He's obviously traumatised by Shaw's bullying. He has to know there's always someone bigger and tougher and meaner out there. Everyone with a beating heart feels fear. But you must stand, even if you get a hammering, at least stand. All this sneaky shadow play this alphabet soup, this BLM , this cowardly bending of the knee is from people who won't stand but lie and cheat. Always stand. Always face forward and yes you'll get beat down yes you'll get victimisation but just stand and put your chin up.
I heard someone, i think it was Carl Gottlieb, that Shaw wanted top billing on the film, because he was the more experience actor, and because the success of his late films (the Taking of the Phelam 1, 2, 3, The Stng, etc). That`s why he didn' t got the nod, because he was advertised as a main character and he wasn`t. But, i have to say that maybe Roy Scheider deserved the nod too as an actor in a leading role. Watch the film carefully, Scheider carries the film over his shoulders the whole time.
Wasn’t even nominated! And Spielberg wasn’t nominated for best director. Just ridiculous. George Burns wins, 😝 Brad Dourif was great in cuckoo’s Nest that year also
The USS Indianapolis scene in Jaws was a scene like no other in history. There was something strangely alluring and mysterious about Shaw, that isn't seen in any other actor since. And that scene was a perfect example of that. Its like he can put a spell on you, once you are affixed on him, you can't escape until he ends the spell, like Medusa, when you look at her you turn into stone, just like Hooper is in this entire scene, he didn't move or take his eyes off Shaw once. This isn't Dreyfuss acting as Hooper, this was Dreyfuss's actual reaction to Shaws dominance of this scene and how he told the story... You can see on Dreyfuss's face he is witnessing magic. Sometimes everything just fits into place in a freak way and you get the perfection that was this scene. It gives me chills every time. "Y’know, the thing about a shark, he’s got lifeless eyes, black eyes, like a doll’s eyes."
This was so nice to see given the mythology around the filming of Jaws. No matter how it went down then, knowing that Richard has made his peace with it, and has such reverence and respect for Shaw says it all. Thanks for posting this!
I learned that Richard Dreyfuss interviewed about Robert Shaw, which he got emotional about him as he talked about his admiration about his skills as an actor.
Richard Dreyfuss is a national treasure . He is humble and a great actor . So many great movies he's in . He has a chill personality. I think he really made Jaws . Him and Shaw were the perfect yin and yang.
I have read the book on Shaw and also listened to his son Ian talk about his dad. He was, in my opinion, a tremendous talent lost at such a young age. I understand Richard's admiration.
My Dad used to regularly enjoy breakfast/brunch with him in Edmonton, London. Shaw was a fair bit older than my old man, but he liked the fact that my Dad along with being a colourful story teller, was a decent fencer and enjoyed boxing.
It’s crazy how much he’s aged (as we all do) over the years but how recognizable his voice still is from those days. What a fantastic group of actors that was.
Thank you remarkable men special nobody and i mean nobody is going to be as great as those men were sure I can I can do anything I want I am the cheif of police I can do whatever I want love that scene with him and Dreyfuss
I wish we had more men and films like these nowadays I am very thankful I saw this 1975 I was ten years old put the hook in me were going to need a bigger boat
Shaw was one of James Bond's best adversary in From Russia With Love. My favorite role was Mr. Blue the mastermind in The Taking of Pelham 123 one of the best movies ever made.
I believe that Shaw's jabs at Dreyfuss were intended to put that extra emphasis and believability on the contrast between their characters. Robert Shaw was an artist and a genius.
We really like to think that, but the fact was, Shaw could be a total jerk. Their feud was, like many other things in the filming of Jaws, an accident which turn out to work in favor for the film.
Actually, Robert didn't win an Oscar for Man for All Seasons. He was nominated but didn't win. Richard got that wrong. Robert Shaw was very competive. That's how he operated. Now about the Jaws Indianapolis speech. He was very drunk on the first filming of the speech so he had to come back the next day and do it again. However, a very small clip from the first night was used and made it to the film. You can spot it if you look because Dreyfuss has his shirt tucked a different way.
+ Television Archives Dreyfuss didn't necessarily get it wrong. He said Shaw gave an "Oscar-winning performance," but didn't say that he actually won an Oscar. Perhaps he meant that Robert's performance was worhty of an Oscar.
There's a great interview on youtube on the Dick Cavett show with Shaw and Peter Cook where they are both verbally fencing with each other. It's very edgy and Cook accuses Shaw of being too competitive. You can see the clash of two big personalities, intellects and egos. It's all a bit scary, you wouldn't want either of them in your house for a dinner party.
The story of Dreyfus and Shaw in “Jaws” has become its own tale. I think part of it is addressed in the play “The Shark is Broken”, written and staring Robert’s son Ian Shaw, who is the spinning image of his father (I haven’t seen the full play, but it looks amazing). Personally, from what’s come out over the years, the way Robert talked about Dreyfus more privately and all the potential he saw in him, I get the sense he was almost trying to “mentor” him, in his own way (Shaw was a complicated man; very much a “man’s man”, an admitted alcoholic, and a brilliant actor and writer. Also a family man in a way; I get the sense he knew, or wasn’t sure, how long he had left on this earth, and he wanted to provide for his family before he was gone). I think he was trying to get the best performance he could out of Dreyfus (if so, it worked). Seeing Dreyfus at peace with the whole thing now, especially that amazing segment from an Irish talk show where he talks about meeting Robert Shaw’s granddaughter and gets very emotional, really brings it full circle. Both men are great actors; Shaw as Quint may be my favorite performance in any movie. It’s a shame he passed away so young. I would have loved to see Shaw and Dreyfus collaborating in something, be it on stage or film.
The show your talking about where Dreyfus addresses Robert Shaw's granddaughter is the Late Late Show, I know that because I'm Irish but I 100% agree with your comment but if i'm to be honest I would have love to have seen all Three of him together on screen I think Roy Scheider is a seriously underrated actor outside of Jaws he starred in the sorcerer, all that Jazz and a guilty pleasure called Blue Thunder. Jaws was not supposed to be hit but it was...and as time passed by...why wouldn't be? it was directed by Spielberg the man who made magic happen before there was CGI or any of that bull shit!
@@jamiecusack415 Scheider was outstanding alongside Gene Hackman in The French Connection. Too bad his last work (I believe it was) featured him in a t.v. series about a submarine. One critic called it: 'Voyage To The Bottom of the Ratings".
@@jamiecusack415There are a lot of underrated actors and actresses, some of them are famous faces, yet rarely get to properly "act" in some of the movies they do. Others act phenomenally, but the movies or plays they do fall by the wayside. As for CGI, it's not "bull shit"... but using too much of it and poor quality work certainly are.
@@legoland1805 It's hardly nitpicking if a person's correcting a statement that isn't correct. Personally I think it's great that Richard Burton, Peter O'Toole and Glenn Close have all won competitive oscars. What do you mean they didn't. Stop nitpicking nitpicker.
Seriously? "I'll play Claudius to your Hamlet if you play The Fool to my King Lear." Holy mackerel. That's gotta be the highest possible praise of one's acting chops coming from Robert Shaw. Sure wish those two productions had come to pass.
I never believed that ‘feud’ story. Watching their chemistry in Jaws you can see they were great together. Mr Shaw might have been a super eccentric person. My Dreyfus is a great actor might be eccentric as well. bravo!
@@dangeroreilly2028When there is no username in the comment, it is in answer to the original comment. This one is in answer to yours, and so has your username in it.
Thought it was Paul Scofield who won the Oscar for Man for all Seasons? I believe Robert Shaw was nominated for best supporting actor but didn’t win. Good to see Richard Dreyfuss remembering Robert Shaw so fondly. Both fine actors (along with Paul Schofield).
There's no doubt that Robert Shaw was a tremendous, great talent as an actor. He played the intimidator role second to none, which was almost a polar opposite from his real life persona (from the many interviews I've seen about him and of him). We lost him way too soon as I think he would have had quite a range of movies to play excellently as an elder actor.
Richard Dreyfus’s is such a class act! Imagine him being in a news Jaws film that has that original old school Jaws vibe. No Woke cgi Hollyweird stuff just good solid writing, character building and practical effects. R.I.P. Robert Shaw. 👏🏽👏🏽💯
It’s interesting how highly he speaks of him. Robert Shaw’s son (Ian Shaw) auditioned for a play Richard was directing in the 90s, and introduced himself as Robert Shaw’s son, but apparently Richard Dreyfus was not impressed! Both fantastic actors.
True both men were friends how great we're all three men in that very classy comments by Dreyfuss all three men drank and hung out together friends true magic
I remember reading that Richard and Bill Murray had a bit of a feud on What About Bob too. Not that it's related, I'm sure plenty of actors have had long-running animosities with their co-stars during filming. Same with actors and directors too... I wonder if Richard is looking back at their time together filming Jaws through rose-tinted glasses now though. He was certainly very emotional after meeting Shaw's granddaughter on the Late Late Show (Irish TV). It was like he was meeting the relative of a long-lost and dear friend. It struck me as strange.
Absolutely was a feud. They were at each others throat and it was a great story. One of those great Hollywood production stories. There are interviews way older than 15 years with those involved talking about it. It was great stuff.
Richard is a great actor but unfortunately I feel after Mr. Holland’s Opus he made a lot of low budget direct to video/streaming movies. I know he has had supporting roles in a few mainstream movies but I wish he would have had better roles after Mr. Holland. Still his work up until that point is great.
Richard Dreyfus is being very conciliatory towards Robert Shaw. As he should. In Jaws Shaw encouraged a breakout performance by Dreyfus. Although Shaw’s methods were ‘difficult’. He helped Dreyfus to be a great leading man.
Robert Shaw was misunderstood. He was originally from Westhoiughton, near Bolton, U.K. but chose to live his life in rural Western Ireland. He refused to condemn the IRA which people misunderstood as support for the IRA. Robert Shaw said the British should never have remained in Ireland. That opinion pacified the IRA. The IRA pretty much left Shaw & his family alone. After 1916, the IRA continued to grow & even started the Irish Civil War against the legitimate Irish Free Government of the Irish Free State of 26 counties which showed successive U.K. Governments that the IRA didn’t just want the island of Ireland to be ‘Free’ at all. The IRA wanted the whole of Ireland to be under their complete Marxist-Leninist control. I guess the Irish-American lobby in US politics saw that too… eventually.
Every video I see of Richard Dreyfuss has him talking about Robert Shaw. Is there a video of him ever talking about something else and never mentioning Robert Shaw?
It kind of sounds like bullying to me.....vexing...vexation....it would have been interesting to ask Robert Shaw about it...I'm sure he would have given an honest answer. All the actors in Jaws were superb....but I really love Roy Scheider in that film....his character is central obviously but his performance was just so beautifully played. I'm glad Steven Spielberg chose not to make the film too close to the book....the film is better than the book in my opinion.
How many Bourbons did Richard Dreyfuss have? I think Robert Shaw made Richard Dreyfus very humbled early in his career. Richard Dreyfus could and has handled his own but how many Bourbons did it take him to do it?
Richard sounds like a drunk dad talking about his glory days. No shade intended, I mean that it sounds like an intimate gathering where family members have had a few and talk about the old days.
Dreyfuss is always talking in interviews like this about what a huge, gigantic, charismatic personality Shaw was. I've now seen four or five interviews with him and several appearances he made on talks shows like Dick Cavett's , and Shaw frankly comes across as a rambling bore. It's quite awkward/embarrassing in fact listening to him drone on. Maybe Dreyfuss has to magnify Shaw, who obviously bullied him alot, to make sense of his unpleasant experience of him. Most bullies of course become cowards quite quickly if confronted or if you don't show them fear. When Peter Cook faced Shaw down on one of the Cavett shows, Shaw indeed suddenly turned all charming and ingratiating. Dreyfuss should have thrown him into the water with that whiskey.
I agree. I think Shaw came across as a very unlikeable person, particularly on the Dick Cavett Show, on which his wife, Mary Ure also appeared. Full of self-importance and always ready with that unnecessary, boorish show of one-upmanship. Mary, in my opinion, appeared downtrodden and almost afraid to speak, or god forbid disagree with anything Shaw said. I got the feeling she was regularly 'put in her place' in that marriage.
I just saw that Dick Cavett interview with Peter Cook, and I think you are all just projecting. That is just what is called banter. I have had experiences with real bullies, so when you twist that into being a boorish bully, you are confusing the sharks from the guppies. When you even suggest Richard doesn't even know how he feels about someone you never met, that seems manipulative.
@@lucianopavarotti2843 then it is based on what you wrote right here. I am not talking about something that I could only know by meeting you in person, like if you are boring and a bully to people. And I haven't included some dubious psychological analysis on why you are projecting a negative view onto Shaw, as you did with why Richard doesn't feel the way you do about Shaw. A real Bully is how Bill Murray acted to Richard and other crew of what about Bob. The way Richard talked about Bill is very different then how he talks about Robert, because he can tell the difference.
the Indianapolis scene is incredible no doubt but the scene where the chief had a wound ,, and shaw [quinn] ,, said first aid over there! damn that was a very numbing scene before the real shit started to happen
A little bit of revisionist history here. Both Speilberg and when he was alive - Roy Schieder - told stories of the hard time Shaw gave him, and Dreyfuss absolutely couldn't stand being around him. Scheider didn't escape Shaw's harranging either.
All I will say is there are many stories of friction in the sets of Dreyfuss movies going back many decades. You have to wonder if where there is smoke...
I get that "feud" is the wrong word for whatever went on between Shaw and Dreyfus on the set of JAWS almost 50 years ago. That these kinds of stories get greatly exaggerated over time and an actor like Dreyfus, who considers acting a profession and finds all the hype around this movie and movies in general absurd, but he's trying to defuse the "feud" stories from JAWS with stories of how Shaw would challenge him and dig at him "in public" and spray a fire hose in his face, etc. I get what he's saying here, but if Dreyfus truly considered Shaw a "great friend" which he says at the end, then he should talk about how they were friends. I'd rather hear that than how they clashed a bit.
He met Robert's granddaughter years later and cried when they met. It was touching and Richard Dreyfuss is great to remember him fondly.
Shaw was a bully, enough said!!!
He's obviously traumatised by Shaw's bullying. He has to know there's always someone bigger and tougher and meaner out there. Everyone with a beating heart feels fear. But you must stand, even if you get a hammering, at least stand. All this sneaky shadow play this alphabet soup, this BLM , this cowardly bending of the knee is from people who won't stand but lie and cheat. Always stand. Always face forward and yes you'll get beat down yes you'll get victimisation but just stand and put your chin up.
Mr. Dreyfuss comes across as a class act and a gentleman
If anything....Shaw should have won the Oscar for best supporting actor for Jaws....much less not even nominated - an absolute travesty!!!
I heard someone, i think it was Carl Gottlieb, that Shaw wanted top billing on the film, because he was the more experience actor, and because the success of his late films (the Taking of the Phelam 1, 2, 3, The Stng, etc). That`s why he didn' t got the nod, because he was advertised as a main character and he wasn`t. But, i have to say that maybe Roy Scheider deserved the nod too as an actor in a leading role. Watch the film carefully, Scheider carries the film over his shoulders the whole time.
I absolutely agree with your statement. One of the most memorable characters in history.
Watching 'Jaws' at the theater scared the devil out of me but Shaw's performance was so memorable even for a 7 year old
Wasn’t even nominated! And Spielberg wasn’t nominated for best director. Just ridiculous. George Burns wins, 😝 Brad Dourif was great in cuckoo’s Nest that year also
I've been saying that for year's!!
A truly decent and gracious man, not to mention a fine actor. Thanks for sharing 😊
The USS Indianapolis scene in Jaws was a scene like no other in history. There was something strangely alluring and mysterious about Shaw, that isn't seen in any other actor since. And that scene was a perfect example of that.
Its like he can put a spell on you, once you are affixed on him, you can't escape until he ends the spell, like Medusa, when you look at her you turn into stone, just like Hooper is in this entire scene, he didn't move or take his eyes off Shaw once. This isn't Dreyfuss acting as Hooper, this was Dreyfuss's actual reaction to Shaws dominance of this scene and how he told the story... You can see on Dreyfuss's face he is witnessing magic.
Sometimes everything just fits into place in a freak way and you get the perfection that was this scene. It gives me chills every time.
"Y’know, the thing about a shark, he’s got lifeless eyes, black eyes, like a doll’s eyes."
Being drunk all the time lowers your inhibitions and helps when acting.
This was so nice to see given the mythology around the filming of Jaws. No matter how it went down then, knowing that Richard has made his peace with it, and has such reverence and respect for Shaw says it all. Thanks for posting this!
Good friends Shaw absolutely magnificent also Dreyfuss and Scheider legendary
I learned that Richard Dreyfuss interviewed about Robert Shaw, which he got emotional about him as he talked about his admiration about his skills as an actor.
It's obvious that Richard misses Robert Shaw to this day!
What a ridiculous statement!
Mr. Hollands Opus
A MASTERPIECE
peace ✌️ 2023
Richard Dreyfuss is a national treasure . He is humble and a great actor . So many great movies he's in . He has a chill personality. I think he really made Jaws . Him and Shaw were the perfect yin and yang.
Love how Richard crushes the styrofoam cup after Robert crushes the beer can in Jaws
And I read that was improvised by Richard
I have read the book on Shaw and also listened to his son Ian talk about his dad. He was, in my opinion, a tremendous talent lost at such a young age. I understand Richard's admiration.
My Dad used to regularly enjoy breakfast/brunch with him in Edmonton, London. Shaw was a fair bit older than my old man, but he liked the fact that my Dad along with being a colourful story teller, was a decent fencer and enjoyed boxing.
So cool! 😄
It’s crazy how much he’s aged (as we all do) over the years but how recognizable his voice still is from those days. What a fantastic group of actors that was.
Thank you remarkable men special nobody and i mean nobody is going to be as great as those men were sure I can I can do anything I want I am the cheif of police I can do whatever I want love that scene with him and Dreyfuss
What a fantastic film all three men are childhood hero's of mine touches my heart what Dreyfuss said about Shaw true magic
I wish we had more men and films like these nowadays I am very thankful I saw this 1975 I was ten years old put the hook in me were going to need a bigger boat
The voice that told the story of my adolescence through the movie "Stand By Me".
@@jcb3393 thanks for your comment
😂 Thank you for setting the story straight about "Jaws". It is still one of the best movies ever made, and all of your performances were classic!
He was so well casted in the original (and best) version of
"The Taking of Pelham 1.2,3"!
Shaw was one of James Bond's best adversary in From Russia With Love. My favorite role was Mr. Blue the mastermind in The Taking of Pelham 123 one of the best movies ever made.
That was the best Bond fist fight ever, Sean Connery Vs Robert Shaw!
I could sit and listen to actors such as Richard telling old Hollywood tales forever. ❤❤❤
I could listen to Dreyfus all day long.
Still think he looks so handsome, aging so graceful
Shaw was a incredible actor, up there with Burton and harris, a true legend that passed way to soon. Missed but never forgotten.
Richard was great in American Graffiti,,..be good to go back to that time,, just for a weekend. . Great movie..
I believe that Shaw's jabs at Dreyfuss were intended to put that extra emphasis and believability on the contrast between their characters.
Robert Shaw was an artist and a genius.
Exactly what it was
We really like to think that, but the fact was, Shaw could be a total jerk. Their feud was, like many other things in the filming of Jaws, an accident which turn out to work in favor for the film.
Actually, Robert didn't win an Oscar for Man for All Seasons. He was nominated but didn't win. Richard got that wrong. Robert Shaw was very competive. That's how he operated. Now about the Jaws Indianapolis speech. He was very drunk on the first filming of the speech so he had to come back the next day and do it again. However, a very small clip from the first night was used and made it to the film. You can spot it if you look because Dreyfuss has his shirt tucked a different way.
He also wrote that speech overnight apparently
+
Television Archives
Dreyfuss didn't necessarily get it wrong. He said Shaw gave an "Oscar-winning performance," but didn't say that he actually won an Oscar. Perhaps he meant that Robert's performance was worhty of an Oscar.
And we should mention that the Oscar went to Walter Matthau in 'The Fortune Cookie'.
There's a great interview on youtube on the Dick Cavett show with Shaw and Peter Cook where they are both verbally fencing with each other. It's very edgy and Cook accuses Shaw of being too competitive. You can see the clash of two big personalities, intellects and egos. It's all a bit scary, you wouldn't want either of them in your house for a dinner party.
@@Fluoride_Jones Please back up to one minute in this video. He says....."and he won the Oscar."
Big fan of Richard Dreyfuss.
The story of Dreyfus and Shaw in “Jaws” has become its own tale. I think part of it is addressed in the play “The Shark is Broken”, written and staring Robert’s son Ian Shaw, who is the spinning image of his father (I haven’t seen the full play, but it looks amazing). Personally, from what’s come out over the years, the way Robert talked about Dreyfus more privately and all the potential he saw in him, I get the sense he was almost trying to “mentor” him, in his own way (Shaw was a complicated man; very much a “man’s man”, an admitted alcoholic, and a brilliant actor and writer. Also a family man in a way; I get the sense he knew, or wasn’t sure, how long he had left on this earth, and he wanted to provide for his family before he was gone). I think he was trying to get the best performance he could out of Dreyfus (if so, it worked). Seeing Dreyfus at peace with the whole thing now, especially that amazing segment from an Irish talk show where he talks about meeting Robert Shaw’s granddaughter and gets very emotional, really brings it full circle. Both men are great actors; Shaw as Quint may be my favorite performance in any movie. It’s a shame he passed away so young. I would have loved to see Shaw and Dreyfus collaborating in something, be it on stage or film.
The show your talking about where Dreyfus addresses Robert Shaw's granddaughter is the Late Late Show, I know that because I'm Irish but I 100% agree with your comment but if i'm to be honest I would have love to have seen all Three of him together on screen I think Roy Scheider is a seriously underrated actor outside of Jaws he starred in the sorcerer, all that Jazz and a guilty pleasure called Blue Thunder. Jaws was not supposed to be hit but it was...and as time passed by...why wouldn't be? it was directed by Spielberg the man who made magic happen before there was CGI or any of that bull shit!
@@jamiecusack415
My thoughts exactly!
Well stated
@jamiecusack415 Amazing that Shaws grandchildren are English yet have that thick Irish accent!
@@jamiecusack415 Scheider was outstanding alongside Gene Hackman in The French Connection. Too bad his last work (I believe it was) featured him in a t.v. series about a submarine. One critic called it: 'Voyage To The Bottom of the Ratings".
@@jamiecusack415There are a lot of underrated actors and actresses, some of them are famous faces, yet rarely get to properly "act" in some of the movies they do. Others act phenomenally, but the movies or plays they do fall by the wayside. As for CGI, it's not "bull shit"... but using too much of it and poor quality work certainly are.
Were it not for his tragic passing in 1978, Robert Shaw would have ultimately won at least one Oscar during the 80s.
Robert Shaw what an actor, personality, man.
It's like a tough father and son story.
Amazing story. I love it
Actually Paul Scofield won the Oscar for his brilliant performance in Man For All Seasons. Best Actor.
Yes, but without being specific, Dreyfuss was referring to the best supporting actor which actually went to Walter Matthau in 'The Fortune Cookie'.
@@WalterFrith Yes. I was just trying to put in a plug for Paul Scofield. LOL.
@@WalterFrith
Nobody cares! Stop nitpicking, ffs
@@legoland1805 It's hardly nitpicking if a person's correcting a statement that isn't correct. Personally I think it's great that Richard Burton, Peter O'Toole and Glenn Close have all won competitive oscars. What do you mean they didn't. Stop nitpicking nitpicker.
Magnificent movie
Seriously? "I'll play Claudius to your Hamlet if you play The Fool to my King Lear." Holy mackerel. That's gotta be the highest possible praise of one's acting chops coming from Robert Shaw.
Sure wish those two productions had come to pass.
Richard, who is a hugely charismatic guy in his own right, is describing the power of an Alpha.
Dreyfuss is one of the greatest actors EVER. To listen to him bow to Shaw lends even larger credibility to Shaw....
I think Shaw was causing the tension with Dreyfuss to make the tension between Hooper and Quint more believable on screen.
I never believed that ‘feud’ story. Watching their chemistry in Jaws you can see they were great together. Mr Shaw might have been a super eccentric person. My Dreyfus is a great actor might be eccentric as well. bravo!
"Dreyfuss? He just talks." - _Robert Shaw, 1975_
Mr Shaw didn’t have a lot of patience but he was very generous in his own way.
I saw Richard in a Bewitched episode. He looked so young in it. I think I saw him in a Gunsmoke episode too.
_Valley of the Dolls_
Thanks Richard. Robert Shaw is one of the few Greatest Actors Of All Time
I love both of these men. Oh my God.
Richard is a class act.
Touches my heart
So cool just to listen to this
Wish we could see his face when he was imitating Shaw after tossing his bourbon in the ocean.
💯😂😂
Dreyfus famously did not get along with Shaw on the Jaws set but he has never been less than gracious when talking about him
And in this talk he says the "feud" actually never was.
See him with Shaws Daughter.He cries.I think he admired Shaw and Shieder as two real Men and role models,being much younger.
You've literally just watched him saying the feud was BS, and this is your comment?
@@bravo2966 I am guessing your comment was confirming mine, but aimed at TTony?
@@dangeroreilly2028When there is no username in the comment, it is in answer to the original comment. This one is in answer to yours, and so has your username in it.
Richard must have learnt from Shaw because in my opinion there on stage is one of the finest actors I have ever seen.
Thought it was Paul Scofield who won the Oscar for Man for all Seasons? I believe Robert Shaw was nominated for best supporting actor but didn’t win. Good to see Richard Dreyfuss remembering Robert Shaw so fondly. Both fine actors (along with Paul Schofield).
I have realy enjoyed the duo with this two acteurs. Remarquable men's and outstanding performer's.
There's no doubt that Robert Shaw was a tremendous, great talent as an actor. He played the intimidator role second to none, which was almost a polar opposite from his real life persona (from the many interviews I've seen about him and of him). We lost him way too soon as I think he would have had quite a range of movies to play excellently as an elder actor.
I'm glad there was no beef between them.
Great actor, Great Man. and Robert wasn't too bad either : )
Richard Dreyfus’s is such a class act! Imagine him being in a news Jaws film that has that original old school Jaws vibe. No Woke cgi Hollyweird stuff just good solid writing, character building and practical effects. R.I.P. Robert Shaw. 👏🏽👏🏽💯
Now u r on to something
What's wrong with woke. Old fogey
@@kifacorea everything..
Robert Shaw was amazing but so is Richard Dreyfuss!
Shaw was just trying to put him in his place, and show old dog still owns the spot .
Everybody`s talking about Shaw being an alcoholic. Yet Richard Drayfuss were often drinking while filming Jaws too.
yes, he admitted that in his interview with Glenn Beck.
Well " We'll drink to our legs"
All I hear when he speaks is the narrator from stand by me
Same
“Farewell and adieu to you fair Spanish lady
Farewell and adieu you lady of Spain
For we’ve received orders to sail back to Boston….”
Class act.
“Aye, aye captain, I don’t think I can take this abuse much longer “…
Ya got silly hands! Been countin' money all yer life ...
It’s interesting how highly he speaks of him. Robert Shaw’s son (Ian Shaw) auditioned for a play Richard was directing in the 90s, and introduced himself as Robert Shaw’s son, but apparently Richard Dreyfus was not impressed!
Both fantastic actors.
I like Dreyfuss he doesn't seem to give a fuck, he's honest.
❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️
Roy Scheider is the star of this film....hands down.
good very best
True both men were friends how great we're all three men in that very classy comments by Dreyfuss all three men drank and hung out together friends true magic
I remember reading that Richard and Bill Murray had a bit of a feud on What About Bob too. Not that it's related, I'm sure plenty of actors have had long-running animosities with their co-stars during filming. Same with actors and directors too...
I wonder if Richard is looking back at their time together filming Jaws through rose-tinted glasses now though. He was certainly very emotional after meeting Shaw's granddaughter on the Late Late Show (Irish TV). It was like he was meeting the relative of a long-lost and dear friend. It struck me as strange.
I can remember when he did a AMC javelin commercial (hey you kid's getaway from that car)
What a bond between the two
Absolutely was a feud. They were at each others throat and it was a great story. One of those great Hollywood production stories. There are interviews way older than 15 years with those involved talking about it. It was great stuff.
Don't be modest, Richard. You were no slouch in Tin Men or Close Encounters. Or Jaws.
Or anything, for that matter.
And let's not forget "Inserts"
Mr. Holland's Opus is one of my all-time favorite movies.
Richard is a great actor but unfortunately I feel after Mr. Holland’s Opus he made a lot of low budget direct to video/streaming movies. I know he has had supporting roles in a few mainstream movies but I wish he would have had better roles after Mr. Holland. Still his work up until that point is great.
Richard Dreyfus is being very conciliatory towards Robert Shaw. As he should. In Jaws Shaw encouraged a breakout performance by Dreyfus. Although Shaw’s methods were ‘difficult’. He helped Dreyfus to be a great leading man.
Robert Shaw was misunderstood. He was originally from Westhoiughton, near Bolton, U.K. but chose to live his life in rural Western Ireland. He refused to condemn the IRA which people misunderstood as support for the IRA.
Robert Shaw said the British should never have remained in Ireland. That opinion pacified the IRA. The IRA pretty much left Shaw & his family alone.
After 1916, the IRA continued to grow & even started the Irish Civil War against the legitimate Irish Free Government of the Irish Free State of 26 counties which showed successive U.K. Governments that the IRA didn’t just want the island of Ireland to be ‘Free’ at all. The IRA wanted the whole of Ireland to be under their complete Marxist-Leninist control. I guess the Irish-American lobby in US politics saw that too… eventually.
Call Richard he must be so fed up talking about all this stuff
~ ~ Jaw Jaw ~ ~ Shaw Shaw ~ ~ Awe Awe ~ ~
Every video I see of Richard Dreyfuss has him talking about Robert Shaw. Is there a video of him ever talking about something else and never mentioning Robert Shaw?
That's because everyone asks him about Robert Shaw. I'm sure Richard would have been content to never say that name again.
It’s just sad that people have to get old.
Shaw liked kicking people off there comfort zone. A jokster.
@Jacob Walsh - did you record this video?
Yes I did!
Hopefully, one day Dreyfus will warm up to Shaw.
Curt Davbar Dillinger 😎
the white Tbird man
It kind of sounds like bullying to me.....vexing...vexation....it would have been interesting to ask Robert Shaw about it...I'm sure he would have given an honest answer. All the actors in Jaws were superb....but I really love Roy Scheider in that film....his character is central obviously but his performance was just so beautifully played. I'm glad Steven Spielberg chose not to make the film too close to the book....the film is better than the book in my opinion.
How many Bourbons did Richard Dreyfuss have? I think Robert Shaw made Richard Dreyfus very humbled early in his career. Richard Dreyfus could and has handled his own but how many Bourbons did it take him to do it?
Both men were good friends
Richard sounds like a drunk dad talking about his glory days. No shade intended, I mean that it sounds like an intimate gathering where family members have had a few and talk about the old days.
Shaw bullied Richard during the filming of Jaws, everyone on set knew it! Enough said!
Shaw sadly never won an Oscar for A Man For All Seasons.
Shaw should have won an Oscar for his magnificent performance Renaissance performance Dreyfuss and Scheider no slouches either
Roy Scheider even said that Dreyfuss got on Shaws nerves!
Dreyfuss is always talking in interviews like this about what a huge, gigantic, charismatic personality Shaw was. I've now seen four or five interviews with him and several appearances he made on talks shows like Dick Cavett's , and Shaw frankly comes across as a rambling bore. It's quite awkward/embarrassing in fact listening to him drone on. Maybe Dreyfuss has to magnify Shaw, who obviously bullied him alot, to make sense of his unpleasant experience of him. Most bullies of course become cowards quite quickly if confronted or if you don't show them fear. When Peter Cook faced Shaw down on one of the Cavett shows, Shaw indeed suddenly turned all charming and ingratiating. Dreyfuss should have thrown him into the water with that whiskey.
I agree. I think Shaw came across as a very unlikeable person, particularly on the Dick Cavett Show, on which his wife, Mary Ure also appeared. Full of self-importance and always ready with that unnecessary, boorish show of one-upmanship. Mary, in my opinion, appeared downtrodden and almost afraid to speak, or god forbid disagree with anything Shaw said. I got the feeling she was regularly 'put in her place' in that marriage.
Well Put ! 👏
I just saw that Dick Cavett interview with Peter Cook, and I think you are all just projecting. That is just what is called banter. I have had experiences with real bullies, so when you twist that into being a boorish bully, you are confusing the sharks from the guppies. When you even suggest Richard doesn't even know how he feels about someone you never met, that seems manipulative.
@@neaituppi7306 I guess when you say we are manipulative and projecting without having met us, then....
@@lucianopavarotti2843 then it is based on what you wrote right here. I am not talking about something that I could only know by meeting you in person, like if you are boring and a bully to people. And I haven't included some dubious psychological analysis on why you are projecting a negative view onto Shaw, as you did with why Richard doesn't feel the way you do about Shaw. A real Bully is how Bill Murray acted to Richard and other crew of what about Bob. The way Richard talked about Bill is very different then how he talks about Robert, because he can tell the difference.
Sounds like Dreyfuss has a drinking problem in this video.
the Indianapolis scene is incredible no doubt but the scene where the chief had a wound ,, and shaw [quinn] ,, said first aid over there! damn that was a very numbing scene before the real shit started to happen
A little bit of revisionist history here. Both Speilberg and when he was alive - Roy Schieder - told stories of the hard time Shaw gave him, and Dreyfuss absolutely couldn't stand being around him. Scheider didn't escape Shaw's harranging either.
What about the whiskey dump?
Robert Shaw seemed like a nut...God bless him...
All I will say is there are many stories of friction in the sets of Dreyfuss movies going back many decades. You have to wonder if where there is smoke...
Judging from just her hair, I’m guessing that blonde is very attractive.
Not sure why he needed the bullet proof vest to tell the story.😂
I am so glad to hear the truth right from the horse's mouth!!!
I get that "feud" is the wrong word for whatever went on between Shaw and Dreyfus on the set of JAWS almost 50 years ago. That these kinds of stories get greatly exaggerated over time and an actor like Dreyfus, who considers acting a profession and finds all the hype around this movie and movies in general absurd, but he's trying to defuse the "feud" stories from JAWS with stories of how Shaw would challenge him and dig at him "in public" and spray a fire hose in his face, etc. I get what he's saying here, but if Dreyfus truly considered Shaw a "great friend" which he says at the end, then he should talk about how they were friends. I'd rather hear that than how they clashed a bit.
I am thinking Richard might have had a bit too much.
We're not going after Tommy Cats Hooper!