@@brando7266 you too lazy to type out “you” what are you 12 years old? I said “one” of the greatest actors that doesn’t mean Brando can’t be one of them too, genius.
Charles Bronson was always my favorite actor. The quite relax personality. He kept in great physical condition something most actors back then did not bother exercising
Charles Bronson was one of a kind. I knew about his hardship when growing up but I must admit I didn't know about his purple heart for his service in the war. A true hero and one of my favorite actors ever. RIP Mr. Bronson
I've always been impressed by the way he seemed to keep himself in good physical shape despite his age. He was 50 or 51 years old when he did the movie "Chato's Land" in 1972 playing a half breed Indian and I envied his great physique in that movie.
I remember watching his movies as a little girl and always wishing I had a father like him because my own father was absent from my life. The tough guy persona appealed to me for reasons I didn't understand at the time. In Death Wish and other movies, I saw him as a man with a hard exterior but with a gentle giant interior. According to the facts in this video, I can understand and empathize with his complexities. I actually have a few of these myself and many of our childhood experiences although seperated by a different time and place, strangely seem to run parallel.
I just read a story about a young boy who lost his leg after he tripped and skinned his knee on the sidewalk. Essential or not, it’s reasonable for humans to fear things like germs and fire.
Bronson is my favorite movie actor. He has starred in more great movies than anyone else. My all-time favorites are The Magnificent Seven, Great Escape, Dirty Dozen, Once Upon a Time, Chato's Land, The Mechanic, Mr. Majestyk, Death Wish, and Hard Times. He has always been criminally underrated as an actor. He should've won an Oscar for the original Death Wish. His performance is at times, happy, sad, frightened, fatigued, and of course menacing. He has always represented courage to me. I miss him. Today's Hollywood stars don't hold a candle to his greatness.
For myself, when it comes to male stars, it's a fourway tie between Bronson, Bogart, Langcaster and Schwarzenegger! I have more of their films than anybody else! Rather than say who was the "best" I usually punk out and say they never phoned in a performance; my eyes were always glued to the screen!
@@williamhelm6632 "Sampano is here!" I like his work, but not as much as the guys I listed! The films in my collection are a fraction of the movies I've enjoyed in which they've appeared! BTW LOVED Quinn as Gauguin!
The original 'Magnificent Seven" was the greatest western ever! I saw that when I was about 13 years-old, and we kids talked about 'those badass gunfighters' for a long time! LOL!!
in 1991-92 I worked in Snowmass Village CO at the reservations office and took his reservations for his Xmas family holidays. I remember our little talk about the great Westerns including his Once Upon a Time....' and when I mentioned liking the classic Peckinpah 'The Wild Bunch, he responded with..."The Wild Bunch was a great film". Such a cool personality and gracious.
Even the name alone is the most badass there ever was. Seconded perhaps by Chuck Norris or just STALLONE. Well, then there is of course Mr. T, which sounds a lot tougher than Mr. Coffee actually.
That is an amazing film. You spend the first half going "Huh?" But it all comes together in the end. Man with a Camera is worth checking out, it was a TV series Charles did.
@@1978garfield I nearly died of boredom during the first half of the film but made myself watch it as my Dad thinks it's marvellous. It's a slow movie, I'd never watch it again but as a piece of art cinema it's terrific.
When Charles Bronson passed away in 2003, l was surprised that they mentioned only Death Wish. While he may have found a higher degree of success with this genre, he made numerous movies that showed his versatility as a actor. I always thought he was a no nonsense man. Loved his movies. I think he deserves another look from the academy of motion picture. I think he was a much better actor than given credit for. Thanks for sharing. Be safe.
@@rogerchoate8899 True, I also love COLD SWEAT and DEATH WISH 1 & 3 but "From Noon..." is a delightful change of pace from most of his filmography! Also, check out his MAN WITH A CAMERA TV series if it's still in print! I think I saw it on Hulu back when it was still free!
im a big charles bronson fan and always thought of him as the average man that worked hard all his life. he is what this country is made of. charles bronson is what america represents.
Bronson seemed like a well-grounded, down to esrth person and he truly loved Jill Ireland. His acting seemed so natural, like he wasn't acting. The Great Escape, Mr Majestyk, so many more. He wad cool.
“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..
I've always enjoyed watching Charles Bronson on screen. Sure, he did play some heavies -- he oozed strength on the screen without even trying, but he was rather quiet in real life, and worked well on screen with his wife, Jill Ireland, in a few movies. Good actor and nice person.
I am most surprise d about his true personality, in 1981 a man called on my new homes for sale ad in the paper, he asked how i could build new houses for such low prices, he sounded exactly like Charles Bronson, but denied it when I asked...I still think it was probably him...my own father worked in a coal mine under Stalin....concentration camp conditions....only 25% of the men survived. Bronson has always been one of my favorite actors
I’ve always liked him. I used to watch the western channel with my aging mother. Charles Bronson showed up many times on the old tv westerns of the fifties.
I've always enjoyed Charles Bronson. I guess it started with his parts in westerns 1st, thru all the Death Wish movies & everything else I could find thru the years. I believe he was also a boxer in his early years.
I wasn’t really surprised about the languages or that he was more popular in Europe first… I think I’ve seen a video about him already. Thank you very much for the very good video!
That was interesting. I was more impressed with how many languages he spoke. I wasn't surprised that he changed his name. They almost all do that. Actors from then to now are so different in their personalities. He was classy and even kept his fear of germs to himself. Today they boast about their fear of germs while they display how they wear gloves to shake hands with fans, which is why I don't believe most of them. And back then they liked being Americans and didn't want any parts of marxism. Today they talk about the reasons they hate American and push for things like Marxism. But anyway, this was a great video on Charles Bronson.
...no mention of his great role in the Magnificent Seven, where he was one of those who sacrificed his life to protect the children who adored him in life and death.
I've remember in the 1980's Charles Bronson he made good-movies in brooklyn newyork , in east newyork brooklyn , he was one ofthe best actor's of the 70' s , 80 's .
His best moment in Death Wish 2 when he asks a bad guy with a cross dangling on his neck " So , You Believe In Jesus " Bad Guy " Yes I Do " Charles " Well , You're Gonna Meet Him " 🔫
One time in 1969 when I was a baby mr Bronson and his beautiful wife were in grand central station along side of my mom and noticed me and asked if they could hold me and they did. What an honor it is to be held by them
A great actor. Always saw him as the strong silent type with a lot more going on beneath the surface. Handsome man, very intelligent. Didn't know that he could speak so many languages. One of the American Greats. Nx😘
According to IMDB Bronson's first acting credit was on TV in 1949, but soon after his first film was in the service comedy You're in the Navy Now starring Gary Cooper just a few years later as a Sailor. The film had many future tough guys and TV Icons such as Lee Marvin's in an uncredited role like Bronson, another was Eddie Albert of Green Acres fame as an Officer who like the other characters fought the ship's quirky engine at the center of the film. A very young Jack Webb of Dragnet fame also played another Officer that went into the boxing ring when Bronson's character was hurt by the engine but in the end all involved got to join a convoy once the " USS Teakettle" got a Diesel engine after the Navy gave up on its experiment power plant. Indeed Bronson did more TV in his career than he did films like The Great Escape and though Death Wish was his most remembered role his Tough Guy persona was well established in films like The Mechanic before it and others. Like many working actors in the 1950s thru the 1960s he often did more TV roles than films because studios went into the new medium as films were no longer the main entertainment they once were when it arrived and he acted in some way just a few years before he passed away at 81 in 2003. But many recalled that the loss of Jill Clayberg to cancer was when he truly began to leave this earth and missed her everyday carrying small part of her ashes with him where he went supposedly in a cane he used until his was mixed with hers soon after his own death nearly 20yrs ago...
Charles Bronson, WOW he was a hunk, I loved him in the scene Chino , also Death Wish, and The Dirty Dozen.. oh heck, I loved him in all the movies that he played in... The one movie he played in was Apache I think! It has been a long time since I saw that movie.. HE WAS GREAT.. I MISS HIM........Thank you Mr. Charles Bronson for the memories.....
Once Upon a Time in the West is the most brilliant and best western ever. I remember watching it for the first time when it came out. I was traumatized by the beginning, the scene with Henry Fonda (Frank) when his name was said and the consequences. I was very young and Henry Fonda was a favorite actor of mine and always a good guy. I still remember the shock lol. Bronson was brilliantly stoic and Claudia Cardinale, Jack Elam, and especially Jason Robards were amazing. I still cry when I watch it.
He was first choice for the spaghetti westerns that Mr Eastwood took on..... Can you imagine what a good job he would've done🎬 Death wish came about at a time we needed a hero, to pull us out of sutch DARK TIME'S.. I guess he's back with the woman he truly loved 😍 Bless his SOUL🙏😇💪💯🇬🇧
Great video ..shame you didn't include a clip from "Once Upon A Time In The West " ..especially when hes asked " Will you come back " That look he gives...is awesome!
He was my mom favorite actor. I remember her mentioning his name thru out most of my youth. Though I doubt she knew how good of a person he also was off screen. R.I.P. Charlie Bronson!
@@FactsVerse The death wish series. I still have a lot of Bronson’s archives to go thru, especially his early work. Still have yet to see magnificent 7.
In 1943, Bronson enlisted in the United States Army Air Forces and served as an aerial gunner in the 760th Flexible Gunnery Training Squadron, and in 1945 as a Boeing B-29 Superfortress crewman with the 39th Bombardment Group based on Guam. he also received a purple heart for wounds received in battle.
That Henry Fonda was repulsed by the Death Wish script and Bronson jumped on it tells me what I already guessed, that Bronson was the Alpha male of the two.
@@Bodiddly55 Also Fonda was already an established movie actor long before the eighties and had the option of choosing his roles carefully. Bronson saw an opportunity to possibly establish himself like the tough persona we all loved about him. Noon to three is one of my favorite movies. he excelled as a true actor in that along with Ireland his wife.
And don't forget it was Charles Bronson vs Henry Fonda (Fonda's only really bad guy role that he did with perfection except Sergio Leon wanted no eye lenses to cover Fonda's baby blues) at the end of Leon's masterpiece Once Upon A Time In The West. The gunfight just as memorable as Leon's Dollar Trilogy and of course, The Good The Bad And The Ugly.
not only was he was recognized in Europe prior to the US, he was also famous in the far east long before America. Bronson was a big hit and a well known actor there way back. He was an icon in Asia.
The first time I saw Bronson he played a rough looking softie! I only remember that there was a little blind girl who had befriended him. He loved this little girl and was happy that she would be getting her sight back even tho she would see what he really looked like when she did. I will never forget the look of sheer happiness on his face when his looks didn’t frighten her. His looks didn’t change her love for him. It was a tv program but I can remember nothing else! It shaped Bronson in my mind as a man of gentle kindness. I was a young girl but I couldn’t help but feel his appeal to women even if I didn’t understand it! I’m now a 75yr old who remembers how he made my heart flutter so long go! Does anyone else remember this show? I somehow remember, “tomatoes,” played a part! Of course at 75 my memory “may” be a bit faulty! Lol
With all due respect,....... Charles Bronson became a star in Europe first. However, he was already a famous and well-known actor in the U.S. He had already played several leading roles in movies and TV series in the 1950s and '60s. In order to achieve a certain status, one has to be well known and have certain fame....... Fame and stardom are two different things....... Please do not confuse one with the other.
I worked in the Paramount Studios mailroom back in the late-80's and used to park my motorcycle just to the right side of the Bronson Gate, back when the studio's property ended there, just before the expansion that swallowed up the original Western Costumes building right across the street. Bronson was the name of the street that ran north and south on the east side of the lot. But an older security guard who was working the Bronson Gate one day told me he knew Bronson from his pre-star days and that the actor took the name from the gate, not the road when he would stand around for hours a the gate, hoping to get picked as an extra back in the days before Central Casting's background players' department existed and hopefuls would stand, waiting to be picked out for a job that day. And actor Jack Klugman's name was pronounced "Clug-men" not Kloog-men."
This was a great video on Charles Bronson & family .. very tastefully done 5 stars . It doesn't surprise me much about Charles having such great fame first overseas before he did here in America .. as my late great friend Slim Whitman - was very huge & well loved in England before America finally took notice of him in the 80's - Slim was a great man & wonderful friend of mine , miss him dearly.
Soooo, for a "Crazy cool," smart, hard working stoic that he was... he was quite sane, in an increasing more insane world. !(: THANKS Mr. Buchinsky and may you R.I.P. :)!
I always wondered about Bronson's ethnicity. Then I figured he had eastern European ancestry. I wasn't far off. He was my mother's favorite actor. She just loved all his movies and when one would come up on TV she wouldn't miss it.
Hello again Facts Verse 👍 I remember Jack Klugman from Quincy M.D. I never watched too many of Bronson’s movies but I knew who he was. Thank you for another great video Facts Verse and I hope you and your subscribers have a wonderful day 🌟
I remember reading that he was demanding $1 million for one movie. I believe that was in the 1970’s. He was also in old western shows on TV. Bonanza wagon train and some twilight zone episodes.
In the movie From Noon TIL Three with Bronson and his wife Jill Ireland, you can see the love ❤️ that they had for each other. Now they are together again.💕
Wow this shocked me from his life story: Bronson was married to English actress Jill Ireland from October 5, 1968,[49] until her death in 1990. He had met her in 1962, when she was married to Scottish actor David McCallum. At the time, Bronson (who shared the screen with McCallum in The Great Escape) reportedly told him, "I'm going to marry your wife". The Bronsons lived in a grand Bel Air mansion in Los Angeles with seven children: two by his previous marriage, three by hers (one of whom was adopted), and two of their own, Zuleika and Katrina, the latter of whom was also adopted.[50] After they married, she often played his leading lady, and they starred in fifteen films together.[citation needed] To maintain a close family, they would load up everyone and take them to wherever filming was taking place, so that they could all be together. They spent time in a colonial farmhouse on 260 acres (1.1 km2) in West Windsor, Vermont,[51] where Ireland raised horses and provided training for their daughter Zuleika so that she could perform at the higher levels of horse showing. The Vermont farm, "Zuleika Farm", was named for the only biological child between them. During the late 1980s through the mid-1990s Bronson regularly spent winter holidays vacationing with his family in Snowmass, Colorado.[citation needed] On May 18, 1990, aged 54, after a long battle with breast cancer, Jill Ireland died of the disease at their home in Malibu, California.[52] In December 1998,
Charles Bronson is easily one of the world's greatest actors of all time, and certainly top three toughest.
not one of the world's greatest actors..THE GREATEST ACTOR
@@josephjperkins973u ever hear of Brando?
You must not know film to say such a stupid thing
@@brando7266 you too lazy to type out “you” what are you 12 years old? I said “one” of the greatest actors that doesn’t mean Brando can’t be one of them too, genius.
@@k-dude4514 don't be a twat ,your whole life,, ps- Bronson was good, but he's not close to Brando,
Charles Bronson was always my favorite actor. The quite relax personality. He kept in great physical condition something most actors back then did not bother exercising
Charles Bronson was one of a kind. I knew about his hardship when growing up but I must admit I didn't know about his purple heart for his service in the war. A true hero and one of my favorite actors ever. RIP Mr. Bronson
I always loved Charles Bronson.
I still do
Hes a darn good actor. Need more like him today
I've always been impressed by the way he seemed to keep himself in good physical shape despite his age. He was 50 or 51 years old when he did the movie "Chato's Land" in 1972 playing a half breed Indian and I envied his great physique in that movie.
He was really impressive! Is Chato's Land your favorite Charles Bronson movie, meljr?
@@FactsVerse It's one of mine.
Genes
@@FactsVerse The hunters become the hunted, great movie!
Just watched that last night.
He is an Icon! Forever
I remember watching his movies as a little girl and always wishing I had a father like him because my own father was absent from my life. The tough guy persona appealed to me for reasons I didn't understand at the time. In Death Wish and other movies, I saw him as a man with a hard exterior but with a gentle giant interior. According to the facts in this video, I can understand and empathize with his complexities. I actually have a few of these myself and many of our childhood experiences although seperated by a different time and place, strangely seem to run parallel.
Very well Put...
I would love to be your daddy
Fire and Germs aren't silly things. Bronson Forever!!
They are the essential elements of a successful life on this planet.
The 'silliness' is found in a human's irrational fear of these things, you moron.
@@manofiske3318 Tell it to the COVID, idiot.
@@manofiske3318 Tell it to the 200+ miners who died in the 1909 Cherry Mine fire, smart guy.
I just read a story about a young boy who lost his leg after he tripped and skinned his knee on the sidewalk. Essential or not, it’s reasonable for humans to fear things like germs and fire.
@@misscleo378 Was he skipping? Coz God hates skippers.
Bronson is my favorite movie actor. He has starred in more great movies than anyone else. My all-time favorites are The Magnificent Seven, Great Escape, Dirty Dozen, Once Upon a Time, Chato's Land, The Mechanic, Mr. Majestyk, Death Wish, and Hard Times. He has always been criminally underrated as an actor. He should've won an Oscar for the original Death Wish. His performance is at times, happy, sad, frightened, fatigued, and of course menacing. He has always represented courage to me. I miss him. Today's Hollywood stars don't hold a candle to his greatness.
zlonxman - You are a true (from the Heart) Bronson Fan, as well as me!🙌👌👍
Agreed-he made Death Wish a great film
For myself, when it comes to male stars, it's a fourway tie between Bronson, Bogart, Langcaster and Schwarzenegger! I have more of their films than anybody else! Rather than say who was the "best" I usually punk out and say they never phoned in a performance; my eyes were always glued to the screen!
@@pulsarstargrave256 How about "Anthony Quinn " ?
@@williamhelm6632 "Sampano is here!" I like his work, but not as much as the guys I listed! The films in my collection are a fraction of the movies I've enjoyed in which they've appeared! BTW LOVED Quinn as Gauguin!
*CHARLES BRONSON WAS ONE OF THE BEST OF THE BEST ACTORS IN HOLLYWOOD AND WILL BE SORELY MISSED!!!*
He is a AMERICAN icon . Wish there were more of them like him
Charles Bronson
@What a maroon yes
But Europe made him first!
@What a maroon No his father was Lithuanian, just like the man in the video said. You aren't a very good listener, a sign of a lack of intelligence.
@What a maroon He was born here. So that makes him first generation American. And Lithuanians are from Lithuania not Poland.
The original 'Magnificent Seven" was the greatest western ever! I saw that when I was about 13 years-old, and we kids talked about 'those badass gunfighters' for a long time! LOL!!
How do you feel about Once Upon a Time in the West?
I love Charles Bronson! Death Wish, Magnificent Seven and The Dirty Dozen are my favs.
I'm Charles Bronson, ....im taking your wife. Then he did it.
Don't forget Once Upon A Time In The West!
in 1991-92 I worked in Snowmass Village CO at the reservations office and took his reservations for his Xmas family holidays. I remember our little talk about the great Westerns including his Once Upon a Time....' and when I mentioned liking the classic Peckinpah 'The Wild Bunch, he responded with..."The Wild Bunch was a great film". Such a cool personality and gracious.
I also liked The Mechanic.
Hard Times where he acted the part of street fighter Chaney 😃 y
Bronson was badass personified. I never knew any of this. All he had to do was be himself in movies.
Even the name alone is the most badass there ever was.
Seconded perhaps by Chuck Norris or just STALLONE.
Well, then there is of course Mr. T, which sounds a lot tougher than Mr. Coffee actually.
@@mercatorjubio3804 Mr.Clean, wasn't very intimidating, either.
He was a terrific international actor. Are there any like him today?
Bronson in "Once Upon A Time In The West". Is one of the best movies ever made He was truly a fantastic actor.
That is an amazing film.
You spend the first half going "Huh?"
But it all comes together in the end.
Man with a Camera is worth checking out, it was a TV series Charles did.
@@1978garfield I nearly died of boredom during the first half of the film but made myself watch it as my Dad thinks it's marvellous. It's a slow movie, I'd never watch it again but as a piece of art cinema it's terrific.
One of the best westerns,for sure
I agree.
@Street Hawk ...."He's whittlin' on a piece of wood. I've got a feeling when he stops whittlin'... Somethin's gonna happen." Cheyenne
When Charles Bronson passed away in 2003, l was surprised that they mentioned only Death Wish. While he may have found a higher degree of success with this genre, he made numerous movies that showed his versatility as a actor. I always thought he was a no nonsense man. Loved his movies. I think he deserves another look from the academy of motion picture. I think he was a much better actor than given credit for. Thanks for sharing. Be safe.
.m
FROM NOON TIL THREE is one of my favorite movies, period.
@@pulsarstargrave256 have to aggree with you, it's also my favorite along with The Passenger of the rain,
He did much better work, in other films.
@@rogerchoate8899 True, I also love COLD SWEAT and DEATH WISH 1 & 3 but "From Noon..." is a delightful change of pace from most of his filmography! Also, check out his MAN WITH A CAMERA TV series if it's still in print! I think I saw it on Hulu back when it was still free!
im a big charles bronson fan and always thought of him as the average man that worked hard all his life. he is what this country is made of. charles bronson is what america represents.
What we used to represent. Now we are represented by Idiots
Of russian descent
Bronson seemed like a well-grounded, down to esrth person and he truly loved Jill Ireland. His acting seemed so natural, like he wasn't acting. The Great Escape, Mr Majestyk, so many more. He wad cool.
"Looks like we're short one horse."
...
_"You brought two too many."_
One of my favorite movies "Once upon a Time in the West", plus he was great in "Hard Times".
classic
“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..
Anytime his movies are on. I stop everything n sit and watch
Charles was an accomplished painter artist
I've always enjoyed watching Charles Bronson on screen. Sure, he did play some heavies -- he oozed strength on the screen without even trying, but he was rather quiet in real life, and worked well on screen with his wife, Jill Ireland, in a few movies. Good actor and nice person.
I am most surprise d about his true personality, in 1981 a man called on my new homes for sale ad in the paper, he asked how i could build new houses for such low prices, he sounded exactly like Charles Bronson, but denied it when I asked...I still think it was probably him...my own father worked in a coal mine under Stalin....concentration camp conditions....only 25% of the men survived. Bronson has always been one of my favorite actors
Always loved Charles Bronson, as well as Clint Eastwood... Great actors!
RIP CHARLIE BUCHINSKI...
“sky”, not ski.
Charles Bronson was a great actor
POS
@@barbararea3858 🖕🤬
@@barbararea3858 Stop commenting about yourself.
I’ve always liked him. I used to watch the western channel with my aging mother. Charles Bronson showed up many times on the old tv westerns of the fifties.
He was an awesome actor I loved watching him since I was a little kid I should say he's about my favorite I have some of his movies
What a great actor. My Grandad looks like him! Also we share the same birthday :) 3rd November.
I've always enjoyed Charles Bronson. I guess it started with his parts in westerns 1st, thru all the Death Wish movies & everything else I could find thru the years. I believe he was also a boxer in his early years.
I wasn’t really surprised about the languages or that he was more popular in Europe first… I think I’ve seen a video about him already. Thank you very much for the very good video!
Glad you liked it, Gay!
That was interesting. I was more impressed with how many languages he spoke. I wasn't surprised that he changed his name. They almost all do that. Actors from then to now are so different in their personalities. He was classy and even kept his fear of germs to himself. Today they boast about their fear of germs while they display how they wear gloves to shake hands with fans, which is why I don't believe most of them. And back then they liked being Americans and didn't want any parts of marxism. Today they talk about the reasons they hate American and push for things like Marxism. But anyway, this was a great video on Charles Bronson.
well said purple sky
...no mention of his great role in the Magnificent Seven, where he was one of those who sacrificed his life to protect the children who adored him in life and death.
I've remember in the 1980's Charles Bronson he made good-movies in brooklyn newyork , in east newyork brooklyn , he was one ofthe best actor's of the 70' s , 80 's .
His best moment in Death Wish 2 when he asks a bad guy with a cross dangling on his neck " So , You Believe In Jesus " Bad Guy " Yes I Do " Charles " Well , You're Gonna Meet Him " 🔫
That line still cracks me up!
Mine too own the 📀
Charles bronson died of Alzheimer's not cancer
After suffering from Alzheimer's disease and battling pneumonia, Bronson died.
One of my favourite scenes ever
Jack Kloogman looks a lot like Jack Klugman.
HAHAHA!!! Right! Who was Jack Kloogman? I heard of Jack Klugman, but not the other dude!
@@GDubbya51 He's probably the guy who played in a sitcom with another actor named Tony Randool. Lol
Charles you are my hero. Doesn’t make sense BECAUSE I WANTED TO BE YOU but I loved you in Hard Time. YOU ARE THE MAN.
One of the All Time Greatest Actors! There will never be another Buchinsky!
My favorite actor love all his movies,watch them over and over ,
Beautiful couple, may they rest in peace. Love them both.
Charles Dennis Buchinsky; November 3, 1921 - August 30, 2003. You made it sound like he died young. He was 81.
One time in 1969 when I was a baby mr Bronson and his beautiful wife were in grand central station along side of my mom and noticed me and asked if they could hold me and they did. What an honor it is to be held by them
Great actor and severely underrated.
I was surprised to hear that he was from a big family. As well as his family and work history. ☺
Always loved Bronson, just something about him. Bronson name is awesome.
Thanks for watching!
Charles!
My Lithuanian brother!!
My grandfather's name also is Charles
Rest in Peace Charles and Charles
He was from Poland?
@@nenadcubric2663 nop, his parents were from Lithuania. On the other hand, one of his parents had blood of Polish/Tatars
Bronson, one of my favorite western film actor
For me his best role was as Cheney, in Hard Times. Great cast. Nice pacing.
Well said, we strongly concur! Thank you for watching our content and for sharing your thoughts. What other types of video would you like to see?
A great actor. Always saw him as the strong silent type with a lot more going on beneath the surface. Handsome man, very intelligent. Didn't know that he could speak so many languages. One of the American Greats. Nx😘
BIG FAN of Bronson
He was UNIQUE , i don't know about anything else.
My favourite act
According to IMDB Bronson's first acting credit was on TV in 1949, but soon after his first film was in the service comedy You're in the Navy Now starring Gary Cooper just a few years later as a Sailor. The film had many future tough guys and TV Icons such as Lee Marvin's in an uncredited role like Bronson, another was Eddie Albert of Green Acres fame as an Officer who like the other characters fought the ship's quirky engine at the center of the film. A very young Jack Webb of Dragnet fame also played another Officer that went into the boxing ring when Bronson's character was hurt by the engine but in the end all involved got to join a convoy once the " USS Teakettle" got a Diesel engine after the Navy gave up on its experiment power plant. Indeed Bronson did more TV in his career than he did films like The Great Escape and though Death Wish was his most remembered role his Tough Guy persona was well established in films like The Mechanic before it and others. Like many working actors in the 1950s thru the 1960s he often did more TV roles than films because studios went into the new medium as films were no longer the main entertainment they once were when it arrived and he acted in some way just a few years before he passed away at 81 in 2003. But many recalled that the loss of Jill Clayberg to cancer was when he truly began to leave this earth and missed her everyday carrying small part of her ashes with him where he went supposedly in a cane he used until his was mixed with hers soon after his own death nearly 20yrs ago...
There is none better than MR. Charles Bronson RIP. MR. Bronson...
We're happy to know that you're a fan of Charles. In your opinion, what is his finest film?
Cheyeene
Charles Bronson, WOW he was a hunk, I loved him in the scene Chino , also Death Wish, and The Dirty Dozen.. oh heck, I loved him in all the movies that he played in... The one movie he played in was Apache I think! It has been a long time since I saw that movie.. HE WAS GREAT.. I MISS HIM........Thank you Mr. Charles Bronson for the memories.....
I love this great actor 👍💯💯😃
Once Upon a Time in the West is the most brilliant and best western ever. I remember watching it for the first time when it came out. I was traumatized by the beginning, the scene with Henry Fonda (Frank) when his name was said and the consequences. I was very young and Henry Fonda was a favorite actor of mine and always a good guy. I still remember the shock lol. Bronson was brilliantly stoic and Claudia Cardinale, Jack Elam, and especially Jason Robards were amazing. I still cry when I watch it.
He was first choice for the spaghetti westerns that Mr Eastwood took on..... Can you imagine what a good job he would've done🎬
Death wish came about at a time we needed a hero, to pull us out of sutch DARK TIME'S..
I guess he's back with the woman he truly loved 😍 Bless his SOUL🙏😇💪💯🇬🇧
CHARLES BRONSON WAS ONE OF THE BEST ACTORS EVER
Ok, whatever. I don't want to hear one bad thing about my father's favorite!
Great video ..shame you didn't include a clip from "Once Upon A Time In The West " ..especially when hes asked " Will you come back "
That look he gives...is awesome!
One of the BEST EVER!!!
RIP Charles, we miss your iconic charisma and "get 'er done!" attitude.
He was my mom favorite actor. I remember her mentioning his name thru out most of my youth. Though I doubt she knew how good of a person he also was off screen. R.I.P. Charlie Bronson!
Beautiful words, thank you for your message for Charles! Which of his films appealed to you the most?
@@FactsVerse
The death wish series. I still have a lot of Bronson’s archives to go thru, especially his early work. Still have yet to see magnificent 7.
Charles Bronson is a icon
Great actor and magnificent character.
In 1943, Bronson enlisted in the United States Army Air Forces and served as an aerial gunner in the 760th Flexible Gunnery Training Squadron, and in 1945 as a Boeing B-29 Superfortress crewman with the 39th Bombardment Group based on Guam. he also received a purple heart for wounds received in battle.
That Henry Fonda was repulsed by the Death Wish script and Bronson jumped on it tells me what I already guessed, that Bronson was the Alpha male of the two.
@@Bodiddly55 Also Fonda was already an established movie actor long before the eighties and had the option of choosing his roles carefully. Bronson saw an opportunity to possibly establish himself like the tough persona we all loved about him. Noon to three is one of my favorite movies. he excelled as a true actor in that along with Ireland his wife.
Bronson was definitely no sissy boy
And don't forget it was Charles Bronson vs Henry Fonda (Fonda's only really bad guy role that he did with perfection except Sergio Leon wanted no eye lenses to cover Fonda's baby blues) at the end of Leon's masterpiece Once Upon A Time In The West. The gunfight just as memorable as Leon's Dollar Trilogy and of course, The Good The Bad And The Ugly.
Telling a person that he would eventually take his wife also tells you all you need to know.
@@AJ-xm4xc Very true, that takes some serious testicular fortitude! Lol
Fire and germs nothing wrong with that He WAS A very good actor loved his movies
Mr.Majestic was one of my favorites.
not only was he was recognized in Europe prior to the US, he was also famous in the far east long before America. Bronson was a big hit and a well known actor there way back. He was an icon in Asia.
Amazing actor 👍
He had the most beautiful wife in Jill Ireland. Wow
LECHER - WENT AFTER HIS FRIEND DAVID MCCALLUM'S WIFE
@@barbararea3858 Yeah, he was an asshole....
@@barbararea3858 BS! Don't forget, it takes two to tango!
@@tedshredz58 Uh oh, Eddie, your jealousy is showing!
he was very loyal to her. He sacrificed his top career years to support her while she was sick.
White buffalo one of favorite movies. Buffalo was one mean beast. Lol...
The first time I saw Bronson he played a rough looking softie! I only remember that there was a little blind girl who had befriended him. He loved this little girl and was happy that she would be getting her sight back even tho she would see what he really looked like when she did. I will never forget the look of sheer happiness on his face when his looks didn’t frighten her. His looks didn’t change her love for him. It was a tv program but I can remember nothing else! It shaped Bronson in my mind as a man of gentle kindness. I was a young girl but I couldn’t help but feel his appeal to women even if I didn’t understand it! I’m now a 75yr old who remembers how he made my heart flutter so long go! Does anyone else remember this show? I somehow remember, “tomatoes,” played a part! Of course at 75 my memory “may” be a bit faulty! Lol
Great Actor.
With all due respect,....... Charles Bronson became a star in Europe first. However, he was already a famous and well-known actor in the U.S. He had already played several leading roles in movies and TV series in the 1950s and '60s. In order to achieve a certain status, one has to be well known and have certain fame....... Fame and stardom are two different things....... Please do not confuse one with the other.
I worked in the Paramount Studios mailroom back in the late-80's and used to park my motorcycle just to the right side of the Bronson Gate, back when the studio's property ended there, just before the expansion that swallowed up the original Western Costumes building right across the street. Bronson was the name of the street that ran north and south on the east side of the lot. But an older security guard who was working the Bronson Gate one day told me he knew Bronson from his pre-star days and that the actor took the name from the gate, not the road when he would stand around for hours a the gate, hoping to get picked as an extra back in the days before Central Casting's background players' department existed and hopefuls would stand, waiting to be picked out for a job that day. And actor Jack Klugman's name was pronounced "Clug-men" not Kloog-men."
Bronson, McQueen, Eastwood. The 'Tough Guy Trio'. Wish they could have made a movie together together!
David C. Bohn Take away Eastwood, he is nothing like the others.
He was one of the best, great actor..
This was a great video on Charles Bronson & family .. very tastefully done 5 stars . It doesn't surprise me much about Charles having such great fame first overseas before he did here in America .. as my late great friend Slim Whitman - was very huge & well loved in England before America finally took notice of him in the 80's - Slim was a great man & wonderful friend of mine , miss him dearly.
Soooo, for a "Crazy cool," smart, hard working stoic that he was... he was quite sane, in an increasing more insane world.
!(: THANKS Mr. Buchinsky and may you R.I.P. :)!
CHARLES BRONSON ,ONE GOOD A TALENT ACTOR, RIP
He was a great actor.
Great biography of Charles Bronson. Thank you for the in depth information!
You are a great person ,you are a great actor, God Bless you.Hello from Brownwood, Texas
I loved Charles Bronson's movie's? He was such a good actor. His wife was beautiful! U don't get movies like tht 2day! 👏😀😍👍
@Steven Davies ure word choice is ugly! Choose better words my friend & b humble? Look for people's good instead! 💟
Thanks he was the best!!
Can't see anyone but Charles Bronson in Death Wish.
I always wondered about Bronson's ethnicity. Then I figured he had eastern European ancestry. I wasn't far off. He was my mother's favorite actor. She just loved all his movies and when one would come up on TV she wouldn't miss it.
Hello again Facts Verse 👍 I remember Jack Klugman from Quincy M.D. I never watched too many of Bronson’s movies but I knew who he was. Thank you for another great video Facts Verse and I hope you and your subscribers have a wonderful day 🌟
I remember reading that he was demanding $1 million for one movie. I believe that was in the 1970’s. He was also in old western shows on TV. Bonanza wagon train and some twilight zone episodes.
He was in a twilight zone episode with Elizabeth montgom.ery
He was also claustrophobic and had some problems with his role in the great escape.
I remember him he was the best actor in the 70and 80 was no 1 Isaw all his movies.
great video. I enjoyed all of Bronson's movie rolls.
Glad you liked it, Dufus!
In the movie From Noon TIL Three with Bronson and his wife Jill Ireland, you can see the love ❤️ that they had for each other. Now they are together again.💕
Ya gotta like Bronson. Great Actor.
What's your favorite Charles Bronson movie, Jim?
I love all his films he is great actor very good actor thank you for sharing your beautiful story thanks
Wow this shocked me from his life story:
Bronson was married to English actress Jill Ireland from October 5, 1968,[49] until her death in 1990. He had met her in 1962, when she was married to Scottish actor David McCallum. At the time, Bronson (who shared the screen with McCallum in The Great Escape) reportedly told him, "I'm going to marry your wife". The Bronsons lived in a grand Bel Air mansion in Los Angeles with seven children: two by his previous marriage, three by hers (one of whom was adopted), and two of their own, Zuleika and Katrina, the latter of whom was also adopted.[50] After they married, she often played his leading lady, and they starred in fifteen films together.[citation needed]
To maintain a close family, they would load up everyone and take them to wherever filming was taking place, so that they could all be together. They spent time in a colonial farmhouse on 260 acres (1.1 km2) in West Windsor, Vermont,[51] where Ireland raised horses and provided training for their daughter Zuleika so that she could perform at the higher levels of horse showing. The Vermont farm, "Zuleika Farm", was named for the only biological child between them. During the late 1980s through the mid-1990s Bronson regularly spent winter holidays vacationing with his family in Snowmass, Colorado.[citation needed]
On May 18, 1990, aged 54, after a long battle with breast cancer, Jill Ireland died of the disease at their home in Malibu, California.[52] In December 1998,
Yes he was also claustrophobic,remember his fear of confined spaces in the tunnel in the great escape.