So grateful to Mr. Dick Cavett, to allow us culturally staved individuals, to look back from the 2020s , at such a renown figure in American literature.
Poor man Tennessee Williams was starting to have a gall bladder attack with those itching hands and feet but didn't know what the symptoms meant during this interview!
@Mookie Spindlehurst Yes, that must be true. He was SO good, so engaging... (and obviously had a good sense of himself, thus didn't need to constantly bring the attention back to himself. ... But then also shared bits about his life).
He was a genius. He wrote some of the greatest plays in theatre history. He was also a tormented soul, as so many of the biggest artists. But his work will remain forever among the best ever written
I like how Tennessee refers to the drunks/bums outside the theater as "resting people." Shows the rather elegant compassion he always had for outcasts.
@@MrCrowebobby Which is your right and prerogative. In Jack's lifetime and since his death almost exactly 50 years ago, his genius has been the subject of much doubt, scorn and bitter debate. And while I'm the first to acknowledge that genius, please note I said nothing about it as such in my comment to which you replied. I merely tried to give Jack his due in that he--like Ten and Nick Ray--has a special and genuine compassion for the forgotten and downcast in our society which is reflected time and again in the art of all three.
“Has it ever struck you that life is all memory, except for the one present moment that goes by you so quick you hardly catch it going?”― Tennessee Williams.......................
So true. Its very hard to live in the 'pinpoint' present. Nearly always drifting backwards. Especially as you get older. And the memories build up behind.
What a interesting man... people used to actually behave as themselves, instead of a formula of what they think is expected. Incredible talent. His plays/films are timeless.
So very true, I think this had a lot to do with the relatively low influence that media appearances had on people back in this era. If a guest acted strange, said something unusual, etc people just shrugged and forgot about it ....today every comment is tweeted, blogged and basically put on record forever
@@lukeingram7655 such a lie. tennessee was a writer, you cant compare here with celebrities. Famous ppl used to be just as plastic as today, even more. fake names and everything, all made up by tbe industry!
What an interesting observation, and so very true. I have sometimes wondered about all the colorful, excentric, or flamboyant characters e.g. so vividly described in Dickens novels. How would they survive in todays socially controlled society? And would they even exist? Our time is loosing the presence of genuine and authentic people, individual thinkers, and original minds. The power of social media and a much more collective influence is killing individuality. People of the time, are so influenced by all the politically and socially current standards of correctness. And so very cautious about saying all the right things, and howling with the pack (they wish to follow) that they have forgotten how to think for themselves. They all use the same expressions, and copy the popular dresscode and mannerisms, so they can send the right signals to the outside world. And when it comes to politicians, actors, musicians etc. the pressure is without mercy. Mistakes are not tolerated. One wrong word, and the press and social media will hunt them down till they drop. Sadly, people get increasingly more and more uniformed, boring and less original. And that is, in my opinion, a great loss.
@@ingeabrahamsen4684 So in other words "second-hand human beings"? Though I didn't come up with the term, Jiddu Krishnamurti did (from one of his books- _Freedom from the Known_ ).
@@101...... Thank you for bringing Jiddu Krishnamurti to my attention. I shamfully admitt that I was not aware of his teachings. But now, that I have formed an idea, I get the expression of "second rate people". And the concept is perhaps not so far from my own, it seems. I'm lamenting the loss (in our time) of what I would call "authentic people" and original thinkers. I have noticed, that several of our most celebrated, artists, writers, philosophers, scientists and politicians grew up under curcumstances with limited outside influence. Witch to some degree allowed them to become individuals. Due to the enormous power from to days social medias, the press, and the so called influencers, they can set the standards and disseminate the popular trends and opinions in no time. And people hurry up to be among the first to copy them and adopt their opinions as their own. I dont suppose, contemporary people are herd-animals in a larger scale than earlier. But the world has become so much smaller. And because of that, people are becoming less individual and independent, and more harmonized and collectively thinking. And I fear this could lead to a loss of originality and divercity in society. Cultural, political and spiritual. And in terms of new inventions and progress. We need those special brains.
"Brando doesn't need any publicity does he?" "Well, he's endlessly interesting to people" "Well so am I" Williams has already told Cavett a lot about Brando and Cavett is supposed to be interviewing Williams!
Cavett has a smarmy way of attempting to extract "dirt" on others from every guest that I have seen him interview. I think he is obsessed with trying to trash Brando.
I never got to see him do it live (I was born about 50 years too late for that, unfortunately), but the movie version of Streetcar is one of my all-time favourites. Brando and Leigh are perfect in that movie...
Love him so much. Tennessee. Cavett too. Cavett brought on so many people who were out of the box. My heart to Mr. Williams. As a Southern woman, I will always hold him dear.
What's wrong with Cavett wanting to know what Williams makes of Brando? He's interested in Williams' take because Williams is bound to have a particular take; he's not implying he's boring by asking about someone else.
I can't help it I love the broken ones The ones who Need the most patching up The ones who Never been loved And maybe i see a part of me in them The missing peice always trying to fit in The shuttered heart Hungry for a home No you are not alone
every play williams ever wrote was about himself and how he imagined he would be/act in certain circumstances......and it goes without saying that homosexuality was always......the main focus of his work.....
@@jadezee6316 From the perspective of Mr. Williams I agree. Though one must consider empathy bears fruit regardless of such trivial choices, moreover what one does in the spaces they feel safest, or in their minds eye, deprives me of nothing, sends no harm, nor precludes my own personal choices with judgements or demands, Frankly speaking as I see and experience the world it has become ever more clear that art cannot be experienced without ownership. Not in a physical sense but, intrinsically own what we are presented with. When we do this we learn about ourselves in languages that supercede our conscious mind. As a hetero male self actualized eyes wide open I read the poem as it pertains to me. I am disposable, misunderstood, labeled. I am broken.
I think Williams is a great US writer. I taught Drama and Theatre Studies for 30 years, and his influence seems to be everywhere throughout 20th century stage on both sides of the pond. Thanks for putting this on.
I'm always amazed by Dick Cavett's skill as an interviewer. As Tennessee Williams started to close up as he noticed the 'hostile' laughter, DC picked up on it and diffused any tension with genuine, thoughtful compliments. Then the walls came back down, TW opened back up, and they were able to have a deeper conversation about craft, influences, etc. DC really was one of the greatest, you can learn so much from these clips
Everything about him is compelling from the physical appearance, behaviour, quicksilver mind, sensitivity and self-defense. I've never seen him before.
This is very welcome. You go to some provincial theatre and see an English cast making a good effort to mimic a Southern drawl on a Williams drama - and you enjoy the play and have a nice dinner.... But the playwright is a million miles away. Or dead. Or both. These little snippets are simply priceless. This man is as strange as his plays. I'm so glad to have seen/heard this clip.
Celebrities used to just go on talk shows in the sixties and seventies completely blasted. It's amazing how many of them were just out of their minds drunk. Cavett probably got that the most of any hosts of the period. Norman Mailer comes to mind but also Joan Crawford, Judy Garland and, of course, Truman Capote. There was also drugs, of course.
Watching this it strikes me that Brando at some point started to talk in real life as if he were doing a kind of impression of Tennessee Williams. Don Corleone is somewhat of a slowed down less nasal version.
His major works were poetic masterpieces -- Streetcar, Glass Menagerie, Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, Sweet Bird of Youth...His later work was more experimental and I'd like to explore them more...Night of the Iguana...Small Craft Warnings, which was playing on 4th Street near the Bowery hahaha...(Cavett was being a bit cheap with the publicity)...When I lived in New Orleans, the ghost of Tennessee loomed larger than life in the French Quarter...He inhabited every street, every boudoir, every old bar that opened up onto the street with doors flung wide open to the world. Wherever there was a man laughing or sipping on a Brandy Alexander, there loomed large the ghost of Tennessee
Getting to see and hopefully know something of the greats that I have read and loved thru these old Dick Cavett clips. Saw it sometimes in my teens but filling in the blanks!
I remember seeing Williams in SMALL CRAFT WARNINGS when it was running on the Upper East Side. He played the role of a doctor, I believe. That run must have been shortly after the run he's talking about. Cavett has to work really hard in this interview.
I think he seems like a man with a very kind nature. The audience did sound at times a bit like hyenas. He left us a legacy of greatness not easily paralleled.
A lot of tourists used to clutter up the audience at the Cavett show. Tickets were free and there was always room for more people. I am positive there were many people in the crowd who had no idea who Tennessee Williams was and the great works he had created. There has never been much free stuff for rubes to do in New York. There's even less now.
I'm sorry but genius as he was TW was wrong about the laughter. That wasn't hostile laughter, that was in fact probably sympathetic laughter which Williams, defensive because he didn't feel like he was having his way of things, misconstrued. He was rubbing his hands, which the audience member who laughed probably interpreted as a callback, and thought they were laughing with him as opposed to at him.
What would this interview have been like if Williams hadn't been tipsy? (Allegedly) I love how he didn't want to play the talk show game and kept deflecting the Brando questions yet still gave Brando his due credit. And love how he accused the audience of being hostile. It was the funniest interview I've seen in ages.
"There's somethin' to be said about the life of an enlisted man" Great ensemble. It's only fault for me was that Huston and his d.p. (Ozzie Morris?) decided to process the film with a golden glow about it...as if we were seeing through the little Asian houseboy's cat's eyes. I thought that was unnecessarily distracting.
@@Jmjdit YEP! speaking of which I read something somewhere one time where it said Marlon irl was MORE like Blanche then his famous character Stanley 😳 Kowalski
I agree with Tennessee about the audience being hostile and arrogant. Laughing because he was scratching his fingers instead of listening and looking at his face and what he was saying. Such a deep thought process. Never wasting a sentence and using simple words that you can relate to. Truman Capote is the same but with more of an intelletual vocabulary. Both Southern men which people think are stupid hillbillies which they are not.
First time I've ever seen TW. Drunk, restless, tetchy or whatever it was a great privilege to see and hear him. A great American writer. With all the stoopid politics and shenanigans that's going on now we in Europe are forgetting that America has been the home of unique literary geniuses.
Thanks for posting this! I saw "Small Craft Warnings" in London during this time--woefully lacking in what his plays were lauded for--poetry, grace, human suffering, love, connection with the ethereal. Also, Mr. Williams's itchy extremities most likely caused by ascites, which is non-absorbed salts caused by liver failure.
There are plenty of documentaries and interviews online in which you get to see him as he is. They arent to be missed if youre a fan. He was a treasure.
Wait. Don't judge Tennessee by this drunk interview. Dick did another show with him, filmed in New Orleans. He was sober in that and much more interesting. It's on UA-cam.
@rayturnertile It's a shame that people like to be mean. Love your neighbor as you love yourself. If people practiced this commandment, we would have more peace and love.
I like Dick Cavett's interviews and him too. I now realise how much people have changed, generally. They have picked up an over inflated impression of themselves today and have this loud, crude way compared with the more attractive subtle attitude of people of, what I call the halcyon days of TV. Tennessee Williams - very interesting interview and man.
Seeing Williams at this stage of his life and career takes me right to Elia Kazan's memoir and Gadge's many deep insights into the man. I believe Kazan quoted a review of "Camino Real" which referred to that work as 'an enconium to the human spirit'. Kazan felt those words better described the author of said work rather than the play itself.
Williams' voice and speaking idiosyncrasies are uncannily like those that Brando created for his role as Major Weldon Pendleton in _Reflections In A Golden Eye_ , which was based on the Carson McCullers novel of the same name. I have to wonder if Brando intentionally modeled this characterization, at least in part, after Williams.
I think Brando obviously modelled Maj Penderton on Tennessee. His soliloquy re "Life of Men among Men" in Refelctions is reminiscent of Blanche's remembrance of her young beau at the Moonlake Casino.
So many people loved the Dick Cavett show along with the Jack Paar, MervGriffin, Mike Douglas and similar TV shows. They had on incredible guests like Orson Wells, Betty Davis,, Tennessee Williams, John Lennon, Janis Joplin, Jimmy Hendrix and on and on especially Dick Cavett. The shows and the guests were honest and themselves. Apparently non scripted because they would say things that I don't think you could say now. We will never see shows like these again.
One can see where Blanche DuBois came from. Those remarks to the audience. Chastising them for their ‘cruel laughter’. The quick shifts of kind and cruel remarks. Incredible watching.
I CAN!! I can explain why so many great writers come out of the South. The Northern States are Germanic, Polish Swedish, etc. these are cultures that are about EFFICIENCY. The South was settled by the English, Irish, the Spanish and French ... look at the literature that comes out of Ireland and England. And then, the richness of the colloquialisms! The South is about form ... more about taking time with communication. The Art of Conversation. And less about efficiency/machinery/things working properly... (I'd say it's sociological, at least in part). Anyway, my opinion. If anyone else has more to add... !
But the great composers come out of the Germanic states. I believe great writing comes from great hardship and the South has always had much more hardship than the rest of the country.
@@christschool Wait... which great composers? (I'm guessing you're not referring to the Great American Songbook?) The South is certainly more tortured...
@@andreaandrea6716 True, they aren't US citizens. I was responding to this that you wrote: "The Northern States are Germanic". My point is that it has less to do with ancestral nationality than it does with local culture and conditions.
The liver has over 500 functions. Regular alcohol use is terrible for your health. It is horrible for mental health: early onset demetia, chronic depression just to name a few. Tennessee’s itching of his hands and feet are a symptom of fatty liver disease resulting from alcoholism.
@@lanceaugust Well, you don't have to drink anything, but there's lots of evidence that wine in particular is very good for health. In fact red wine is positively recommended.
I heard an explanation for why the South produced writers, playwrights and speakers of Tennessee Williams' generation. When the Industrial Revolution was dominating life in the North, the South was primarily agricultural. This meant a lot of down time with not a lot of money to spend. People refined the art of conversation and storytelling in order to keep themselves entertained. I still see evidence of it today in the South.
When Dick Cavett says that John Osborne was influenced by Tennessee Williams, and Tennessee Williams responds "Why, it made him angry you mean", I don't think Dick Cavett (nor the audience) understood the joke Tennessee Williams was making.
An expectation betrayed. Some great guys are not easy for interview. Their powerful ego wouldn't open a window for normal communication with other human being. In this regard I must thank Francis for his simplicity and humbleness.
Tennessee Williams in this interview is intelligent, sensitive, honest, witty, ironic and quite charming, and it all seems to go completely over Dick Cavett's head.
Cavett was always astute. But he had a tight schedule, where one day he had John Lennon and Yoko Ono, or Jimi Hendrix or Janis Joplin, or Katherine Hepburn or Orson Welles, or Marlon Brando or Richard Burton or Laurence Olivier, and so on. It's kind of hard to keep up with all these extraordinary people all the time. He had some truly remarkable people on his show, and I think his gift is he stepped back and let them be themselves.
So grateful to Mr. Dick Cavett, to allow us culturally staved individuals, to look back from the 2020s , at such a renown figure in American literature.
This is velvet, not velveteen, a gentleman must know the difference.
Poor man Tennessee Williams was starting to have a gall bladder attack with those itching hands and feet but didn't know what the symptoms meant during this interview!
Yes!! I love Dick Cavett. What a fabulous interviewer.
@@verdis23rdoperaunballoinma39 Ooooh, how interesting... (Thanks).
@Mookie Spindlehurst Yes, that must be true. He was SO good, so engaging... (and obviously had a good sense of himself, thus didn't need to constantly bring the attention back to himself. ... But then also shared bits about his life).
He was a genius. He wrote some of the greatest plays in theatre history. He was also a tormented soul, as so many of the biggest artists. But his work will remain forever among the best ever written
Amen!
T. Williams is the greatest playwright that America ever produced...end of story. Nobody else comes close.
@@johnnypastrana6727 nonsense....ever hear of Eugene O'Neill
@@jadezee6316 We're not dealing with objective truth here.
@@jadezee6316 Very different writers. Certainly room for both.
I like how Tennessee refers to the drunks/bums outside the theater as "resting people." Shows the rather elegant compassion he always had for outcasts.
Love that "resting people" line!
Lovely comment. What an astonishing writer Tennessee Williams was. I wonder if he could exist today.
Great observation, not altogether unlike Kerouac or, perhaps Nicholas Ray in that quality.
@@telebob5983 I would hardly consider Kerouac a genius, but could be wrong.
@@MrCrowebobby Which is your right and prerogative. In Jack's lifetime and since his death almost exactly 50 years ago, his genius has been the subject of much doubt, scorn and bitter debate. And while I'm the first to acknowledge that genius, please note I said nothing about it as such in my comment to which you replied. I merely tried to give Jack his due in that he--like Ten and Nick Ray--has a special and genuine compassion for the forgotten and downcast in our society which is reflected time and again in the art of all three.
“Has it ever struck you that life is all memory, except for the one present moment that goes by you so quick you hardly catch it going?”― Tennessee Williams.......................
Whew.....Genius
Actually yes!
❤
So true. Its very hard to live in the 'pinpoint' present. Nearly always drifting backwards. Especially as you get older. And the memories build up behind.
@@degsbabe "...and so we beat on, boats against the current, borne back ceaselessly into the past." F.Scott Fitzgerald
Genius playwright...I could listen to him speak for hours!
My sentiments exactly.
Tenness Williams... eloquent, kind, amusing and all time classic
My sentiments exactly.
What a interesting man... people used to actually behave as themselves, instead of a formula of what they think is expected. Incredible talent. His plays/films are timeless.
So very true, I think this had a lot to do with the relatively low influence that media appearances had on people back in this era. If a guest acted strange, said something unusual, etc people just shrugged and forgot about it ....today every comment is tweeted, blogged and basically put on record forever
@@lukeingram7655 such a lie. tennessee was a writer, you cant compare here with celebrities. Famous ppl used to be just as plastic as today, even more. fake names and everything, all made up by tbe industry!
What an interesting observation, and so very true.
I have sometimes wondered about all the colorful, excentric, or flamboyant characters e.g. so vividly described in Dickens novels.
How would they survive in todays socially controlled society? And would they even exist?
Our time is loosing the presence of genuine and authentic people, individual thinkers, and original minds.
The power of social media and a much more collective influence is killing individuality.
People of the time, are so influenced by all the politically and socially current standards of correctness.
And so very cautious about saying all the right things, and howling with the pack (they wish to follow) that they have forgotten how to think for themselves.
They all use the same expressions, and copy the popular dresscode and mannerisms, so they can send the right signals to the outside world.
And when it comes to politicians, actors, musicians etc. the pressure is without mercy.
Mistakes are not tolerated. One wrong word, and the press and social media will hunt them down till they drop.
Sadly, people get increasingly more and more uniformed, boring and less original.
And that is, in my opinion, a great loss.
@@ingeabrahamsen4684 So in other words "second-hand human beings"?
Though I didn't come up with the term, Jiddu Krishnamurti did (from one of his books- _Freedom from the Known_ ).
@@101......
Thank you for bringing Jiddu Krishnamurti to my attention.
I shamfully admitt that I was not aware of his teachings. But now, that I have formed an idea, I get the expression of "second rate people". And the concept is perhaps not so far from my own, it seems.
I'm lamenting the loss (in our time) of what I would call "authentic people" and original thinkers.
I have noticed, that several of our most celebrated, artists, writers, philosophers, scientists and politicians grew up under curcumstances with limited outside influence. Witch to some degree allowed them to become individuals.
Due to the enormous power from to days social medias, the press, and the so called influencers, they can set the standards and disseminate the popular trends and opinions in no time. And people hurry up to be among the first to copy them and adopt their opinions as their own.
I dont suppose, contemporary people are herd-animals in a larger scale than earlier. But the world has become so much smaller. And because of that, people are becoming less individual and independent, and more harmonized and collectively thinking.
And I fear this could lead to a loss of originality and divercity in society. Cultural, political and spiritual. And in terms of new inventions and progress. We need those special brains.
"Brando doesn't need any publicity does he?"
"Well, he's endlessly interesting to people"
"Well so am I"
Williams has already told Cavett a lot about Brando and Cavett is supposed to be interviewing Williams!
Cavett has a smarmy way of attempting to extract "dirt" on others from every guest that I have seen him interview. I think he is obsessed with trying to trash Brando.
@@tvdok
Yes, he was a gossipy douche bag
I love how he is like if you're going to interview me talk about me. When you interview Brando them you can talk about him.
The artistic meeting of Williams and Brando gave us the greatest theater in history. Once-in-a-lifetime moment.
EXACTLY!! Well said and I could not agree more!!
No , i would say that Vivien Leigh was the greatest and i believe that Tennessee Williams would agree with me !
there are better plays out there.
@@lampad4549 And better comparisons.
I never got to see him do it live (I was born about 50 years too late for that, unfortunately), but the movie version of Streetcar is one of my all-time favourites. Brando and Leigh are perfect in that movie...
My grandmother used to sit and drink coffee with him in New Orleans. They were friends.
"Zowie!" (as in "wow")
How did that come to be? Was your grandmother also a writer or from an important family?
Cafe Du Monde? Tipitinas?
He could have used a cup before this appearance 😳
@@andreaandrea6716 wtf are you doing
I love the tones and cadences of this man's voice
His voice in indeed mesmerizing.
Love him so much. Tennessee. Cavett too. Cavett brought on so many people who were out of the box. My heart to Mr. Williams. As a Southern woman, I will always hold him dear.
@5:15: Cavett: "Brando is endlessly interesting." Williams: "Well, so am I." He vy nicely pointed out Cavett's rudeness.
What's wrong with Cavett wanting to know what Williams makes of Brando? He's interested in Williams' take because Williams is bound to have a particular take; he's not implying he's boring by asking about someone else.
@@mattpopemusic
What's wrong with your head?🤕
Quit making excuses for Cavett's prying.
“No no but he’s endlessly interesting to people” (Brando)
“Oh yes but so am I” I love this man 🤣
I can't help it
I love the broken ones
The ones who
Need the most patching up
The ones who
Never been loved
And maybe i see a part of me in them
The missing peice always trying to fit in
The shuttered heart
Hungry for a home
No you are not alone
S
Are you quoting Williams?
@@2degucitas It's a from 'the Glass Menagerie', one of his plays. A personal favorite.
every play williams ever wrote was about himself and how he imagined he would be/act in certain circumstances......and it goes without saying that homosexuality was always......the main focus of his work.....
@@jadezee6316
From the perspective of Mr. Williams I agree. Though one must consider empathy bears fruit regardless of such trivial choices, moreover what one does in the spaces they feel safest, or in their minds eye, deprives me of nothing, sends no harm, nor precludes my own personal choices with judgements or demands,
Frankly speaking as I see and experience the world it has become ever more clear that art cannot be experienced without ownership. Not in a physical sense but, intrinsically own what we are presented with. When we do this we learn about ourselves in languages that supercede our conscious mind.
As a hetero male self actualized eyes wide open I read the poem as it pertains to me. I am disposable, misunderstood, labeled. I am broken.
One of the greatest playwrights of all time.
Indubitably.
I think Williams is a great US writer. I taught Drama and Theatre Studies for 30 years, and his
influence seems to be everywhere throughout 20th century stage on both sides of the pond.
Thanks for putting this on.
Just wondering what your take is on Vonnegut saying that Hamlet is the only perfect story.
I'm always amazed by Dick Cavett's skill as an interviewer. As Tennessee Williams started to close up as he noticed the 'hostile' laughter, DC picked up on it and diffused any tension with genuine, thoughtful compliments. Then the walls came back down, TW opened back up, and they were able to have a deeper conversation about craft, influences, etc. DC really was one of the greatest, you can learn so much from these clips
I enjoy Tennessee's speaking voice. I like how he was like "let's get back to my play."
Maybe too controversial. Don't know what year this was.
Seems like he'd be good at narration.
He was such a wit and a charmer! Bet he was a hoot to be friends with. Still holds his place among the best or our playwrights of our time.
Everything about him is compelling from the physical appearance, behaviour, quicksilver mind, sensitivity and self-defense. I've never seen him before.
Well, that was painful. Still superb to see him.
I feel sad that we really don't have much in the way of these grand, larger than life characters anymore.
It's sad we don't have this type of interviewer on TV any longer. I guess he's too cerebral.
Dick cavett is still alive
Jeff Goldblum!
What a good observation. 🙂
We have Kylie Jenner you know
Elegant kindness in speech and theatre
This is very welcome. You go to some provincial theatre and see an English cast making a good effort to mimic a Southern drawl on a Williams drama - and you enjoy the play and have a nice dinner.... But the playwright is a million miles away. Or dead. Or both.
These little snippets are simply priceless. This man is as strange as his plays. I'm so glad to have seen/heard this clip.
What a delight to see and hear a genius of his stature. I believe Mr. Williams is the greatest playwright that America has ever produced.
I agree, Joe. Look at the lines he casually tosses out here, the "resting" people.
I disagree I say Eugene 0 Neill
@@seanohare5488I have for forgotten what he wrote. Did he write "Death of a Salesman"?
@@srldwg That was Arthur Miller.
He is a amazing beautiful person. Just love him. From the south. We love Marlon Brando he's a fantastic person .
I 💖 Brando too! 😳 a girl from the North 😏
"More Brandy in Your Coffee Mr. Williams?" Man, that dude dared to do it all his way. Brilliant
Judging by his voice/expression, I'm not sure he was entirely sober for the interview. :-)
@@kakstin - He was most definitely NOT.
@@kakstin He was sober enough. Which was all that mattered with his crowd, back in those days,
Much more interesting than todays writers.
Legend! The greatest American playwright ever!
T WILLIAMS, WAS THE GREATEST EVER.🐐🐐🐐🐐🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆
August Wilson
Wrong! Arthur Miller on line 1.
Ernest Kovach 😂
No Eugene 0 Neill was
Simply class. Thank goodness we can glimpse into the past like this and bring legendary names to life.
One of the greatest playwriters ever.
Indeed.
Celebrities used to just go on talk shows in the sixties and seventies completely blasted. It's amazing how many of them were just out of their minds drunk. Cavett probably got that the most of any hosts of the period. Norman Mailer comes to mind but also Joan Crawford, Judy Garland and, of course, Truman Capote. There was also drugs, of course.
Booze in the green room didn't help.
DC: "Brando was endlessly interesting"
TW: "So am I"
My Mother born in Richmond, Virginia.1920's. People from the South in this generation. Spoke with this wonderful southern twang, I Loved it!
As a brando fan it’s quite obvious they share the same mannerisms.
Watching this it strikes me that Brando at some point started to talk in real life as if he were doing a kind of impression of Tennessee Williams. Don Corleone is somewhat of a slowed down less nasal version.
th2k brilliant observation
th2k Yes, what a fascinating observation. I think you're right. Both men, Tennessee and Brando, what a couple of very odd ducks. I love both of them.
Interesting observation.
I was thinking exactly the same thing.
And they were both doing their best Truman Capote.
His major works were poetic masterpieces -- Streetcar, Glass Menagerie, Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, Sweet Bird of Youth...His later work was more experimental and I'd like to explore them more...Night of the Iguana...Small Craft Warnings, which was playing on 4th Street near the Bowery hahaha...(Cavett was being a bit cheap with the publicity)...When I lived in New Orleans, the ghost of Tennessee loomed larger than life in the French Quarter...He inhabited every street, every boudoir, every old bar that opened up onto the street with doors flung wide open to the world. Wherever there was a man laughing or sipping on a Brandy Alexander, there loomed large the ghost of Tennessee
What a wonderful human being.
Getting to see and hopefully know something of the greats that I have read and loved thru these old Dick Cavett clips. Saw it sometimes in my teens but filling in the blanks!
One of the greatest American author ever hands down
No pun intended ;-)
This show should have been called Dick Cavett Asks People About Brando.
I remember seeing Williams in SMALL CRAFT WARNINGS when it was running on the Upper East Side. He played the role of a doctor, I believe. That run must have been shortly after the run he's talking about. Cavett has to work really hard in this interview.
Facinating Man. Tennessee Williams. Writer.🙏🌅🇩🇰🇺🇸😍
I think he seems like a man with a very kind nature. The audience did sound at times a bit like hyenas. He left us a legacy of greatness not easily paralleled.
A lot of tourists used to clutter up the audience at the Cavett show. Tickets were free and there was always room for more people. I am positive there were many people in the crowd who had no idea who Tennessee Williams was and the great works he had created. There has never been much free stuff for rubes to do in New York. There's even less now.
I'm sorry but genius as he was TW was wrong about the laughter. That wasn't hostile laughter, that was in fact probably sympathetic laughter which Williams, defensive because he didn't feel like he was having his way of things, misconstrued. He was rubbing his hands, which the audience member who laughed probably interpreted as a callback, and thought they were laughing with him as opposed to at him.
What would this interview have been like if Williams hadn't been tipsy? (Allegedly) I love how he didn't want to play the talk show game and kept deflecting the Brando questions yet still gave Brando his due credit. And love how he accused the audience of being hostile. It was the funniest interview I've seen in ages.
i cant imagine enjoying the company of this man..if he is the person we see here....
I, on the contrary, would have loved his company. He was clearly a broken soul...
I love this man!!!!
Being from MA, I like knowing that he spent a summer on the Cape, Truro, MA @4:55. I wonder if he went to Longnook Beach...😄
What a character.
Love his southern lilt
TENNESSEE WILLIAMS was/is FANTASTIC !
I see who Marlon modeled his character's voice after on Reflections in a Golden Eye.
Yes! I never realized that but it's true.
Underrated Brando film
"There's somethin' to be said about the life of an enlisted man" Great ensemble. It's only fault for me was that Huston and his d.p. (Ozzie Morris?) decided to process the film with a golden glow about it...as if we were seeing through the little Asian houseboy's cat's eyes. I thought that was unnecessarily distracting.
The Bird, as Gore Vidal referred to him, is boiled as British beef. What a trip. The play he's attempting to promote here was a bomb.
He said “these people are a hostile audience”😂😂😂
Love Williams
OMG! Tennessee Williams is Marlon Brando is disguise.
Yes that's correct ✔️.....
he's Blanche more like it
@@Jmjdit YEP! speaking of which I read something somewhere one time where it said Marlon irl was MORE like Blanche then his famous character Stanley 😳 Kowalski
Gore Vidal always called Williams The Magnificent Bird.
A dodo? Turkey vulture? Kookaburra? Marbled Murillette? Hootie Owl?
Tennessee is hammered
Thanks for posting! 💓💓💓
Thank you for posting, I love Dick Cavett!!💞💞
Oh my! Tough interview.
Williams is an asshole.
I agree with Tennessee about the audience being hostile and arrogant. Laughing because he was scratching his fingers instead of listening and looking at his face and what he was saying. Such a deep thought process. Never wasting a sentence and using simple words that you can relate to. Truman Capote is the same but with more of an intelletual vocabulary. Both Southern men which people think are stupid hillbillies which they are not.
He was born in Columbus Mississippi, which basically in the middle portion of the state a couple miles from Alabama.
Oh his drawl is lovely and makes me miss home
First time I've ever seen TW.
Drunk, restless, tetchy or whatever it was a great privilege to see and hear him.
A great American writer.
With all the stoopid politics and shenanigans that's going on now we in Europe are forgetting that America has been the home of unique literary geniuses.
he was delightful
The brilliance of Williams.
"that hostile laughter .." haha
which it wasn't.
This guy had the most impressive guests.
“Why is the south so rich in writers?” “Not many playwrights…people have more to write about in the South.”
I think there was also this other writer who came out of the south, I believe his name was Samuel Clemens . . . or something to that effect.
Honestly, Hannibal, MO is more Midwest...it's north of St. Louis
Yep 👍
In fact, the writer to which you are referring is named Samuel Clemens. He went by the pseudonym of Mark Twain.
Leonardo DiCaprio would do a great job playing Williams on film
He's got that pug face like DiCaprio
He already did a great job portraying him in Django...
I disagree
DiCaprio is looking a lot like Orson Welles without the major weight.
LOLOLOLOL
Delightful to watch.
Thanks for posting this! I saw "Small Craft Warnings" in London during this time--woefully lacking in what his plays were lauded for--poetry, grace, human suffering, love, connection with the ethereal. Also, Mr. Williams's itchy extremities most likely caused by ascites, which is non-absorbed salts caused by liver failure.
so that's what Tennessee Williams is like
There are plenty of documentaries and interviews online in which you get to see him as he is. They arent to be missed if youre a fan. He was a treasure.
Wait. Don't judge Tennessee by this drunk interview. Dick did another show with him, filmed in New Orleans. He was sober in that and much more interesting. It's on UA-cam.
My first time seeing him too!!!!!!!!
(1:58) 'I hope I wouldn't be Ohio Williams.' 😁
He is so amazing
LOVE TENNESSEE WILLIAMS MOVIES AND BOOKS
That's hostile laughter out there in the audience. Great call by the playwright, Tennessee Williams.
Yes! I thought so, too. That took courage.
me too.
@rayturnertile It's a shame that people like to be mean. Love your neighbor as you love yourself. If people practiced this commandment, we would have more peace and love.
He may have said it with a grin, but that doesn't make it untrue.
Do you not think he was teasing them? As he was teasing Mr. Cavett...
I like Dick Cavett's interviews and him too. I now realise how much people have changed, generally. They have picked up an over inflated impression of themselves today and have this loud, crude way compared with the more attractive subtle attitude of people of, what I call the halcyon days of TV. Tennessee Williams - very interesting interview and man.
My theory on why great writers, musicians and athletes come from the South is that don't have much else to do, so we get good at what we have.
Cavett was a great inerviewer , he had a style that posed no threat to his guests ; and they responded.
It's why he could get some of these people who didn't do a lot of interviews otherwise, like Brando. Cavett's reputation preceded him at that point.
That's the best kind of interviewer in my opinion.
Seeing Williams at this stage of his life and career takes me right to Elia Kazan's memoir and Gadge's many deep insights into the man. I believe Kazan quoted a review of "Camino Real" which referred to that work as 'an enconium to the human spirit'. Kazan felt those words better described the author of said work rather than the play itself.
Williams' voice and speaking idiosyncrasies are uncannily like those that Brando created for his role as Major Weldon Pendleton in _Reflections In A Golden Eye_ , which was based on the Carson McCullers novel of the same name. I have to wonder if Brando intentionally modeled this characterization, at least in part, after Williams.
...once seen, one never forgets how Brando/Pendleton looked on a horse. And now you make me wonder how Williams looked when he rode.
@@martian9999 If we could only see him!
The other way round
I think Brando obviously modelled Maj Penderton on Tennessee. His soliloquy re "Life of Men among Men" in Refelctions is reminiscent of Blanche's remembrance of her young beau at the Moonlake Casino.
Def Brando did it based on Williams.
So many people loved the Dick Cavett show along with the Jack Paar, MervGriffin, Mike Douglas and similar TV shows. They had on incredible guests like Orson Wells, Betty Davis,, Tennessee Williams, John Lennon, Janis Joplin, Jimmy Hendrix and on and on especially Dick Cavett. The shows and the guests were honest and themselves. Apparently non scripted because they would say things that I don't think you could say now. We will never see shows like these again.
A thousand times better than anything we have today.
One can see where Blanche DuBois came from.
Those remarks to the audience.
Chastising them for their ‘cruel laughter’.
The quick shifts of kind and cruel remarks.
Incredible watching.
He was TEASING the audience!!
@@ME-gz8yi I hope so, because that wasn't cruel laughter.
Oh dear - I understand him! When you're from the South you can't explain it, you just are. Pass the biscuits please.
with that Seersucker suit and those snazzy glasses, he looked like a boss before he said a word
@Rob Torres Not in the right social circle--J Peterman catalog has them at high dollar and great quality off and on and they are terrific.
@@verdis23rdoperaunballoinma39 Cinco de Mayo/Putomayo is missing all their desiccant packets.
I CAN!! I can explain why so many great writers come out of the South. The Northern States are Germanic, Polish Swedish, etc. these are cultures that are about EFFICIENCY. The South was settled by the English, Irish, the Spanish and French ... look at the literature that comes out of Ireland and England. And then, the richness of the colloquialisms! The South is about form ... more about taking time with communication. The Art of Conversation. And less about efficiency/machinery/things working properly... (I'd say it's sociological, at least in part).
Anyway, my opinion. If anyone else has more to add... !
But the great composers come out of the Germanic states. I believe great writing comes from great hardship and the South has always had much more hardship than the rest of the country.
@@christschool Wait... which great composers? (I'm guessing you're not referring to the Great American Songbook?)
The South is certainly more tortured...
@@andreaandrea6716 Beethoven and Mozart to start.
@@christschool They aren't from the States. They're German and Austrian.
@@andreaandrea6716 True, they aren't US citizens. I was responding to this that you wrote: "The Northern States are Germanic". My point is that it has less to do with ancestral nationality than it does with local culture and conditions.
He drank every day. Today alcoholism is more widely recognized than it was in 1972.
'Drinking every day' is by no means alcoholism. People that don't drink seem to have absurd suspicions of it.
The liver has over 500 functions. Regular alcohol use is terrible for your health. It is horrible for mental health: early onset demetia, chronic depression just to name a few. Tennessee’s itching of his hands and feet are a symptom of fatty liver disease resulting from alcoholism.
@@lanceaugust Well, you don't have to drink anything, but there's lots of evidence that wine in particular is very good for health. In fact red wine is positively recommended.
Red wine has benefits but it doesn't if you consume it daily. It can lead to liver disease, breast cancer, heart disease etc
Life can directly lead to death
I heard an explanation for why the South produced writers, playwrights and speakers of Tennessee Williams' generation. When the Industrial Revolution was dominating life in the North, the South was primarily agricultural. This meant a lot of down time with not a lot of money to spend. People refined the art of conversation and storytelling in order to keep themselves entertained. I still see evidence of it today in the South.
They're not producing great writers in the South like they used to.
@@patricias5122 They are not producing great writers anywhere like they used to.
When Dick Cavett says that John Osborne was influenced by Tennessee Williams, and Tennessee Williams responds "Why, it made him angry you mean", I don't think Dick Cavett (nor the audience) understood the joke Tennessee Williams was making.
Cavett is, well...stupid.
Nope - it went right over his head. Cavett is one of the most over-rated interviewers in the history of the business. So often makes me cringe.
Tennessee Williams was a real handsome man.
What's up with that beard though 🤔
3:35 talks about his show SMALL CRAFT WARNINGS; he can tune in to more than one conversation at a time; (his fingers itch).
Williams was absolutely bombed during this interview (and the itching was probably a symptom of severe liver damage)
Severe? He lived another 10 years.
Strange interview with TW but awesome to see him interviewed by Cavett.
An expectation betrayed. Some great guys are not easy for interview. Their powerful ego wouldn't open a window for normal communication with other human being. In this regard I must thank Francis for his simplicity and humbleness.
Tennessee Williams in this interview is intelligent, sensitive, honest, witty, ironic and quite charming, and it all seems to go completely over Dick Cavett's head.
If he's drunk, he's still 10x more interesting than Cavett.
So you can read Cavet's mind, then?
Cavett was always astute. But he had a tight schedule, where one day he had John Lennon and Yoko Ono, or Jimi Hendrix or Janis Joplin, or Katherine Hepburn or Orson Welles, or Marlon Brando or Richard Burton or Laurence Olivier, and so on. It's kind of hard to keep up with all these extraordinary people all the time. He had some truly remarkable people on his show, and I think his gift is he stepped back and let them be themselves.
I think he gets it, even if he doesn't always demonstrate it.
Nothing ever went over Cavett's head. Very sharp man.
Wonderful video Thanks