:23,206 That's very unusual for a poor kid from Tibet, 356 00:27:23,206 --> 00:27:28,003 So unlike many other Sherpas who actually climb just to make a living, 357 00:27:28,003 --> 00:27:29,963 he was a mountaineer at heart, 358 00:27:29,963 --> 00:27:34,874 His drive was to go to the top just like Ed Hillary, 359 00:27:40,849 --> 00:27:44,644 HUNT: As we walked on into the coomb, the crevasses grew fewer 360 00:27:44,644 --> 00:27:48,899 and we realised that the coomb itself was open to us, 361 00:27:48,899 --> 00:27:52,018 (DRAMATIC MUSIC) 362 00:28:09,920 --> 00:28:12,130 HUNT: We are now established at Base Camp 363 00:28:12,130 --> 00:28:15,008 and the first problem is to get our supplies 364 00:28:15,008 --> 00:28:18,792 up to Camp 4 high up in the Western Cwm, 365 00:28:19,846 --> 00:28:22,766 Owing to the climbing difficulties in the icefall, 366 00:28:22,766 --> 00:28:26,716 laden porters require three days to reach Camp 4, 367 00:28:30,315 --> 00:28:32,317 CONEFRE Y: There was this idea in those days 368 00:28:32,317 --> 00:28:34,444 of laying siege to a mountain, 369 00:28:34,444 --> 00:28:37,072 This meant you would do it in a very systematic way - 370 00:28:37,072 --> 00:28:40,075 you would set up a camp and you would set up another camp 371 00:28:40,075 --> 00:28:42,827 and get higher and higher, 372 00:28:42,827 --> 00:28:45,163 VENABLES: You build up this pyramid of camps 373 00:28:45,163 --> 00:28:50,502 to get enough tents, food, cooking fuel, oxygen - 374 00:28:50,502 --> 00:28:54,548 to get enough of those supplies where you can rest 375 00:28:54,548 --> 00:28:57,121 before going up to the next stage, 376 00:29:03,890 --> 00:29:07,644 And to do that, people have got to go up and down the mountain, 377 00:29:07,644 --> 00:29:10,689 Ideally, people go up to a camp and then go back down again 378 00:29:10,689 --> 00:29:13,400 'cause if everyone goes up to a camp and then stays there 379 00:29:13,400 --> 00:29:15,938 they then consume all the food they've carried up, 380 00:29:35,881 --> 00:29:37,841 CONEFRE Y: People tried to come up with solutions 381 00:29:37,841 --> 00:29:40,218 which would help the team to get to the top, 382 00:29:40,218 --> 00:29:42,095 people from around the world 383 00:29:42,095 --> 00:29:45,098 sending in madcap suggestions on inventions, 384 00:29:45,098 --> 00:29:46,850 Somebody had an ingenious device 385 00:29:46,850 --> 00:29:48,560 which was a type of harpoon 386 00:29:48,560 --> 00:29:51,051 with an incendiary device on the end of it, 387 00:29:52,105 --> 00:29:55,525 The idea was that it would burn its way into the ice 388 00:29:55,525 --> 00:29:57,402 and give a secure holding 389 00:29:57,402 --> 00:29:59,613 so people could haul themselves up, 390 00:29:59,613 --> 00:30:02,449 Most of them were completely crazy ideas, 391 00:30:02,449 --> 00:30:04,784 VOICEOVER: My method involves the use of a hand cable 392 00:30:04,784 --> 00:30:07,120 laid in adv ance by aircraft... 393 00:30:07,120 --> 00:30:08,747 VOICEOVER 2: With my relay w armth 394 00:30:08,747 --> 00:30:10,540 personal heating apparatus, 395 00:30:10,540 --> 00:30:12,500 air could be passed through a heating chamber 396 00:30:12,500 --> 00:30:14,211 and pumped via rubber tube 397 00:30:14,211 --> 00:30:15,921 to the hands, feet and head... 398 00:30:15,921 --> 00:30:19,090 VOICEOVER 3: May I mention a Wonder Gun 399 00:30:19,090 --> 00:30:21,468 for driving steel bolts into concrete... 400 00:30:21,468 --> 00:30:23,303 VOICEOVER 4: I suggest that a woollen suit 401 00:30:23,303 --> 00:30:24,930 be wired in much the same w ay 402 00:30:24,930 --> 00:30:26,556 as an electric blanket... 403 00:30:26,556 --> 00:30:28,099 VOICEOVER 5: It should be possible 404 00:30:28,099 --> 00:30:31,144 to ascend the mountain using a large helium-filled balloon. 405 00:30:31,144 --> 00:30:34,595 A significant amount of helium would be required. 406 00:30:41,154 --> 00:30:44,574 MAN: Nearly all of the technological innovations 407 00:30:44,574 --> 00:30:46,910 that were used on the 1953 expedition 408 00:30:46,910 --> 00:30:49,412 arose from things developed by the military 409 00:30:49,412 --> 00:30:51,535 during the Second World War, 410 00:30:54,376 --> 00:30:57,504 They tested the windproof equipment they were going to be wearing 411 00:30:57,504 --> 00:31:00,707 in the wind tunnel at Farnborough Aircraft Factory, 412 00:31:08,306 --> 00:31:11,351 30 different firms, UK firms, 413 00:31:11,351 --> 00:31:14,518 were involved in designing the boots alone, 414 00:31:18,525 --> 00:31:22,819 The ascent of Everest in '53 had become a question of national pride, 415 00:31:24,155 --> 00:31:27,242 When World War II ended, Britain was completely bankrupt 416 00:31:27,242 --> 00:31:29,953 and because of the austerity, the postwar austerity in Britain, 417 00:31:29,953 --> 00:31:31,744 the really awful days that had past,,, 418 00:31:34,332 --> 00:31:37,168 ,,it was the last great colonial project, 419 00:31:37,168 --> 00:31:40,169 the last hurrah of the British Empire, 420 00:31:52,392 --> 00:31:54,561 PETER HILLARY: My father and Tenzing 421 00:31:54,561 --> 00:31:57,856 kept volunteering to help in different situations 422 00:31:57,856 --> 00:32:02,150 to demonstrate their competency as being one of the summit teams, 423 00:32:03,194 --> 00:32:06,448 Dad could see that there were a whole lot of reasons 424 00:32:06,448 --> 00:32:10,362 why this could be a great combination for success, 425 00:32:11,786 --> 00:32:14,953 They were very at home in this alpine environment, 426 00:32:15,999 --> 00:32:19,035 They were hungry, They wanted the top, 427 00:32:29,888 --> 00:32:32,807 CONEFRE Y: There's a point where they were partnered together 428 00:32:32,807 --> 00:32:35,143 and they were racing down the Khumbu Icefall, 429 00:32:35,143 --> 00:32:37,978 trying to prove that they could do it quickly, 430 00:32:39,481 --> 00:32:42,067 But as a sort of product of his over-exuberance, really, 431 00:32:42,067 --> 00:32:44,902 he's racing through it and something goes wrong, 432 00:32:46,238 --> 00:32:48,907 EDMUND HILLARY: Tenzing and I headed back down to Base Camp, 433 00:32:50,533 --> 00:32:53,245 When we were about halfway down the icefall 434 00:32:53,245 --> 00:32:56,080 we came to one of the crevasses, 435 00:32:59,334 --> 00:33:02,754 On one side of it there was a great chunk of ice 436 00:33:02,754 --> 00:33:05,757 and we had used this as a stepping stone 437 00:33:05,757 --> 00:33:07,631 to reach the other side, 438 00:33:09,302 --> 00:33:12,007 (TENSE MUSIC) 439 00:33:42,836 --> 00:33:44,462 CONEFRE Y: It was slightly ironic 440 00:33:44,462 --> 00:33:47,048 that it was Ed Hillary, who was such a good climber, 441 00:33:47,048 --> 00:33:49,006 that it should happen to him, 442 00:33:52,929 --> 00:33:54,806 EDMUND HILLARY: People have often said to me, 443 00:33:54,806 --> 00:33:56,558 "You must've been very thankful, 444 00:33:56,558 --> 00:33:59,019 "Tenzing having saved your life like that," 445 00:33:59,019 --> 00:34:00,729 but I don't think I was, 446 00:34:00,729 --> 00:34:04,145 You know, I'd have been very annoyed if he hadn't saved my life, 447 00:34:11,990 --> 00:34:14,284 HUNT: Camp 4 has now been established 448 00:34:14,284 --> 00:34:16,036 and we have successfully carried 449 00:34:16,036 --> 00:34:19,120 the three tons of supplies up here, 450 00:34:25,212 --> 00:34:27,422 VENABLES: You don't conquer a mountain, 451 00:34:27,422 --> 00:34:29,299 If you 're lucky enough, 452 00:34:29,299 --> 00:34:32,834 the mountain gives you a chance to stand on the top, 453 00:34:33,887 --> 00:34:37,754 You 're trying to overcome your own weaknesses, 454 00:34:49,861 --> 00:34:52,656 CONEFRE Y: Ed Hillary, he was so kind of gung-ho 455 00:34:52,656 --> 00:34:54,532 and he always wanted to be out front, 456 00:34:54,532 --> 00:34:57,494 he always wanted to be in the lead, 457 00:34:57,494 --> 00:35:01,823 He wasn't brash, He was a quieter, sort of more reserved, character, 458 00:35:04,793 --> 00:35:07,580 PETER HILLARY: Dad was quite a complicated person, 459 00:35:08,630 --> 00:35:12,425 I think my father had quite a few demons 460 00:35:12,425 --> 00:35:14,803 born out of being a perfectionist, 461 00:35:14,803 --> 00:35:20,141 but also the sense of inferiority - nothing is ever quite good enough, 462 00:35:20,141 --> 00:35:24,554 I think it came out of a very complicated family background, 463 00:35:29,317 --> 00:35:31,570 EDMUND HILLARY: My father really wasn't very interested 464 00:35:31,570 --> 00:35:33,738 in adventurous activities, 465 00:35:33,738 --> 00:35:36,908 He was a man of very strong beliefs, 466 00:35:36,908 --> 00:35:42,947 The climbing of mountains he probably regarded as a bit of a waste of time, 467 00:35:48,336 --> 00:35:51,171 I fought with my father, 468 00:35:53,341 --> 00:35:57,220 And I would usually end up being taken over to the woodshed 469 00:35:57,220 --> 00:36:00,138 and being given a good thumping, 470 00:36:02,684 --> 00:36:04,519 I'm rather proud of the fact 471 00:36:04,519 --> 00:36:08,018 that I never actually admitted I was wrong,,, 472 00:36:10,066 --> 00:36:12,225 ,,even if I had been, 473 00:36:29,502 --> 00:36:32,622 (TYPEWRITER CLICKS) 474 00:36:34,466 --> 00:36:36,259 (DING!) 475 00:36:36,259 --> 00:36:39,930 WESTMACOTT: Well, of course it was of tremendous interest to all of us 476 00:36:39,930 --> 00:36:42,385 who would be chosen for the final push, 477 00:36:47,812 --> 00:36:52,309 VENABLES: In those days, the leader's word was absolute,,, 478 00:36:53,360 --> 00:36:57,144 ,,particularly for men who had all been in the armed forces, 479 00:36:59,157 --> 00:37:01,660 Hunt had to make the decision, 480 00:37:01,660 --> 00:37:05,080 He would say who were going to be the lucky ones 481 00:37:05,080 --> 00:37:07,487 who were going to have a crack at the summit, 482 00:37:13,088 --> 00:37:15,340 It was at our Base Camp 483 00:37:15,340 --> 00:37:17,717 and John Hunt got everybody round 484 00:37:17,717 --> 00:37:23,471 and outlined his plans for the rest of the expedition, 485 00:37:25,517 --> 00:37:29,645 The crucial thing, of course, was the attempts for the summit, 486 00:37:30,689 --> 00:37:32,566 VENABLES: At that meeting, 487 00:37:32,566 --> 00:37:35,819 that extraordinary meeting with this team 488 00:37:35,819 --> 00:37:37,946 totally isolated from the rest of the world, 489 00:37:37,946 --> 00:37:40,354 thousands of miles from home,,, 490 00:37:43,660 --> 00:37:46,663 ,,those men, each thinking, "Oh, wouldn't it be wonderful 491 00:37:46,663 --> 00:37:49,450 "if I was one of the lucky ones," 492 00:37:51,918 --> 00:37:55,463 BAND: You 're all chosen as basic climbers to go to the top, 493 00:37:55,463 --> 00:37:59,082 but there are all these other jobs to be done as well, 494 00:38:02,888 --> 00:38:06,141 PETER HILLARY: My father was absolutely determined 495 00:38:06,141 --> 00:38:10,008 that he was going to have an opportunity to climb this mountain, 496 00:38:11,354 --> 00:38:12,898 NORBU TENZING: One of the conditions 497 00:38:12,898 --> 00:38:15,108 for my father to go with the English team 498 00:38:15,108 --> 00:38:18,695 was that he'd have a chance to go to the top, 499 00:38:18,695 --> 00:38:21,948 There was no other climber quite as accomplished, 500 00:38:21,948 --> 00:38:25,118 WESTMACOTT: All of us would have liked to have a crack at the top, 501 00:38:25,118 --> 00:38:27,162 but the first attempt on the summit 502 00:38:27,162 --> 00:38:31,456 was to be made by Tom Bourdillon with Charles Evans,,, 503 00:38:36,713 --> 00:38:40,050 ,,and, "If needed, the second attempt," he said, 504 00:38:40,050 --> 00:38:43,419 "is going to be made by Ed Hillary and Tenzing," 505 00:38:46,014 --> 00:38:47,766 PETER HILLARY: I'm sure my father 506 00:38:47,766 --> 00:38:50,767 would have loved to have been in the first team, 507 00:38:54,314 --> 00:38:58,146 Tenzing was probably quite conflicted by it, 508 00:39:01,446 --> 00:39:04,783 HUNT: The next stage, and the really crucial one, 509 00:39:04,783 --> 00:39:07,867 is up the Lhotse Face to the South Col, 510 00:39:09,371 --> 00:39:13,416 VENABLES: John Hunt said, "OK, Tom Bourdillon with Charles Evans, 511 00:39:13,416 --> 00:39:15,544 "We'll send the two of them up first, 512 00:39:15,544 --> 00:39:18,505 "They can do a huge leap from the South Col 513 00:39:18,505 --> 00:39:21,043 "right to the summit in a day," 514 00:39:29,224 --> 00:39:32,394 HUNT: The first major task in this plan fell to George Lowe, 515 00:39:32,394 --> 00:39:36,815 He was to make a route up the Lhotse Face and prepare the way 516 00:39:36,815 --> 00:39:39,899 for the high-carrying parties to reach the col, 517 00:39:40,944 --> 00:39:43,898 This was to be finished by 15 May, 518 00:39:50,870 --> 00:39:52,664 CONEFRE Y: Basically what he said was, 519 00:39:52,664 --> 00:39:56,668 "We want to be in a position to climb Everest on May 15," 520 00:39:56,668 --> 00:39:59,546 because there was a constant fear in the back of Hunt's mind that 521 00:39:59,546 --> 00:40:03,959 “The monsoon would come and end all our hopes," 522 00:40:05,093 --> 00:40:09,173 But they had to get up this thing called the Lhotse Face, 523 00:40:13,268 --> 00:40:16,313 EDMUND HILLARY: This is a vast 4,000-foot snow-and-ice face 524 00:40:16,313 --> 00:40:20,262 leading up steeply to the South Col at 26,000 feet, 525 00:40:21,443 --> 00:40:23,737 (WIND HOWLS) 526 00:40:23,737 --> 00:40:27,282 George Lowe, my fellow New Zealander, spent much time and energy 527 00:40:27,282 --> 00:40:29,987 bashing a route up this difficult problem, 528 00:40:31,286 --> 00:40:33,914 LOWE: Well, the work on the face was very difficult 529 00:40:33,914 --> 00:40:35,790 and made more difficult and atrocious 530 00:40:35,790 --> 00:40:39,919 by the weather and daily falls of snow which covered the tracks, 531 00:40:41,880 --> 00:40:44,633 I shared my high perch for a long time with Ang Nyima, 532 00:40:44,633 --> 00:40:47,124 a splendid little Sherpa, 533 00:40:50,764 --> 00:40:53,183 WESTMACOTT: George Lowe worked on the Lhotse Face 534 00:40:53,183 --> 00:40:58,853 without oxygen for over a week up to about 24,500 feet, 535 00:41:01,274 --> 00:41:04,819 LOWE: The cold was terrific and the wind was bad 536 00:41:04,819 --> 00:41:08,031 and all the time I was hoping to get the traverse complete 537 00:41:08,031 --> 00:41:11,032 and the route right through to the South Col, 538 00:41:12,452 --> 00:41:17,040 But I was thrashed by the weather and the altitude was affecting me, 539 00:41:17,040 --> 00:41:20,824 We didn't seem to be able to make the last 1,000 feet to the col, 540 00:41:24,464 --> 00:41:26,675 CONEFRE Y: John Hunt's big mistake 541 00:41:26,675 --> 00:41:29,761 was that he underestimated the Lhotse Face, 542 00:41:29,761 --> 00:41:31,884 It's just so big, 543 00:41:39,646 --> 00:41:42,896 He didn't give enough support to George Lowe, 544 00:41:44,568 --> 00:41:47,112 LOWE: It really was myself and Ang Nyima, 545 00:41:47,112 --> 00:41:49,489 Whenever they did send up support, 546 00:41:49,489 --> 00:41:52,858 within 24 hours, they were not able to carry on, 547 00:41:55,996 --> 00:41:57,956 HACKETT: Being at high altitude, 548 00:41:57,956 --> 00:42:00,494 you never feel very well, 549 00:42:04,629 --> 00:42:07,841 Each breath of air we take in at high altitude 550 00:42:07,841 --> 00:42:09,634 has fewer oxygen molecules 551 00:42:09,634 --> 00:42:13,964 so we need more breaths in order to get the same amount of oxygen, 552 00:42:19,477 --> 00:42:21,688 WHITTAKER: Put a pillow over your mouth 553 00:42:21,688 --> 00:42:24,482 and try and breath through it as you 're running, 554 00:42:24,482 --> 00:42:27,527 (PUFFS) You just suck in air, you 're trying to get enough air 555 00:42:27,527 --> 00:42:30,322 and the oxygen debt builds up until you just can't go any,,, 556 00:42:30,322 --> 00:42:33,158 You have to stop, (PUFFS HEAVILY) 557 00:42:33,158 --> 00:42:35,827 Take three, four breaths to a step, 558 00:42:35,827 --> 00:42:39,748 five breaths to a step, six breaths to a step, 559 00:42:39,748 --> 00:42:41,791 15 breaths to a step, 560 00:42:41,791 --> 00:42:44,127 You 're just not getting the air, 561 00:42:44,127 --> 00:42:46,535 (WIND HOWLS) 562 00:42:47,589 --> 00:42:52,050 LOWE: Up there, your mind somehow gradually accepts slowness, 563 00:42:55,305 --> 00:42:57,682 I thought I was going extremely well, 564 00:42:57,682 --> 00:43:01,597 but in fact we were staggering about like men in a dream, 565 00:43:10,153 --> 00:43:13,531 HUNT: We had spent 10 days on the Lhotse Face - 566 00:43:13,531 --> 00:43:16,243 considerably more than I'd reckoned on - 567 00:43:16,243 --> 00:43:21,373 but we had still not broken through to the South Col, 568 00:43:21,373 --> 00:43:24,327 The time factor was becoming critical, 569 00:43:28,964 --> 00:43:31,383 BAND: Watching the progress on the Lhotse Face, 570 00:43:31,383 --> 00:43:34,302 there was no doubt that the momentum of the attack 571 00:43:34,302 --> 00:43:36,763 seemed to be winding down, 572 00:43:36,763 --> 00:43:38,723 and the first inklings of the monsoon 573 00:43:38,723 --> 00:43:41,973 were building up in the Bay of Bengal, 574 00:43:43,311 --> 00:43:46,265 VENABLES: It was a very, very critical time, 575 00:43:47,440 --> 00:43:49,067 You could imagine Hunt 576 00:43:49,067 --> 00:43:51,778 feeling that this whole great enterprise was just unravelling 577 00:43:51,778 --> 00:43:54,364 and, "If we don't get a grip on this thing soon 578 00:43:54,364 --> 00:43:55,949 "we're going to lose our chance, 579 00:43:55,949 --> 00:43:57,492 "The monsoon will arrive 580 00:43:57,492 --> 00:44:00,620 "and we won't even have reached the South Col, let alone the summit," 581 00:44:00,620 --> 00:44:03,242 (MORSE CODE BEEPS) 582 00:44:12,382 --> 00:44:16,011 MAN: This is London calling the British Mount Everest expedition. 583 00:44:16,011 --> 00:44:18,138 Here is the latest weather bulletin. 584 00:44:18,138 --> 00:44:21,975 Western disturbance apparently moving eastw ards 585 00:44:21,975 --> 00:44:24,853 across the extreme north of Nepal 586 00:44:24,853 --> 00:44:27,939 is likely to cause cloudy to overcast skies 587 00:44:27,939 --> 00:44:30,181 with occasional thunderstorms... 588 00:44:31,693 --> 00:44:34,988 CONEFRE Y: The later in May it was, 589 00:44:34,988 --> 00:44:37,693 the more likely that the monsoon would arrive, 590 00:44:39,910 --> 00:44:41,620 When the monsoon comes, 591 00:44:41,620 --> 00:44:46,041 you get huge dumps of snow and they make climbing much more difficult, 592 00:44:46,041 --> 00:44:49,711 You don't want to be climbing through large amounts of soft snow, 593 00:44:49,711 --> 00:44:51,454 wading your way through it, 594 00:44:53,590 --> 00:44:56,426 The British expeditions of the 1930s had all failed 595 00:44:56,426 --> 00:44:58,335 because the monsoon had come early, 596 00:44:59,387 --> 00:45:02,424 And so all of this was piling on the pressure, you know? 597 00:45:12,901 --> 00:45:15,654 BAND: So even though the route 598 00:45:15,654 --> 00:45:18,573 hadn't actually been made all the way to the South Col 599 00:45:18,573 --> 00:45:21,826 John Hunt had to make a sort of crucial decision 600 00:45:21,826 --> 00:45:25,372 to start sending up the team of 14 Sherpas 601 00:45:25,372 --> 00:45:27,613 to carry all the stores we needed, 602 00:45:36,383 --> 00:45:39,636 HUNT: Nothing must endanger the getting of our stores to the col 603 00:45:39,636 --> 00:45:42,756 in time for our attempts on the summit, 604 00:45:47,561 --> 00:45:50,063 EDMUND HILLARY: On 21 May, Tenzing and myself 605 00:45:50,063 --> 00:45:53,942 led a band of 14 high-altitude Sherpas up the Lhotse Face, 606 00:45:53,942 --> 00:45:57,062 (DRAMATIC MUSIC) 607 00:46:05,870 --> 00:46:10,375 13 Sherpas struggled up to the col that day, without oxygen, 608 00:46:10,375 --> 00:46:14,754 The 14th only just failed to make it, and his load was carried on, 609 00:46:14,754 --> 00:46:17,921 We were proud of them, and grateful, 610 00:46:19,885 --> 00:46:21,761 It was a 10,5-hour day, 611 00:46:21,761 --> 00:46:24,264 They carried 30 pounds each, and their only nourishment 612 00:46:24,264 --> 00:46:26,969 was a single cup of tea apiece for breakfast, 613 00:46:30,645 --> 00:46:34,357 BAND: And so we were able to equip the camp properly 614 00:46:34,357 --> 00:46:38,069 with tents, sleeping bags, oxygen equipment and food, 615 00:46:38,069 --> 00:46:40,643 and that was one of the biggest achievements, 616 00:46:49,080 --> 00:46:50,624 EDMUND HILLARY: The South Col is probably 617 00:46:50,624 --> 00:46:52,166 the most barren spot in the world, 618 00:46:54,044 --> 00:46:55,921 The continual strong wind 619 00:46:55,921 --> 00:46:59,633 is always blowing over the dreary waste of rock and ice, 620 00:46:59,633 --> 00:47:01,468 Adding an air of desolation 621 00:47:01,468 --> 00:47:03,803 are the remnants of the Swiss tents of the previous year, 622 00:47:03,803 --> 00:47:07,338 with pieces of tattered cloth still clinging to them, 623 00:47:12,103 --> 00:47:16,441 NORBU TENZING: 1952, the Swiss had invited my father to climb Everest, 624 00:47:16,441 --> 00:47:20,403 and he had been up where no human had been before, 625 00:47:20,403 --> 00:47:23,238 but bad weather turned them back, 626 00:47:26,201 --> 00:47:28,745 LOWE: I remember André Roch, of the Swiss party, said, 627 00:47:28,745 --> 00:47:32,332 "On the col there's a smell of death," 628 00:47:32,332 --> 00:47:34,876 We thought that was Continental dramatics, 629 00:47:34,876 --> 00:47:37,332 but when we'd been there, we understood, 630 00:47:41,091 --> 00:47:43,969 WHITTAKER: I'm telling you, the cold, 631 00:47:43,969 --> 00:47:45,929 you can feel it coming up the extremities, 632 00:47:45,929 --> 00:47:49,182 You know you 're gonna freeze your hands and toes, 633 00:47:49,182 --> 00:47:51,434 and you just feel the cold creeping up, 634 00:47:51,434 --> 00:47:55,772 It's a race between the body and what you hope you can do, 635 00:47:55,772 --> 00:47:59,693 You know that you 're dying a little bit up there, 636 00:47:59,693 --> 00:48:02,812 (WIND WHISTLES RELENTLESSLY) 637 00:48:09,077 --> 00:48:10,996 EDMUND HILLARY: A major step had been achieved, 638 00:48:10,996 --> 00:48:13,783 and we then returned once more to the Western Cwm, 639 00:48:17,794 --> 00:48:22,373 Without wasting any time, we brought into action our assault plan, 640 00:48:25,093 --> 00:48:28,346 CONEFRE Y: Hunt wanted to have two attempts on the summit, 641 00:48:28,346 --> 00:48:31,099 but he realised that he couldn't have two attempts 642 00:48:31,099 --> 00:48:33,810 which were using open-circuit oxygen sets, 643 00:48:33,810 --> 00:48:35,812 WESTMACOTT: In the open-circuit, 644 00:48:35,812 --> 00:48:39,941 when you breathe out, the expired air goes to the atmosphere, 645 00:48:39,941 --> 00:48:41,526 and when you breathe in, 646 00:48:41,526 --> 00:48:45,238 the atmospheric air comes with an addition of a puff of oxygen 647 00:48:45,238 --> 00:48:47,147 from your oxygen set, 648 00:48:50,911 --> 00:48:53,204 CONEFRE Y: The thing about open-circuit oxygen sets 649 00:48:53,204 --> 00:48:55,290 is that they use a lot of oxygen, 650 00:48:55,290 --> 00:48:58,919 so he would have to get an awful lot of oxygen 651 00:48:58,919 --> 00:49:01,171 up onto the South Col and to the Southeast Ridge, 652 00:49:01,171 --> 00:49:02,714 so he sort of thought, 653 00:49:02,714 --> 00:49:05,008 "Well, no, we're not gonna be able to do this," 654 00:49:05,008 --> 00:49:07,302 But there was an alternative form of oxygen set, 655 00:49:07,302 --> 00:49:09,341 which was called a closed circuit, 656 00:49:11,014 --> 00:49:13,642 WESTMACOTT: The closed-circuit, when you breathe out 657 00:49:13,642 --> 00:49:16,186 the carbon dioxide goes through a canister 658 00:49:16,186 --> 00:49:19,940 of something called soda lime, which extracts the carbon dioxide 659 00:49:19,940 --> 00:49:22,317 and gives you back the oxygen into the set, 660 00:49:22,317 --> 00:49:25,484 and you 're completely insulated from the outside air, 661 00:49:28,990 --> 00:49:34,579 Now, if it works, the closed system can be more efficient 662 00:49:34,579 --> 00:49:37,749 than the open-circuit system, 663 00:49:37,749 --> 00:49:41,294 CONEFRE Y: The people who are using the closed-circuit set 664 00:49:41,294 --> 00:49:43,880 can start from lower down, 665 00:49:43,880 --> 00:49:46,341 But the thing about a closed-circuit set 666 00:49:46,341 --> 00:49:49,219 was that the only person who really knew how to use them 667 00:49:49,219 --> 00:49:52,138 was the person who had designed them, Tom Bourdillon, 668 00:49:52,138 --> 00:49:54,933 WESTMACOTT: And the first attempt on the summit, 669 00:49:54,933 --> 00:49:57,060 using the closed-circuit oxygen, 670 00:49:57,060 --> 00:50:00,643 was to be made by Tom Bourdillon with Charles Evans, 671 00:50:02,816 --> 00:50:06,860 John Hunt went ahead to the South Col in support, 672 00:50:13,577 --> 00:50:16,121 PETER HILLARY: Evans and Bourdillon left Advanced Base 673 00:50:16,121 --> 00:50:18,039 down in the Western Cwm 674 00:50:18,039 --> 00:50:20,874 and climbed up the South Col to camp, 675 00:50:22,210 --> 00:50:24,838 WESTMACOTT: Tom and Charles were to go all the way 676 00:50:24,838 --> 00:50:26,914 from the South Col to the top, 677 00:50:28,550 --> 00:50:31,219 I thought at the time they had a chance, 678 00:50:31,219 --> 00:50:34,054 but it was a hell of a long way, 679 00:50:42,856 --> 00:50:45,358 PETER HILLARY: If Bourdillon and Evans reach the summit, 680 00:50:45,358 --> 00:50:47,611 John Hunt might go, "Job done, 681 00:50:47,611 --> 00:50:50,232 "We're all going home, Everyone's safe," 682 00:50:56,244 --> 00:50:59,915 But the weather closed in and everyone got stuck for two days, 683 00:50:59,915 --> 00:51:03,414 including Bourdillon and Evans on the South Col, 684 00:51:05,503 --> 00:51:08,924 My father and Tenzing left Advanced Base 685 00:51:08,924 --> 00:51:11,009 down on the Western Cwm 686 00:51:11,009 --> 00:51:14,804 to come up to the South Col to be the second summit team, 687 00:51:14,804 --> 00:51:18,183 EDMUND HILLARY: Well, we left Base Camp in the Western Cwm, 688 00:51:18,183 --> 00:51:20,101 There was our support party - 689 00:51:20,101 --> 00:51:23,684 George Lowe, Alf Gregory and several Sherpas, 690 00:51:28,276 --> 00:51:30,695 And then Tenzing and myself, who were the actual assault party, 691 00:51:30,695 --> 00:51:32,403 with the open-circuit, 692 00:51:45,669 --> 00:51:49,339 PETER HILLARY: As my father and Tenzing were departing from Camp 4, 693 00:51:49,339 --> 00:51:51,877 Bourdillon and Evans were making their summit bid, 694 00:51:58,765 --> 00:52:00,976 EDMUND HILLARY: Well, we went up the Lhotse Face 695 00:52:00,976 --> 00:52:04,724 and across the long traverse that leads up to the South Col, 696 00:52:12,529 --> 00:52:14,906 And we're just about up to the South Col 697 00:52:14,906 --> 00:52:17,701 when we notice the support party, 698 00:52:17,701 --> 00:52:21,871 George started shouting and jumping around, 699 00:52:21,871 --> 00:52:24,833 And we looked up and we saw Evans and Bourdillon 700 00:52:24,833 --> 00:52:27,794 going up the tiny little peak far above us, 701 00:52:27,794 --> 00:52:30,166 onto the top of the South Summit, 702 00:52:31,798 --> 00:52:35,093 I think it was somewhere around about 12:00 in the morning, 703 00:52:35,093 --> 00:52:39,097 and we thought, "Ooh, they've,,, South Summit, 12:00, 704 00:52:39,097 --> 00:52:41,635 "They've time to get to the top, 705 00:52:44,436 --> 00:52:46,309 "They're going to climb it," 706 00:52:48,899 --> 00:52:52,068 PETER HILLARY: You know, when Bourdillon and Evans went out of sight, 707 00:52:52,068 --> 00:52:53,987 there would've been very high emotions, 708 00:52:53,987 --> 00:52:56,193 because these guys wanted to be up there, 709 00:53:00,744 --> 00:53:04,824 EDMUND HILLARY: We crossed over and reached the South Col, 710 00:53:10,253 --> 00:53:12,797 A little later in the day, we kept an eye out 711 00:53:12,797 --> 00:53:14,883 for the clouds that come over the mountain, 712 00:53:14,883 --> 00:53:18,261 and we were a bit worried about Evans and Bourdillon, 713 00:53:18,261 --> 00:53:20,430 But, uh, I think it was about 3:30, 714 00:53:20,430 --> 00:53:22,766 George once again caught sight of them 715 00:53:22,766 --> 00:53:25,644 coming down the couloir from the Southeast Ridge, 716 00:53:25,644 --> 00:53:27,435 down towards the South Col, 717 00:53:31,691 --> 00:53:33,443 LOWE: And it was a long time 718 00:53:33,443 --> 00:53:35,021 before they actually started to come down, 719 00:53:40,200 --> 00:53:44,862 And when they were coming down, they were clearly very, very tired, 720 00:53:51,253 --> 00:53:53,797 PETER HILLARY: When Bourdillon and Evans came down, 721 00:53:53,797 --> 00:53:56,335 Dad walked out to meet them, 722 00:54:02,973 --> 00:54:05,225 People tend to see it in terms of 723 00:54:05,225 --> 00:54:09,104 this really good guy going out to meet them and help them back, 724 00:54:09,104 --> 00:54:11,310 and there was that, absolutely, 725 00:54:12,983 --> 00:54:16,778 But there was another part, which was inside, where he,,, 726 00:54:16,778 --> 00:54:18,613 ,,he wanted to climb this mountain, 727 00:54:18,613 --> 00:54:21,318 He needed to know, "Where did they get to?" 728 00:54:26,037 --> 00:54:27,581 EDMUND HILLARY: And they told us 729 00:54:27,581 --> 00:54:29,124 that they'd reached the South Summit alright, 730 00:54:29,124 --> 00:54:31,167 had a look at the summit ridge, 731 00:54:31,167 --> 00:54:35,414 but hadn't had sufficient time or oxygen or energy to go any further, 732 00:54:46,391 --> 00:54:48,351 CONEFRE Y: They were in a terrible state, 733 00:54:48,351 --> 00:54:51,521 Most of the day Charles Evans had been climbing with an oxygen set 734 00:54:51,521 --> 00:54:53,064 which didn't work properly, 735 00:54:53,064 --> 00:54:56,026 so he'd been inhaling carbon dioxide as well as oxygen, 736 00:54:56,026 --> 00:55:01,907 But I think also Tom Bourdillon was very,,,emotionally in a bad state, 737 00:55:01,907 --> 00:55:04,200 because it really meant a lot to him, you know, 738 00:55:04,200 --> 00:55:08,068 He had designed this oxygen set which had failed, 739 00:55:09,205 --> 00:55:13,369 So they were in a bad way, physically and emotionally as well, 740 00:55:15,545 --> 00:55:19,132 GREGORY: Tom Bourdillon kept saying, "We should've had a go, 741 00:55:19,132 --> 00:55:21,259 "We should've gone on," you know, 742 00:55:21,259 --> 00:55:23,133 "We should've gone on," 743 00:55:27,974 --> 00:55:29,809 VENABLES: Evans and Bourdillon 744 00:55:29,809 --> 00:55:31,932 were very strong, very experienced climbers, 745 00:55:35,315 --> 00:55:38,850 Having climbed higher than any human beings had ever been before,,, 746 00:55:40,570 --> 00:55:42,447 ,,having got to the South Summit 747 00:55:42,447 --> 00:55:46,826 and looked across at this final, almost knife-edged ridge, 748 00:55:46,826 --> 00:55:50,956 Charles Evans did say to Ed Hillary something like, 749 00:55:50,956 --> 00:55:56,709 "That last ridge looks really hard, I don't know if you can do it," 750 00:56:04,928 --> 00:56:08,048 (WIND RUSHES) 751 00:56:18,400 --> 00:56:21,820 HACKETT: Above 26,000 feet is what we call the death zone, 752 00:56:21,820 --> 00:56:25,323 because you are slowly dying, 753 00:56:25,323 --> 00:56:28,906 It's not a place for humans, 754 00:56:34,791 --> 00:56:38,003 GREGORY: John Hunt was a leader leading from the front, 755 00:56:38,003 --> 00:56:40,964 And as the front now was up above the South Col, 756 00:56:40,964 --> 00:56:42,966 that's why he wanted to stay, 757 00:56:42,966 --> 00:56:46,798 and we realised that he really wasn't strong enough to stay, 758 00:56:48,638 --> 00:56:50,307 VENABLES: It was a classic case 759 00:56:50,307 --> 00:56:53,894 of someone having been too high too long, 760 00:56:53,894 --> 00:56:56,313 GREGORY: He'd gone beyond the limit, 761 00:56:56,313 --> 00:56:58,607 like Tom Bourdillon and Charles Evans, 762 00:56:58,607 --> 00:57:02,735 And he was eventually persuaded to go down with them, 763 00:57:04,613 --> 00:57:07,741 They were exhausted and we were worried about them 764 00:57:07,741 --> 00:57:11,110 and we dug out some oxygen to help them, 765 00:57:12,746 --> 00:57:15,123 HUNT: Well, I hated to leave the col, 766 00:57:15,123 --> 00:57:16,875 but after a certain amount of discussion, 767 00:57:16,875 --> 00:57:19,669 I saw that I could not weaken the second party, 768 00:57:19,669 --> 00:57:24,580 So I left Ed with the parting instruction not to give in, 769 00:57:27,135 --> 00:57:29,763 CONEFRE Y: This was a great moment on the expedition 770 00:57:29,763 --> 00:57:33,516 in which the leader sacrifices his own personal ambition, 771 00:57:33,516 --> 00:57:36,019 and Ed Hillary says, "Never at any moment 772 00:57:36,019 --> 00:57:38,806 "have I respected John Hunt more," 773 00:57:56,039 --> 00:57:58,041 LOWE: You know, it was touch and go, 774 00:57:58,041 --> 00:58:00,544 because the monsoon comes in the first week of June, 775 00:58:00,544 --> 00:58:03,880 and it was tight, on the last days of May, 776 00:58:03,880 --> 00:58:06,341 (WIND RUSHES) 777 00:58:06,341 --> 00:58:09,719 CONEFRE Y: For Hillary and Tenzing to make an attempt on the summit, 778 00:58:09,719 --> 00:58:11,638 they couldn't go from the South Col, 779 00:58:11,638 --> 00:58:14,099 because they would have to carry too much oxygen, 780 00:58:14,099 --> 00:58:18,428 So the only way was to start from higher up, then go for the summit, 781 00:58:21,731 --> 00:58:24,568 (WIND RUSHES) 782 00:58:24,568 --> 00:58:27,404 EDMUND HILLARY: The following day was extremely windy and cold, 783 00:58:27,404 --> 00:58:29,895 and no movement upwards was possible, 784 00:58:31,199 --> 00:58:33,660 We spent the day preparing the oxygen and gear, 785 00:58:33,660 --> 00:58:37,159 with the hope that the following day would prove clear and fine, 786 00:58:41,585 --> 00:58:45,922 CONEFRE Y: They would use oxygen at night, flowing at a very low rate, 787 00:58:45,922 --> 00:58:47,632 because it would help them sleep 788 00:58:47,632 --> 00:58:50,170 and make them feel slightly warmer as well, 789 00:58:54,055 --> 00:58:56,141 WHITTAKER: Night-time is a tough time, 790 00:58:56,141 --> 00:58:58,548 You lay there listening to the mountain,,, 791 00:59:02,647 --> 00:59:06,192 ,,listening to the wind, listening to the avalanche, 792 00:59:06,192 --> 00:59:08,565 Thinking, "Oh, my God," you know, 793 00:59:10,906 --> 00:59:13,064 Demons come, 794 00:59:20,790 --> 00:59:24,544 LOWE: The original plan was that Gregory and three Sherpas 795 00:59:24,544 --> 00:59:26,796 would carry the high camp, 796 00:59:26,796 --> 00:59:31,885 One Sherpa had collapsed on the col and gone down previously, 797 00:59:31,885 --> 00:59:33,842 leaving us two Sherpas, 798 00:59:37,933 --> 00:59:41,811 On the morning of the day we intended to do the carry, 799 00:59:41,811 --> 00:59:44,064 we poked our head into the pyramid tent 800 00:59:44,064 --> 00:59:46,389 and found Sherpa Pemba in a very bad condition, 801 00:59:48,652 --> 00:59:50,528 It was obvious that he wouldn't carry, 802 00:59:50,528 --> 00:59:54,396 and so we had the job of sharing the load, 803 01:00:01,164 --> 01:00:03,541 GREGORY: First of all, early in the day 804 01:00:03,541 --> 01:00:07,160 we knew that we'd have to reorganise the loads and take more, 805 01:00:09,297 --> 01:00:14,921 George Lowe and I and Ang Nyima left about a quarter to nine, 806 01:00:20,725 --> 01:00:24,437 LOWE: Ed and Tenzing left the South Col an hour behind us 807 01:00:24,437 --> 01:00:27,899 to conserve their energy and to go faster through our steps 808 01:00:27,899 --> 01:00:30,022 and so conserve their oxygen, 809 01:00:31,361 --> 01:00:34,948 And we took off carrying between 50 and 60 pounds, 810 01:00:34,948 --> 01:00:38,285 and Ed, I think we estimated his at 63 pounds, 811 01:00:38,285 --> 01:00:41,202 which is quite an enormous load for that altitude, 812 01:00:44,249 --> 01:00:48,253 The wind was very strong on the col, 813 01:00:48,253 --> 01:00:51,381 We had very difficult conditions, 814 01:00:51,381 --> 01:00:53,623 We moved up this ridge looking for a flat spot, 815 01:01:01,516 --> 01:01:04,185 GREGORY: For a long time we couldn't find a camp site,,, 816 01:01:05,687 --> 01:01:08,940 ,,until at last Tenzing found one, 817 01:01:08,940 --> 01:01:12,724 a nearly flat spot underneath a rocky bluff, 818 01:01:14,946 --> 01:01:17,282 EDMUND HILLARY: They helped us to the highest camp 819 01:01:17,282 --> 01:01:19,284 ever put up on Everest or any other mountain, 820 01:01:19,284 --> 01:01:22,071 at 27,900 feet, 821 01:01:33,423 --> 01:01:36,590 VENABLES: No-one had ever camped this high before, 822 01:01:38,887 --> 01:01:41,848 George Lowe and Alf Gregory take a few pictures 823 01:01:41,848 --> 01:01:45,060 and then shake hands and say, "Well, 'bye now, Good luck, 824 01:01:45,060 --> 01:01:47,646 "We'd better be off down," 825 01:01:47,646 --> 01:01:52,400 And then there's a wonderfully poignant moment, 826 01:01:52,400 --> 01:01:55,904 PETER HILLARY: Ang Nyima is very tired, he should go down, 827 01:01:55,904 --> 01:01:59,074 But he said to Dad that he wanted to stay 828 01:01:59,074 --> 01:02:02,324 so he could make some tea when they came down, and help them, 829 01:02:03,662 --> 01:02:07,040 I know Dad was very touched by that, 830 01:02:07,040 --> 01:02:11,336 But eventually they start back down again, 831 01:02:11,336 --> 01:02:15,001 VENABLES: Leaving Hillary and Tenzing completely alone, 832 01:02:20,011 --> 01:02:22,889 EDMUND HILLARY: It was with certain feelings of sorrow 833 01:02:22,889 --> 01:02:25,433 that we saw George and Greg and Sherpa Ang Nyima 834 01:02:25,433 --> 01:02:28,520 descending down the mountain, leaving us up there all alone, 835 01:02:28,520 --> 01:02:31,398 We'd have much preferred to have a bit of company for the night, 836 01:02:31,398 --> 01:02:34,233 However, they had to get down - our oxygen was running short, 837 01:02:36,152 --> 01:02:40,490 PETER HILLARY: You 're totally on your own, really out on a limb, 838 01:02:40,490 --> 01:02:42,909 There's no radio contact with anyone, 839 01:02:42,909 --> 01:02:44,494 You could disappear 840 01:02:44,494 --> 01:02:47,495 and everyone will just wonder, "Whatever happened to them?" 841 01:02:49,291 --> 01:02:52,377 I think it would've been very exciting, 842 01:02:52,377 --> 01:02:55,497 very Ionely and very scary, 843 01:02:58,800 --> 01:03:01,291 (WIND WHISTLES AND HOWLS) 844 01:03:08,935 --> 01:03:12,147 EDMUND HILLARY: It took us two hours of solid work to set up the tent 845 01:03:12,147 --> 01:03:15,516 on two strips of ground a yard wide and 10 feet long, 846 01:03:20,906 --> 01:03:23,366 CONEFRE Y: Towards the top of Everest, 847 01:03:23,366 --> 01:03:26,036 you get these very, very powerful winds, 848 01:03:26,036 --> 01:03:29,414 and they were very precariously attached to this slope 849 01:03:29,414 --> 01:03:30,999 and all the time they're worried 850 01:03:30,999 --> 01:03:32,873 they're gonna be blown off the mountain, 851 01:03:34,669 --> 01:03:37,005 DOUGLAS: When the wind gets up in the evening 852 01:03:37,005 --> 01:03:38,965 you 're in quite a dangerous position 853 01:03:38,965 --> 01:03:40,922 because you 're pinned to the mountain, 854 01:03:42,177 --> 01:03:44,429 The noise is really frightening, 855 01:03:44,429 --> 01:03:47,549 (WIND HOWLS AND RUSHES RELENTLESSLY) 856 01:03:57,651 --> 01:04:01,399 CONEFRE Y: That night was the coldest ever recorded on the expedition, 857 01:04:07,285 --> 01:04:09,371 HACKETT: It's such a dehydrating environment, 858 01:04:09,371 --> 01:04:11,164 and there's only one way to make water, 859 01:04:11,164 --> 01:04:13,738 and that is you have to melt snow or ice, 860 01:04:14,876 --> 01:04:18,421 You 're breathing eight times more than you are at sea level, 861 01:04:18,421 --> 01:04:20,674 You can lose more than a litre a day 862 01:04:20,674 --> 01:04:23,635 just from the heavy breathing at high altitude, 863 01:04:23,635 --> 01:04:25,595 In addition, the air is so dry 864 01:04:25,595 --> 01:04:27,671 that it sucks the moisture right from your skin, 865 01:04:38,024 --> 01:04:40,485 EDMUND HILLARY: I made myself as comfortable as possible, 866 01:04:40,485 --> 01:04:44,072 half sitting and half reclining on the upper shelf, 867 01:04:44,072 --> 01:04:48,243 It wasn't comfortable, but I could at least brace my feet and shoulders 868 01:04:48,243 --> 01:04:52,572 to help our meagre anchors hold the tent in the gusts of wind, 869 01:04:57,043 --> 01:04:58,587 VENABLES: High-altitude climbing 870 01:04:58,587 --> 01:05:02,536 is all about being comfortable in uncomfortable places, 871 01:05:05,343 --> 01:05:09,723 He was very good at basic day-to-day survival, as was Tenzing, 872 01:05:09,723 --> 01:05:12,510 and I think that's where they really scored, 873 01:05:22,193 --> 01:05:24,529 EDMUND HILLARY: Early in the night, the wind dropped, 874 01:05:24,529 --> 01:05:28,742 We had some oxygen, which we used for sleeping purposes 875 01:05:28,742 --> 01:05:32,704 for about four hours out of the 16 hours we spent there, 876 01:05:32,704 --> 01:05:34,789 For the four hours, at least, we did doze, 877 01:05:34,789 --> 01:05:36,583 but as soon as the oxygen cut out 878 01:05:36,583 --> 01:05:39,999 we'd immediately wake up and start feeling cold, 879 01:05:41,546 --> 01:05:43,381 CONEFRE Y: He's all the time thinking, 880 01:05:43,381 --> 01:05:45,425 "I don't want to use tomorrow's oxygen," 881 01:05:45,425 --> 01:05:48,261 There's just little things go wrong, 882 01:05:48,261 --> 01:05:51,681 They've lugged up an enormous black oxygen cylinder 883 01:05:51,681 --> 01:05:53,975 which they planned to use for sleeping oxygen, 884 01:05:53,975 --> 01:05:56,061 But, unfortunately, having lugged this bottle up, 885 01:05:56,061 --> 01:05:58,730 they discovered that somebody has gone back with the adaptor for it, 886 01:05:58,730 --> 01:06:01,102 so the bottle is useless, 887 01:06:03,193 --> 01:06:05,862 EDMUND HILLARY: Well, I didn't have the complete conviction 888 01:06:05,862 --> 01:06:08,104 that we were going to be successful, 889 01:06:12,494 --> 01:06:14,537 I was very aware of the fact 890 01:06:14,537 --> 01:06:17,374 that very good expeditions had attempted the mountain 891 01:06:17,374 --> 01:06:20,825 and had got very high but had not succeeded, 892 01:06:29,678 --> 01:06:33,011 At 6:30am we started off from our tent, 893 01:06:35,100 --> 01:06:38,967 We wasted no time in preparing the oxygen apparatus and equipment, 894 01:06:42,899 --> 01:06:45,360 CONEFRE Y: It's all about oxygen at this point, 895 01:06:45,360 --> 01:06:47,654 Hillary is constantly thinking about this, 896 01:06:47,654 --> 01:06:49,698 "How much oxygen do I need? 897 01:06:49,698 --> 01:06:52,242 "What should the flow rate of the oxygen be?" You know? 898 01:06:52,242 --> 01:06:55,704 "If I have it flowing at a higher rate, then I feel better, 899 01:06:55,704 --> 01:06:58,325 "but I use up the bottle more quickly," 900 01:07:08,800 --> 01:07:10,802 DOUGLAS: It's very, very cold, 901 01:07:10,802 --> 01:07:13,555 They measure it at below -25, 902 01:07:13,555 --> 01:07:17,350 And that kind of profound, bone-chilling cold 903 01:07:17,350 --> 01:07:19,311 is almost like an assault, you know? 904 01:07:19,311 --> 01:07:21,350 It's just grim, 905 01:07:22,689 --> 01:07:25,483 CONEFRE Y: The team physiologist had said, "When you get to high altitude, 906 01:07:25,483 --> 01:07:27,944 "you 've got to climb using your oxygen sets 907 01:07:27,944 --> 01:07:29,863 "at a rate of four litres per minute, 908 01:07:29,863 --> 01:07:33,730 "Anything less than that, you 're not gonna get real benefit from it," 909 01:07:35,452 --> 01:07:38,496 EDMUND HILLARY: Our progress at first was pretty steady, 910 01:07:38,496 --> 01:07:40,290 However, we examined the oxygen supplies 911 01:07:40,290 --> 01:07:42,959 and found we couldn't go on our estimated four litres a minute 912 01:07:42,959 --> 01:07:44,961 and have a chance of getting to the top, 913 01:07:44,961 --> 01:07:46,753 Had to cut it down to three, 914 01:07:52,093 --> 01:07:57,224 PETER HILLARY: A fairly simple calculation about the oxygen flow rate 915 01:07:57,224 --> 01:08:00,143 is unbelievably difficult up there 916 01:08:00,143 --> 01:08:04,604 because you 've got an addled, oxygen-deprived mind, 917 01:08:43,144 --> 01:08:44,854 EDMUND HILLARY: After going for some time, 918 01:08:44,854 --> 01:08:47,148 we reached the bottom of a 400-foot slope 919 01:08:47,148 --> 01:08:49,526 which led up to the South Summit, 920 01:08:49,526 --> 01:08:52,443 and this slope was a tremendously steep one, 921 01:08:54,781 --> 01:08:58,280 We felt that this snow could easily avalanche, 922 01:08:59,536 --> 01:09:01,580 DOUGLAS: There was a bit of a crust, 923 01:09:01,580 --> 01:09:03,665 so you 'd think you were standing on firm ground 924 01:09:03,665 --> 01:09:06,084 and then it would give way - it would be powdery underneath, 925 01:09:06,084 --> 01:09:08,712 So Hillary is anxious about that, 926 01:09:08,712 --> 01:09:11,631 And also fear of avalanche, 927 01:09:11,631 --> 01:09:14,634 And they have this exchange, 928 01:09:14,634 --> 01:09:17,220 EDMUND HILLARY: I remember turning to Tenzing and saying to him, 929 01:09:17,220 --> 01:09:19,472 "Well, what do you think about it, Tenzing?" 930 01:09:19,472 --> 01:09:21,182 He said he didn't like it at all, 931 01:09:21,182 --> 01:09:22,974 thought it was decidedly dangerous, 932 01:09:29,482 --> 01:09:31,151 Then I said, "Well, what do you think? 933 01:09:31,151 --> 01:09:32,777 "Do you think we should go on?" 934 01:09:32,777 --> 01:09:35,529 And he said, "Just as you like," 935 01:09:38,491 --> 01:09:43,118 We climbed up it with a good deal of fear and trepidation, 936 01:09:46,291 --> 01:09:49,794 I think this is the first time I've ever had to make a decision 937 01:09:49,794 --> 01:09:52,756 as to whether something was justifiable or not, 938 01:09:52,756 --> 01:09:56,207 decided it wasn't justifiable, but we still went on, 939 01:09:59,804 --> 01:10:02,390 DOUGLAS: You 're right on the edge of what's possible 940 01:10:02,390 --> 01:10:06,353 and every step you take is putting you more into danger, 941 01:10:06,353 --> 01:10:09,769 so the temptation to turn round and go down is strong, 942 01:10:14,236 --> 01:10:16,446 EDMUND HILLARY: I'm frightened a great deal of the time 943 01:10:16,446 --> 01:10:18,490 when I'm in dangerous country, 944 01:10:18,490 --> 01:10:21,859 But I think being afraid is one of the important factors, 945 01:10:23,119 --> 01:10:25,278 It's a stimulating factor, 946 01:10:26,373 --> 01:10:29,084 Of course, if you just get petrified with fear, 947 01:10:29,084 --> 01:10:31,076 then it would be hopeless, 948 01:10:42,222 --> 01:10:45,350 PETER HILLARY: The crux of it is whether or not you 're gonna survive, 949 01:10:45,350 --> 01:10:47,477 You know, none of that is guaranteed, 950 01:10:47,477 --> 01:10:50,230 If anything goes wrong up there, 951 01:10:50,230 --> 01:10:52,774 even a relatively minor accident 952 01:10:52,774 --> 01:10:56,938 can very rapidly slide into a fatal one, 953 01:11:03,118 --> 01:11:04,828 EDMUND HILLARY: It was a great relief 954 01:11:04,828 --> 01:11:06,785 when we reached the South Summit at 9am, 955 01:11:09,291 --> 01:11:10,917 Oxygen was running short, 956 01:11:10,917 --> 01:11:14,582 so we wasted no time and set off along the ridge, 957 01:11:18,967 --> 01:11:22,799 But we were moving slowly and time was against us, 958 01:11:29,895 --> 01:11:33,231 PETER HILLARY: Evans and Bourdillon had gone to the South Summit 959 01:11:33,231 --> 01:11:36,814 and had had reservations about the route ahead, 960 01:11:38,320 --> 01:11:42,616 Evans had pointed out that there was a very difficult knife-edged ridge, 961 01:11:42,616 --> 01:11:44,826 It's serrated, 962 01:11:44,826 --> 01:11:49,122 it's got these just horrifying drops on both sides, 963 01:11:49,122 --> 01:11:53,334 They must've had concerns about whether or not they could climb it, 964 01:11:57,172 --> 01:11:59,090 VENABLES: On the left you 've got 965 01:11:59,090 --> 01:12:00,717 the immense Southwest Face of Everest, 966 01:12:00,717 --> 01:12:02,260 and if you fell down that, 967 01:12:02,260 --> 01:12:04,763 you 'd probably fall all the way back down to the Western Cwm, 968 01:12:04,763 --> 01:12:06,636 8,000 feet below, 969 01:12:09,309 --> 01:12:12,437 And then to your right is the even bigger precipice 970 01:12:12,437 --> 01:12:14,689 of the Kangshung Face, 971 01:12:14,689 --> 01:12:16,646 and that really concentrates the mind, 972 01:12:21,279 --> 01:12:22,864 EDMUND HILLARY: For the mountaineer, 973 01:12:22,864 --> 01:12:24,908 the thought of the process of dying 974 01:12:24,908 --> 01:12:26,743 is more unpleasant 975 01:12:26,743 --> 01:12:30,077 than the actual fact that you may be dead at the end of it, 976 01:12:39,172 --> 01:12:43,593 HUNT: In the meantime, watching from below down at Camp 4, 977 01:12:43,593 --> 01:12:47,377 we were all waiting most anxiously, 978 01:12:52,894 --> 01:12:55,939 BAND: Obviously we'd hoped to have our little walkie-talkies going 979 01:12:55,939 --> 01:12:58,233 right up to at least the South Col, 980 01:12:58,233 --> 01:13:01,319 but the one that was taken to the South Col didn't work, 981 01:13:01,319 --> 01:13:04,197 So in fact we realised we wouldn't actually know 982 01:13:04,197 --> 01:13:07,117 whether Hillary and Tenzing had been successful 983 01:13:07,117 --> 01:13:10,486 until they actually came down and told us, 984 01:13:14,416 --> 01:13:18,837 PETER HILLARY: No-one had any idea where they were, how they were going, 985 01:13:18,837 --> 01:13:22,502 would they be successful, or, indeed, would they come back? 986 01:13:25,176 --> 01:13:28,296 (SNOW CRUNCHES) 987 01:13:35,687 --> 01:13:37,564 EDMUND HILLARY: Our oxygen equipment 988 01:13:37,564 --> 01:13:39,399 was not all that sophisticated, 989 01:13:39,399 --> 01:13:42,152 It only had a pressure gauge on it, 990 01:13:42,152 --> 01:13:46,990 so I never really knew just how much oxygen still remained, 991 01:13:46,990 --> 01:13:50,160 My brain was working fairly energetically 992 01:13:50,160 --> 01:13:53,493 working out just how much time we had left, 993 01:13:58,668 --> 01:14:01,922 HACKETT: One of the problems with extreme altitude climbing 994 01:14:01,922 --> 01:14:04,007 is failure of oxygen systems, 995 01:14:04,007 --> 01:14:09,547 And people die on a regular basis when their oxygen packs up, 996 01:14:10,722 --> 01:14:12,891 DOUGLAS: And then there's a bit of a problem, 997 01:14:12,891 --> 01:14:14,434 Tenzing is really struggling, 998 01:14:14,434 --> 01:14:17,103 where before he was following Hillary quite nicely, 999 01:14:20,357 --> 01:14:21,900 EDMUND HILLARY: I suddenly noticed 1000 01:14:21,900 --> 01:14:24,694 that Tenzing seemed to be in some distress, 1001 01:14:24,694 --> 01:14:26,613 And when I looked at him closely, 1002 01:14:26,613 --> 01:14:29,157 I saw that he was breathing very quickly indeed, 1003 01:14:29,157 --> 01:14:31,409 I immediately examined his oxygen set 1004 01:14:31,409 --> 01:14:34,496 and found that the outlet from his oxygen mask 1005 01:14:34,496 --> 01:14:37,247 was almost completely blocked up with ice, 1006 01:14:42,212 --> 01:14:44,917 Fortunately I was able to release this ice, 1007 01:14:48,885 --> 01:14:50,637 DOUGLAS: Because you 're suddenly hypoxic 1008 01:14:50,637 --> 01:14:52,514 and you 're not thinking straight, 1009 01:14:52,514 --> 01:14:54,349 you may not immediately think, 1010 01:14:54,349 --> 01:14:57,102 "Oh, this is because my oxygen equipment isn't working right," 1011 01:14:57,102 --> 01:15:00,601 You just think, "Oh, my God, I'm incredibly tired all of a sudden," 1012 01:15:08,113 --> 01:15:13,368 VENABLES: You have this strange, slightly surreal blur 1013 01:15:13,368 --> 01:15:17,366 of images and thoughts and ideas going through your head, 1014 01:15:24,337 --> 01:15:29,711 So you have to watch yourself and watch each other very closely, 1015 01:15:56,369 --> 01:15:57,954 EDMUND HILLARY: Well, after about an hour 1016 01:15:57,954 --> 01:16:00,999 we had made quite a distance along the ridge, 1017 01:16:00,999 --> 01:16:03,585 and then we came to a rock bluff 1018 01:16:03,585 --> 01:16:05,921 which barred the way along the ridge, 1019 01:16:05,921 --> 01:16:08,875 Now, I really thought that perhaps this was as far as we were going, 1020 01:16:11,551 --> 01:16:13,136 I took photographs 1021 01:16:13,136 --> 01:16:15,388 because the actual rock itself was very steep 1022 01:16:15,388 --> 01:16:17,879 and we knew that it could stop us, 1023 01:16:24,606 --> 01:16:28,105 PETER HILLARY: Was that step even climbable? 1024 01:16:29,945 --> 01:16:34,108 And was it climbable at 29,000 feet? 1025 01:16:35,659 --> 01:16:37,817 No-one had ever gone there before, 1026 01:16:39,246 --> 01:16:41,037 WHITTAKER: It's a hell of a step, 1027 01:16:42,999 --> 01:16:47,079 You look at that and you think, "Oh, my God, What a decision," 1028 01:16:50,840 --> 01:16:53,969 But Sir Ed took the gamble and thought, 1029 01:16:53,969 --> 01:16:56,673 "What the hell, I'm gonna go for it," 1030 01:17:02,227 --> 01:17:05,313 EDMUND HILLARY: The only way to climb it seemed to me a crack 1031 01:17:05,313 --> 01:17:08,900 where the ice was sticking to the rock, 1032 01:17:08,900 --> 01:17:13,697 and I wasn't at all sure that the ice would remain in place 1033 01:17:13,697 --> 01:17:16,022 when I was wriggling my way up, 1034 01:17:19,953 --> 01:17:22,408 I was scared stiff, 1035 01:17:27,419 --> 01:17:31,339 VENABLES: He just set forth up this nearly vertical step 1036 01:17:31,339 --> 01:17:34,968 and wedged himself in this chimney more or less with his feet, 1037 01:17:34,968 --> 01:17:39,472 his cramponed feet pressing against the rocks on the left 1038 01:17:39,472 --> 01:17:43,852 and his back pushing out against the snow on the right, 1039 01:17:43,852 --> 01:17:46,771 and just hoping the snow wouldn't give way 1040 01:17:46,771 --> 01:17:50,650 and catapult him 11,000 feet down the Kangshung Face, 1041 01:17:50,650 --> 01:17:55,155 Because it's doubtful whether Norgay could've held him on the rope 1042 01:17:55,155 --> 01:17:57,610 if he'd come off, 1043 01:18:18,053 --> 01:18:19,888 (ROCKS TUMBLE) 1044 01:18:19,888 --> 01:18:22,265 PETER HILLARY: Little slabs were breaking off 1045 01:18:22,265 --> 01:18:25,634 and Dad was not really enjoying the conditions, 1046 01:18:27,562 --> 01:18:29,731 You know, if he was back in the Southern Alps, 1047 01:18:29,731 --> 01:18:32,859 he'd probably turn around and try it another day, 1048 01:18:32,859 --> 01:18:35,946 And then, um, that little internal voice going, 1049 01:18:35,946 --> 01:18:38,990 "Ed, my boy, this is Everest, 1050 01:18:38,990 --> 01:18:41,528 "You 've got to go the extra distance," 1051 01:18:49,084 --> 01:18:52,546 EDMUND HILLARY: By jamming back on the ice with my crampons, 1052 01:18:52,546 --> 01:18:54,631 or ice spikes on my boots, 1053 01:18:54,631 --> 01:18:56,967 and scrambling on the rock in front, 1054 01:18:56,967 --> 01:19:01,545 I was able to wriggle and push my way up the crack and onto the top, 1055 01:19:04,182 --> 01:19:07,352 After recovering my breath, I took the rope in 1056 01:19:07,352 --> 01:19:09,020 and, with many a heave, 1057 01:19:09,020 --> 01:19:12,232 and old Tenzing wriggling and scrambling the same, 1058 01:19:12,232 --> 01:19:14,805 got him onto the top of the rock too, 1059 01:19:17,821 --> 01:19:19,864 VENABLES: There are times in life, you know, 1060 01:19:19,864 --> 01:19:22,659 when you have to be bold and decisive, 1061 01:19:22,659 --> 01:19:28,498 So much hung on Hillary's ability to pull out all the stops, 1062 01:19:28,498 --> 01:19:31,914 and he was able to give it that little extra, 1063 01:19:40,969 --> 01:19:43,471 CONEFRE Y: When Hunt had to go down from the South Col 1064 01:19:43,471 --> 01:19:45,724 he turned to Ed and he said, 1065 01:19:45,724 --> 01:19:48,727 "Look, you know, this is our last chance, 1066 01:19:48,727 --> 01:19:51,811 "You 're carrying a lot of people's hopes on your back," 1067 01:19:54,441 --> 01:19:57,611 WESTMACOTT: What would we do if they failed? 1068 01:19:57,611 --> 01:20:01,072 Because that was a feeling, particularly in John Hunt's mind, 1069 01:20:01,072 --> 01:20:05,200 I don't think anybody dared express an opinion, 1070 01:20:17,923 --> 01:20:19,883 EDMUND HILLARY: We continued on 1071 01:20:19,883 --> 01:20:22,093 and we were getting distinctly tired and rather desperate, 1072 01:20:22,093 --> 01:20:24,845 for the summit seemed to be continually eluding us, 1073 01:20:29,976 --> 01:20:32,062 VENABLES: Beyond the Hillary Step, 1074 01:20:32,062 --> 01:20:35,690 it's still a fair distance horizontally to the summit 1075 01:20:35,690 --> 01:20:39,902 and you 're going over three or four broad hummocks, 1076 01:20:41,238 --> 01:20:43,865 And as you get to the crest of one of these hummocks, 1077 01:20:43,865 --> 01:20:46,076 there's another one beyond, 1078 01:20:46,076 --> 01:20:48,863 and you think, "Is this ridge ever gonna end?" 1079 01:21:01,174 --> 01:21:04,261 DAVID SHLIM: There's just certain human beings 1080 01:21:04,261 --> 01:21:06,638 able to put one foot in front of the other, 1081 01:21:06,638 --> 01:21:11,476 you know, relentlessly, psychologically able to do it, 1082 01:21:11,476 --> 01:21:13,718 whereas other people would fail, 1083 01:21:21,152 --> 01:21:23,947 EDMUND HILLARY: We cut steps along the top, round bump after bump, 1084 01:21:23,947 --> 01:21:25,904 keeping looking for the top, 1085 01:21:28,243 --> 01:21:32,872 And finally we actually reached the summit itself, 1086 01:21:32,872 --> 01:21:35,992 (STIRRING MUSIC BUILDS) 1087 01:22:26,051 --> 01:22:28,637 I looked at Tenzing, 1088 01:22:28,637 --> 01:22:31,640 and even underneath his oxygen mask and balaclava 1089 01:22:31,640 --> 01:22:34,643 I could see his infectious grin of sheer pleasure, 1090 01:22:34,643 --> 01:22:36,770 We shook hands, 1091 01:22:36,770 --> 01:22:39,225 To Tenzing this was not enough, 1092 01:22:41,191 --> 01:22:43,151 And we thumped each other on the back 1093 01:22:43,151 --> 01:22:45,108 until we had no breath left, 1094 01:22:47,030 --> 01:22:51,326 I glanced at my watch, It was 11:30, 1095 01:22:51,326 --> 01:22:54,446 (STIRRING MUSIC CONTINUES) 1096 01:22:59,501 --> 01:23:02,546 On top we only spent quarter of an hour, 1097 01:23:02,546 --> 01:23:06,007 We were conscious all the time that our oxygen was running short 1098 01:23:06,007 --> 01:23:09,257 and that we had no time to waste and we must get down again, 1099 01:23:10,887 --> 01:23:13,888 I took my oxygen off in order to take photographs, 1100 01:23:17,769 --> 01:23:20,480 Tenzing dug a little hole in the snow 1101 01:23:20,480 --> 01:23:23,849 and in that he put a gift to the gods, 1102 01:23:29,030 --> 01:23:30,949 Had a good look round at the view, 1103 01:23:30,949 --> 01:23:32,617 and also I took photographs 1104 01:23:32,617 --> 01:23:34,703 down all the main ridges of the mountain 1105 01:23:34,703 --> 01:23:37,372 just to have some proof that we'd been on top, 1106 01:23:48,717 --> 01:23:53,343 And photographed Tenzing waving his ice axe with four flags tied to it, 1107 01:23:55,515 --> 01:23:58,560 It was a tremendous moment for both of us, 1108 01:23:58,560 --> 01:24:01,680 (STIRRING MUSIC CONTINUES) 1109 01:25:00,997 --> 01:25:04,117 (STIRRING MUSIC CONTINUES) 1110 01:26:05,562 --> 01:26:08,682 ('ONLY TO BE' B Y SIX 60 PLAYS) 1111 01:26:27,876 --> 01:26:30,462 ♪ Only to be 1112 01:26:30,462 --> 01:26:33,256 ♪ I live in expectancy 1113 01:26:33,256 --> 01:26:35,884 ♪ No wonder it feels 1114 01:26:35,884 --> 01:26:38,637 ♪ Like this wasn't meant for me 1115 01:26:38,637 --> 01:26:43,099 ♪ But, girl, my mind is so confined 1116 01:26:43,099 --> 01:26:47,687 ♪ That there ain't no point in reasoning 1117 01:26:47,687 --> 01:26:51,233 ♪ Now that it's clear to see 1118 01:26:51,233 --> 01:26:53,944 ♪ It was all in front of me 1119 01:26:53,944 --> 01:26:58,531 ♪ And I'm right where I'm supposed to be 1120 01:26:58,531 --> 01:27:02,494 ♪ Yeah, yeah 1121 01:27:02,494 --> 01:27:07,249 ♪ I'm left just turning pages 1122 01:27:07,249 --> 01:27:09,407 ♪ Mmm 1123 01:27:10,877 --> 01:27:13,338 ♪ Yeah 1124 01:27:13,338 --> 01:27:19,135 ♪ Well, I know that it's worth the ride 1125 01:27:19,135 --> 01:27:22,836 ♪ Ain't it good to be alive? 1126 01:27:33,275 --> 01:27:35,777 ♪ So what will it be? 1127 01:27:35,777 --> 01:27:38,780 ♪ My dreams or my company 1128 01:27:38,780 --> 01:27:41,199 ♪ To lose what is me 1129 01:27:41,199 --> 01:27:44,077 ♪ Or follow the path I see 1130 01:27:44,077 --> 01:27:48,707 ♪ Boy, my mind is so confined 1131 01:27:48,707 --> 01:27:53,003 ♪ That I don't even know where to begin 1132 01:27:53,003 --> 01:27:56,715 ♪ But it took me so long to find 1133 01:27:56,715 --> 01:27:59,426 ♪ That I could leave it all behind 1134 01:27:59,426 --> 01:28:03,972 ♪ 'Cause I've got everything I'd ever need 1135 01:28:03,972 --> 01:28:08,018 ♪ Yeah, yeah 1136 01:28:08,018 --> 01:28:13,106 ♪ I'm left just turning pages 1137 01:28:13,106 --> 01:28:16,151 ♪ Mmm 1138 01:28:16,151 --> 01:28:18,862 ♪ Yeah 1139 01:28:18,862 --> 01:28:24,492 ♪ Well, I know that it's worth the ride 1140 01:28:24,492 --> 01:28:29,238 ♪ Ain't it good to be alive? 1141 01:28:38,506 --> 01:28:41,218 ♪ 'Cause only to be 1142 01:28:41,218 --> 01:28:44,137 ♪ Was all that you got from me 1143 01:28:44,137 --> 01:28:46,681 ♪ You told me it's real 1144 01:28:46,681 --> 01:28:49,684 ♪ And nothing comes easily 1145 01:28:49,684 --> 01:28:51,686 ♪ 'Cause that was the truth 1146 01:28:51,686 --> 01:28:54,356 ♪ I was losing all my youth 1147 01:28:54,356 --> 01:29:00,608 ♪ To a world that's fit for someone else 1148 01:29:02,822 --> 01:29:05,200 ♪ Yeah 1149 01:29:05,200 --> 01:29:09,955 ♪ I'll live just turning pages 1150 01:29:09,955 --> 01:29:12,576 ♪ Mmm 1151 01:29:13,792 --> 01:29:16,044 ♪ Yeah 1152 01:29:16,044 --> 01:29:21,716 ♪ Well, I know that it's worth the ride 1153 01:29:21,716 --> 01:29:24,761 ♪ Oh, whoa, whoa 1154 01:29:24,761 --> 01:29:27,222 ♪ Yeah, yeah 1155 01:29:27,222 --> 01:29:32,310 ♪ I'm left just turning pages 1156 01:29:32,310 --> 01:29:35,438 ♪ Yeah, yeah 1157 01:29:35,438 --> 01:29:37,941 ♪ Yeah 1158 01:29:37,941 --> 01:29:43,655 ♪ But I know it was worth the ride 1159 01:29:43,655 --> 01:29:49,693 ♪ Ain't it good to be alive? 1160 01:29:51,246 --> 01:29:54,207 ♪ Alive 1161 01:29:54,207 --> 01:29:59,830 ♪ Ain't it good to be alive? 1162 01:30:01,965 --> 01:30:05,963 ♪ Alive, ♪ 97990

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