I LOVED Mitchum from the first time I saw him---in about 1966. Not only was he a fine actor, but I had a crush on him. To me he was the epitome of "cool".
This interview shows why Mitchum was so great. He was a man you could see in a deep philosophical conversation about the meaning of life and then ten minutes later be winning a bar fight.
Probably my favourite actor. I hope he had wardrobes stuffed full of awards for 'Night Of The Hunter', 'Cape Fear', and 'The Friends Of Eddie Coyle'. Super-cool.
In a true "lets talk movies" setting, as opposed to another "lets interview a superstar" piece, Robert Mitchum looks so at ease. Informative, interested, interesting, enthusiastic, responsive. The man oozed class. Terrific interviewer too . Really knows his stuff and has an engaging style Great stuff, thanks for posting.
....and right before your eyes, ladies & gentlemen, is the very definition of the Alpha Male. He was born with every possible gift that can be given a man. When they made Robert Mitchum, they broke the mold. Holy shizzle....!! 😄
And it’s crazy how Jimmy and Bob were different in terms of how they carried themselves. Jimmy was basically Mr. Rogers while Bob was the Rebel-Bad Boy. Yet Both of Them Left Huge Marks on the Acting World👍🏿👍🏿👍🏿👍🏿👍🏿
It is tribute to the interviewer's skills that this must be the finest Mitchum interview I have ever seen. Such intelligence, humour, knowledge, his mastery of the English language matches Welles & Ustinov. He clearly relished the opportunity to talk about the business rather than his-self - a rare quality in any actor. Parkinson got him to sing, but this guy got him to reveal the professional actor rather than the Star he was and will always be to me. I have a number of fave actors - Welles, Bogart, Mason, McGoohan, but if forced to choose no 1, Mitchum would nudge the other Robert (Ryan) into 2nd place.
Very funny anecdote he tells about Arafat and Zionists. The sad thing is that it wouldn’t be all that many years later that Mitchum descended into real alcoholism. But back in the late ‘70s he was still witty, charming and congenial. And it’s a real treat to be able to watch the actual film clip, which so often isn’t the case with UA-cam interviews.
This interviewer asks serious, interesting questions. I saw Mitchum on Parkinson, and the questions were so shallow and inane. ("Do you get in a lot of fist fights?" etc.) I suppose it's no surprise when the show is called Cinema Showcase, but Jim Whaley is a really good host.
Michael Parkinson is still a very overrated talk show host. He was simply lucky to be the sole, leading TV chat show in the 'seventies, when visiting Hollywood stars needed a place to park their rear end and plug their new movie.
@@glamdolly30 Your statement is probably almost blasphemous in England, but I think you're right. Now that you mention it, any Parkinson interview I can recall was completely saccharin. It's sort of like Phil Donahue dominating the 70's in America... yeah, there were only three channels! (Although even Donahue tried to tackle serious subjects. Parky is just empty.)
@@christopherg9806 Nailed it! Michael Parkinson, Phil Donahue, Mike Douglas, Dick Cavett and countless other white, middle class, middle aged, male TV talk show hosts cornered the market in celebrity chat in the 1970s, with little discernible talent or charisma (and alas, a conveyor belt of equally underwhelming, cookie-cutter successors followed in successive decades, the ghastly Jay Leno among them). Incidentally, my comments about Michael Parkinson are born of personal experience - I'm a former BBC TV producer who worked with Parkinson during his resurgence of the early 'noughties. Like so many other famous British TV chat show hosts I worked closely with, he was (in my admittedly not so humble opinion), astonishingly lazy, and without question, hugely overrated (mostly by himself). That said, I believe history is the final, and in truth the only judge of talent. Many of the most celebrated media names of their generation are also the most forgettable, and will ultimately be consigned to the recycling bin of history.
What actor would've said the word "disinterested" and then, knowing it was the wrong word, said "uninterested."? Mitchum. If you enjoy this, see his interview with Cavett in 1981.
I was charmed by Robert Mitchum's obvious love of England, I had no idea he was an Anglophile. A great shame he drank the Michael Winner Kool Aid - he was a lousy writer/director, and the movie was inevitably panned.
Very funny anecdote he tells about Arafat and Zionists. It’s unfortunate, but it wasn’t all that many years after this that Mitchum descended into real alcoholism. He was still very bright, charming and congenial in the late ‘70s. And it’s a real treat to be able to actually watch the film clip, which so often is not the case with UA-cam interviews.
Dommage que la traduction en français est très mauvaise il y a des mots qu'ils ne veulent absolument rien dire 😮pauvre Mitchum les fans sont tristes 😥 Mais j'ai le dvd au moins le film est sauvé ❤un jour peut-être on compradra les interviews 🎉
The conservatory scene with James Stewart was filmed at Avery Hill Park and Winter Gardens in Greenwich, and the exterior shots are Knebworth House in Hertfordshire.
I Consider Mitchum and Bogart to be the best the acting community 40s-70s(RM) amonst the best. However, "The Big Sleep" may have been exclusively left in Bogart's care in his stunning role as Doghouse Riley.
Oversized shades were something of a trademark for Robert Mitchum when off-duty from acting. I believe he felt they gave him some measure of psychological privacy, from the scrutiny of celebrity he did not relish.
This is only 10 years before scrooged he aged like 30 years in 10 years lol I can get my big break at 70 today and still look younger than most actors 30nyears younger then I'll be looking 50 when I'm 100 lol
@@plasticweapon. Bobby D, Sylvester Stallone, Mike Madsen and Clint Eastwood all said Bob was one of Their Favorites. Mike said that Bob was His Idol and His Role Model and He Modeled His Career and Acting Style after Mitch.
Mitchum was a great man, actor and star. A shame he got involved with this sub-standard movie, directed (and, unforgivably, written), by the deadly hand of Michael Winner. The reviews at the time were real stinkers - the general view was the plot was hard to follow, the all-star cast were simply going through the motions, and transplanting the action to London made no sense at all. Mitchum was 60 when he played Phillip Marlowe for the second time, in the book the character was 33. Slightly odd to see a twenty-something woman coming on to him in that early clip from the movie.
This guy was one of those old-time sociopaths and the reason behind those glasses in every interview is beyond me, not unless he was hiding bloodshot eyes😮
@@glamdolly30 My guess is that it's a subconscious way of hiding some deep-rooted secrets, they don't even realize it themselves and if you listened to a great many of his interviews and read up on his history, he had a lot of insecurities coupled with a possible guilt complex regarding his "stardom". It's all they can do to create a barrier between themselves and the masses, as a criminal psychology major, that would be my diagnosis. Did you ever notice how many of these professional poker players wear them? It's so people can't read their facial expressions, or so they believe, they believe that they're giving something about themselves away. Well ya know what they say, "The Eyes Are A Window Into The Soul". Roy Orbison started wearing them after his wife's death, Elvis was hardly ever without them, there's an obvious pattern there. I've put them on now and then when I've been high. You dont find it odd or a bit ridiculous for someone to sit down for an interview wearing sunglasses, especially on something like "The Tonight Show"?, yeah, there's definitely something deep going on with that. Mitcham was definitely a very disturbed guy🤔
Same reason every star wore 'em - privacy and protection - psychological, of course. That level of unrelenting public scrutiny is hard to handle 24 -7.
Mitchum trying to avoid speaking honestly about Winner. The Big Sleep remake was a critical and commercial failure. The interviewer asking if would do another Marlow film when he should know that Marlow was written to be in his mid 30s. Mitch could have played his father!
Robert obviously has some he will talk to and some he won't. ok this one he will and I wish he hadn't. and I would say that to Robert Mitchum with out any question.
I LOVED Mitchum from the first time I saw him---in about 1966. Not only was he a fine actor, but I had a crush on him. To me he was the epitome of "cool".
What a man ! Such a cool dude.
What a great legendary actor Robert was..
This interview shows why Mitchum was so great. He was a man you could see in a deep philosophical conversation about the meaning of life and then ten minutes later be winning a bar fight.
Mr Mitchum was not only an amazing actor but a good dresser and always a good interview.
Robert Mitchum was truly Mr.Cool, a brilliant natural actor, and incredibly handsome. When he spoke his mind he was REAL.
Just goes to show how easy Mr Mitchum could be with the right interviewer. A cracking interview. 👌👌👌
He was a lot smarter than he sometimes pretended to be. This is the real guy.
what a find! mitch fans assemble!
This was a great find. A marvellous interview. I am a real Robert Mitchem fan, he will always me my No 1.
There will never be another Robert Mitchum!
The coolest son of a bitch who ever lived. And the interviewer was great. Prepared. Knew what questions to ask and wasn’t rattled.
Probably my favourite actor. I hope he had wardrobes stuffed full of awards for 'Night Of The Hunter', 'Cape Fear', and 'The Friends Of Eddie Coyle'. Super-cool.
Bob Mitchum is a national treasure.
Better than any actor today!
In a true "lets talk movies" setting, as opposed to another "lets interview a superstar" piece, Robert Mitchum looks so at ease. Informative, interested, interesting, enthusiastic, responsive. The man oozed class.
Terrific interviewer too . Really knows his stuff and has an engaging style
Great stuff, thanks for posting.
What a class act
....and right before your eyes, ladies & gentlemen, is the very definition of the Alpha Male. He was born with every possible gift that can be given a man. When they made Robert Mitchum, they broke the mold. Holy shizzle....!! 😄
Absolutely right - and happily married to one woman only, from boy to man. What a man!
He’s so hot and so cool at the same time!
Great actor and great interview. He also was a great mimic which he displayed slightly in this interview.
Interesting seeing Mitchum acting with James Stewart, remembering they died within a day of each other in 1997.
And it’s crazy how Jimmy and Bob were different in terms of how they carried themselves. Jimmy was basically Mr. Rogers while Bob was the Rebel-Bad Boy. Yet Both of Them Left Huge Marks on the Acting World👍🏿👍🏿👍🏿👍🏿👍🏿
Wow. Excellent
He's a man wow. He's so bloody honest love that
For the love of God UA-cam please put the movie Thunder Road up for us. Been years since I saw it on TCM.
Robert MItchum movies!
ok.ru/video/c1468579
Ain't you gotta Dvd player?
My grandfather had a very similar voice as Mitchum, very deep but with a NE England accent. Like Mitchum he was a lifelong smoker.
It is tribute to the interviewer's skills that this must be the finest Mitchum interview I have ever seen. Such intelligence, humour, knowledge, his mastery of the English language matches Welles & Ustinov. He clearly relished the opportunity to talk about the business rather than his-self - a rare quality in any actor. Parkinson got him to sing, but this guy got him to reveal the professional actor rather than the Star he was and will always be to me. I have a number of fave actors - Welles, Bogart, Mason, McGoohan, but if forced to choose no 1, Mitchum would nudge the other Robert (Ryan) into 2nd place.
No, changing it from California to London didn't work. Farewell my lovely was a better movie.
Great actor
fine interview, good moderator, great witty Robert M.
The definition of cool.
Mitchum was an original. He was very intelligent and someone who knew him said that he was constantly reading.
Fascinating dude.
Thanks for this. Ask the right questions. Mr. Mitchum was just a regular guy. Had some talent also.
Mitchum looks great here. It's a shame he wasn't put in more films.
Next time Mr. Mitchum is one your show, please ask him about his Photographic Memory. I find that totally fascinating.
It may be a while
Hmmm... You'd need a medium to reach him. Mitchum's been dead 27 years!
😂😂😂 Don’t hold your breath.
I’ve seen several of his interviews where he seems either annoyed or drunk he is obviously neither here and very sharp and showing intellect
As a UGA Journalism graduate, nice to see this.
Great thanks
Wow, I never heard of this remake maybe because of the British production. I'll have to see it now!
'The Big Sleep' was a Michael Winner production, therefore, sadly lived up to its name despite the all-star cast.
Un attore bravissimo! Dovrebbero trasmettere. Ancora i suoi ffilm
Mitchum had just turned 60 here. One Cool Customer - if I may be so bold.. .. !
Fantastic!
Wonderful!
Very funny anecdote he tells about Arafat and Zionists.
The sad thing is that it wouldn’t be all that many years later that Mitchum descended into real alcoholism.
But back in the late ‘70s he was still witty, charming and congenial.
And it’s a real treat to be able to watch the actual film clip, which so often isn’t the case with UA-cam interviews.
he "didn't descend into real alcoholism" until after the 70's? i don't know who told you that, but that's bullshit.
They don't make um like him anymore.. Just watched " "Heaven Knows Mr. Allison". One of my favorites.. Thank yoh for so ma y wonderfu! characters..
This interviewer asks serious, interesting questions. I saw Mitchum on Parkinson, and the questions were so shallow and inane. ("Do you get in a lot of fist fights?" etc.) I suppose it's no surprise when the show is called Cinema Showcase, but Jim Whaley is a really good host.
Michael Parkinson is still a very overrated talk show host. He was simply lucky to be the sole, leading TV chat show in the 'seventies, when visiting Hollywood stars needed a place to park their rear end and plug their new movie.
@@glamdolly30 Your statement is probably almost blasphemous in England, but I think you're right. Now that you mention it, any Parkinson interview I can recall was completely saccharin. It's sort of like Phil Donahue dominating the 70's in America... yeah, there were only three channels! (Although even Donahue tried to tackle serious subjects. Parky is just empty.)
@@christopherg9806 Nailed it! Michael Parkinson, Phil Donahue, Mike Douglas, Dick Cavett and countless other white, middle class, middle aged, male TV talk show hosts cornered the market in celebrity chat in the 1970s, with little discernible talent or charisma (and alas, a conveyor belt of equally underwhelming, cookie-cutter successors followed in successive decades, the ghastly Jay Leno among them).
Incidentally, my comments about Michael Parkinson are born of personal experience - I'm a former BBC TV producer who worked with Parkinson during his resurgence of the early 'noughties. Like so many other famous British TV chat show hosts I worked closely with, he was (in my admittedly not so humble opinion), astonishingly lazy, and without question, hugely overrated (mostly by himself).
That said, I believe history is the final, and in truth the only judge of talent. Many of the most celebrated media names of their generation are also the most forgettable, and will ultimately be consigned to the recycling bin of history.
My number 1 ...Always
Far beyond cool.
"The magic of movies."
Interesting to hear what he says about London and it's multi culture. This not go with the accusations that he was a racist.
Although Bob could Be VERY COLORFUL when He was Drunk😂😂😂😂
What actor would've said the word "disinterested" and then, knowing it was the wrong word, said "uninterested."? Mitchum. If you enjoy this, see his interview with Cavett in 1981.
'71.
Cool❤ Brilliant actor.
The man is a brain!
wow
Getting a pair of shades like that and waring them in public or on camera is freaky.
Stunning stunning STUNNING man. He's Robert Mitchum and the rest of us are not. 😄
Only a star of Mitchum's rare charisma could pull it off. And he did!
I was born on that day
Proper 70s sunglasses!
Bob was a regular visitor to Britain made at least a dozen films here
I was charmed by Robert Mitchum's obvious love of England, I had no idea he was an Anglophile.
A great shame he drank the Michael Winner Kool Aid - he was a lousy writer/director, and the movie was inevitably panned.
ONE TAKE BOB. TOP MAN. FIOR LAOCH
(IRISH FOR TRUE LEGEND)
When Mitch got six sheets against the wind time to go. He was a bad ass and mean drunk.
Anyone know what that song is called at the end of the video
It's known as bumper music. Ask your app.
Very funny anecdote he tells about Arafat and Zionists.
It’s unfortunate, but it wasn’t all that many years after this that Mitchum descended into real alcoholism.
He was still very bright, charming and congenial in the late ‘70s.
And it’s a real treat to be able to actually watch the film clip, which so often is not the case with UA-cam interviews.
How IRONIC, MITCHUM & STEWART died on the same day in 1997
Dommage que la traduction en français est très mauvaise il y a des mots qu'ils ne veulent absolument rien dire 😮pauvre Mitchum les fans sont tristes 😥 Mais j'ai le dvd au moins le film est sauvé ❤un jour peut-être on compradra les interviews 🎉
Affected, what about those shades
I love watching Robert Mitchum, but I have to say I find it very rude when people wear sunglasses whilst being interviewed.
"Whenever I'm invited" 😅
Fantastic. Miss him in films
Funny guy.
might have been Kew Gardens
The conservatory scene with James Stewart was filmed at Avery Hill Park and Winter Gardens in Greenwich, and the exterior shots are Knebworth House in Hertfordshire.
What's with the sunglasses?
He was Bob Mitchum. He could get away with it 🤷🏿🤷🏿🤷🏿🤷🏿🤷🏿
I believe his trademark oversized shades were a reaction the the crazy level of scrutiny he got as a star, which he was not comfortable with.
Steve Stalzle is a cool guy.
I Consider Mitchum and Bogart to be the best the acting community 40s-70s(RM) amonst the best. However, "The Big Sleep" may have been exclusively left in Bogart's care in his stunning role as Doghouse Riley.
Who was in charge of toupees ?
Bob man's man ...like Sean Connery 😊
WHY THE SHADES ? A black eye ....(?).
Oversized shades were something of a trademark for Robert Mitchum when off-duty from acting. I believe he felt they gave him some measure of psychological privacy, from the scrutiny of celebrity he did not relish.
This is only 10 years before scrooged he aged like 30 years in 10 years lol I can get my big break at 70 today and still look younger than most actors 30nyears younger then I'll be looking 50 when I'm 100 lol
Mitchum was an alcoholic, that ages you faster than anything. I believe he also had dentures fitted in later life, which alone, aged him dramatically.
Robert Mitchum could be the real Father or Robert De Niro and Michael Madsen😮😮😮😮😮
what??
Madson got his swag by watching Mitch.
@@plasticweapon. Bobby D, Sylvester Stallone, Mike Madsen and Clint Eastwood all said Bob was one of Their Favorites. Mike said that Bob was His Idol and His Role Model and He Modeled His Career and Acting Style after Mitch.
@@NYVoice. Yep. Said Bob was His Idol and His Role Model👍🏿👍🏿👍🏿👍🏿
@@allengreene9954 Every actor worth a damn learns from those who went before.
Mitchum was a great man, actor and star. A shame he got involved with this sub-standard movie, directed (and, unforgivably, written), by the deadly hand of Michael Winner.
The reviews at the time were real stinkers - the general view was the plot was hard to follow, the all-star cast were simply going through the motions, and transplanting the action to London made no sense at all.
Mitchum was 60 when he played Phillip Marlowe for the second time, in the book the character was 33. Slightly odd to see a twenty-something woman coming on to him in that early clip from the movie.
This guy was one of those old-time sociopaths and the reason behind those glasses in every interview is beyond me, not unless he was hiding bloodshot eyes😮
You don't understand why stars, subjected to unnatural levels of public scrutiny, often choose to wear sunglasses?
@@glamdolly30 My guess is that it's a subconscious way of hiding some deep-rooted secrets, they don't even realize it themselves and if you listened to a great many of his interviews and read up on his history, he had a lot of insecurities coupled with a possible guilt complex regarding his "stardom". It's all they can do to create a barrier between themselves and the masses, as a criminal psychology major, that would be my diagnosis. Did you ever notice how many of these professional poker players wear them? It's so people can't read their facial expressions, or so they believe, they believe that they're giving something about themselves away. Well ya know what they say, "The Eyes Are A Window Into The Soul". Roy Orbison started wearing them after his wife's death, Elvis was hardly ever without them, there's an obvious pattern there. I've put them on now and then when I've been high. You dont find it odd or a bit ridiculous for someone to sit down for an interview wearing sunglasses, especially on something like "The Tonight Show"?, yeah, there's definitely something deep going on with that. Mitcham was definitely a very disturbed guy🤔
HARRY ANDREWS BUTLER
He always wore sunglasses indoors, wonder why.
Same reason every star wore 'em - privacy and protection - psychological, of course. That level of unrelenting public scrutiny is hard to handle 24 -7.
Mitchum trying to avoid speaking honestly about Winner. The Big Sleep remake was a critical and commercial failure. The interviewer asking if would do another Marlow film when he should know that Marlow was written to be in his mid 30s. Mitch could have played his father!
Robert obviously has some he will talk to and some he won't. ok this one he will and I wish he hadn't. and I would say that to Robert Mitchum with out any question.
Uh huh ...