Was this not similar in any way to your father's daily breakfast soliloquy? "Now, is the time when you shall inform to me who ate the rest of my WORK-LUNCH baloney! I pray to hold thee nearest to my breast, and wring thy neck with the force of mighty stallions if I find the true culprit! Now dine on your Cheerios that which has issued from my loins for it may be the last earthly nourishment that you shall receive, courtesy of this gentleman's brow sweat, back, and anguish!" My dad worked at the GM plant in Kalamazoo, MI, and it was a whole thing he did every morning.
We used to practice our monologues on 17th street, in Denver, while attending the NTC. We we do them for the public. I remember doing Mobray, "Let not my cold words" From Rich II. It's a smoldering piece, that builds and builds, where he challenges a relative of the sitting King to a duel. This was a good way to work the piece up. Raising your rehearsal stakes by presenting and force you into the moment. Some fun reaction stories associated with this practice. Reactions varied but for the most part, people got it and seemed to dig it. With out a room but.. pretty much the approach you are musing at.
To be fair...he forgot to limp right at the end, he limped all the way through then stormed off at the end quite briskly. I can forgive him, I hope you can. I too can't remember my phone number, I can't understand how actors can remember their lines, it's a dark art.
I lived in England from 1963-66 as the son of a US Air Force serviceman. I went to a small American school on the base and my teacher for two years was Ms. Gloria Magnuson. She was a Shakespeare "freak" as we called her and she took us on field trips to Stratford Upon Avon and to plays at the Royal Shakespeare Theatre numerous times. I saw Ian Holm play Richard III and I was hooked for life. I saw David Warner play Hamlet and was hooked into eternity. I saw Mr. Holm play Henry V and that was the icing on the cosmic cake. I was 12 and 13 years old. Ms. Magnuson passed on many years back but I thank her to this day for taking a bunch of Yank kids out of their comfort zone and turning them on to the genius of Mr. Shakespeare. Rest in Peace, learned teacher. I miss you...
@@juliaconnell Thank you. She was a delightful personality too. Went to the University of Chicago and graduated Magna but chose to be a teacher when she had the chance to make "the big bucks". She must be resting peacefully knowing all the lives she changed. Peace and Love...
@@merxeddie6474 Until further notice, I will take that as a huge compliment. I'm not sure the Bard would use "freak" in his work but what the heck!! I loved living in England. Were it not for my wife, I would be there now. I love history and Britain is the proverbial goldmine. Cheers !!
It’s wonderful how he goes further away from the camera when he wants to be theatrical and rhetorical, then moves closer when he wants to be intimate and insinuating. It’s a clever blend of acting in two different mediums in one speech.
Here I was thinking it would be the reverse. The more intimate he wants to become the further away he should get until his words become so indecipherable the "audience" has to get on stage to hear what he says. Then when he wants to throw his arms around he would natuarally go in for a close up of his face. Now that makes sense to me. But I have to bow to Olivier's wonderful genius.
@@simongleaden2864 The Actor's Medium: On Stage and in Film. Marc Silberman. Modern Drama, Volume 39, Number 4, Winter 1996, pp. 558-565 (Article). To clarify your ignorance.
He is speaking to someone. The door is pushed open slightly then one can hear the door close and the latch shut. Great work in both medium of stage and film. Media is incorrect. The Actor's Medium: On Stage and in Film. Marc Silberman. Modern Drama, Volume 39, Number 4, Winter 1996, pp. 558-565 (Article).
Ahem - the quoted sentence from the book is differently constructed to this comment. "Great work in both medium of stage and film." The second use of 'medium' is implied here, i.e. Great work in both medium of stage and (medium) of film. The plural of medium is media, so 'two different media' would be correct. I'm afraid using the quote from the book therefore does not support the argument.
I have watched this over and over (I'm not a player or student of theatre) and it still chills me 'I'll drown more sailors than the mermaid shall" What an amazing talent
The direction here is just superb. When he says "but yet I know not how to get the crown" and pulls the camera along with him, you feel totally immersed.
@@user-wz2qe2pv6r To be fair, there a many amazing actors but they probably all used Lord Larry as the template. Tom Hiddlestone is fantastic in Shakespeare plays as is Ralph Fiennes.
Olivier’s best work, I think. Mesmeric, hitting every beat of language with precision, revealing the disdain for his brother, the self-loathing and pity. Insulting himself to beat everyone else to the punch, he does so to justify his evil deeds to come. He could be speaking plain English and it would be as clear. Notice also this is all one tracking shot. A master at work at the peak of his confidence and skills.
Perfection. Olivier veaves two soliloquies together. The opening one from Richard III and one from Henry VI part 3. They compliment each other brilliantly. His delivery is awesome. Cutting each vowel and consonant, underlining the meaning of each phrase to clarify the poetry for modern audiences unfamiliar with Elizabethean prose. Genius.
The way its set up, just a couple of empty, echoey rooms but by moving to certain places, with long shadows or the dark, green lighting from the stained glass windows it changes the tone without need for music or editing. Its a case of knowing Olivier can bring the goods and keeping everything else subdued, but not bland.
4:20 he says "frame my face" while his face is being framed You can tell every second of this was carefully crafted, this is the sort of work almost no one puts in anymore
@@osman01003 His earlier material, especially his standups, draw inspiration from this (or Olivier in general). I've never seen Olivier before, but I _immediately_ thought of Atkinson.
I've seen this many, many times and am still left grinning ear to ear and shaking my head with delight each time....hugely funny and marvelously devilish, he proclaims himself a villain and gets us on his side. Supernaturally masterful.
The genius of Olivier was taking the language of Shakespeare and playing it pitch perfect. Not sure any actor has made it as readily accessible as he did.
When I was a kid this scene scared the living daylights out of me. Now as an adult it's one of the most exquisite things I've ever seen. Olivier was cut from a very different cloth ❤
I saw Laurence Olivier at the Old Vic in 1973, late January. He was joined by Constance Cummings and Dennis Quilley (and I forget the name of the younger son) for "A Long Day's Journey Into Night". In retrospect, I was expecting a big ham, and was underimpressed by Olivier at first. By the play's end, I had learned a lot about acting from his performance, and from the performance of the ensemble. He never 'stole' a scene, and never overplayed a line. Every action was believable. His face reddened when required, he wept on demand, and at the end his despair and grief during Ms Cummings' lines were devastating, and in character. I had the opportunity to see Eric Clapton at the Rainbow Theatre, but instead stood on line in the snow to get tickets to "A Long Day's Journey Into Night". I made the right decision. Thank you, Sir Laurence and cast. I have spent these many years applauding that performance.
@@spockboy Thanks. Also saw him play Henry V and David Warner as Hamlet. I was an Air Force brat and my teacher was a card-carrying Shakespeare nut, as we called her. Opened my eyes to a part of the world I'll always appreciate. I mean, how many kids can say they have seen what I saw? Not many. Cheers !!
Some of the best facial expressions from an actor ever. Such an amazing talent with the virtuosity like that of very few throughout time. The natural talent and hard work displayed here are hard to take in.
@@varana You overlook three things: In modern English we could correctly say 'Love *did foreswear* me ...' (&) Grammatical rules shift significantly overtime - Doth could well have equally meant does & did (but see below) Part of the foundation of the impact of Shakespear's writing stems from his ability and willingness to bend the usual rules of Grammar to carry extra potency. And then again maybe not because in Julius Ceasar there is a very, very clever piece of underhanded character assasination Cassius says to Brutus in essence 'Yeah mate? You thing Ceasar's well hard, more or less a God. Pha! When we were in Sapin he had a fit and fell sick and - yeah get this innit: His coward lips did from their colour fly'. So Shakespear did (or possibly doth) use 'did' as well as 'doth'. But on the other hand he spelled Shakespear at last half a dozen different ways. Ironically to make sure I had the quote spot on (of course I had, as but modesty (which I obviously do flawlessly) obliged it) I checked it. And I was slightly sad to read next to the original a modern English version. My first thought was 'great, its being make accessible'. Sadly, the muppets writing the conversion evidently had no real concept of nuance & connotation. It became 'His lips turned white' Evidently oblivious to the deeper meaning of someone 'flying from their colour(s)'. Its like saying "The Mona Lisa's this young old time chick, quite pretty, eyes are done nicely. And because the gaze is horizontal it gives the impression she follows you with her eyes. It a well used technique. Done in paint. Not much going on in the background".
And that, folks, is what we call compelling and sublime acting! Laurence Olivier set the gold standard for interpreting William Shakespeare's works. Actors either meet, exceed, or fail to meet this standard.
No one has ever equaled Olivier's performance of this role. And indeed many other Shakespearean roles. I saw him do Othello and the Shylock on stage back in the 60's and it was gripping.
@@nagoranerides3150 They already cancelled the long running annual summer Shakespeare outdoor festival here in our midwestern US city on the grounds that it isn't diverse enough. Harold Bloom is probably rolling in his grave.
Did someone say, “frightful ham!” ?? Well then, pass the mustard and I’ll gobble this up all day long….. Watch how Larry hits every mark without seeming to look for them The lighting is strikingly good for this period of cinema. The camera movements so smooth and subtle, perfectly framed, that they only exist if you look for them.
I didn't even realise this was two separate soliloquies combined into one. I can't even pinpoint where one soliloquy ended and the other began. Olivier flowed from one to the other so effortlessly that I could easily buy that it was always written as one scene.
Probably sounds a bit sad but I set this to memory by playing it over and over again in the car for a couple of weeks - I can still repeat it word for word 10; years later. It's amazing how you can remember things you enjoy so clearly yet day to day stuff slips away like sand through your fingers!
Without a doubt the greatest Shakespearean actor who ever drew breath . RIP Sir Laurence Olivier. Now is the winter of our discontent very appropriate quote for current bleak time we all going through.
Seen lots of them have you? Seriously, this may be your opinion, and is as valid as mine or anyone else's, but "without a doubt"? I think there might just be some doubters dotted here and there.
Try Ralph Fiennes now Also In Stratford upon Avon where the RSC is based Outside a sports shop appeared this sign ‘Now is the discount of our winter tent’
I never saw him in the theatre so I'll take the word of other actors who said he was great,but could you really imagine him playing the role of Arthur Seaton, or Mr Sugden in Kes?
@@DJKinney I found that more gripping to watch than any number of current method-bores, it's a different style for sure but still brilliant. There's a lot of subtlety under the bluster.
@@DJKinney are serious?i really feel his emotion and im not even an english speaker,most of the word he said i dont understand but the emotion and feeling is certainly there.he is like speaking to you personally telling all his evil plan and man he is scary,,im actually shocked that he is great,i find theatrical acting boring, but not this one, he knows what he's doing and is very good at it...the only thing a non english speaker understand someone is through his action while speaking,its not about what he say it is how he say it
The relevance of this to today's world is remarkable. The plotting and subterfuge in the worlds of politics and business are unchanged from Shakespeare's time.
Sir Lawrence...The true master of the theater! BRAVO!👏 May these video performances last on forever to educate and show the world of his amazing talents!
A bravura performance by Olivier an artist at the height of his powers making the part his own. He is relaxed and totally confident in the role because he knows how great he is.
This performance committed to film will last as long as people are interested in the works of Shakespeare.His reading of it though of its time is Masterful, a foundation for others to build on
Watching this it’s not hard to see why many consider Olivier to be one of the greatest actors of all time. Not only having to remember that entire soliloquy but also having to deliver it in a single take all whilst hitting his marks and putting the proper passion and nuance into every line and movement. Truly impressive.
better than that its two sollilogauirs merged into one. The start is from richard the third but it then moves into King Henry VI, Part 3. Oliver understood the audiance needed to see just how much richard wanted the crown. ( true history be dammed as always history was written by the victor+
Yh I really don't get it. I'm sure this was considered great back then, but there's a reason you don't see this kind of acting in Shakespeare plays anymore.
I can't explain why this brings me to tears. Is it a memory of a forgotten past? Why do I feel such emotion when wandering York and Bosworth and Towton, these things I cannot put into words, for I know deep down England and Richard are in my heart and very being.
The then Richard of Gloucester was too young to fight at Towton, of course. And your comment being where it is, is very misleading to those who do not know that there is very little substance to connect Shakespeare's diabolical Richard with the real man.
I agree that it’s impressive, but... He’s looking directly at the camera and saying things like “he capers nimbly in the lady’s chamber”. It’s not exactly slice of life lol
@@wilfwilfman FYI, he looks directly at the audience because he's speaking to the audience. It's a MONOLOG. It's a theatre thing. Ancient tradition, etc. And btw, when he says '“he capers nimbly in the lady’s chamber”, he's saying the King is a puff. It's an insult.
Richard III was the last King of England who died in battle. After 500 years of his death his remains were found under a parking lot. Lawrence Oliver was a brilliant actor❤
Magnificent! I love the nuances Olivier brought to Richard III: softer when closer, louder when further away, knowing when to change his mood, placing himself under the hanging giant crown to express his ambition, and de-emphasizing his limp at the end in his determination "to get a crown." Bravo! Thanks for posting. Rest in peace, Laurence.
@James Henderson What fucking vile people you are. Miss Leigh has won numerous awards as the most beautiful of all Hollywood stars. I myself would put Raquel Welch on top of a list. But Ugly? Ridiculous.
@James Henderson You cannot have any sense at all if you think Vivien Leigh ugly. SShe is the most beautiful creature to ever. Also, your eyes are failing you; go see a doctor. Also, you have no heart. I suspect you're just very jealous or perhaps one of those incels. Retreat to your mothers basement, from whence you came
When you watch this and somehow find the need to clap hands but of shock stop yourself, asking why? Don’t be harsh on yourself. This was an excellent performance by an incredible actor.
Yes, the legend that is Laurence Olivier, but to see and hear this without knowing who he was yet his talent and, yes, understanding of the character and every word does he convince us - this is extraordinary.
Such genius in his interpretation! He took text that is barely decipherable to the average reader, and rendered every word intelligible and resonant. I feel like I should watch the whole film now.
I've watched this-who knows how many times, and I never get tired of seeing it. This is how you become a knight. His expression change at 4:24 will make you take two steps backward.
Certainly; this embodiment of the audience in the form of the camera-man is also seen at the beginning of the clip, when Richard notices the camera-man entre, and begins his soliloquy then, speaking directly into the lens.
Just...wow. What an actor, this man encarnates every Sheakespeare´s word on this play...There let be known, that will never be another one, like Sir Lawrence Olivier. ;) .
That's not how you do it! You have the sale in summer. Summer tents are inexpensive already. The sale should cover winter tents that cost more, as they have to hold up against rougher weather.
Laurence Olivier directed and starred in "Henry V," "Hamlet" (Best Picture & Best Actor Oscars), and this, "Richard III." Sheer genius and dedication to his craft! How shameful that he still wasn't able to raise financing for his planned "Macbeth"! His rendition of "Othello" was superb, but was a filmed recording of his National Theatre production, rather than a full-fledged film. We are truly blessed that he left us such a noble, versatile legacy. God Bless, Lord Olivier, or as he liked to be called . . . Larry.
Thomas Chacko His Othello was rendered- and I do mean rendered- in burnt cork blackface makeup. To complete the effect, he would roll his eyes and flash his whitened teeth. It really was something to see.
@@vestibulate Hey, Tom! At the time (1964 - 65), Olivier's portrayal of "Othello" did stir some controversy: many raves, some scathing reviews. Others - including Orson Welles - had played the role as a Middle Eastern type. But Olivier made a firm decision to play Othello as an African. I've read how hard he worked to prepare: workouts at the gym, voice lessons to lower the pitch, and even developing a more "athletic" walk. The makeup took a couple of hours to apply, about the same amount of time to remove! (Can you imagine doing this every night for the stage?) The reason they did the filmed recording was, the show was a complete sellout! Plus, it made additional money for the National Theatre. I wish I could have seen Paul Robeson do it!
My only regret has been not to have read ALL of Shakespeare's works yet. I have to catch up. The metaphors are so deep that every bit of prose is poetry. When Olivier does Shakespeare I cling to every word. What greatness in these words. Richard III is one of my favorites. We must not lose this and it should be taught in every school.
I would hope the UK will always cherish Shakespeare. Maybe they will remain closer to Elizabethan English than Americans. Sadly, too many American students are not literate enough to understand this former and increasingly alien version of the language. Compounding the problem is the push for more current and relevant reading material (I will not call it literature) in all schools and the movement to reduce colleges to trade schools.
Simply...A Classic!! Its been viewed so many times and been placed under so much scrutiny that it's been labeled as great! And then left on a shelf somewhere. But this is Olivier!! The Master Of Acting!! He directed it. To me, Olivier is the greatest actor ever. Surprisingly, this movie is kind of dull...Unless Olivier As Evil Richard The Third Is In The Scene....THEN THE MOVIE IS EAGERLY DARK!!!
From now on, I will be reciting this when I answer the door to I find it has been knocked upon by undesirable persons. I will just keep going and respond to nothing they say until they get disturbed and leave.
I love how smoothly he passes from one soliloqui to another. (For those new to RIII, sir Laurence combines two sol. : "Winter of our duscontent" - beginning of R III, and "add colours to yhe chameleon" from Henry VI part 3).
My fondest memory was going to see Derek Jacobi, in the Theatre Royal in Bath, back in 1978. It was the early afternoon performance of Richard 2nd, and sublime acting. WORD PERFECT, with all the character movements and mannerisms, as his character lost all control. Heaven forbid, he was doing Henry V later on that evening, and according to relatives, who saw the production, it was one of the best they had seen. Blimey, most of us struggle to learn a few lines of the Bards famous works, but learning two plays, word perfect, with the ability to act them, without thinking of what to say next. That's what separates the great actors from the run of the mill crowd
I remember a hilarious Monty Python skit: The Old Overactor's Home. In one room is several people dressed up as Long John Silver (Robert Newton ) in 'Treasure Island', completely costumed, with pegleg and shoulder-parrot, hobbling around crying "Aaargh!" In the second room is another bunch of people dressed up as Richard III (as Olivier plays him here)....
I really can't see or hear this without seeing Peter Sellers swimming into view, with the "definitive spoof" of this performance and "A Hard Day's Night".......
Being some one who is interested in the history of words , ( etymology) . There is so much in this speech that covers so much ground . It is wonderful writing !
I've watched this clip many times over several years. This time, I noticed the broken lighting en route to the throne. As Olivier limps back toward the viewer, he flashes in and out of the shadows with a lurch. Perfect.
I heard some years ago that a camping supplies shop had a sale and had a banner "Now is the winter of our discount tents".
Now that was wit.
😎👍
I wonder how many customers got the joke?
Very good.
@@stevekaczynski3793 Can you explain it?
puns are the lowest form of wit
Imagine walking into the wrong room and this guy just starts talking to you like this.
Was this not similar in any way to your father's daily breakfast soliloquy? "Now, is the time when you shall inform to me who ate the rest of my WORK-LUNCH baloney! I pray to hold thee nearest to my breast, and wring thy neck with the force of mighty stallions if I find the true culprit! Now dine on your Cheerios that which has issued from my loins for it may be the last earthly nourishment that you shall receive, courtesy of this gentleman's brow sweat, back, and anguish!"
My dad worked at the GM plant in Kalamazoo, MI, and it was a whole thing he did every morning.
We used to practice our monologues on 17th street, in Denver, while attending the NTC. We we do them for the public. I remember doing Mobray, "Let not my cold words" From Rich II. It's a smoldering piece, that builds and builds, where he challenges a relative of the sitting King to a duel. This was a good way to work the piece up. Raising your rehearsal stakes by presenting and force you into the moment. Some fun reaction stories associated with this practice. Reactions varied but for the most part, people got it and seemed to dig it. With out a room but.. pretty much the approach you are musing at.
@@hungrypromethean Genius...bravo, bravo!
Hungry Promethean your dad sounds legit
🤣😜😂😬😳
I can't remember my own phone number and then there's this guy.
The big show-off.
Neither do I remember my own phone number, mainly because I call myself so seldom and I have no need to remember it.
How do you get to Carnegie Hall? Practice; practice; practice.
To be fair...he forgot to limp right at the end, he limped all the way through then stormed off at the end quite briskly. I can forgive him, I hope you can. I too can't remember my phone number, I can't understand how actors can remember their lines, it's a dark art.
Nobody better than Olivier....
I lived in England from 1963-66 as the son of a US Air Force serviceman. I went to a small American school on the base and my teacher for two years was Ms. Gloria Magnuson. She was a Shakespeare "freak" as we called her and she took us on field trips to Stratford Upon Avon and to plays at the Royal Shakespeare Theatre numerous times. I saw Ian Holm play Richard III and I was hooked for life. I saw David Warner play Hamlet and was hooked into eternity. I saw Mr. Holm play Henry V and that was the icing on the cosmic cake. I was 12 and 13 years old. Ms. Magnuson passed on many years back but I thank her to this day for taking a bunch of Yank kids out of their comfort zone and turning them on to the genius of Mr. Shakespeare. Rest in Peace, learned teacher. I miss you...
Thank you for sharing - the mark of a true teacher - one that changes our lives
@@juliaconnell Thank you. She was a delightful personality too. Went to the University of Chicago and graduated Magna but chose to be a teacher when she had the chance to make "the big bucks". She must be resting peacefully knowing all the lives she changed. Peace and Love...
Methinks your post has somewhat the swagger of the Bard!
@@merxeddie6474 Until further notice, I will take that as a huge compliment. I'm not sure the Bard would use "freak" in his work but what the heck!! I loved living in England. Were it not for my wife, I would be there now. I love history and Britain is the proverbial goldmine. Cheers !!
David Warner was incredible. It seems no one remembers him anymore.
It’s wonderful how he goes further away from the camera when he wants to be theatrical and rhetorical, then moves closer when he wants to be intimate and insinuating. It’s a clever blend of acting in two different mediums in one speech.
Media, not mediums.
Here I was thinking it would be the reverse. The more intimate he wants to become the further away he should get until his words become so indecipherable the "audience" has to get on stage to hear what he says. Then when he wants to throw his arms around he would natuarally go in for a close up of his face. Now that makes sense to me. But I have to bow to Olivier's wonderful genius.
@@simongleaden2864 The Actor's Medium: On Stage and in Film. Marc Silberman. Modern Drama, Volume 39, Number 4, Winter 1996, pp. 558-565 (Article). To clarify your ignorance.
He is speaking to someone. The door is pushed open slightly then one can hear the door close and the latch shut. Great work in both medium of stage and film. Media is incorrect.
The Actor's Medium: On Stage and in Film. Marc Silberman. Modern Drama, Volume 39, Number 4, Winter 1996, pp. 558-565 (Article).
Ahem - the quoted sentence from the book is differently constructed to this comment.
"Great work in both medium of stage and film." The second use of 'medium' is implied here, i.e. Great work in both medium of stage and (medium) of film.
The plural of medium is media, so 'two different media' would be correct.
I'm afraid using the quote from the book therefore does not support the argument.
I have watched this over and over (I'm not a player or student of theatre) and it still chills me 'I'll drown more sailors than the mermaid shall"
What an amazing talent
One of the greatest soliloquies of Shakespeare's works. Envy is timeless.
It is actually two stitched together.
For everything else, there’s MasterCard…
@@cameradanblack Olivier was always doing that. It is one of the things about his performances that I really detest.
I don't know how to see what you see
How about this same Actor in Henry V ? Another of Olivier's Tour de Force! ❤
The direction here is just superb. When he says "but yet I know not how to get the crown" and pulls the camera along with him, you feel totally immersed.
And guess who the director was.
So true, the interaction with the viewer is sublimely done
When it's done right Shakespeare is completely modern.
*eternal
He was not of an age, but for all time.
Completely agree
@Hell Bro Away, you three-inch fool.
Timeless
All done in one glorious sustained take.
This man had no equal.❤
Judi Dench
@@user-wz2qe2pv6rno
@@user-wz2qe2pv6r To be fair, there a many amazing actors but they probably all used Lord Larry as the template. Tom Hiddlestone is fantastic in Shakespeare plays as is Ralph Fiennes.
Sir Laurence Olivier must have done this scene a thousand times. He perfected it with every fiber of his body.
Olivier’s best work, I think. Mesmeric, hitting every beat of language with precision, revealing the disdain for his brother, the self-loathing and pity. Insulting himself to beat everyone else to the punch, he does so to justify his evil deeds to come.
He could be speaking plain English and it would be as clear. Notice also this is all one tracking shot. A master at work at the peak of his confidence and skills.
Perfection. Olivier veaves two soliloquies together. The opening one from Richard III and one from Henry VI part 3. They compliment each other brilliantly. His delivery is awesome. Cutting each vowel and consonant, underlining the meaning of each phrase to clarify the poetry for modern audiences unfamiliar with Elizabethean prose. Genius.
*complement each other
It is what I dislike most about Olivier's performances.
As did Alec Guinness; to each his own...@@fearlessfosdick160
I don't like It. I didn't age well at all
No, it is still good. Interesting to know what is more 'modern' and effective. Please do not say Ian McKellan...@@edwardcoward5003
The use of lighting and shadow is just amazing
The way its set up, just a couple of empty, echoey rooms but by moving to certain places, with long shadows or the dark, green lighting from the stained glass windows it changes the tone without need for music or editing. Its a case of knowing Olivier can bring the goods and keeping everything else subdued, but not bland.
Exquisite
Garbo understood that..She used her own lighting man whenever filming.
The way the shadows darken on his face at the end!
4:20 he says "frame my face" while his face is being framed
You can tell every second of this was carefully crafted, this is the sort of work almost no one puts in anymore
Ben Dover I love the way his cheekbones sink at that moment and says ”i’ll drown more sailors than the mermaid shall”, its so good!!!
Some actors do put in "a lot of work" nowadays, but sadly, it is often the kind of work that Hugh Jackman did to gain muscle for Wolverine.
@@Herodollus so menacing and in no time at all
Yep
I now understand everything that Rowan Atkinson has ever done.
For sure.
The first season of Blackadder is basically a parody of this, the first episode especially
What is the message of the video?
How is so?
@@osman01003 His earlier material, especially his standups, draw inspiration from this (or Olivier in general).
I've never seen Olivier before, but I _immediately_ thought of Atkinson.
I've seen this many, many times and am still left grinning ear to ear and shaking my head with delight each time....hugely funny and marvelously devilish, he proclaims himself a villain and gets us on his side. Supernaturally masterful.
I wore a vhs cassette of my dad's out watching this. Blue ray now. Sublime.
Some of it's the writing...
That's a very goofy reaction.
I'm definitely not on his side. Iago, though.
@@hmq9052 I regret that you fail to stand under understatement...
You can spend a life time unpacking just five minutes of Shakespearean dialogue. Absolute genius.
dialogue? where?
"Unpacking"... yeah, you go unpack, genius.
@@LoveOneAnotherHeSaid feeling a bit salty darling ?
@@LoveOneAnotherHeSaid
What’s your problem?
The genius of Olivier was taking the language of Shakespeare and playing it pitch perfect. Not sure any actor has made it as readily accessible as he did.
When I was a kid this scene scared the living daylights out of me. Now as an adult it's one of the most exquisite things I've ever seen. Olivier was cut from a very different cloth ❤
I saw Laurence Olivier at the Old Vic in 1973, late January. He was joined by Constance Cummings and Dennis Quilley (and I forget the name of the younger son) for "A Long Day's Journey Into Night". In retrospect, I was expecting a big ham, and was underimpressed by Olivier at first. By the play's end, I had learned a lot about acting from his performance, and from the performance of the ensemble. He never 'stole' a scene, and never overplayed a line. Every action was believable. His face reddened when required, he wept on demand, and at the end his despair and grief during Ms Cummings' lines were devastating, and in character. I had the opportunity to see Eric Clapton at the Rainbow Theatre, but instead stood on line in the snow to get tickets to "A Long Day's Journey Into Night". I made the right decision. Thank you, Sir Laurence and cast. I have spent these many years applauding that performance.
I envy you, what a wonderful experience, what a priceless memory.
Ronald Pickup played the younger son and Maureen Lipmann played the maid.
Genius writer, genius actor. Doesn't get better than this.
Amen. I saw Ian Holm play him at The Royal Shakespeare Theater many moons ago when I was 12. Hooked me for life on Shakespeare.
@@MaynardGKrebs-gv4vy You're lucky! : )
@@spockboy Thanks. Also saw him play Henry V and David Warner as Hamlet. I was an Air Force brat and my teacher was a card-carrying Shakespeare nut, as we called her. Opened my eyes to a part of the world I'll always appreciate. I mean, how many kids can say they have seen what I saw? Not many. Cheers !!
Yes it does! Add genius _director_ to that resume!
Genius director too.
Some of the best facial expressions from an actor ever. Such an amazing talent with the virtuosity like that of very few throughout time. The natural talent and hard work displayed here are hard to take in.
"Love doth forswore me in my mother's womb..."
Damn, that's cold.
It's just "love foreswore"; past tense, which can't be preceded by "doth", which is the present active/infinitive form of "do".
@@slappy8941 -- Source, please.
@@rerite2 2:10
Also, that's how grammar works. "doth" is the old form of "does"; you wouldn't say "love does forswore me".
Russell G It's: "Why, love forswore me in my mother's womb." But you're right: cold.
@@varana You overlook three things:
In modern English we could correctly say 'Love *did foreswear* me ...' (&)
Grammatical rules shift significantly overtime - Doth could well have equally meant does & did (but see below)
Part of the foundation of the impact of Shakespear's writing stems from his ability and willingness to bend the usual rules of Grammar to carry extra potency.
And then again maybe not because in Julius Ceasar there is a very, very clever piece of underhanded character assasination Cassius says to Brutus in essence 'Yeah mate? You thing Ceasar's well hard, more or less a God. Pha! When we were in Sapin he had a fit and fell sick and - yeah get this innit: His coward lips did from their colour fly'.
So Shakespear did (or possibly doth) use 'did' as well as 'doth'.
But on the other hand he spelled Shakespear at last half a dozen different ways.
Ironically to make sure I had the quote spot on (of course I had, as but modesty (which I obviously do flawlessly) obliged it) I checked it.
And I was slightly sad to read next to the original a modern English version. My first thought was 'great, its being make accessible'.
Sadly, the muppets writing the conversion evidently had no real concept of nuance & connotation.
It became 'His lips turned white'
Evidently oblivious to the deeper meaning of someone 'flying from their colour(s)'.
Its like saying "The Mona Lisa's this young old time chick, quite pretty, eyes are done nicely. And because the gaze is horizontal it gives the impression she follows you with her eyes. It a well used technique. Done in paint. Not much going on in the background".
The most impressive feat in this speech was the mention of Machiavelli who published The Prince 47 years after Richard III died.
If the trick to acting is in the eyes then this is a masterpiece.
And that, folks, is what we call compelling and sublime acting! Laurence Olivier set the gold standard for interpreting William Shakespeare's works. Actors either meet, exceed, or fail to meet this standard.
Incredible man. I couldn't really catch all he was saying, but I was still mesmerized. Mark of a true actor.
You're ahead of me, then. I couldn't catch MOST of what he was saying.
No one has ever equaled Olivier's performance of this role. And indeed many other Shakespearean roles. I saw him do Othello and the Shylock on stage back in the 60's and it was gripping.
Hello Joe - this is brummagem Peter. I also saw him in Othello in the 60´s and it will stay with me all my life.
@@peterknight2860Strange to think it would be banned/cancelled now. Probably his Shylock too.
@@nagoranerides3150 They already cancelled the long running annual summer Shakespeare outdoor festival here in our midwestern US city on the grounds that it isn't diverse enough. Harold Bloom is probably rolling in his grave.
VINCENT PRICE AS WELL
Perfect poise, intonation, volume, and delivery. This is how you chat up a lady.
Back in the ancient days of the 60s Olivier was Othello on film and beautiful, young Maggie Smith, Desdemona. Divine.
Did someone say, “frightful ham!” ??
Well then, pass the mustard and I’ll gobble this up all day long…..
Watch how Larry hits every mark without seeming to look for them
The lighting is strikingly good for this period of cinema. The camera movements so smooth and subtle, perfectly framed, that they only exist if you look for them.
I've never heard anyone do it better. Brilliant. And it just now occurred to me this is where Rowan Atkinson derived his Blackadder (the first one).
They do have a similiar bangin' fashion sense! 😂
Now is the summer of our sweet content...
Als
Peter Sellers’ rendition of the Beatles “hard day’s night” as Richard III in the style of Lawrence Olivier is wonderful
yes it is, I'd forgotten that. It used to be played frequently on the radio---a lot of things did, once upon a time. Now it's junk.
Now, we are on the money!
This is the perfect blending of film and theater. What magnificent acting and directing.
It's very daring and creative to combine two soliloquies from separate acts and tailor it so seamlessly. And that hair dude... So menacing 😧
I didn't even realise this was two separate soliloquies combined into one. I can't even pinpoint where one soliloquy ended and the other began. Olivier flowed from one to the other so effortlessly that I could easily buy that it was always written as one scene.
What an actor.! He is one of the greatest actors of all times.
not one of, the best one
Great acting to the very heights by the world's greatest actor. I Salute
Correction. Marlon Brando is the greatest. Olivier doesn't come close.
Amazing that he also played Henry the Fifth so well--enormously different characters!
@@johnmulligan455 who is greater than him?
@@johnmulligan455 :D HIM
Is he, sirs? I fear there will a worse come in his place.
Probably sounds a bit sad but I set this to memory by playing it over and over again in the car for a couple of weeks - I can still repeat it word for word 10; years later. It's amazing how you can remember things you enjoy so clearly yet day to day stuff slips away like sand through your fingers!
Sounds like an admirable use of your time. No one has used our language so well as Shakespeare; it almost seems like it was designed for his pen.
Ever give that speech in a post office, buying stamps? Or in a bar?
So many swords decorate that scene, and yet, the sharpest thing in this video is his delivery.
Few were, or ever will be, the caliber actor Olivier was. The voice, face, passion and talent……he was incredible.
Without a doubt the greatest Shakespearean actor who ever drew breath . RIP Sir Laurence Olivier. Now is the winter of our discontent very appropriate quote for current bleak time we all going through.
Seen lots of them have you? Seriously, this may be your opinion, and is as valid as mine or anyone else's, but "without a doubt"? I think there might just be some doubters dotted here and there.
He's not THE greatest. Many others including Gielgud, Rylance, Hopkins, Fiennes, Schofield and others have been equally great. @@adolforodolfo6929
Try Ralph Fiennes now
Also
In Stratford upon Avon where the RSC is based
Outside a sports shop appeared this sign
‘Now is the discount of our winter tent’
"So, I'm guessing that's a 'no' on the new, vinyl gutters, then?"
I laughed disproportionately more than I think any man should
A truly great Shakespearian actor at his best.
One of the greatest actors who ever lived.
Tera Reid is better...
I never saw him in the theatre so I'll take the word of other actors who said he was great,but could you really imagine him playing the role of Arthur Seaton, or Mr Sugden in Kes?
@@DJKinney You are unaquinted with the craft.
@@DJKinney I found that more gripping to watch than any number of current method-bores, it's a different style for sure but still brilliant. There's a lot of subtlety under the bluster.
@@DJKinney are serious?i really feel his emotion and im not even an english speaker,most of the word he said i dont understand but the emotion and feeling is certainly there.he is like speaking to you personally telling all his evil plan and man he is scary,,im actually shocked that he is great,i find theatrical acting boring, but not this one, he knows what he's doing and is very good at it...the only thing a non english speaker understand someone is through his action while speaking,its not about what he say it is how he say it
Sir Laurence Olivier - The Lord of the Stage. Legendary, iconic and immortal performer of the English Plays.
The relevance of this to today's world is remarkable. The plotting and subterfuge in the worlds of politics and business are unchanged from Shakespeare's time.
Sir Lawrence...The true master of the theater! BRAVO!👏 May these video performances last on forever to educate and show the world of his amazing talents!
……his first name is spelled the Latin way, ‘Laurence’……
@@elizabethroberts6215 Thank you so very much for your kind correction.👌⚘
Never before or since has the English language be so eloquently written and spoken. Shakespeare and Larry Olivier a perfect combination.
I've always wondered by Laurence Olivier was so highly regarded when it came to Shakespeare. I can see now why he was known as the actor's actor.
He wasn't always good at it - in Nicholas and Alexandra, he overacts quite a bit.
He was such a great actor. So whimsy, playful and mesmerizing.
To me Laurence Olivier IS Richard III. Having seen this film when it first came out the impression it made on me has never been superseded.
Once you start watching, you can't stop. Mesmerizing. You want more.
A bravura performance by Olivier an artist at the height of his powers making the part his own. He is relaxed and totally confident in the role because he knows how great he is.
This performance committed to film will last as long as people are interested in the works of Shakespeare.His reading of it though of its time is Masterful, a foundation for others to build on
I saw this late one night on TV and it grabbed me so effectively that I just dropped everything and watched it through to the end, past midnight.
Watching this it’s not hard to see why many consider Olivier to be one of the greatest actors of all time.
Not only having to remember that entire soliloquy but also having to deliver it in a single take all whilst hitting his marks and putting the proper passion and nuance into every line and movement.
Truly impressive.
Well he was a stage actor and he would have the whole play learnt off by heart I suppose
yeah too bad they abridged it.
Interesting fact, he suffered from stage fright. He would always vomit just before going on stage it was that terrible
better than that its two sollilogauirs merged into one. The start is from richard the third but it then moves into King Henry VI, Part 3.
Oliver understood the audiance needed to see just how much richard wanted the crown. ( true history be dammed as always history was written by the victor+
Yh I really don't get it. I'm sure this was considered great back then, but there's a reason you don't see this kind of acting in Shakespeare plays anymore.
I can't explain why this brings me to tears. Is it a memory of a forgotten past? Why do I feel such emotion when wandering York and Bosworth and Towton, these things I cannot put into words, for I know deep down England and Richard are in my heart and very being.
The then Richard of Gloucester was too young to fight at Towton, of course. And your comment being where it is, is very misleading to those who do not know that there is very little substance to connect Shakespeare's diabolical Richard with the real man.
The words of Shakespeare and the delivery of Olivier make a deep emotional tide in one’s soul.
Moving and uplifting with a mesmerising performance……
Absolutely spot on my friend
There's actors and then there is this guy, that was impressive, in the fact that you kinda forget he is acting.
I agree that it’s impressive, but... He’s looking directly at the camera and saying things like “he capers nimbly in the lady’s chamber”. It’s not exactly slice of life lol
@@wilfwilfman dude come on I say that kind of stuff at least twice a week lol 😋
You are most fair, kind Sir Robert. May the trumpets of St. Peter always sing thy melody, and the beasts of Lucipher be ever at thy beck and call.
@@wilfwilfman dude if I had a dollar for every time I heard that id be a rich man. 😏
@@wilfwilfman FYI, he looks directly at the audience because he's speaking to the audience. It's a MONOLOG. It's a theatre thing. Ancient tradition, etc.
And btw, when he says '“he capers nimbly in the lady’s chamber”, he's saying the King is a puff. It's an insult.
Richard III was the last King of England who died in battle. After 500 years of his death his remains were found under a parking lot.
Lawrence Oliver was a brilliant actor❤
(And the skeleton revealed that he did in fact have a curvature of the spine.)
And blonde, a gracile, and likely his dark representation and rancid evil was merely political smearing to appease Shakespear’s sponsors. I think.
Curvature of the spine but still a warrior. I think King Richard was misunderstood.
I think Sir Larry, would have been amused by that recent find.
did they find his car too?
A masterpiece and the greatest olivier ever did.
“Is it safe?”...... chills
That reminds me I have to make a dental appointment 🤣👍
Worlds apart...galaxies...
Damn, beat me to it...
The industrial music group Skinny Puppy introduced me to that movie. They sample that line in their song "Assimilate".
"Run, run, run as fast as you can / You can't catch me, I'm the Gingerbread Man!"- Lord Farquaad
Magnificent! I love the nuances Olivier brought to Richard III: softer when closer, louder when further away, knowing when to change his mood, placing himself under the hanging giant crown to express his ambition, and de-emphasizing his limp at the end in his determination "to get a crown." Bravo! Thanks for posting. Rest in peace, Laurence.
Actors since, grasping this nettle, would hear this matchless, definitive monologue pounding in their ears.
I prefer Peter Sellers' version.
@James Henderson You are merely jealous. Larry's girl was Vivian Leigh. From 19 years old......
James Henderson Watch a streetcar named desire. She plays a pathetic whore
@James Henderson What fucking vile people you are. Miss Leigh has won numerous awards as the most beautiful of all Hollywood stars.
I myself would put Raquel Welch on top of a list. But Ugly? Ridiculous.
@James Henderson You cannot have any sense at all if you think Vivien Leigh ugly. SShe is the most beautiful creature to ever. Also, your eyes are failing you; go see a doctor. Also, you have no heart. I suspect you're just very jealous or perhaps one of those incels. Retreat to your mothers basement, from whence you came
Greatness. Nothing will ever surpass this.
Oh it is impossible to surpass that.. this is the edge of the horizon
This guy was a great actor. I saw him in the Othello play. R.I.P Sir Laurence Olivier 🙏🌺
When you watch this and somehow find the need to clap hands but of shock stop yourself, asking why? Don’t be harsh on yourself. This was an excellent performance by an incredible actor.
His intonation and dynamics are flawless.
Yes, the legend that is Laurence Olivier, but to see and hear this without knowing who he was yet his talent and, yes, understanding of the character and every word does he convince us - this is extraordinary.
Such genius in his interpretation! He took text that is barely decipherable to the average reader, and rendered every word intelligible and resonant. I feel like I should watch the whole film now.
I've watched this-who knows how many times, and I never get tired of seeing it. This is how you become a knight. His expression change at 4:24 will make you take two steps backward.
first a knight and then became a lord
I love at 3:35 when he personifies the camera and making it look like he is grabbing our hand to lead us in his direction.
Certainly; this embodiment of the audience in the form of the camera-man is also seen at the beginning of the clip, when Richard notices the camera-man entre, and begins his soliloquy then, speaking directly into the lens.
I love that part!
Exactly!)
Just...wow. What an actor, this man encarnates every Sheakespeare´s word on this play...There let be known, that will never be another one, like Sir Lawrence Olivier. ;) .
He looks like Lord farquaad
Yes! Lord Farquaad is absolutely based on this performance, as a grasping, deformed malcontent.
I mean, Lord Farquaad was very much based on this kind of medieval look. :P
Lord Farquaad was based off Richard III.
I was gonna say the exact same thing!
Lord Fuckwad.
It’s that great “Now” speech.
Olivier’s Camping Goods Store: “Now is the winter of our discount tents!”
Shakespeare gaming company; “Now is the winter of our disc content dlc!!
Among the ten funniest comments I ever read ...
🤣
That's not how you do it! You have the sale in summer. Summer tents are inexpensive already. The sale should cover winter tents that cost more, as they have to hold up against rougher weather.
Almost got it: The joke was a sign seen outside a sporting goods store in April: "Now is the discount of our winter tents"
Laurence Olivier directed and starred in "Henry V," "Hamlet" (Best Picture & Best Actor Oscars), and this, "Richard III." Sheer genius and dedication to his craft! How shameful that he still wasn't able to raise financing for his planned "Macbeth"! His rendition of "Othello" was superb, but was a filmed recording of his National Theatre production, rather than a full-fledged film. We are truly blessed that he left us such a noble, versatile legacy. God Bless, Lord Olivier, or as he liked to be called . . . Larry.
Thomas Chacko His Othello was rendered- and I do mean rendered- in burnt cork blackface makeup. To complete the effect, he would roll his eyes and flash his whitened teeth. It really was something to see.
He would've been a great MacBeth, IMHO. Vivian Leigh as Lady MacBeth. Today, he could raise the money through GoFundMe. Alas....
@@vestibulate Hey, Tom! At the time (1964 - 65), Olivier's portrayal of "Othello" did stir some controversy: many raves, some scathing reviews. Others - including Orson Welles - had played the role as a Middle Eastern type. But Olivier made a firm decision to play Othello as an African. I've read how hard he worked to prepare: workouts at the gym, voice lessons to lower the pitch, and even developing a more "athletic" walk. The makeup took a couple of hours to apply, about the same amount of time to remove! (Can you imagine doing this every night for the stage?) The reason they did the filmed recording was, the show was a complete sellout! Plus, it made additional money for the National Theatre. I wish I could have seen Paul Robeson do it!
Thomas Chacko Larry? Who would dare!
He'd be strung up if he did Othello today! Yet plenty of black actors take traditionally Caucasian roles
My only regret has been not to have read ALL of Shakespeare's works yet. I have to catch up. The metaphors are so deep that every bit of prose is poetry. When Olivier does Shakespeare I cling to every word. What greatness in these words.
Richard III is one of my favorites. We must not lose this and it should be taught in every school.
I would hope the UK will always cherish Shakespeare. Maybe they will remain closer to Elizabethan English than Americans. Sadly, too many American students are not literate enough to understand this former and increasingly alien version of the language. Compounding the problem is the push for more current and relevant reading material (I will not call it literature) in all schools and the movement to reduce colleges to trade schools.
Absolutely stunning and compelling performance by a master of the art.
This is one of the best movies ever!
Simply...A Classic!! Its been viewed so many times and been placed under so much scrutiny that it's been labeled as great! And then left on a shelf somewhere. But this is Olivier!! The Master Of Acting!! He directed it. To me, Olivier is the greatest actor ever. Surprisingly, this movie is kind of dull...Unless Olivier As Evil Richard The Third Is In The Scene....THEN THE MOVIE IS EAGERLY DARK!!!
No argument here. I saw Ian Holm play Richard III in about 1964 at the Royal Shakespeare Theatre in Stratford. I was 12. Was an addict immediately.
From now on, I will be reciting this when I answer the door to I find it has been knocked upon by undesirable persons. I will just keep going and respond to nothing they say until they get disturbed and leave.
I love how smoothly he passes from one soliloqui to another.
(For those new to RIII, sir Laurence combines two sol. : "Winter of our duscontent" - beginning of R III, and "add colours to yhe chameleon" from Henry VI part 3).
The master of acting. All actors should study him.
Ham
@@DWinegarden2 I like it on rye with swiss cheese.
They all do.
I did...
It’s also really cool that the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. alludes to the first line within the “ I Have a Dream” speech.
The man is brilliant! He should be working in the theater! 💐
My fondest memory was going to see Derek Jacobi, in the Theatre Royal in Bath, back in 1978.
It was the early afternoon performance of Richard 2nd, and sublime acting. WORD PERFECT, with all the character movements and mannerisms, as his character lost all control.
Heaven forbid, he was doing Henry V later on that evening, and according to relatives, who saw the production, it was one of the best they had seen.
Blimey, most of us struggle to learn a few lines of the Bards famous works, but learning two plays, word perfect, with the ability to act them, without thinking of what to say next.
That's what separates the great actors from the run of the mill crowd
One of the masters of that great instrument which is English.
rico567 Olivier or Shakespeare? 😎
cufflink44 Either or both, take your pick. Although Shakespeare even had a hand in contributing to modern English.
I love his voice
Me too!😊
Greatness Shines Through Forever...The Best Actor in the World for the last 400 years...
Unrivalled !
I think this is where Lord Farquaad was inspired from 🤣
This inspires art, not just poetry.
Simply brilliant! He was so loud!!! Beautiful man and actor. Bravo 👏👏👏❤️
The lighting is amazing, it shifts with his mood
I remember a hilarious Monty Python skit: The Old Overactor's Home. In one room is several people dressed up as Long John Silver (Robert Newton ) in 'Treasure Island', completely costumed, with pegleg and shoulder-parrot, hobbling around crying "Aaargh!" In the second room is another bunch of people dressed up as Richard III (as Olivier plays him here)....
That had escaped my memory. I am laughing hysterically in case you're wondering.
Who's in the other rooms? There has to be one for portrayers of Macbeth another for Hamlet and for Julius Caesar.
@@tenhirankei I forget, so I looked it up. The other rooms were for King Rat(s) & Hamlet(s).
I really can't see or hear this without seeing Peter Sellers swimming into view, with the "definitive spoof" of this performance and "A Hard Day's Night".......
“A horse. A horse. My kingdom for a horse”
Being some one who is interested in the history of words , ( etymology) . There is so much in this speech that covers so much ground . It is wonderful writing !
The author was a guy of some renown in the playwriting business...
It was unnecessary to define "etymology".
Read "A Theatre of Envy"
@@wholeNwon In this day and age, I don't think so.
I've watched this clip many times over several years. This time, I noticed the broken lighting en route to the throne. As Olivier limps back toward the viewer, he flashes in and out of the shadows with a lurch. Perfect.
Pretty good acting. Pretty, pretty. prettttty good.