TRUMAN CAPOTE DISCUSSES WRITING "IN COLD BLOOD" 1968 interview

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  • Опубліковано 28 лис 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 180

  • @cheyenneasiafoxe292
    @cheyenneasiafoxe292 10 місяців тому +35

    A true genius and a wonderful writer. In Cold Blood is a masterpiece I taught in all my college classes for years.

    • @trawlins396
      @trawlins396 3 місяці тому +1

      I'm reading it now. It truly is a masterpiece. I'm surprised by how beautifully written it is. I wasn't expecting that.

    • @elizabethcloutman8913
      @elizabethcloutman8913 Місяць тому

      @@trawlins396 Capote’s description of western Kansas in the book’s beginning pages is sheer perfection.

  • @hastyone9048
    @hastyone9048 5 років тому +69

    In Cold Blood is surely one of the greatest non fiction novels ever written. It can be read many times over and the reader will never tire of it.

    • @jubalcalif9100
      @jubalcalif9100 Рік тому +5

      I heartily concur. A magnificent work.

    • @rongenung
      @rongenung 11 місяців тому +5

      I have read it at least eight times. It is a masterpiece. I wish I had written it!

  • @mcraig1969
    @mcraig1969 5 місяців тому +7

    Truman was a genius. Overcoming a tragic childhood and becoming one of the most prolific writers of the 20th century.

  • @vestcoat
    @vestcoat 3 місяці тому +4

    What a genius…an extraordinary writer. That book still haunts me 55 years after reading it.

  • @elainemarie8725
    @elainemarie8725 5 років тому +41

    This man was beyond his years...❤️

  • @annalisette5897
    @annalisette5897 9 місяців тому +10

    The first chapter of "In Cold Blood" is amazing, a style for all writers to aspire. The whole is a masterpiece.

  • @rongenung
    @rongenung 11 місяців тому +9

    "In Cold Blood" is a work of art---a literary masterpiece. Many of its sentences are elegant, even stately, in their prose----these include the first and last sentences of the book. It is a book you will never forget having read.

  • @HistoricFilmsArchive
    @HistoricFilmsArchive  3 роки тому +18

    The program was called "Good Company". The interviewer is F. Lee Bailey. It was recorded at Capote's Sagaponack NY studio.

    • @flamingvans1135
      @flamingvans1135 3 роки тому +3

      No wonder the flowers matched both the chair and his clothes!

    • @sgt.thundercok4704
      @sgt.thundercok4704 2 роки тому +1

      @@flamingvans1135 Hah! I was wondering and assumed they set the flowers for him on the set he was on.

  • @wvanderwahl
    @wvanderwahl 5 років тому +121

    In Cold Blood was fiction based on facts. It was never intended to chronicle or to tell the story of the murders exactly as they occurred. What Truman did was humanize the killers. He didn't downplay the horror of the crimes. He didn't forgive them in my opinion though I understand why many would disagree. The said its one of the best works I've read.

    • @JesusSavesSinners
      @JesusSavesSinners 3 роки тому +12

      Not true. Truman Capote did not spend 5 plus years on this book to not get the facts correct. It is not Historical Fiction. It is a True Crime Novel that is not considered or called Fiction. He and Harper Lee interviewed a good portion of the community. Truman Capote did everything possible to get all the available facts to accurately tell what actually happened. He documented entire conversations and asked the murderers what was going through their minds.

    • @jackjohnhameld6401
      @jackjohnhameld6401 3 роки тому +6

      @@JesusSavesSinners Truman did spend years interviewing and writing.
      Publishing extracts in The New Yorker was one thing, but the book began to take on a form in his mind, and he believed this required the proper end : the execution of the two murderers. Jack Olsen said Capote fabricated conversations and scenes.
      The English journalist Ken Tynan said Capote did not do enough to stop the two men from being executed (Tynan was very anti capital punishment) and in truth he delayed publication of the book until their execution. Some say the last pages were invention.
      I remain a Capote admirer, I just wish he had not wasted his last years drinking.

    • @gonavy5607
      @gonavy5607 Рік тому +3

      Certainly Truman told the story the way he wanted it told, but it was all true. It wasn’t fiction.

    • @highjinxwillie62
      @highjinxwillie62 Рік тому +6

      Nobody knows how the murders went down, except for the murderers. And TC explained the murders the way the KBI and the FBI believe how the murders happened. And the way the killers (scum) said they happened, and as we know they pointed their crooked fingers at each other. And TC did have empathy for the killers. But the beginning of book he makes sure everyone that reads it. Falls in love with the all American Clutter family, especially Nancy ❤. But what is strange on my behalf is I never saw the movie 🍿

    • @highjinxwillie62
      @highjinxwillie62 Рік тому +3

      You are absolutely 100% correct. ​@@JesusSavesSinners

  • @daleandrews3552
    @daleandrews3552 10 місяців тому +6

    To say Truman Capote was a great author is a gross understatement. To write "In Cold Blood", he did countless hours interviewing the townspeople of Holcom, Kansas, the Kansas police, and even the killers themselves. He was even present for their executions!
    Capote was so smart he never brought a recorder to the interview with whoever he was recording and claimed close to a 90% recall. One of my book reports in high school in the '60's was of this book. I admit it was rather easy, since I had seen the movie as well! Capote just had a way with words that totally encapsulated the reader. One of the finest authors of our time.

    • @songbirdsinging1878
      @songbirdsinging1878 9 місяців тому +5

      i just watched a documentary that revealed his friend Harper Lee was at his side while he did his interviews and research for his book. apparently she took copious notes and handed them over to him.

    • @trawlins396
      @trawlins396 3 місяці тому

      ​@@songbirdsinging1878they both took notes. The townspeople said that.

  • @josephballerini3730
    @josephballerini3730 6 років тому +69

    I like this because it shows him before he destroyed his mind and abilities with alcohol. I've read just about everything he wrote. He was an incredible writer.

    • @jadezee6316
      @jadezee6316 6 років тому +4

      he never destroyed his mind or abilities by alcohol...in fact the mind is the last thing to go///most alcoholics die from organ ...liver/kidneys etc...shutdown long before they lose their "abilities"....show me one who can run a hundred yard dash but cant write his name

    • @josephballerini3730
      @josephballerini3730 6 років тому +12

      I believe in the Gerald Clarke bio of Truman, he writes that after Truman was arrested a few times in eastern Long Island, doctors determined that his brain had physically degraded from alcohol abuse. I’m citing that from memory but I do remember that detail because it was so horrific.

    • @chevydude658
      @chevydude658 6 років тому +21

      @@josephballerini3730 You are correct with your first statement. He absolutely did destroy his abilities with drugs and alcohol. He wasn't able to finish his later works because he had degraded his abilities to concentrate and focus on productive writing. To say mental faculties aren't effected by alcohol and drug use is absurd.

    • @user-tt5li8hf2f
      @user-tt5li8hf2f 6 років тому +1

      @@chevydude658 he did not destroy his brain with alcohol and drugs.
      He died, like every human being does.

    • @user-tt5li8hf2f
      @user-tt5li8hf2f 6 років тому

      @@jadezee6316 you are right,Jade.

  • @sunnysmiles8211
    @sunnysmiles8211 5 років тому +67

    Truman was a social chameleon. He knew what people wanted to hear, he understood their motivations. I think a lot of this had to do with his abandonment by his parents at a young age. He adapted to learn how to make people like him, so they wouldn’t leave him, But in the end they did because he betrayed their trust.

    • @m.e.d.7997
      @m.e.d.7997 2 роки тому +2

      The mother did not totally abandon him

    • @sgt.thundercok4704
      @sgt.thundercok4704 2 роки тому

      I agree. I summarize it by saying he BS's a lot.

    • @tnt01
      @tnt01 9 місяців тому +1

      A narcissistic sociopath.

  • @lydacastruita2923
    @lydacastruita2923 6 років тому +74

    I think it's beautiful and sad the way Truman acts when the interviewer talks about the kiss on the cheek that Perry gave to him (to Truman) before he died. Just look at him, he's almost crying..

    • @jadezee6316
      @jadezee6316 6 років тому +9

      CAPOTE CLAIMS that perry fell in love with him(perry told him so) during the time they spent together....though he capote also says he DID NOT fall in love with perry.

    • @lianawinans4531
      @lianawinans4531 4 роки тому +6

      @@jadezee6316 WHERE DOES HE SAY THAT??!! PLEASE GIVE LINK! I've seen it before but i wanna see it for myself. I think capote was in love with perry though. I mean, i can just tell from his writing.

    • @nebulous6660
      @nebulous6660 2 роки тому

      Poor baby. Did the victims get a kiss on the cheek from a loved one before they were blown away with a shotgun? 🖕

  • @sanctuary8396
    @sanctuary8396 14 днів тому

    Capote's intellect was so natural and swift. It really is kind of amazing how fast he could learn, and then apply his knowledge.

  • @searchlight18
    @searchlight18 6 років тому +155

    In Cold Blood is one of the best books ever written. It is one of those books you dont want to end.

    • @haileydegray4143
      @haileydegray4143 6 років тому +6

      searchlight17 I am reading it now and I fully agree

    • @searchlight18
      @searchlight18 6 років тому +8

      +Hailey Degray Thanks. I read it thirty years ago.

    • @lukegriffin6577
      @lukegriffin6577 6 років тому +1

      That's funny, I absolutely can't stand it. I can't think of one memorable part. Each to their own I guess.

    • @searchlight18
      @searchlight18 6 років тому +4

      +Luke Griffin That's okay to each his own. I thought 'the Great Gatsby' sucked, but so many critics rave about it. Hah!

    • @lukegriffin6577
      @lukegriffin6577 6 років тому +1

      searchlight17 fair enough 😂I'm not a GG fan either

  • @boopah4365
    @boopah4365 2 роки тому +7

    His interview on Carson just 4 short years after this he looks like a different person..He really went down hill quickly after this.

  • @dennisdivine7448
    @dennisdivine7448 8 місяців тому +2

    Aside from Harper Lee, one other figure to not overlook in the development of "In Cold Blood": Random House's co-founder and publisher Bennett Cerf. He was Truman Capote's mentor for getting the book published, and you have to wonder if Cerf hadn't died in the early '70s, Capote might have been talked out of his "Answered Prayers" debacle.
    Bennett Cerf championed authors as diverse as Capote and Dr. Seuss, and he was a raconteur, a toastmaster, a connoisseur of humor (having a syndicated newspaper column and compiling several books on quips and stories), and he was best known as the enthusiastic panelist on the 17-year run of the panel game show "What's My Line?". On that show, the tuxedo-clad Cerf oozed Manhattan sophistication without being snobby; he was just as much of a cheerleader for contestants coming on the show in mundane jobs as he was for the celebrity guests.

  • @empireofpeaches
    @empireofpeaches 6 років тому +44

    I just watched the movie Capote. I am surprised they didn't show the kiss on the cheek mentioned here.

    • @lianawinans4531
      @lianawinans4531 4 роки тому +1

      I think Perry and Truman were in love. You should watch the 2006 movie Infamous. It's awesome, and sweet, and horribly sad.

  • @bluegalaxy7746
    @bluegalaxy7746 11 місяців тому +3

    He was magnificent before substance destroyed him....the most amazing man..he radiated sheer intelligence

  • @dereknagel840
    @dereknagel840 4 роки тому +6

    Special talent! His decline was a shame. This interview was in '68 watch his Dick Cavet interview in '78 poor bastard went through the ringer.

  • @bread_is_life2476
    @bread_is_life2476 Рік тому +4

    I read and wrote a book report on In Cold Blood in high school, it was in my opinion the best book I've ever read.

  • @songbirdsinging1878
    @songbirdsinging1878 9 місяців тому +3

    i find him to be utterly facinating but how he could lie so easily and assuredly is astonishing!!
    Quote: "the impact of Harper Lee on Truman Capote's true-crime novel, 'In Cold Blood.' Lee helped her childhood friend with much of the research for the book, although she was not credited when the book was published."
    he was not a very good friend...

  • @howardsternssmicrophone9332
    @howardsternssmicrophone9332 4 місяці тому +1

    Robert Blake was great in that movie. His character wasn't great, but his character had one redeeming quality in that he prevented the other guy from assaulting the young girl. He said something like "I can't stand people that can't control themselves" or something like that. That always stuck with me for some reason.

  • @gabrielabarros2036
    @gabrielabarros2036 3 роки тому +10

    ok but philip seymour was just like him in Capote, im shocked

  • @carolinejones8382
    @carolinejones8382 9 місяців тому +3

    I find Truman Capote a very interesting charecter it is so sad that he sabotaged his happiness by betraying confidences that his friends told him. I believe gossip to be a symptom of lack of humility and low self-worth. I would far rather have had him as a chum than the husbands most of his friends had to turn themselves into pretzels for in order keep themselves in their favour. I find him and his Swans interesting and am reading about them at the moment.

  • @rosag1788
    @rosag1788 6 років тому +13

    I read it in 1970 in Spanish translation, and I dare to say, maybe Gabriel García Márquez was inspired by it to write his Chronicle of a Foretold Death who is also based in a true story that happened in Cartagena, Colombia, and became one of the 100 novels ever written. I like both novels, but if Gabo was influenced by Capote, I also dare to say, the student overpassed the master.

  • @TheSaltydog07
    @TheSaltydog07 Рік тому +3

    He's not his usual flamboyant self here.

  • @janicemurphy7878
    @janicemurphy7878 4 роки тому +11

    I always refrained from reading in cold blood, because of the horror of the crime but I'll read it now. Can you W

    • @lolizorz
      @lolizorz 4 роки тому +3

      I've been reading it in the past few days.60 pages left.I say you should read it.

    • @dy9278
      @dy9278 4 роки тому +1

      No. I never say never, but I am betting that I will not

    • @lianawinans4531
      @lianawinans4531 4 роки тому +1

      You will love it. It really connects you with the killers. It's not that graphic. But you'll empathize with Dick and Perry.

  • @Handiman544
    @Handiman544 2 роки тому +4

    I remember reading how frustrated Truman Capote was during the writing of his book when he was approaching the final chapter and could not finish it because the murderers were not executed. He was in a hurry to finfish his book (deadlines) so he was in a hurry for them to be executed so he could finish it.

  • @atxbee
    @atxbee 5 років тому +14

    today marks the 60th anniversary of the murder of the clutter family :(

  • @bradgrauer9148
    @bradgrauer9148 3 роки тому +2

    Rich Little doesn't impersonation of him so good it's hard 2 even tell the difference

  • @DCI-Frank-Burnside
    @DCI-Frank-Burnside Рік тому +1

    Perhaps it's the distance in time but I found Hickock and Smith drifting into myth, Americana, and the American landscape. But then the front cover of my copy had the photos of the killers which brought the reality of their being to the fore. The effect was profound.

  • @philljenner4045
    @philljenner4045 5 років тому +9

    Just watched the movie, it was pretty good but of course not comparable really with the book. As he says, that's impossible.

  • @s123le
    @s123le 5 років тому +7

    3:08 Truman Capote gets the struggle

  • @vampoftrance
    @vampoftrance Рік тому +2

    I know a journalist who also doesn't need to record or write down. He did a news piece on us and quoted me exactly!

    • @meghanmisaliar
      @meghanmisaliar Рік тому

      And?

    • @elizabethcloutman8913
      @elizabethcloutman8913 Місяць тому

      @@meghanmisaliar
      Truman claimed to have the same ability to recall events, etc., in perfect detail without taking notes.

  • @randymarsengill6035
    @randymarsengill6035 Рік тому

    He’s one of those writers that you never want to stop writing. 😎

  • @DLR1144
    @DLR1144 9 місяців тому +2

    I have the same auditory memory he referenced. Dominant auditory learners are the least common.

  • @MARIANSCATLIFFE
    @MARIANSCATLIFFE 11 місяців тому +1

    Capote was a genius writer

  • @DStuart-s1q
    @DStuart-s1q Місяць тому

    His IQ, he said was, "185". I believe him and I love him so much as a fellow Alabamian. What it must have been like to interview the most famous writer in the world.

  • @barbsyorkies
    @barbsyorkies 3 роки тому +1

    U are a genius Truman...t.y..for all of ur books.....

  • @charleswinokoor6023
    @charleswinokoor6023 25 днів тому

    It’s amazing that he didn’t need to take notes during interviews.

  • @dorrielove
    @dorrielove 8 місяців тому

    Truman was a Genius 👍🏻

  • @SuperBagshot
    @SuperBagshot 9 місяців тому +1

    There are parallels between him and Tennessee Williams

  • @benrosn8154
    @benrosn8154 7 місяців тому

    True genius right here

  • @cathybrown8334
    @cathybrown8334 Рік тому +8

    Fact - Truman’s best friend Interviewed all the town’s residents, not Truman. Her name is Harper Lee. If you don’t know her……. shame on you.

    • @dd911
      @dd911 8 місяців тому +6

      Don’t shame people for not knowing……encourage a person to know more. There are things you don’t know and you don’t deserve to be shamed for what you don’t know.

    • @trawlins396
      @trawlins396 3 місяці тому +1

      ​@@dd911everyone ADULT should know who she is.

    • @dd911
      @dd911 3 місяці тому +1

      @@trawlins396 people don’t read anymore……..it’s quite sad

  • @tugglemiles2991
    @tugglemiles2991 6 місяців тому

    Harper Lee collected the facts he changed the truth. She was his friend afterward, but she didn't speak to him.

    • @elizabethcloutman8913
      @elizabethcloutman8913 Місяць тому

      Truman reportedly was furious and jealous when Harper Lee won the Pulitzer Prize for fiction because he believed he was the more talented writer of the two.

  • @Midnitexowboy
    @Midnitexowboy 4 роки тому +5

    He seems like a very gentle nice man

  • @kennethbredow3098
    @kennethbredow3098 6 років тому +8

    Mr Capote had a bad childhood, a mother and father who cared more about their lives than Truman .

    • @jadezee6316
      @jadezee6316 6 років тому +2

      so have millions of other kids..what is your point?

    • @michaelcelani8325
      @michaelcelani8325 4 роки тому +4

      He was severly. abused. And with sensitive people the abuse does more damage.

  • @CadeCYC
    @CadeCYC 3 роки тому

    ♥️♥️

  • @goodkawz
    @goodkawz 6 років тому +6

    “a cast entirely unknown .. all new faces ...”? ... Robert Blake? Had he been that forgotten?
    We know the experience of writing the book had a dramatic effect on Capote!
    What about Blake? Just wondering ...

  • @andremeehan8796
    @andremeehan8796 7 місяців тому

    A genius

  • @andremeehan8796
    @andremeehan8796 7 місяців тому

    Hello was a genius

  • @merlincarnes
    @merlincarnes 3 роки тому

    Can someone please tell me the name of the program and the name of the interviewer?

    • @jamesfahy3963
      @jamesfahy3963 3 роки тому +1

      F lee Bailey, famous attorney. No idea re program.

  • @nstanifer28
    @nstanifer28 9 місяців тому

    that outfit is out of control

  • @killereverb3928
    @killereverb3928 6 місяців тому

    Can’t hear this Damn video!!!!

  • @alanstevens1296
    @alanstevens1296 3 роки тому

    Judicial trap-door hanging is quick and humane.

  • @kitkatherine23
    @kitkatherine23 4 роки тому +1

    what show was this on

    • @dthtoneocons1
      @dthtoneocons1 4 роки тому +2

      Grace Rydberg, I'm not sure what the show is called, but the guy doing the interview is famous criminal attorney F Lee Baily. (OJ, Albert De Salvo, Sam Shepard)

    • @michaelcelani8325
      @michaelcelani8325 4 роки тому +1

      F. Lee Bailey was NOT an intellectual or even a follower or lover of literature.
      He is not qualified IN ANY WAY to do this interview...

  • @graziellamagri3497
    @graziellamagri3497 4 роки тому

    Adoro mister Capote ❤️❤️

  • @jillsmcfarland2001
    @jillsmcfarland2001 5 років тому +6

    Every sick freak in intertainment, it's about me !

    • @jillsmcfarland2001
      @jillsmcfarland2001 5 років тому +3

      He works it ,always the sweet inocent victim.

    • @michaelcelani8325
      @michaelcelani8325 4 роки тому +2

      @@jillsmcfarland2001 Well heck...Jills he is (was) an Artist ! Not a politician or A General. or even a used car salesman who lies to make a sale on a beat up old car. All good artists are complicated....the very nature of Art.

  • @lukyluke2936
    @lukyluke2936 8 місяців тому

    Entre apios zapallitos y 🍅 tomates perita
    Tómame e hilvaname
    Con costura 🧵 practicidad
    Haceme tuye
    Entre los hábitos del 🥭🦩 trópico
    Tríptico
    Desilvachaste un espureo atardecer 🌇
    Plácido en sombras el agua se aquieta
    Con pinceladas
    Monet

  • @guidosmeets2581
    @guidosmeets2581 2 роки тому +2

    What I remember of the movie is that he betrayed his subject by not hiring a lawyer which he promised. He didn t show real interest to the man interviewed. I could be mistaken, but all this positive feedback is overrated. He maybe a great writer, but with lousy personality.

    • @MrWillHughes
      @MrWillHughes 8 місяців тому

      My heart bleeds for that murderer!!

  • @lukyluke2936
    @lukyluke2936 8 місяців тому

    Amame

  • @msbrownbeast
    @msbrownbeast 5 років тому +7

    What a squeaky voice.

  • @lisagunnison2856
    @lisagunnison2856 9 місяців тому +1

    Very talented, successful writer! Miserable human being that couldn’t square up his success with his inferiority and the need to expose and humiliate members of “high society”. Quite interesting persona…..heavily damaged underneath.

  • @MissPerriwinkle
    @MissPerriwinkle 10 місяців тому +2

    f lee bailey help get oj off??

  • @MsColetha
    @MsColetha 8 місяців тому

    Truman must have took liberties in his writing that the clutters haunted him about? Until he himself died?

  • @kousar4572
    @kousar4572 2 роки тому +2

    Murderer killed 4 people for just $10,000,got punishment and remember as monster for ever but capote took fame and millions of dollars by what they done. So there is a lesson for everyone to don't choose wrong way to make money.

    • @elizabethcloutman8913
      @elizabethcloutman8913 Місяць тому

      They didn’t even get $10,000. They left with $40 in cash, Kenyon’s transistor radio and Herb’s binoculars. They killed four people in cold blood Cody next to nothing. The actual truth is that Herb Clutter wrote checks for everything and never kept cash at home.

  • @1seansouth
    @1seansouth Рік тому

    A grifter at work - if you don't record anyone, then you can claim they said just about anything you want. He invented the last scene of In Cold Blood, the killers' confession and lots more, then completely invented a non-fiction book for his next work because he got away with so much for In Cold Blood

    • @meghanmisaliar
      @meghanmisaliar Рік тому +2

      Stop spreading misinformation. In Cold Blood was not fiction. 🤦‍♀️

    • @1seansouth
      @1seansouth Рік тому

      @@meghanmisaliar Its a very well written non-fiction book but many key elements are invented, and the Sunday Times exposed how he completely invented the murder for his next work. That's the level of deception

  • @acushla_music
    @acushla_music 4 роки тому

    He would have liked Netflix

  • @fidobarks
    @fidobarks 6 років тому +9

    in cold blood was filled wiith so many inaccuracies that its a joke these days...and not respected.

    • @jadezee6316
      @jadezee6316 6 років тому +34

      you are the only joke...since the book was genius and ground breaking creating a style totally new in writing...the non fiction novel.
      another idiot on line thinking he has knowledge....

    • @bobtaylor170
      @bobtaylor170 6 років тому +20

      Whatever he may have embellished, one, the story of the crimes themselves, the killers and their lives, and the trial and the denouement, are essentially true, and two, he created a literary classic. I read a year or two ago that a son of one of the KBI investigators was writing a book about the facts and Capote's embellishments, and if so, I'll want to read it. But "In Cold Blood" will always be one of the greatest books ever written by an American.

    • @getsnipedhockey32
      @getsnipedhockey32 6 років тому +2

      Jade Zee capote said he wanted his book to be 100% non fiction

    • @Broadwaybuff-pi1qg
      @Broadwaybuff-pi1qg Рік тому

      Good to know you speak on behalf of everyone.

    • @johngarrels6059
      @johngarrels6059 9 місяців тому

      Maybe the joke's on you. He created a new genre of literature. What have you created...other than hot air?

  • @josel8389
    @josel8389 Рік тому +1

    Rodolfo walsh from argentina created no fiction novel 40 years before truman . Read “massacre operation “