A ROOM OF ONE'S OWN with Eileen Atkins.

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  • Опубликовано: 3 апр 2017
  • A Room of One's Own is based on two lectures which Virginia Woolf gave at Cambridge University in 1928 to the women students there. It is performed here by the British actress Eileen Atkins.

Комментарии • 101

  • @wandajames6234
    @wandajames6234 4 года назад +86

    Just a staggering performance by one genius speaking the words of another genius.

    • @ellenm3803
      @ellenm3803 3 года назад +4

      Simply brilliant, and as relevant now as when it was first written.

    • @crazyduck1254
      @crazyduck1254 2 года назад

      staggering???? are you serious?

    • @crazyduck1254
      @crazyduck1254 2 года назад

      @@ellenm3803 brilliant? Are you an old gas bag too like Ms Woolf?

    • @tracytracy622
      @tracytracy622 Год назад +1

      I love Dame Eileen's acting abilities, she's amazing! This is the first time A Room Of One's Own has made sense to me, actually interested me. It's wonderful.

    • @elaineedgar2913
      @elaineedgar2913 5 месяцев назад

      I was just thinking of finding words to describe Eileen Atkins performance and ‘staggering performance of another genius’ perfectly says it. Thank you.

  • @maryeliason1504
    @maryeliason1504 Год назад +11

    She really is one of the greats. I always enjoy her roles.

  • @KatesFree
    @KatesFree 2 года назад +19

    I remember watching this and crying in my room when it was first run on Masterpiece Theater. God bless you for posting it, I never thought I'd ever get to see it again!!!

  • @itamardias17
    @itamardias17 Год назад +10

    This speech is not just for women. It's for everyone. Thank you!

  • @susanvaughan4210
    @susanvaughan4210 2 года назад +25

    It is astounding to find something of this caliber on YT. Many thanks for posting this!

    • @robertasirgutz8800
      @robertasirgutz8800 2 года назад +4

      Susan, I was just blown away by her performance and since have been looking for more.
      Recommend "The Dresser", with the great Albert Finney and Tom Courtenay.

    • @colinellesmere
      @colinellesmere Год назад +1

      RUclips may have loads of rubbish but there is also a vast quantity of fantastic content. Enough for a years and years. Maybe a lifetime of study.

  • @annikalilja4170
    @annikalilja4170 2 года назад +8

    Wonderful actress, pin points all characters "thrown" at her.... Splendid performances🤩🌱

  • @madeleinebelle2105
    @madeleinebelle2105 Год назад +5

    Compelling... the male/female balance within the mind...great performance...thank you.

  • @susanjackett9268
    @susanjackett9268 Год назад +3

    Wow, this is a new venture into Wolfe. This narrator is absolutely mind blowing

  • @lindafrancis3279
    @lindafrancis3279 11 месяцев назад +2

    Well said. And a guideline for all women who want to succeed in a man’s world, which still exist today.

  • @ceydaerenkol8176
    @ceydaerenkol8176 3 года назад +11

    It was superb performance! We all need to know history of women’s rights. I am so thankful for these amazing women in the history. Thank you for sharing.

  • @JV-xs6hi
    @JV-xs6hi 4 года назад +14

    Thank you so much. Love Virgínia Woolf, love Eileen Atkins. The two together - sublime.

  • @hodaalfachtali3544
    @hodaalfachtali3544 4 года назад +4

    I would stay watching this for ages ..

  • @robertasirgutz8800
    @robertasirgutz8800 3 года назад +6

    A brilliant, young Eileen Atkins,
    speaking the truth, as seen by Virginia Woolf.

    • @robertasirgutz8800
      @robertasirgutz8800 3 года назад +1

      Thanks for watching her brilliant performance. Woolfe's words sadly, still ring true. Atkins was titled by the Queen, and is now a "Dame".
      A National Treasure.

    • @robertasirgutz8800
      @robertasirgutz8800 2 года назад

      Thanks, Ms. Li, for your response to the posting of Eileen Atkins, playing Virginia Woolf in "A Room of One's Own". Stream a film she was in, with Tom Courtenay and Albert Finney, "The Dresser".
      At the beginning of her career, they didn't know what to do with her. She was not beautiful in the conventional sense. She was SEXY.

  • @dawn1153
    @dawn1153 2 года назад +9

    Wonderful performance. I tend to find Virginia Woolf difficult to read, but this I really enjoyed. Thank you.

  • @barbielyngdoh7189
    @barbielyngdoh7189 2 года назад +13

    Absolutely brilliant! I'm slayed. What a combination to see! Transferring the content of Virginia in a flawless performance such as this is mind blowing. Thank you

  • @jylyhughes5085
    @jylyhughes5085 4 года назад +3

    thank you thank you for this precious jewel .... Virginia and Eileen ... stupendous xxx

  • @dresqueda
    @dresqueda 7 лет назад +12

    I watched this years ago on PBS. I just now remembered to look and see if it was on youtube. I am so pleased that it is. I was in college when I first watched it, and the message meant a lot.

  • @anitachandaartist524
    @anitachandaartist524 3 года назад +7

    Absolutely Brilliant. Thank you for posting. Eileen Atkins' amazing performance of Virginia Woolf's powerful words - truly inspiring.

  • @thumbprint7150
    @thumbprint7150 4 года назад +13

    Thank you for uploading; thank you Eileen Atkins; thank you Virginia Woolf. Brilliant.

  • @deborahnash5092
    @deborahnash5092 2 года назад +3

    Thankyou for this amazing presentation of an amazing and brilliant opus by Virginia Woolf! Relevant to all woman at all times! Illuminating and great insight for a a woman not permitted to attend a college !

  • @FloraDiana
    @FloraDiana 5 лет назад +16

    What a superb performance! Thank you so very much.

  • @CocoMac
    @CocoMac 6 лет назад +17

    Thank you for posting this! Amazing performance to encourage women to get the room they deserve in life!

  • @dellamoore9270
    @dellamoore9270 6 лет назад +14

    God bless you for posting this wonderful performance of one of my favorite author's insiteful works. Dame Atkins brings it alive.

  • @robyndaniels1381
    @robyndaniels1381 6 лет назад +40

    Thank you for uploading this gem. I have long wanted to read 'A Room of One's Own' but been daunted by Virginia's stream of consciousness method of writing and the seduction of her word-music. Eileen Atkins has done a phenomenal job in delivering this essay. 50 minutes or passed like a whisper.

    • @amherst88
      @amherst88 4 года назад +2

      If you're still interested try to find a recording of Claire Bloom reading an hour's worth of it -- life changing

  • @lilliannieswender266
    @lilliannieswender266 7 лет назад +7

    Thank you for posting this video about such a fascinating woman. Her contribution to literature is enormous.

  • @paulahermes4941
    @paulahermes4941 5 лет назад +5

    No words I am in awe, amazing.

  • @neatpaws
    @neatpaws 2 года назад +2

    WOW! Sooo good.

  • @susancarolalbert6191
    @susancarolalbert6191 Год назад +1

    Absolutely wonderful, thank you!

  • @chinavaughan6383
    @chinavaughan6383 27 дней назад

    Loved her performance in, The Crown!😊

  • @clarepover4978
    @clarepover4978 4 года назад +4

    How delightful. A super presentation of Virginia Woolf and of her written word, by the great actress Eileen Atkins. Thank you for this gem.

  • @lancelee4840
    @lancelee4840 2 года назад +2

    Absolutely stunning.

  • @gryeskedal6300
    @gryeskedal6300 5 лет назад +3

    I am sooo moved!! Thank you for posting this!!

  • @susanavidal592
    @susanavidal592 4 года назад +1

    What a surprise!!!! Thank you so much!!! Deeply moving.

  • @infinitafenix3153
    @infinitafenix3153 7 лет назад +11

    This is a treasure, thank you very much.

  • @sharonstone8245
    @sharonstone8245 5 лет назад +2

    Wonderful!Thank you.🙏

  • @laurafoster327yt
    @laurafoster327yt 5 лет назад +2

    Thank you for posting this!

  • @kennithumperovitch3371
    @kennithumperovitch3371 6 лет назад +1

    Love this! My daughter Genevieve Nastassja Umperovitch would love this!

  • @agnibeena8069
    @agnibeena8069 4 года назад +1

    That was lovely! Thank you so much.

  • @alanberry1318
    @alanberry1318 6 лет назад +9

    What a stupendous performance. Had to look up Keat's tombstone: 'Here lies one whose name was writ in water'.

  • @jennyjenny3531
    @jennyjenny3531 Год назад +1

    37:30 sums up so well why its important to hold on to the literary tradition- the literary canon (which has been brought into question with our post modern notions of doing away with the works of the past).

  • @pacificostudios
    @pacificostudios Год назад

    This is a fantastic adaptation, production, and performance.

  • @liliayuan7494
    @liliayuan7494 7 лет назад +3

    Thanks for upload! Thank you so much!

  • @malamati007
    @malamati007 6 лет назад +5

    Impeccable.

  • @operaguy1
    @operaguy1 Год назад +1

    That Charlotte may have been more gifted than Jane, but C. wrote about herself while J. remained pure ... that hit me like thunder.

  • @user-te7zz8mv3x
    @user-te7zz8mv3x 28 дней назад

    i have been listening juliet stevenson and tilda swinton’s versions on audible. this is a nice short version.

  • @vintagebrew1057
    @vintagebrew1057 2 года назад +2

    Dame Eileen also wrote the screenplay for the film of Mrs Dalloway with Vanessa Redgrave.

    • @genevievel5309
      @genevievel5309  2 года назад +1

      I didn't realise that there was a film of 'Mrs Dalloway'. I did enjoy 'The Hours' though, wonderful film.

    • @vintagebrew1057
      @vintagebrew1057 2 года назад +1

      @@genevievel5309 Yes, its on RUclips. Very good screenplay and performances.

    • @vintagebrew1057
      @vintagebrew1057 2 года назад +1

      @@genevievel5309 Thanks very much for sharing❤

  • @judynesher5898
    @judynesher5898 4 года назад +2

    Magnificent!

  • @stephengill-jb1jn
    @stephengill-jb1jn Год назад

    Very familiar with the Dinner menu same as I endured at boarding school.

  • @billyb6001
    @billyb6001 6 лет назад +1

    Such a good writer.

  • @MK-hv7zg
    @MK-hv7zg 2 года назад

    Thanks Genevieve, the book is great but it's interesting to actually see the narration this way.

  • @laurawashington5660
    @laurawashington5660 6 лет назад +2

    Powerful!

  • @phillise1
    @phillise1 3 года назад +1

    The only thing I really know about Eileen Atkins is she played Mts. Bumble in Oliver Twist--and did a great job, too!

  • @athenaellis1902
    @athenaellis1902 2 года назад

    Excellent!!!

  • @TheLeonhamm
    @TheLeonhamm Год назад

    A wonderful tour-de-force performance and essay on why no one need fear Virginia Woolf or anyone like her. Sadly, now it is a mere echo of a long-vanished world .. not that of Virginia Woolf, there are plenty of those conceited souls even now, but that of Eileen Atkins. Yes, there are actresses today who put on a Port Out - Starboard Home accent or try to, but increasingly few who properly understand it and its place in what - being British - meant .. just casually, taken for granted, simply a necessary privilege (for the good of humankind, and not least that of 'Society', most especially among women of the right sort, possessing charm if not good looks, well-contained drive - enough for two, perhaps with some property or a modest income of her own right, or at very least - prospects, before her utilisable charms fade and her long-term utility with them).
    ;o)

  • @cs3742
    @cs3742 4 года назад +2

    There are ringing resonances in Gaudy Night. I wonder if Dorothy Sayers heard these lectures.

    • @ruthc4620
      @ruthc4620 Год назад +1

      I adore Gaudy Night!

  • @barbaracook4764
    @barbaracook4764 2 года назад

    However much I enjoyed Virginia Woolf's Lecture, I found discrepancies and contradictions between males' geniuses vs female geniuses in that how they had been derived and finally
    expressed. I also was disappointed that American women authors/ poets were not mentioned. The presentation by Dame Atkins was wonderful.

    • @clairenoon4070
      @clairenoon4070 2 года назад +2

      Were you also disappointed that women writers from all over the English-speaking world were not mentioned: Canada, Australia, Barbados, New Zealand, Jamaica, etc etc, or indeed from nations where English is widely spoken: South Africa, India, many other African nations etc etc?
      The purpose of Woolf's lecture wasn't simply to enumerate women who write in English, it was specifically about how the historic and contemporary position of women related to the position of female students at Girton at the time.
      Woolf also mentions female characters written by non-British writers - Anna Karenina, Emma Bovary etc - because they are relevant to the theme of the lecture, and she mentions George Sands. She also mentions world female historical figures such as Cleopatra.
      A strong theme is also to contemplate what would have happened if a sister of Shakespeare had had a similar talent; in the late 1500s/early 1600s there could have been no equivalent in America.

  • @anerdanieljimenezolave5802
    @anerdanieljimenezolave5802 5 лет назад +1

    Does anyone know where I can get a copy on dvd?

    • @genevievel5309
      @genevievel5309  5 лет назад

      Yes, copies are available from the following link but they are very expensive:
      ffh.films.com/id/6213/Virginia_Woolf_A_Room_of_Ones_Own.htm

  • @orsino88
    @orsino88 7 лет назад +12

    I thought this was a splendid depiction of Woolf and her ideas when I first saw it many years ago...and despaired of ever finding it again. Thank you, and where did you find it, or did you upload it yourself?

    • @genevievel5309
      @genevievel5309  7 лет назад +8

      I uploaded it, Graham, after transferring it from a tape I had onto DVD. It is a pity that the quality is not all that great but it is better than nothing. I am so glad that you enjoyed it.

    • @debraleighscott
      @debraleighscott 6 лет назад +4

      Genevieve, thank you so much. I once had taped this on VHS, from TV......but lost it during a move. I have searched for years.....and was thrilled to find this tonight.

    • @robertasirgutz8800
      @robertasirgutz8800 2 года назад +1

      It's still being discovered.

    • @robertasirgutz8800
      @robertasirgutz8800 2 года назад

      I re-uploaded this video recently, to the surprise and delight of many people.

    • @jeanash9502
      @jeanash9502 2 года назад +1

      Very inspiring Dame Eileen makes words come alive

  • @alexandrecosta4016
    @alexandrecosta4016 6 лет назад +4

    Woolf´s deep reflexions could easily jump to "a World of One´s Own", as a "room" seems to have been too circumvented, too small for her. On the other hand, a "lighthouse" was perhaps too bright ? A garden too full of birds´uneven songs? What a brilliant mind ! But concluding that it all ended in "a River of One´s Own" remains too painful. To me, of course.

  • @katherineseward7287
    @katherineseward7287 6 лет назад +2

    What happened to the audio???

    • @genevievel5309
      @genevievel5309  6 лет назад +2

      I don't know. The sound is perfect on my laptop, but on my old desktop I have to physically turn up the speakers to get the sound right on this interview and on another one I posted about Alec Guinness. I hope that this works for you.

  • @kimberlymartinez6665
    @kimberlymartinez6665 2 года назад +1

    ¿alguien sabe donde puedo verlo en español?

  • @MariaSilva-lw3te
    @MariaSilva-lw3te 5 месяцев назад

    👏👏👏👏

  • @ShanayaRao67
    @ShanayaRao67 9 месяцев назад +1

    Privacy, luxury and leisure are things that marginalised can't afford

  • @lookingforlove7811
    @lookingforlove7811 4 года назад +1

    An eloquent woman.......

  • @taehyungsmulletsupremacist3910
    @taehyungsmulletsupremacist3910 5 лет назад +1

    24:56

  • @trashkidd
    @trashkidd 3 года назад

    English 206 required watching check

  • @operaguy1
    @operaguy1 Год назад

    I hope Wolfe's nod to the emergence of the bourgeois woman survives. Capitalism has made it more feasible for all to secure the $500. And the room.

  • @johnpaulsecond4626
    @johnpaulsecond4626 Год назад +1

    Eileen is i suspect demonstrating here the art of declamation, of rhetoric at its finest; perhaps that is the apex of acting, or perhaps it is the apex of non acting; i am not sure which; Saint Theresa of Avila, the Carmelite nun, lived in the sixteenth century and became one of only three (of 35 in all) female doctors of the Roman Catholic Church, no mean feat, along with Saint Catherine of Siena (lay Dominican (14th century), and Therese of Lisieux (19th century); women of grace equal to the argument that woman is no less the equal of man and even better as his perfect complement. Neither he nor she can help it that God created both as paradoxical complements in His image. The case is well made however, and eloquently declaimed by a singular actor of rare giftedness.

  • @crazyduck1254
    @crazyduck1254 2 года назад

    prunes and custard. what is this madness

    • @barbaracook4764
      @barbaracook4764 2 года назад

      Sounds delicious to me.

    • @francisheperi4180
      @francisheperi4180 11 месяцев назад

      '... prunes with mitigating custard...' '... beef with its attendant greens and potatoes...' 😊

  • @victoriabiel5861
    @victoriabiel5861 3 года назад +2

    The elephant in the room here is that ill fitting man's suit that is distracting me uncomfortably. It may seem like a trivial thing to some, but to me it is speaking volumes. George Elliot and other women in the past may have used men's names as the authors of their books, but why on earth are we still donning a man's persona (including his clothes) to hide our own? When we finally learn to accept ourselves and display our unique beauty, talents, and intelligence then we can stop hiding behind men's masks, names, clothes and identities.

  • @crazyduck1254
    @crazyduck1254 2 года назад

    I don't really understand why Virginia Woolf is referred to as a genius. And a room of ones own was boorish claptrap, waffling on like a river going nowhere. If i had written an essay with opening lines as clumsy as this i would have stuck my mouth over that exhaust pipe a good deal sooner.

    • @barbaracook4764
      @barbaracook4764 2 года назад +7

      How mean spirited you are. It shows how impatient you were in understanding the context and how inept you are at following an idea.

    • @crazyduck1254
      @crazyduck1254 2 года назад

      @@barbaracook4764 do you feel just a tad ashamed? Condemning me to the gallows for my "harsh" comment, while yours is equally as harsh. You're all a bunch of quacking ducks following each other with all your wow words and songs of praise like weak minded peasants. If you knew anything about writing at all you'd know it is a gift, neither the result of intellect or genius. And Barbara Cook should change her name to SillyOldDuck. quawck squawk.

    • @chunyang4017
      @chunyang4017 Год назад

      It wasn't Woolf's fault you lack understanding you, self-back-patting lame lil angwy man. You could've at least presented your prominence first rather than your pathetic superiority complex