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The mom of a close friend was at a cocktail party where Francoise Gilot was and asked her what it was like to have the partner of Picasso and Jonas Salk ( it was the '70s) and she replied "why don't you ask them what it was like to be with me."
Well, it's so obvious for a mature person what kind of relationships are like this. Without him she'd be nobody. Without her he wouldn't flattered himself. A kind of transaction like plenty around.
Great woman and a painter, not a great painter, and her works have certainly never achieved the greatness, importance and a 'paradigm shift' in how we look at art Picasso's works have. Besides, nowhere does she claim Picasso disparaged her as an artist, only that they had a complex relationship (plus a 40 year age gap) where she gave as good as she got.
Of course it’s easy for you to say what you say, but let’s face it, she was the only woman that left Picasso. Let that sink in. Picasso was a great artist, but he used other people to his advantage as any other person who wants to reach to the top. Francoise was smart and she was talented.
I have read her book twice and loved it both times. This was my second time watching this interview also. So delightful to see such an intelligent, creative woman who always seems to have known who she was and stood her ground! A fun, enlightening interview.
She is very beautiful. I saw a video of her in 2017 and she still retains her beauty and despite her age her vibe is incredibly youthful. It's very inspiring.
As often he did, Charlie tried to "out clever" the subject. It did NOT happen with Francois. She clearly ran this show! Wonderful to see her remaining so substantially herself in the face of everything, and recalling it so deftly. Brava to her. And paint in peace.
I love this interview, there is so much history wrapped up in it, and beauty in so many ways. You have to admire Françoise, and also appreciate the incredible skill of Charlie Rose.
I saw this woman on the Morning Show today 20 Aug 17. At 95 she is still "at it", still sharp, and painting! She said, she will not ever leave it, it may leave her, but she will not leave it. (painting)
Several instances where Rose didn't understand at all what Gilot was saying. I felt he wasn't really listening to her, at those times, because she was quite clear in what she said, and he seemed to be trying to make her fit into his idea of her, rather than accepting what she said. Despite all his obsequious laughter, I didn't think he got her as a person at all.
She is wonderful and I do not see the same thing said about Francoise Gilot cutting Charlie off. She is a woman who has lived through the unimaginable, she is brilliant, an excellent artist, with stories to tell. Why can't this female cut into Charlie when it is her story to tell not Charlie's. For a woman abused by Picasso and other men and over-powered by her dad as her male role model, she was strong and held her own. I am sad to see that she could not discern better the intimate abilities of her partners to support her own values. She is a lovely women. An honor to have access to Charlie interviewing her.
So very interesting! I'm not an artist. Just happened upon this interview by accident, but enjoyed it thoroughly. Thank you for posting Manufacturing Intellect. And thank heaven for UA-cam!
I read her book years abput her time with him. Boy was she strong for a girl so young. Im delighted to find this interview. I admire and like her so much and her mischievous sense of humour is very appealing also. Noticed the nasty male comments. Weak guys.
She sticks to her guns, despite Pose's obnoxious nagging, where he wants her to capitulate and say that she's only famous because of her association. She has her own self-esteem and identity within herself, and her body of work to be proud of. Ultimately, we should, everyone, absorb this lesson. You are not who you know, you are what you are. And "the world" and its opinion can take a hike.
Lisa Majersky yes...thats correct...spot on! She is absolutely committed to her work....right since the beginning...a true painter....(and an inspiration actually..)
Well, it's so obvious for a mature person what kind of relationships are like this. Without him she'd be nobody. Without her he wouldn't flattered himself. A kind of transaction like plenty around.
The interviewer is none too bright. At around 19:09, when she starts "I was not bad looking, but you know there are so many..." she means that her relationship with Picasso was first of all intellectual and artistic, in that way probably distancing herself from other muses of Picasso's. Maybe she is fooling herself a bit, who knows, but that is the jist of her expressed opinion. The interviewer interrupts her by protesting that she was MUCH MORE than "not bad looking", very beautiful indeed, thinking that he is paying homage, when, in that context, he is insulting her.
I have read Ms. Gilot's Life with Picasso book a number of times, what with my lifelong interest in her and her sometimes stormy relationship with Picasso.
mr Charlie rose was speechless when she said she felt no pain when Picasso died. ''but dont you love the father of your children'' love is not gratitude. it is given FREELY from the heart. this exposes his lack of understanding LOVE & why he needed to force women into relationship with him. a common failing with this type of ''man''
I have read a lot about this woman thru the years but watching this interview helped me see who she really was-a beautiful, talented and strong woman. I think Pablo, being a Spaniard, was somewhat chauvinistic as well as narcissistic. She lived a better and more fulfilling life without him. I had traveled to Spain and France to "find" Piccaso but I think he was a much better artist than he was a person.
Love Francoise Gilot, what a talented, intelligent, sophisticated and beautiful woman. Charlie Rose, oh Charlie Rose, all he did sadly inflected by his scandal.
Yes, he kind of got on my nerves. I think he studied and was coached on how to talk intelligently to a painter. I kept asking myself what was wrong with this interview even though it was so interesting. He wasn't bad, but he wasn't THERE.
It started awkwardly with his pronouncing her name, "Francois". Later he asked her if the war was " the most exciting time " of her life, or some such stupid remark. Yikes.
Francoise Gilot was a very, very strong woman, who came from a family who helped her be what she became, both from her mother and her father's sides: independent, artistic, a free woman. Which she became: first with Picasso, then for the rest of her life. Her relationship with Picasso was due to special circumstances. But she knew the artist he was; he saw the personality she had; that's how they clicked and had two children together. Her life went and on. And her life example and work is now with us, forever 🌟🌟🌟
She defends Picasso at every turn in such an admirable way with such strength and confidence despite Charlie roses insistence that he knows more about it than she does
Im from London. I used to clean and help an old lady, also from who was a friend of Picasso. She told me a few stories which I didn’t appreciate at the time. She looked like Bette Davis’s when she was young.
Picasso wasn’t easy but she said he had definitely influenced her positively in her painting. A very special lady, beautiful, talented and kind. I heard a recent interview with her on the BBC they played because of her death, and I was struck then by how interesting she was.
@@samyandkitty8399 Charlie Rose is interested in hearing stories about Picasso and Matisse, and doesn't really care about her work. That must happen to her a good deal, but she handles the slight with grace. I think, too, he's interested in her as a woman/muse/icon.
I have always respected Charlie Rose. Here, I could be watching Entertainment Tonight. It would appear that she is being unnecessarily contrary if you weren't listening carefully. On top of that she is speaking her truth and it seems to irk him that she is having to correct him.
Spoke too soon. He is getting better as it goes along. He seems delighted when she finally says "exactly" in agreement. I imagine it would be a difficult interview.
Your reading of him is the same as mine.I noticed that he couldn't believe she no longer loved Picasso despite having two children with him. He simply didn't get it, that a woman didn't continue to need a famous man. I found him a ponderous bore, who often missed what she was saying because it didn't suit his view.
@@julietholmesacourt Or is it Picasso's ego knows that she is young and she might lose interest in him. Francoise is wanting to focus on their children, and as a family that includes her parents (grandparents to her children), and PAINTING - then the relationship with Picasso is left behind.
Interesting in this day and age of Rose-less-ness. I couldn't help imagining what Rose was thinking about his own abuse of women while interviewing Francoise- the woman who stood up to Picasso and later married Jonas Salk.
I agree 100%. She grew into the Woman she was from her fathers grooming. He was an end to a need. He needed her,she admits she needed him. She is A strong woman through out her whole life. she's admirable.
You clearly know nothing about Picasso. He was a genius and not a spoil child. She gets interviews because she fucked Picasso seventy years ago. That's the giant of a man he was.
We know absolutely nothing about their life.picasso was the greatest painter of those past 100 years and totally creative until the end of a very long life...he has crossed many women like many others men...some of them were strong women,others not...he was not a monster,but a that level of genius, his art was the most important thing and it's normal and all those women knew it!
@Clink Roslam If he was so horrible why did so many people love him so much? He was absolutely adored by a myriad of men and women from the age he was a child, to when he was practically a peasant in Paris to when he became a celebrity. Like @ChritopherPena put it above, his level of genius is not something easy to cope with and you're judging someone of the early twentieth century with the morals and ethics of the 21st century. Sad you can't appreciate his art, otherwise you wouldn't say such silly things.
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Fascinating, and intelligent woman. Only woman to leave Picasso.
The mom of a close friend was at a cocktail party where Francoise Gilot was and asked her what it was like to have the partner of Picasso and Jonas Salk ( it was the '70s) and she replied "why don't you ask them what it was like to be with me."
Priceless
Ahead of her time.
Smart lady!
Very French. Very Artist. Very Wonderful!
Yes!
What a talented, witty, charming lady. Rest in peace ❤
Fantastic woman, an example to us all of how to believe in, and honour, ourselves whatever men may think of us
I’m so privileged to have met Ms Gilot over three evenings. She was a superb conversationalist and most elegant artist, happy to speak of her work.
Fantastic woman and an artist!!! She put Picasso in his place.
How so?
Well, it's so obvious for a mature person what kind of relationships are like this.
Without him she'd be nobody. Without her he wouldn't flattered himself.
A kind of transaction like plenty around.
Great woman and a painter, not a great painter, and her works have certainly never achieved the greatness, importance and a 'paradigm shift' in how we look at art Picasso's works have.
Besides, nowhere does she claim Picasso disparaged her as an artist, only that they had a complex relationship (plus a 40 year age gap) where she gave as good as she got.
Of course it’s easy for you to say what you say, but let’s face it, she was the only woman that left Picasso. Let that sink in. Picasso was a great artist, but he used other people to his advantage as any other person who wants to reach to the top. Francoise was smart and she was talented.
Gosh what a Queen! His questions are .... provoking I love how calm and collected she is. She is fast becoming one of my legends artists
She is simply delightful!! And I enjoy her intelligence and originality. Gotta read her book.
I have read her book twice and loved it both times. This was my second time watching this interview also. So delightful to see such an intelligent, creative woman who always seems to have known who she was and stood her ground! A fun, enlightening interview.
What a great, strong, intelligent, fascinating woman ❤️ I like a lot her paintings ❤️😍 Thank You for sharing this interview 🙏
She is very beautiful. I saw a video of her in 2017 and she still retains her beauty and despite her age her vibe is incredibly youthful. It's very inspiring.
RIP Francoise. Brave lady
Classy and a great painter,her work is unique.😍
As often he did, Charlie tried to "out clever" the subject. It did NOT happen with Francois. She clearly ran this show! Wonderful to see her remaining so substantially herself in the face of everything, and recalling it so deftly. Brava to her. And paint in peace.
That was one of the annoying characteristics. I'm so glad she didn't play his game.
I doubt he has ever 'out clevered' anyone.
Remarkable and Gifted thankyou for sharing this lovely interview with Ms Francoise Gilot thoroughly enjoyed watching Her book is amazing
Her work is beautiful!!!
Amazingly empowered and gifted woman Bravo...
I love this interview, there is so much history wrapped up in it, and beauty in so many ways. You have to admire Françoise, and also appreciate the incredible skill of Charlie Rose.
The one is a great painter, the other a clumsy, crude egomaniac of an interviewer. They’re in no way comparable.
I saw this woman on the Morning Show today 20 Aug 17. At 95 she is still "at it", still sharp, and painting! She said, she will not ever leave it, it may leave her, but she will not leave it. (painting)
What a brilliant person she is. Thank you for shearing.
A fantastic woman/ artist/ and role model. For ever 🌿
Several instances where Rose didn't understand at all what Gilot was saying. I felt he wasn't really listening to her, at those times, because she was quite clear in what she said, and he seemed to be trying to make her fit into his idea of her, rather than accepting what she said. Despite all his obsequious laughter, I didn't think he got her as a person at all.
Agreed.
TOTALLY SPOT ON. He's so irritating here.
A good interviewer always listens, he’s not bad he just doesn’t listen so well
I love what she shared in spite of the interruptions and contrariness of Charley. Her art is beautiful. She is smart and strong.
Actually Charlie did his job... it was a great interview and it looks like she enjoyed it.
She is wonderful and I do not see the same thing said about Francoise Gilot cutting Charlie off. She is a woman who has lived through the unimaginable, she is brilliant, an excellent artist, with stories to tell. Why can't this female cut into Charlie when it is her story to tell not Charlie's. For a woman abused by Picasso and other men and over-powered by her dad as her male role model, she was strong and held her own. I am sad to see that she could not discern better the intimate abilities of her partners to support her own values. She is a lovely women. An honor to have access to Charlie interviewing her.
Wonderful, wonderful human being.
This lady is fascinating!
Phenomenal woman. Phenomenal artist. Never in a shadow. "Lions mate with lions"😍
Very profound sharing, thank you pouring your soul!
So very interesting! I'm not an artist. Just happened upon this interview by accident, but enjoyed it thoroughly. Thank you for posting Manufacturing Intellect. And thank heaven for UA-cam!
Great insight of a wise women and her journey.
She's still alive as of today (2019) She is 97.
Still alive! 98 years young now.
and *still* alive. she’s 99 now.
@Okiroshi she died
@Okiroshi why
2021 and shes still alive!
I read her book years abput her time with him. Boy was she strong for a girl so young. Im delighted to find this interview. I admire and like her so much and her mischievous sense of humour is very appealing also. Noticed the nasty male comments. Weak guys.
She sticks to her guns, despite Pose's obnoxious nagging, where he wants her to capitulate and say that she's only famous because of her association. She has her own self-esteem and identity within herself, and her body of work to be proud of. Ultimately, we should, everyone, absorb this lesson. You are not who you know, you are what you are. And "the world" and its opinion can take a hike.
Lisa Majersky yes...thats correct...spot on! She is absolutely committed to her work....right since the beginning...a true painter....(and an inspiration actually..)
Loved Charlie's interview, he was the best !
Like a painting - a wonderful interview .
Very sincere and honest woman. Picasso was a brute who took advantage of her innocence and the French occupation by Germany.
Picasso was a macho.
Well, it's so obvious for a mature person what kind of relationships are like this.
Without him she'd be nobody. Without her he wouldn't flattered himself.
A kind of transaction like plenty around.
Picasso was a man of his time who attracted beautiful women, but yes he was very cruel to the women in his life
She’s do cubism as Picasso, and she do it really well. Françoise was inspired directly in every aspect...🤩 She’s proud, and very wonderful.
❤️ Thank you Francoise 🌹
This is what an interview should be !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! And what an articulate, clear mind lady. (Thanks to her father)
Who comes close to her today?
One exclamation point is sufficient, thank you very much.
RIP Francoise Gilot. The only woman that left Picasso
And lived longer !
I have read her book, and enjoyed the interview, I do see Picasso’s influence in her work.
What a fantastic woman.
To an older man, the younger girlfriend is such a thrill and super beautiful. But Pablo blew it!!
a strikingly sane and fascinating woman. am looking forward to reading her book.
Fascinating, beautiful, intelligent, and classy gorgeous and wonderful artist woman.
Fascinating, intelligent, classy gorgeous woman!
I would like to remember that Picasso was violent with her, but she never presents herself as victim! She is a winner 👏👍❤️
I admire this lady!
The only Lady to leave Pablo Picasso, he said " what kind of woman leaves Picasso?? That was the young glamorous Fran, he must cried rivers of tears.
A great woman indeed!
Fascinating woman and fascinating life!
Francoise Gilot will always be someone I look up to throughout my life. I wish I could be friends with her.
The interviewer is none too bright. At around 19:09, when she starts "I was not bad looking, but you know there are so many..." she means that her relationship with Picasso was first of all intellectual and artistic, in that way probably distancing herself from other muses of Picasso's. Maybe she is fooling herself a bit, who knows, but that is the jist of her expressed opinion. The interviewer interrupts her by protesting that she was MUCH MORE than "not bad looking", very beautiful indeed, thinking that he is paying homage, when, in that context, he is insulting her.
I have read Ms. Gilot's Life with Picasso book a number of times, what with my lifelong interest in her and her sometimes stormy relationship with Picasso.
Oh my God, she is so amazing!
A wise and loving father she had.
She’s fabulous. A woman after my own heart. So smart.
mr Charlie rose was speechless when she said she felt no pain when Picasso died. ''but dont you love the father of your children'' love is not gratitude. it is given FREELY from the heart. this exposes his lack of understanding LOVE & why he needed to force women into relationship with him. a common failing with this type of ''man''
I have read a lot about this woman thru the years but watching this interview helped me see who she really was-a beautiful, talented and strong woman. I think Pablo, being a Spaniard, was somewhat chauvinistic as well as narcissistic. She lived a better and more fulfilling life without him. I had traveled to Spain and France to "find" Piccaso but I think he was a much better artist than he was a person.
Most men at that time were chauvinistic women weren’t important
Picasso was a pervert and I suspect a kind of an obsessed maniac.
Love Francoise Gilot, what a talented, intelligent, sophisticated and beautiful woman.
Charlie Rose, oh Charlie Rose, all he did sadly inflected by his scandal.
This is the epitome of emotional intelligence.
Very sad, mourning and wonderful couple.
What a lady! What a force.
Francoise is very good here at remaining calm and tolerant with Charlie Rose and his inanities.
Yes, he kind of got on my nerves. I think he studied and was coached on how to talk intelligently to a painter. I kept asking myself what was wrong with this interview even though it was so interesting. He wasn't bad, but he wasn't THERE.
It started awkwardly with his pronouncing her name, "Francois". Later he asked her if the war was " the most exciting time " of her life, or some such stupid remark. Yikes.
@cubomania3 By many miles!
He listens to himself, in love with his own voice.
Francoise Gilot was a very, very strong woman, who came from a family who helped her be what she became, both from her mother and her father's sides: independent, artistic, a free woman. Which she became: first with Picasso, then for the rest of her life. Her relationship with Picasso was due to special circumstances. But she knew the artist he was; he saw the personality she had; that's how they clicked and had two children together. Her life went and on. And her life example and work is now with us, forever 🌟🌟🌟
Excellent interview
Siempre...
.. inspirador../!!!
She defends Picasso at every turn in such an admirable way with such strength and confidence despite Charlie roses insistence that he knows more about it than she does
She was intellectually superior to PP and that's why he fought her.
Im from London. I used to clean and help an old lady, also from who was a friend of Picasso. She told me a few stories which I didn’t appreciate at the time. She looked like Bette Davis’s when she was young.
Respected advice, takes the doubt out
Picasso wasn’t easy but she said he had definitely influenced her positively in her painting. A very special lady, beautiful, talented and kind. I heard a recent interview with her on the BBC they played because of her death, and I was struck then by how interesting she was.
Very candid
Honoring her spirit the day she died at 104 I purchased the Merchant Ivory movie Living With Picasso!
Fascinating and Wonderful. I love. ❤️❤️❤️.
Great advice to take
Great interview!!
Wow. What a woman.
what a beautiful life
Schallom. Rest in peace, Madame Gilot
Glorious footage
What a fantastic woman😊👍♥️
Wonderful ❤️
.
Fly high , Françoise ❣
⚘🕊
Presenting a painter without showing at least 30 of her best artworks , is stupid .
@@samyandkitty8399 Charlie Rose is interested in hearing stories about Picasso and Matisse, and doesn't really care about her work. That must happen to her a good deal, but she handles the slight with grace. I think, too, he's interested in her as a woman/muse/icon.
She's 10 now ans til painting ! Incredible.
“You don’t necessarily begin life at the beginning”. ( from her book)
I can picture her expression as she said it. 👌👌👌👌👌
what a sweet heart.
I respect her
RIP dear Francoise!
Could someone please tell me what the song is that begins this program, and who is singing?
Lovely lady. Thank you Charlie Rose.
Merci pour cette vidéo..je suis algérien : artiste peintre
I have always respected Charlie Rose. Here, I could be watching Entertainment Tonight. It would appear that she is being unnecessarily contrary if you weren't listening carefully. On top of that she is speaking her truth and it seems to irk him that she is having to correct him.
Spoke too soon. He is getting better as it goes along. He seems delighted when she finally says "exactly" in agreement. I imagine it would be a difficult interview.
Your reading of him is the same as mine.I noticed that he couldn't believe she no longer loved Picasso despite having two children with him. He simply didn't get it, that a woman didn't continue to need a famous man. I found him a ponderous bore, who often missed what she was saying because it didn't suit his view.
He doesn’t listen to her but immediately jumps to another subject missing the chance for real exchange. Dismissive imo.
@@julietholmesacourt Or is it Picasso's ego knows that she is young and she might lose interest in him. Francoise is wanting to focus on their children, and as a family that includes her parents (grandparents to her children), and PAINTING - then the relationship with Picasso is left behind.
How irritating that when they' re discussing the blue painting above the fireplace, the videographer DOESN'T SHOW THE PAINTING! AAAAGGGGHHH
Interesting in this day and age of Rose-less-ness. I couldn't help imagining what Rose was thinking about his own abuse of women while interviewing Francoise- the woman who stood up to Picasso and later married Jonas Salk.
Deviants never see themselves as deviant and often times they hate the deviance of others. It's a disease.
Deviants never see themselves as deviant and often times they hate the deviance of others. It's a disease.
@@jhb61249 Probably true.
Just because he’s abusive doesn’t mean he can’t be charming, that is how they draw women in. Narcissistic
“His eyes were wandering “. Her: “Not only his eyes”
Her voice bears an uncanny similarity to that of Catherine Deneuve. Françoise has lived an extraordinary life in her nearly hundred years.
Do your thang bae for me you will down in history as a powerful and strong woman. I have respect for you always
Very powerful woman!
stunning, super interview , Francoise is unbelievable and Charlie Rose so great
I love that song by "Dalida"
ik kap me too.
Picasso was there to make her a strong woman while she grew up from a girl to a mother! Sadly, Picasso stayed like a spoiled child.
shiningc323 oh my god you put it so well👏
I agree 100%.
She grew into the Woman she was from her fathers grooming.
He was an end to a need.
He needed her,she admits she needed him.
She is A strong woman through out her whole life.
she's admirable.
You clearly know nothing about Picasso. He was a genius and not a spoil child. She gets interviews because she fucked Picasso seventy years ago. That's the giant of a man he was.
We know absolutely nothing about their life.picasso was the greatest painter of those past 100 years and totally creative until the end of a very long life...he has crossed many women like many others men...some of them were strong women,others not...he was not a monster,but a that level of genius, his art was the most important thing and it's normal and all those women knew it!
@Clink Roslam If he was so horrible why did so many people love him so much? He was absolutely adored by a myriad of men and women from the age he was a child, to when he was practically a peasant in Paris to when he became a celebrity. Like @ChritopherPena put it above, his level of genius is not something easy to cope with and you're judging someone of the early twentieth century with the morals and ethics of the 21st century. Sad you can't appreciate his art, otherwise you wouldn't say such silly things.