- Видео 33
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Eric
Добавлен 8 мар 2015
Видео
Lo-fi Digital Synth Tutorial - FM Modulation with Yoshimi (ZynAddSubFX)
Просмотров 587Год назад
Lo-fi Digital Synth Tutorial - FM Modulation with Yoshimi (ZynAddSubFX)
Checking solutions to systems of linear differential equations with Maple: Quick Tips!!!
Просмотров 1042 года назад
maybe this helps someone
nobody™ - Ambient Assortment (2017)
Просмотров 1682 года назад
introducing.... this album was taken from the site (maybe a replica?) but i'm lead to believe it's authentic because even though it's dated 2017, when most people say the site was taken down in 2016, the dating format in the mp3 files is the same unique format as found on earlier releases.. the .org version of the site that is currently up is a replica of the original site, and only links to au...
SageMath - How to set zmin and zmax for plot3d? the add_condition() method!
Просмотров 1842 года назад
hopefully you know a little bit about how sagemath plotting and python works - let me know any suggestions for further clarification!
Botany of Desire - Determinism
Просмотров 733 года назад
www.discogs.com/release/13249571-Botany-of-Desire-Determinism-
Death of a Salesman (1966, DVD quality)
Просмотров 369 тыс.3 года назад
arthur miller, gene wilder, lee j. cobb, stanley adams, edward andrews www.imdb.com/title/tt0187806/
Torso - Nacht Leiche (2015) FULL
Просмотров 1483 года назад
full tape rip copyright Total Black www.discogs.com/Torso-Nacht-Leiche/release/7075004
Clock Dva - Cage (1979)
Просмотров 5143 года назад
from "Group Fragments" cassette release www.discogs.com/Dva-Group-Fragments/release/1088864
Radio Tenere: Goudel Mollo Swagger (Radio Niger)
Просмотров 2113 года назад
Radio Tenere: Goudel Mollo Swagger (Radio Niger)
Catriel Nievas + Ivan González - Neblina
Просмотров 463 года назад
Catriel Nievas Ivan González - Neblina
Graham Lambkin & Áine O'Dwyer - Greenways
Просмотров 5323 года назад
Graham Lambkin & Áine O'Dwyer - Greenways
Bastard Noise / Hermit - Nature Is God (1997) [Full Cassette]
Просмотров 4756 лет назад
Bastard Noise / Hermit - Nature Is God (1997) [Full Cassette]
Sana Obruent & Plasticstatic - Nisi Vindices Delicta (Guilt)
Просмотров 1457 лет назад
Sana Obruent & Plasticstatic - Nisi Vindices Delicta (Guilt)
In my opinion, “Death of a Salesman” is one of the greatest plays ever written. I first heard the play during an 11th grade English class on an LP record and it’s been one of my favorites for the past 40 years. Arthur Miller truly had his finger on the pulse of the Human Condition. Lee Cobb was genius in the role, and I’ve seen many actors play Willy. My only regret was never seeing Philip Seymour Hoffman play Willy. I personally believe he was one of the greats, and as Willy, he MUST have been outstanding.
Willy was going into Alzemers, and having a nervous breakdown. He encouraged his sons criminal behavior. No good sons. Did Miller's father behave like this.😮😮
I remember this production from my childhood, and I'm so glad and grateful to see it again. And with no commercial interruptions, which is as it should be. This play rings as true now as it ever did -- a classic, timeless tale. Thanks so much for posting.
Jume Foray, the voice of Rocket J. Squirrel and so many others.
1:00:00
The American dream in all its glory....and that was back in 1966 when there was some sort of social safety net.
Willy makes me terribly sad
This feels like the angry version…
debut extrait 54:36 fin extrait: 58:48
You can spend your entire life worrying about being liked, and then hate yourself for eternity… Liking and excepting yourself is the only path to happiness…
I’m 16 in high school, any older folk have any advice for me?
make time to read
See above kid…
@ it was rearranged but I saw it thanks.
Doesn't hold a candle to the one with Hoffman and Malkovich. That one made me cry. This one is bland, cold, uninspired.
I remember his acting performance in 12 angry men 😮 he is great
I’m 11 and reading this in school😂😂
He’s lazy. One thing about Biff is that he’s not lazy. In the space of a minute or so.
Same thing with Chevrolet.
What a play. Shockingly relatable.
Thanks for uploading this. ✨️
Thank you, Eric
The Man didn't know who he was. In those days many women were good women. She was a saint. She gave him everything he could ever need. He was basically a dreamer who wasn't grounded. Like a lot of people he tried to fit his family around his career and goals. Instead he should have fit his career around his family. If he had done that he would have had the house paid for. He also wasn't content. He had too much arrogance and too much pride...sort of an unrealistic idea of how great he was. Notice he was too proud to take a job for the guy who offered him a position. But that guy's son found more success. As a salesman he's a talker and not a doer. A dreamer when he should have been a contractor. Some people do and some people talk.
I'm so lucky that my Grandfather was who he was. A good man to all - including treating women as equals.
Better b&w. Colorization of original films is an arrogant travesty 👎
I read this when I was 15 and I came home extolling its virtues ave my father was very upset telling le it was a mediocre work. He was a salesman and my comment was upsetting to him.
This is a Godless movie. All of the characters are faithless and over the top folks. No moral values except what they see in themselves. As it goes, each pays a price for their miserable rejection of God their Creator.
When I saw this on video cassette years ago, it gave me nightmares. Cobb was a rare actor. Always came from the soul.
Talk about perfect casting and acting Lee j Cobb resembles and exemplifies a broken man throughout the whole movie in my opinion Cobb is the only willy lohman
23:56 - 47:41
23: 56
As often as I've seen DOAS, no production surpasses this one. Brilliant cast, stage design, even the music worked. Fascinating too to see actors known for their television and film work especially in comedy - Wilder, Andrews, Koppell, even Segal (I saw him on tour in ART with Wayne Knight and Buck Henry). And when the tape recorded played, I thought, Wait, that's the voice of June Foray - better known as the voice of Rocky the Flying Squirrel and a host of other cartoon characters! Thanks for this great upload.
It's hard to believe those two are brothers
Cobb! Dunnock! Legends! The Original Production! This is Excellent Also! Everyone. Fantastic Job!
No actor will ever match LeeJ Cobb in this role, either on stage or film, but Frederick March did a damn good job with it in a black& white 1950’s film version….🙏🎭
I’m ten mins in and I’m hooked. I’m watching bc of a theatre class I’m taking. But this is good. N I’m from NY so hearing things like Buschwick makes me homesick.
This literary/dramatic masterpiece has been translated into literally hundreds of languages and performed in almost every country on the globe, so devastatingly universal are its themes. Once you know the play, you could attend a performance in a language that you don’t understand and still be swept away in the story, such was Miller’s genius. I had the privilege of acting in this(playing Happy) 20 years ago at a small theatre company in San Francisco, we ran it for 9-10 weeks, 4-5 shows per week, and not a single actor got bored taking the stage every night. 5 minutes into every show we were all completely swept away in what we were creating & participating in, like “magic dust” in the air every night…🙏🎭
Great ❤❤
There were promises made in this office ! The office scene, brutal, heartbreaking. I first 'heard' this play in the early 1970s on a long playing record in English class. It was an audio recording of this great production and I remember being very moved by it and Lee J. Cobb's performance. When NBC aired this I would have been too young to have understood it. Now it is with me for life as it will be with all who see it, for it will most certainly live forever. Thank you Eric so much for the gift of it now. Lee Cobb, Volcanic, beaten and yet, beacon of light. Willy Loman raised high.
Tears. Not so much of the play (although it’s tearful), but for these comments. Oh the dreadful truth.
To my mind this masterpiece encapsulates all of the seven deadly sins. Primarily though is Miller's notion in prediction, 75 years ago of what's coming our way hard, fast and it's here today in abundance; GREED! Where enough will never be enough!
Thank you, thank Artor Miller and special thanks for Lee J Coub.
When Lee J Cobb was ill and found himself in the hospital facing an operation, Frank Sinatra stepped in anonymously and paid all his medical bills and even provided for care for Lee's recovery. Upon learning who his benefactor was Lee confronted Frank and asked, 'how could he ever repay him?' Frank reportedly said, 'you're work as an actor and what it has brought to the world is payment enough'.
I don't know much about Sinatra but, reputedly, he was a generous guy with $!
This play impresses for sure, but to balance the glowing praise to some degree... The thing lacks subtlety - the characters are too obviously and predictably drawn, and their reactions to each other and the situations are (mostly) way over the top. Of course characters, etc, have to be exaggerated to a degree in performance, but this was quite a bit beyond the pale, and really didn't convince. …On Willy Loman - yes the man appeared to have been chewed-up and spat-out by his employers in the last part of his career at least, but ultimately what we see here is a man with serious mental health/personality- disorder issues. Many of us feel disappointed with life and our perceived level of success in relation to expectations/ambitions, and many are used and abused by employers, but most of us find a way to reconcile ourselves to this. Willy's health issues prevented that reconciliation. The point is that it wasn't only the 'situation' that broke Willy, but also his reaction to it....And, a minor point - Lee J Cobb was fantastic, his acting was second to none - however if I was directing him in this I'd have done something about that strange, exaggerated, lolloping gait he broke into on occasion. All in all a great play and performance, nonetheless!
Nice
Atmosphere❤
what an excellent version ! and amazing performances wow
Damn. Old school casting. Farentino and Segal playing teenagers.
PBS? Colorized? The classic American tragedy.
Can you get "Luther" with Robert Shaw , "The Price" with George C Scott, and "The Iceman Cometh" with Jason Robards, please? I'll be your best friend!
George Segal, James Farantino, and Gene Wilder so young here. And Gene and George we lost just recently. Wow the color quality and sound on this isnt bad for nearly 60 year old production. Edward Andrews in a dramatic role? WOW hes good. I remember him from a lot of TV and Movie Guest Appearances and commercials...mostly comedic (Molly Ringwald's grandad in SIXTEEN CANDLES)
This is a remarkable bit of Theater History. Lee J. Cobb leads a brilliant cast in an ultimately dark and depressing story. Fun to see familiar faces like Gene Wilder, Seigfried (Bernie Kopell) Cyrano Jones (Stanley Adams) and Mildred Dunnock who got thrown down a flight of stairs in a wheelchair by Richard Widmark in Kiss of Death... of a Salesman.... Young Segal and Farentino acquit themselves well in the presence of greatness like Cobb. I remember seeing Hoffman a few years back and wasn't all that impressed. I am going to revisit that version and see how I feel now that I am older (and wiser). I am curious to seek out Brian Dennehy's performance as well. George C Scott played Willie on Broadway. Don't know if it was ever recorded, but that would be an interesting watch as well. The problem is, it is such a damned depressing tale... I don't know how many I can take!!
I've taught this to summer school students the past few years, focusing on how it's a dark look at the American Dream, how if a person values style over substance they're eventually exposed, and how it's important to value what you have. As a way to wrap the unit up, I pair it with Rocky and compare that look at the American Dream (much more positive) and you'd be shocked at some of the parallels students draw. I do agree, though, that as an adult it definitely hits different.
Pairing this play with “Rocky” is an inspired choice! (30-year teacher here.)
47:43
Life happens daily, a journey. The good things happen, the inconsequential overall happen, and the bad things happen. Facing life by a human being person is part of the human condition, under the skies, 24/7. By my inherent thankfulness, thank you for your consideration. The need of being loved, liked, inherently beloved and to love happens to be part of being human. Livelihood is more than income, the joyous spirit of life has the hellos, and the sorrows of so long for now, and the freedom inherent to greet each other glad on each part of the human being person inherent communication during life. The inherent part has the inner life that relates directly to the outer life during daily life. The characters each have a personal life experience, the dialogue in the screen play fiction is indicative of the impartiality in dignity of the human being person, yet can be very emotionally charged. Passivity masks emotionally charged, and in my personal dignity, my belief is that only God is omniscient. In that life is never a "game," those who live by "tells" are not omniscient, instead of letting go and letting God. God has the equality in the compassion flowing from God in goodness sake influence to each human being person, such as depicted in this tragedy, "The Death of a Salesman." The 1st Amendment Establishment Clause is a needed part of The original Ten Bill of Rights, and this is natural language freedom of speech, also in the 1st Amendment as an enumerated guaranteed to me, and universally guaranteed to each human being person, in simply, of course, voluntary participation to communicate to someone else. This brief comment is not a summarized critique of the plot of dialogue so rich in real concepts of human thought, only a personal overview. In that, by God given dignity, God and me, and those I voluntarily communicate, as in the past, and continue to voluntarily as part of God given freedom to me, I do talk of God of each Testament of The Holy Bible, the God, not just my human concept, however God Who is being God of my life, <> but it needs to be voluntary on my part, <> and voluntarily as part of my freedom to enter into a conversation, <> and stay in a conversation once I entered into a conversation, <> and that is how I live my life. God is Sovereign over me, <> and I'm steward over myself being me, someone of God given freedom. This voluntarily typed in freedom of use of natural language is not to impose God nor religion on someone reading this. Good today of days, and the human need of "inner life" relates to "outer life," the correctness just peacefulness in freedom to express by this natural language. 🕊.