Dame Edith Sitwell - Face to Face Interview 1959

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  • Опубликовано: 17 ноя 2014
  • Eckington Parish Television - Dame Edith Sitwell - Face to Face Interview 1959. Broadcast 18th November 2014. All Copyright Is Owned By The BBC.

Комментарии • 1,4 тыс.

  • @plan4life
    @plan4life 9 месяцев назад +27

    It’s cruel that people called her ugly. She really had her own kind of beauty. A most interesting woman.

  • @sonyonker
    @sonyonker 3 года назад +508

    One of her hobbies is ‘silence’ 😂😂😂 what a legend

    • @justme-yr2xf
      @justme-yr2xf 3 года назад +2

      Doppleganging 101

    • @prunabluepepper
      @prunabluepepper 2 года назад +12

      Yes, noticed that too. So savage! Love her. 😂👍

    • @lakehayden
      @lakehayden 2 года назад +17

      Relatable

    • @mikeford1273
      @mikeford1273 Год назад +6

      Her eyes , as bright as a bird.. so much I'm her head! Brilliant!

    • @Rachel-tw2wq
      @Rachel-tw2wq 11 месяцев назад +3

      I love it:)

  • @Deliquescentinsight
    @Deliquescentinsight 3 года назад +137

    Dame Edith died in 1964, we are very lucky to have this fragment of her thoughts, charming lady.

  • @Davidonaa
    @Davidonaa 3 года назад +30

    "Well it was very dreadful and I don't want to talk about it." And the interviewer stops asking about it... why doesn't this happen now!

  • @lornam3637
    @lornam3637 3 года назад +101

    'That I think I can't answer'
    'No reason indeed you should at all'
    How refreshingly respectful and kind!

    • @Pikestnt
      @Pikestnt 3 года назад +14

      Indeed - How wonderful that she elected to retain her privacy and dignity on a particular subject and that the interviewer allowed her to. Such a contrast with today’s prurient interviewing of attention seeking ‘celebrities’

    • @shattymcdumper8836
      @shattymcdumper8836 3 года назад +6

      It's amazing how even simple everyday pleasantries and shutdowns/disagreements back in the day sound indistinguishable from world-class poetry! It's a shame nobody talks so magically anymore.

    • @Pikestnt
      @Pikestnt 3 года назад +4

      So says “Shatty McDumper” 🤣

    • @TheNotBees
      @TheNotBees Год назад

      @@Pikestnt Poetry, I tell you

  • @corneliushackl06
    @corneliushackl06 4 года назад +298

    20:30 -- She discusses Marilyn Monroe, but more than that, she DEFENDS Monroe in a way that is absolutely brilliant and wonderful. In reference to a nude calendar of Monroe, for which Monroe was evidently shamed, Sitwell says of the critics, "If people have never been poor, perhaps they don't know what it is like to be hungry." How thoughtful of her; the explanation of her perception of Marilyn Monroe is full of empathy and defense.

    • @franmellor9843
      @franmellor9843 4 года назад +10

      Everybody appreciates MARILYN

    • @suzyqc7607able
      @suzyqc7607able 4 года назад +14

      Beautifully stated.. We really have lost some brilliant souls over the years. Dame Edith Sitwell, Lives on in her life's work.

    • @deniserichardson630
      @deniserichardson630 4 года назад

      That's not Me wow , that’s amazing!! You must be beautiful. Very lucky . Did you look up to Marilyn ?

    • @Lytton333
      @Lytton333 4 года назад +7

      Bullshit. Pure and simple. By claiming she had to do it for the money she implies that there is censure. Monroe was pure soft porn. Pornography is rotting the west. Sex for sale. That's what Monroe did, she sold sex to the highest bidder. The piffle about her being a beautiful soul is just Hollywood waffle. Tits and bum, and a poor acting range.

    • @cinderelladevil1687
      @cinderelladevil1687 3 года назад +7

      She does not speak about MM as a victim, she understands her background and explains it devoid of any clogging sentimentality.

  • @Riogi
    @Riogi 5 лет назад +471

    The interviewer's name is John Freeman. He died in 2014 at the age of 99 years old.

    • @dhh488
      @dhh488 5 лет назад +9

      Thank you!

    • @phillipecook3227
      @phillipecook3227 4 года назад +18

      A signature of Freeman's nterviewing on Face To Face was that his face was never shown.

    • @langjones3846
      @langjones3846 4 года назад +7

      @@phillipecook3227 A shame that in this case he seemed to stick to a script, and ignored many of the answers that deserved exploration.

    • @danielwhittaker695
      @danielwhittaker695 4 года назад +7

      and a very respected war hero and politician!!!!

    • @deybi5018
      @deybi5018 4 года назад +1

      Wow

  • @morganolfursson2560
    @morganolfursson2560 4 года назад +53

    My grand mother had tea with her as a child , because my great grand mother was invited to tea on occasion. And Dame Sitwell offered my then quite young grand mother a miniature tea set , like a doll house tea set, from China , which my grand mother kept preciously and which is still in her house today. The tea set is exquisite and it came with a poem written in Dame Sitwell own's hand, (as she often gave a poem along with presents). I am married to a Japanese and my mother in law once visited my grand mother, from Kyoto , and because she (mother in law) is a fine connoisseur of asian fine art, i took her to see the tea set . It turns out that it is an absolute masterpiece from the early 17th century . Apparently it was first made in China, then sent to japan where it was decorated in the Kutani style and fired and then sent back to china to be decorated some more and then glazed and fired in the city of Jingdezhen, bearing 7 potters seals from China to Japan . something only the Japanese or Chinese aristocracy could afford at that time. And then the set traveled to the UK via the famous west Indian company trade and ended, god knows how, in the house of Mrs Sitwell and it now sits in my grand mother's cabinet of curiosity, after surviving 400 years, but could just as well (again according to mum in law) sit at the British Museum or the Museum of fine arts in Beijing or Tokyo.
    Now whether Dame Sitwell knew that or not is open to debate but the lady was a well of knowledge and seemed quite curious by nature, so i doubt she would keep trinkets without trying to find out about their origin and significance. Besides, she clearly liked to surround herself with rare and beautiful things, her jewelry and sense of style were a direct testimony of the esthete she was. This also shows the generosity of the Dame who would part with art, and give it to a young woman , entrusting her with the responsibility of ensuring that the piece survives yet another generation. But i also believe that Dame Sitwell, had no interest in material possessions (no real poets do) and that for her, things were just things, and had no real value other than the one, one gives them, due to emotional attachment, which is completely subjective and somehow a little silly when we think of it, but also what makes us sentient beings.
    For my mother in law, it was like looking at the Mona Lisa, for my grand mother, it is a present from a strange lady her mother was having tea with while she was bored out of her wits , and couldn't think of anything better to do than look at/for trinkets. But she cherishes the poem probably even more than the miniature teapot and cups, and had it (the poem) framed and placed in her room by her bed.
    I personally am just happy that someone in my family actually knew Dame Sitwell enough to have tea with her . How i wish i was old enough to have met her myself.

    • @ceasarandrepont5331
      @ceasarandrepont5331 4 года назад +3

      You should write a book.

    • @azapp4761
      @azapp4761 4 года назад +1

      @@ceasarandrepont5331
      she already started! May as well add the final page lol... kidding! Long posts always make me think why don't they just write a book!! Cheers!

    • @margarethess6583
      @margarethess6583 4 года назад +5

      Thank you for writing this post! Could have read more

    • @arosefortes6507
      @arosefortes6507 4 года назад +2

      I love stories like this. A glimpse in time in part of someone's life, like a little sparkling bubble floating by a memory being unwrapped as you speak of it's contents of the story being retold. This is what I enjoyed so much when working at the nursing home and listing to parts of a person's memory of there past. Thank you for sharing this. Sometimes we have moments in owe life that seem so trivial and nothing special at that moment until years later when we share those moments with someone and they're so intent in listening. She doesn't seem so eccentric to me. Just someone that has no precious time to be wasted on what she knows she doesn't want. She must have thought a great deal of your Grandmother.

    • @antoinettedaly1284
      @antoinettedaly1284 4 года назад +3

      Morgan Olfursson What a wonderful post to go along with a fascinating interview. Thank you.x

  • @erika7674
    @erika7674 5 лет назад +182

    'People would doubt the existence of the Almighty if they saw me looking like that.' Brilliant!!

    • @JadenJahci
      @JadenJahci 5 лет назад +4

      Screw those people.
      Best Wishes,
      TV Dinner (Brilliant!!)

    • @katyp.2495
      @katyp.2495 3 года назад +2

      The same would be thought of me if I were to wear a dress!

    • @marlenemcmillan8891
      @marlenemcmillan8891 3 года назад +2

      😂😂

  • @pauldockree9915
    @pauldockree9915 3 года назад +145

    “I am patient with stupidity, but not with those who are proud of it.”
    ― Edith Sitwell
    “My personal hobbies are reading, listening to music, and silence.”
    ― Edith Sitwell
    3 minutes 39 seconds in - almost word for word.
    RIP Dame Edith and John Freeman I am told

    • @seanpendulum5121
      @seanpendulum5121 2 года назад +1

      Yes! I remember those very words when this interview first broadcast!!

    • @michaelmcginley7930
      @michaelmcginley7930 Год назад +1

      Great women and enjoyed John's interview with Evelyn waugh who despite being a snobs his writing is impeccable

    • @garymitchell5899
      @garymitchell5899 Год назад

      This is easily clarified, you pompous arse.

    • @listen2meokidoki264
      @listen2meokidoki264 Год назад +2

      Perfectly reasonable IMHO.
      My personal hobbies are reading, listening to music, and silence.”
      ― Edith Sitwell

  • @djbobhoskins
    @djbobhoskins 5 лет назад +732

    How can they make a programme of such depth with not a gimmick in sight, and yet today with god knows how many channels and technology, TV has degenerated into mostly trash for people with the attention span of a goldfish.

    • @barbarastepien-foad4519
      @barbarastepien-foad4519 4 года назад +23

      Nnayyy, a goldfish has a much longer attention span.

    • @Kahuna_550
      @Kahuna_550 4 года назад +38

      It's called programming for a reason

    • @familyfriendlylives
      @familyfriendlylives 4 года назад +14

      Look no further than those who own the movie companies

    • @sleepingdogpro
      @sleepingdogpro 4 года назад +16

      Those two things are deeply related, actually: the more options you have, the more you jump between said options and the shorter your attention span becomes. In other words: it's designed that way now because we're all that way now much more than any of us used to be. All of us, you included. It can't be understated what a visual medium with movement - and I'm considering TV and film to be virtually identical here - has done to us as a whole. Not just in terms of style but content: it's difficult if not impossible to imagine we'd take someone like this seriously today, and yet through most of human history you didn't have to present an airbrushed image in an airbrushed way. This medium is incredibly powerful in ways most of us aren't aware of, and it's changed our perception of what life is even supposed to be shaped like and how human beings are supposed to present themselves.
      (/philosophical thought on the heels of your "old man yells at cloud" bitching) :)

    • @maniplefringe
      @maniplefringe 4 года назад +20

      ​Because the people who were making TV in 1959 were not formed or even much influenced by the medium of television. They were formed by a culture of the word, written and spoken, not by a culture of the image, such as we now inhabit.

  • @aprilsky1666
    @aprilsky1666 5 лет назад +420

    Stumbled upon this by accident but she's really likeable and straightforward.

  • @TheSierraRose
    @TheSierraRose 4 года назад +303

    Her work of poetry "Facade" has been my favorite literary work all my life. I memorized all the poems in my 20's and now in my 80's I can still quote most of them. She stays with you.

    • @hortleberrycircusbround9678
      @hortleberrycircusbround9678 2 года назад +2

      I am just beginning to memorize them...... Trio for two cats and a trombone was the first.

    • @colinglass1342
      @colinglass1342 2 года назад

      Yes ive yet to hear the complete version of facade Yes it's one of my all time favourite pieces of ENGLISH classics. I heard a BREIF piece of this very strange peice of music" facade". I was totally fascinated Whilst listening to this peice .Did the film actor Jeremy Irons perform facade . EDITH SITWEL totally unique personality one of the great eccentrics I've come across. I realy like the English classical Composers William Walton bliss holst elgar Ireland Vaughan Williams. And also Three cornish dances and three English dances by William Walton I think thats correct.

    • @TheSierraRose
      @TheSierraRose 2 года назад +4

      I just heard somewhere, can't remember where, that Sitwell was the first rap artist. This just tickles me to the bone. And I can see that it is true!

    • @thedativecase9733
      @thedativecase9733 Год назад +4

      @@TheSierraRose In a sense that is true, in a very old-fashioned English way. She spoke her poetry through a sort of loud hailer over a specially composed modern score. It was very unlike most other music at the time. Though the1920s seem to have been an era of wild and crazy innovation I think without the 1920s we wouldn't have had the Swinging 60s.

    • @nigelmayer8061
      @nigelmayer8061 11 месяцев назад +2

      Are you still with us, from OZ

  • @emmanuelomotoso7628
    @emmanuelomotoso7628 4 года назад +53

    We have some of the same hobbies: Reading; listening to music; SILENCE!

  • @onemanenclave
    @onemanenclave 4 года назад +80

    3:53 "And not being bothered by silly questions."
    Oof, that was smooth.

  • @dinahleeloo
    @dinahleeloo 5 лет назад +412

    I like the interviewer; he seems genuinely interested in both his questions and her answers. Never talks over her or interrupts. I love that.

    •  4 года назад +3

      He interrupts her a lot of times.

    • @jasminflower3814
      @jasminflower3814 4 года назад +7

      He didn't leave enough time for her to gather more thoughts on the questions he asked. The moment she took a breath he was onto the next question. And because of that, I felt her answers weren't as indepth as they could have been.

    • @jak9483
      @jak9483 4 года назад +9

      The Gentleman conducts the interviews with such politeness and respect. I was born in 1958 in England and the first thing we learnt were manners and how to conduct yourself. Those who know Lady C, might notice that these two ladies have similar attributes. 💐

    • @blasianluvschocolate397
      @blasianluvschocolate397 3 года назад +5

      And he did it soft soft spoken and with class

    • @baliksupper6043
      @baliksupper6043 3 года назад +12

      @@jak9483 The second thing you learned was to roam the world and steal everything you could get your hands on but your manners were impeccable.

  • @kayokay4011
    @kayokay4011 6 лет назад +603

    Its mindboggling seeing someone being interviewed on TV who was born in 1887!

    • @Marcel_Audubon
      @Marcel_Audubon 5 лет назад +43

      arithmetic challenges, Kay? most people born in the late 1880s lived well into the 20th century ... why would it be "mindboggling" to see them on media common during their lifetimes? Igor Stravinsky, Franklin Roosevelt, Georgia O'Keeffe, W.C. Fields, George Patton, Harry Truman, Chiang Kai Shek, the Marx Brothers, Irving Berlin, Eugene O'Neill, Maurice Chevalier, Louis B Mayer ... the list goes on and on and on and all of them interviewed on television countless times. Don't be such a dullard, woman! Many people still in their 50s and 60s today had grandparents born in the 1880s - it's a mere two generations removed from them and there you sit with your mouth hanging open as if you just saw a tweet from someone born in the third century BC.

    • @russellford5597
      @russellford5597 5 лет назад +138

      @@Marcel_Audubon Get over it. Perhaps she just means that it is fascinating. And it is!

    • @Marcel_Audubon
      @Marcel_Audubon 5 лет назад +11

      yeah, right Russell, that's what she meant ... p.s. are you an imbecile or merely a moron?

    • @josephinebennington7247
      @josephinebennington7247 5 лет назад +26

      This hints at what it would have been like to have an interview with, say, Anne Boleyn. Simply a witty, intelligent, independently minded woman but with knowledge and experience of a vastly different and earlier era.

    • @MrRobster1234
      @MrRobster1234 5 лет назад +75

      @@Marcel_Audubon You must be a real scream at parties.

  • @Wanamaker1946
    @Wanamaker1946 Год назад +18

    She was a true Victorian..being born in the 19th century, and here interviewed in 1959. Her closing answer was Divine.

  • @Ellen24493
    @Ellen24493 4 года назад +115

    oh my god, i love her. to be so self-assured and comfortable in her own skin is a lesson for all women today.

  • @saphirus1able
    @saphirus1able 5 лет назад +167

    Love her! "Very impertinent...I don't teach plumbers how to plumb.."

  • @dinahleeloo
    @dinahleeloo 5 лет назад +195

    She is so elegant, simple and direct. I love her. Not many words but what she does say is precisely what she means. Beautiful. Such a good listener. Such a good answerer. I found myself smiling, I like her so much. “Being an artist is quite painful, you see; perpetual resurrection. The Art returns after long periods of deadness.”

  • @patriciamasters5539
    @patriciamasters5539 5 лет назад +401

    Oh how she makes me miss the world of high culture, good education and delicate manners. The end was particularly brilliant.

    • @Lytton333
      @Lytton333 5 лет назад +27

      Today we are left with the pit of vulgarity, into which we are given the choice to either to either jump or be pushed.

    • @salvador130
      @salvador130 4 года назад +8

      @@Lytton333 Not me !, don't want anything to do with it.😬

    • @VelveteenRabbit77
      @VelveteenRabbit77 4 года назад +12

      @@Lytton333 isn’t it sad the way vulgarity is highly lauded in our society today crammed down our throats by the entertainment industry. Mission accomplished.

    • @mihaelazlate4729
      @mihaelazlate4729 4 года назад +18

      In which you had 99% chance to be poor and not afford school if you were not born or inherited something.b

    • @annanajduch2428
      @annanajduch2428 4 года назад +7

      Love the phrase, 'delicate manners'.

  • @jamesz.williams8746
    @jamesz.williams8746 3 года назад +23

    Never even knew who Dame Edith Sitwell was until this interview. What a lovely, sharp, and intellectual woman.

  • @ingenuity168
    @ingenuity168 5 лет назад +133

    She was so beautiful for her age and her hands were exquisite.
    Very sharp mind for her age.

    • @catsinhouse
      @catsinhouse 5 лет назад +9

      Sadly, the long elegant hands and fingers were a symptom of Marfan's Syndrome which she had.

    • @ingenuity168
      @ingenuity168 5 лет назад +2

      @@catsinhouse I see.

    • @krumbsbakery154
      @krumbsbakery154 5 лет назад +9

      @@catsinhouse still exquisite

    • @kim1416
      @kim1416 5 лет назад +3

      @@catsinhouse ,
      She has a beautiful complexion too.

    • @mikeleight7437
      @mikeleight7437 2 года назад

      @@kim1416 Do you wear glasses...

  • @stillbee7222
    @stillbee7222 5 лет назад +263

    This woman is a brilliant, intelligent, beautiful LADY. I could listen to her speak all day.

    • @nohopewithoutjesus
      @nohopewithoutjesus 5 лет назад +5

      Ikr! I could too.

    • @heathercorinne5876
      @heathercorinne5876 5 лет назад +3

      If you like this lady. ...look uo John maclean.

    • @baliksupper6043
      @baliksupper6043 3 года назад +1

      I don’t know what your idea of beauty is? She comes across as the classic superior toff.I’m so glad that accent is extinct.

    • @joecarr2224
      @joecarr2224 2 года назад +1

      Balik Supper What snobbish ignorance!

    • @1976mcfarlane
      @1976mcfarlane 2 года назад +1

      It's a man

  • @russellgrenning1317
    @russellgrenning1317 4 года назад +36

    A very grand old lady from a forgotten long-ago era.

  • @seanburke4421
    @seanburke4421 4 года назад +486

    Interview around 50 Years ago . how society has fallen when you listen how eloquent and articulate she is

    • @a5dr3
      @a5dr3 4 года назад +49

      The further we get from Christianity the more the society will degenerate.

    • @rodrigoneustadt6302
      @rodrigoneustadt6302 4 года назад +27

      @@a5dr3 From Christianity?

    • @ericellis3506
      @ericellis3506 4 года назад +17

      61 years ago.

    • @Unfunny_Username_389
      @Unfunny_Username_389 4 года назад +5

      Nirvana were stout and vocal followers of the Christian faith.

    • @lukasrussell5905
      @lukasrussell5905 4 года назад +11

      I'm pretty sure most Dames have similar accents

  • @seagreentangerine2065
    @seagreentangerine2065 5 лет назад +219

    My great grandmother lived right next to Renishaw Hall and I have fabulous memories of sneaking into the grounds with my younger brother... taking photographs of the gardens and the bluebells. I was only 12 years old but I truly loved that house, it had an air of mystery... I think because the house, at the time, was shut up and not used for most of the year, it intrigued me, I desperately imagined what was inside. Nobody really knew who the family truly was, only what they read in the newspapers and I didn't know anything about Edith for some time after my Renishaw Hall "break ins"... my Grandfather gave me all of the Sitwell Novels and newspaper cuttings. I love Edith Sitwell, she completely reminds me of my Great Grandmother, a woman with laser thought processes, extremely creative and didn't suffer fools!

    • @QueenBee-gx4rp
      @QueenBee-gx4rp 5 лет назад +8

      Seagreentangerine Lucky you! 😉

    • @wmnoffaith1
      @wmnoffaith1 4 года назад +5

      Funny. She reminds me of my English grandmother as well.

    • @fionamaddock3984
      @fionamaddock3984 4 года назад +11

      I was brought up not too far away from Renishaw Hall. Obviously it's open for the public to visit. I visited the gardens a few years back, the woods and gardens around there are so beautiful and magical! It would have been a lovely place for Edith to grow up there. It's such a shame her mother and father weren't very loving parents. She fascinates me. A very elegant, intelligent, articulate talented and beautiful woman!

    • @csfan65
      @csfan65 4 года назад +2

      @@fionamaddock3984 Have you ever heard how many rooms were in the main house when they lived there? I can't seem to find that information anywhere. Thanks.

    • @fionamaddock3984
      @fionamaddock3984 4 года назад +1

      @@csfan65 No I dont know that to be fair. Could do with researching actually. Ive never been in the house part but would like to at some point. If I get to visit,I will ask this question and post my reply!

  • @crochetemporium
    @crochetemporium 3 года назад +40

    I must really recommend reading Osbert Sitwell's 4 vol. autobiography - He explains that their parents really made Edith's life a f**king misery - because she wasn't - 'beautiful'. I think she is a frigging legend.

  • @lancasterII
    @lancasterII 5 лет назад +171

    Never heard of her till this video appeared in my suggested viewing. What a glorious stalwart of a bygone era: intelligent, quick-witted, could opine on a plethora of topics. Just lovely.

    • @franciswright6578
      @franciswright6578 4 года назад +6

      It's never too late. Glad you've met!

    • @SophiahKoikasWindyQueen
      @SophiahKoikasWindyQueen 3 года назад +4

      likewise

    • @kimberlypatton205
      @kimberlypatton205 8 месяцев назад +1

      Same here! I am glued to the phone watching her! What a person to have had as a friend and to have known! We are alike in many ways!

    • @onesunnyday5699
      @onesunnyday5699 7 месяцев назад +1

      I'm here from tiktok & fell in love with her ❤

  • @FrFrankiejr
    @FrFrankiejr 5 лет назад +37

    I could look at her incredible face for hours!

  • @lynnettesand575
    @lynnettesand575 5 лет назад +107

    So lucky to have found this.

  • @phillipecook3227
    @phillipecook3227 4 года назад +12

    Both interviewee and interviewer are speaking in a way that's gone forever - sadly. Calm, focused and completely without affectation.The words are from another time" I was a changeling" ..... He pushed me in a perambulator" ....

  • @tintinhickey5869
    @tintinhickey5869 5 лет назад +133

    Today's audience and interviewer wouldn't know a Plantagenet from a turnip. What an excellent interviewer and fascinating subject and how refreshing that she uses the word queer in its original meaning.

    • @ivanofna
      @ivanofna 5 лет назад +11

      What a gloomy vision of our era you have. Considering how posh most people in broadcasting are, well educated etc. - I highly doubt they don't know the bare minimum of Brittish history. And as for audiences, entertaining sources of information have never yet been so widely availaible, I would assume many more then you think know about the plantagenets. Might I suggest not watching television channels owned by Murdoch and instead something better, like arte.

    • @heathercorinne5876
      @heathercorinne5876 5 лет назад +5

      If you like this lady. ...look uo John maclean.

    • @ivanofna
      @ivanofna 5 лет назад

      @@heathercorinne5876 whilst also taking note of his vast fanbase, proving that youth today is not ignorant.

    • @karmacuisine6959
      @karmacuisine6959 4 года назад +1

      Hi there^^
      I'm german. My english is ok. But i dont get the word queer😅
      Can U pls tell me the original meaning and the nowerdays use?

    • @salvador130
      @salvador130 4 года назад +5

      @@karmacuisine6959 Well the old use of the word ment strange, not normal, out of the ordinary. and modern day use means homosexual, sodomite",gay'

  • @Flughafenkaiser
    @Flughafenkaiser 5 лет назад +279

    Her honesty is refreshing dignified and inspiring. This interview 60 years ago was way ahead of its time. It is captivating and interesting. You don't get this quality of
    Interview today anywhere. I pray for her beautiful spirit and delight in her memory. This video merits protection and saving.

    • @MistressQueenBee
      @MistressQueenBee 5 лет назад +8

      Well written, Flughafenkaiser.

    • @wmnoffaith1
      @wmnoffaith1 5 лет назад +20

      I wish other women were like her. She is so dignified, has incredible poise, which is a trait completely missing today. One of the reasons I have no female friend s, even though I'm a woman. I find most women today so shallow. I can't bear to waste time talking about makeup, clothes, Facebook, tv.

    • @widbear3703
      @widbear3703 4 года назад +19

      She's impressive isn't she - she looked like Elizabeth I, and had something of her regal bearing and powerful intellect.

    • @tairastuart
      @tairastuart 4 года назад +9

      She is one f the best expressions of the British character.

    • @syhooverman5418
      @syhooverman5418 4 года назад +6

      @@wmnoffaith1 I could"nt agree more. I don"t have ANYTHING to do with "Social Media" Its peurile and dangerous. RUclips is the only site i go on for intelligent information like this The poor woman was i believe constantly being told she was ugly by her father. What a poor girl

  • @thethikboy
    @thethikboy 5 лет назад +64

    What a treasure for our civilization

  • @kllwc7772
    @kllwc7772 5 лет назад +21

    Majestic without even trying 👑

  • @chevydude658
    @chevydude658 5 лет назад +57

    I'm an American that LOVES the BBC. The quality of programming is fantastic. Great dramas with wonderful actors. I wish we had this quality in the U.S.

  • @erika7674
    @erika7674 5 лет назад +61

    ' ... at that moment I didn't dislike ugly voices as I'm afraid I do now' ... I'm with you on that one, Edith!!

    • @Flughafenkaiser
      @Flughafenkaiser 5 лет назад +6

      Here here. I hate all the voices on TV today. For example that fool Graham Norton. All full of their own sense of uniqueness and who find their own jokes funny. They think they are special in some way, when the reality is that they are just empty noisey shells. There is no substance essence or quality of character anymore.

  • @johncourt3451
    @johncourt3451 5 лет назад +138

    I remember seeing this great lady interviewed when I was very young. She wore a toque and large acquamarines on her large elegant fingers.
    Her poem on our Lord’s crucifixion is particularly memorable. She speaks of her disliking impertinence.
    Alas, we now live in an era where impertinence is worn as a badge of honour.

    • @davidbetts9169
      @davidbetts9169 5 лет назад

      No hi I

    • @rychelledipalo8762
      @rychelledipalo8762 3 года назад

      She looks exactly like the portrait of QE1

    • @mt.shasta6097
      @mt.shasta6097 2 года назад

      John Court, those four rings are the deep aquamarines. My wife covets them!

  • @rougeetnoir1252
    @rougeetnoir1252 5 лет назад +51

    That I’m afraid I can’t answer... love this woman!!

  • @Dyrnwyn
    @Dyrnwyn Год назад +6

    the interview style is so different than today. "It was awful and I don't want to talk about it. / Okey dokey. Next question..."

  • @MrJoeyeast
    @MrJoeyeast 5 лет назад +225

    brilliant women you can tell she sees right through the interviewer she was no one's fool

    • @dixonpinfold2582
      @dixonpinfold2582 5 лет назад +26

      I detected no disdain nor reason for any.

    • @gavinmillar7519
      @gavinmillar7519 5 лет назад +27

      @@dixonpinfold2582 I agree - the interviewer is very courteous and pertinent. A very intelligent and interesting discourse. I think it would be almost impossible to recreate this nowadays.

    • @iamshotty
      @iamshotty 4 года назад +3

      @@gavinmillar7519 I agree with you all. Brilliant woman, I adore her.

  • @Etheldreda-
    @Etheldreda- 5 лет назад +554

    Imagine seeing something like this on tv today, how we’ve degenerated.

    • @billyinwaves
      @billyinwaves 5 лет назад +16

      Quite the opposite. She was so ahead of her time.

    • @conradmason87
      @conradmason87 5 лет назад +19

      Please...speak for yourself. Traditional English values, including beautiful poetic congruence, continue, fully resplendent, within certain areas of the British Isles.

    • @ianmedium
      @ianmedium 5 лет назад +40

      Conrad Mason very very very small parts of England! The rest are full of people who have adopted the sarrf east Essex accent and wear ignorance with pride. I’m an an Englishman who chose to live abroad because people like that have taken over from people like this. Laziness, rudeness, entitlement and ignorance have taken over from pride through deeds done with honour and integrity.
      Lazy Anglo saxons are the death of the UK, not immigrants!

    • @spoton2826
      @spoton2826 5 лет назад +9

      @@ianmedium Perhaps you should speak for yourself. I very much disagree.

    • @stuartbritton7408
      @stuartbritton7408 5 лет назад +15

      @@ianmedium they are lazy because they are better off being lazy- the society is designed for laziness and greed.

  • @robinbush8259
    @robinbush8259 5 лет назад +43

    She was so delightful!

  • @auntroachkiller6086
    @auntroachkiller6086 5 лет назад +67

    Loved the interview.
    Full of Queens English .
    So etiquette and aristocratic.
    Seemplay maahvlus!

    • @filipematias5127
      @filipematias5127 4 года назад

      @@lovesender159
      But Brits who are on benefits at least are in their own country!

    • @chickyface7537
      @chickyface7537 3 года назад +1

      @@filipematias5127 huh?

    • @mediterraneanworld
      @mediterraneanworld 3 года назад

      @@filipematias5127 What are you banging on about?

  • @hauntological
    @hauntological 3 года назад +21

    I absolutely love Edith. She broke the mould. There has never been anyone quite like her and never will be again.
    The world would be a much better place with more Ediths in it.

    • @maddannafizz
      @maddannafizz 9 месяцев назад +1

      Quentin Crisp was another unique beautiful person 🙌🦋

    • @hauntological
      @hauntological 9 месяцев назад

      Absolutely.@@maddannafizz

  • @paulbutterworthbillericay
    @paulbutterworthbillericay 3 года назад +7

    Refreshing to listen to someone who is honest

  • @ysgol3
    @ysgol3 5 лет назад +55

    She was so brilliantly clever and beautifully courteous.

  • @joshuataylor6087
    @joshuataylor6087 5 лет назад +191

    Stumbled across this gem. What a class act and a testament to her humanity that she had such a soft spot and deep insight and understanding of Marilyn Monroe.

    • @ceciliaellis6721
      @ceciliaellis6721 3 года назад +5

      that's what I recall from seeing this interview years ago - the story about Marilyn and herself and her opinion of her. It was disturbing at the time to think M.M.'s public image was so trashy compared to the glimpse of the real. never forgot it.

    • @cecilefox9136
      @cecilefox9136 3 года назад +1

      @@ceciliaellis6721 I agree!

    • @pauladkins9829
      @pauladkins9829 3 года назад +2

      🤛🇺🇸🤜👌 Paul from Denver the contrast a woman's Beauty Monroe and sitwell beauty within Monroe Beauty on the out set well the beauty within the contrast of women beautiful

  • @davidglow3
    @davidglow3 5 лет назад +276

    The days when Britain has a plentiful amount of intellectuals and were held in reverence

    • @dougr.2398
      @dougr.2398 5 лет назад +8

      There is always room for more, but can anyone rise to the challenge?

    • @pixyrosejes7133
      @pixyrosejes7133 5 лет назад +13

      Indeed and rightly, so...STUDY, Please!

    • @minzygreen1167
      @minzygreen1167 4 года назад +14

      @@pixyrosejes7133 problem is these wonderfull people are no longer held in such high regard by this generation. Now its all about Kardashians. Talentless and vacuous.

    • @AxmedBahjad
      @AxmedBahjad 4 года назад +7

      Britain had a brutal Empire at that time. For you, it doesn't matter how many Africans, and West Indians killed, and brutalised at that time.
      You called it "intellectuals."

    • @minzygreen1167
      @minzygreen1167 4 года назад +11

      @@AxmedBahjad yes that is true to a certain extent. But you cannot blame writers and actors for that. Most ordinary folk play no part in war. Governments are responsible for decisions to bomb and invade countries. Not intellectuals. In fact i would say they would be seen as having the talent and ability to educate people.

  • @0Dkiew4S
    @0Dkiew4S 5 лет назад +44

    Now this is the correct and largely forgotten way to conduct an interview. No interruptions every 30 seconds or frequent breaks for inane promos or commercials.

  • @seealterego88
    @seealterego88 3 года назад +6

    6:23 "i like talking to you" --that must have felt so good to the interviewer..

  • @Poemsapennyeach
    @Poemsapennyeach 5 лет назад +49

    Great character from another time.

  • @deecantola1923
    @deecantola1923 4 года назад +58

    She was hilarious and so honest.

  • @ladybearbaiter
    @ladybearbaiter 4 года назад +44

    What character, I love her spirit, attitude and uniqueness. Express yourself as you are. Identity groups are dangerous

  • @marc-xn8tu
    @marc-xn8tu Год назад +11

    O my goodness gracious! I have watched this interview so many times, and never grow tired of it. Fascinating lady and poetic genius!

  • @JamesHarris-hl2bm
    @JamesHarris-hl2bm 5 лет назад +84

    Occasionally, I come back to watch Dame Edith. What a joy to behold!!! I would have loved to have known her.

  • @Lisa1111
    @Lisa1111 5 лет назад +46

    Here is a brilliant woman who definitely knew "what time it was." 😉
    Thank you

  • @tillietrue9397
    @tillietrue9397 5 лет назад +59

    I loved listening to this very elegant woman.

  • @Ripeoldage
    @Ripeoldage 3 года назад +10

    Calls a spade a spade. Just adore her. Class act - calls out impertinence.

  • @SAGHAJAR
    @SAGHAJAR 3 года назад +9

    What an intellectual, this interview is as old as I am 1959 was the year I was born, still relevant to date what she said then : being patient with stupidity, Winter is the time of comfort , for good food and warmth.....talk beside the fire, it is time for home .

  • @kelvinallen2624
    @kelvinallen2624 7 лет назад +120

    Dame Edith, born in my home town Scarborough, her brother Sacheverell was also born in Scarborough. The Sitwell House is now a arts and craft centre.

  • @gerryan7831
    @gerryan7831 5 лет назад +202

    I loved this woman , she is being herself , we don't have to conform to anyone , l respect her 💐 lovely video 👍🏼🌈

    • @iamshotty
      @iamshotty 4 года назад +4

      Me too, I adore her ❤️

  • @dorianphilotheates3769
    @dorianphilotheates3769 4 года назад +117

    2:29 - “You see, I’m descended from the most queer and remote sources...” - love it! 👍🏽👏

    • @Jonathanbegg
      @Jonathanbegg 3 года назад +2

      And who isn't, my dear? But do dream-on, that your DNA is a specially exotic cocktail. We love you anyway.

    • @dorianphilotheates3769
      @dorianphilotheates3769 3 года назад +4

      Jonathan Begg - Obviously a direct quote (complete with video play time reference) of Dame Edith Sitwell’s quaint description of her own pedigree - not of course of mine...

    • @Jonathanbegg
      @Jonathanbegg 3 года назад +1

      @@dorianphilotheates3769 I meant her, not your good self.

    • @dorianphilotheates3769
      @dorianphilotheates3769 3 года назад +1

      Jonathan Begg - 🙂

    • @JoseighBlogs
      @JoseighBlogs 3 года назад +2

      The word "queer" used in its old form of 'odd' or 'unusual' and not to mean anything to do with being homosexual or gay ~ although 'a queer man' was at the time regarded odd and unusual of their kind.

  • @jenniferholden9397
    @jenniferholden9397 5 лет назад +297

    She is a real Plantagenet. Look at the old paintings of them, she looks like she's just stepped out of one.

    • @ianmedium
      @ianmedium 5 лет назад +21

      Jennifer Holden I was just going to say the same thing, it’s like the gene code has not deteriorated one bit!

    • @jenniferholden9397
      @jenniferholden9397 5 лет назад +37

      ianmedium She is unusual to look at but when she speaks she has a lovely character, she is a blast from the past. A real lady.

    • @ianmedium
      @ianmedium 5 лет назад +42

      Jennifer Holden I’m of the age that I remember ladies like this. A great many retired down to Devon where I grew up and lived a gentle dowager type life. They carried their life in dignified and refined ways. Always polite but always to the point and not afraid to stand their ground. I always liked them as they were always honest, you knew exactly where you stood with them. And like most from this class they were not judgmental or superior to others, in my experience that comes with the Nuevo riches who have next to no class in comparison.

    • @filipematias5127
      @filipematias5127 4 года назад +1

      No, she's not a Plantagenet although having an ancestor whom was an illegitimate child of a Prince from the Plantagenet Dynasty!

    • @lindan2836
      @lindan2836 4 года назад +3

      Plantagenets would wish they were of her standard, way to high for them😂🤣😂

  • @sarahleahB
    @sarahleahB 2 года назад +26

    Dame Edith is such a gem and I'm really happy this came in my newsfeed. She is the epitome of 'growing old gracefully '

  • @juliapatricia6223
    @juliapatricia6223 5 лет назад +40

    Would have so enjoyed to meet her. I admire her authenticity.

  • @dasareero
    @dasareero Год назад +4

    Looking at her face, I can see some very similar features to the portraits of royals and nobility in the Plantagenet - Tudor periods. I've always wondered how close or far off the accuracy was, and she is like a living portrait. Very very cool.

  • @gordonhall752
    @gordonhall752 4 года назад +22

    John Freeman, "I suspect you've become a member of the establishment". Dame Edith Sitwell (with the utmost indignance) "OH NO I'VE NOT!"

  • @TheClemcaster
    @TheClemcaster 5 лет назад +87

    When I think of the English - or considering their essential character, Edith Sitwell would be the perfect example. A penetrating and dry wit, with an intellect that is both formidable and warm - also, charming and wildly creative whilst being kind and intolerant of snobbery. I would imagine that she would find our present predicament concerning Europe utterly incomprehensible.

  • @golkeeper8517
    @golkeeper8517 5 лет назад +58

    oh she used to play with a peacock!wonderful!

  • @Alfredromeothatsme
    @Alfredromeothatsme 5 лет назад +143

    Thoroughly enjoyed listening to this amazing lady; rarely see interesting people like this on the telly today.

    • @a0b0
      @a0b0 5 лет назад +12

      that's what happens after 40 years of cuts in education and a glorification of morons like jade goody and katie price, reality tv.

    • @heathercorinne5876
      @heathercorinne5876 5 лет назад +2

      If you like this lady. ...look uo John maclean.

    • @salvador130
      @salvador130 4 года назад +1

      I really enjoyed that !👍👍

  • @ednaperhach2769
    @ednaperhach2769 5 лет назад +111

    What a truly wonderful ❤️ and interesting woman , sharp as a pin , utterly fasonating , 😘✌️

  • @Missditabomb
    @Missditabomb 4 года назад +6

    The first time Dame Edith met Marilyn Monroe was in 1953, and Dame Edith said, "she came to visit in a green dress and with her golden hair she look like a daffodil". How lovely.

  • @caligulalonghbottom2629
    @caligulalonghbottom2629 4 года назад +17

    I just realized that Tilda Swinton is related to her...and Quintin Crisp in Orlando looked VERY similar to Edith.

  • @Zamigirl
    @Zamigirl 5 лет назад +34

    This lady is sharp as a tack and I love that she dislikes snobbery for which the English have been stereotype. Then again countries that have Royalty are at the peril of this.

    • @widbear3703
      @widbear3703 4 года назад +5

      She was an original and an independent thinker, so she rejected the arrogance and snobbery of her 'world', and good on her!

  • @gulmerton2758
    @gulmerton2758 3 года назад +15

    She was only 72 years old when she did this Face to Face. I thought she looked at least 85! People looked old sooner than nowadays back in the day.
    But what a moral elegance!

    • @johndaarteest
      @johndaarteest 2 года назад +1

      Life was harder then than it is now.

  • @ronaldyoung8040
    @ronaldyoung8040 5 лет назад +44

    what a real personality means-for all to see!

  • @28105wsking
    @28105wsking 5 лет назад +34

    What a wonderful woman! Well done!

  • @poppybell8217
    @poppybell8217 4 года назад +35

    I love this woman so very much. Being an artist is very, very painful.

  • @wmnoffaith1
    @wmnoffaith1 5 лет назад +44

    I love watching this! I also am descended from the Plantagenets through the Earl of Arundel. She reminds me of my grandmother who was quite like this. Her voice has that soothing cadence my grandmother had, and it brings back memories.

  • @littleogeechee223
    @littleogeechee223 5 лет назад +33

    what a lovely, intelligent, interesting woman she was!

  • @40ounce58
    @40ounce58 4 года назад +12

    Wow! She’s was a very elegant lady. A look into the past.

  • @madeleine8977
    @madeleine8977 4 года назад +23

    This is so interesting. And John Freeman was an excellent interviewer.

  • @johnohare69
    @johnohare69 2 года назад +9

    Sublime.
    Dame Edith, what a divine human being.
    Her vulnerability and courage are an inspiration.

  • @maryangeladouglas
    @maryangeladouglas 4 года назад +36

    I have always loved her poetry. Seeing her in this way makes me want to cry. Please notice how her face lit up when she speaks about birds and how she speaks the name of God.

  • @Qao1017
    @Qao1017 2 года назад +11

    I randomly came across this video and I am finding myself smitten with this woman. I love her directness and unapologetic attitude to expect excellence of herself and her peers.

  • @rachaelshelton7178
    @rachaelshelton7178 4 года назад +5

    I’m 26 and I love her

  • @MangAiren
    @MangAiren 5 лет назад +14

    I feel like I've seen something priceless. I'm grateful

    • @franmellor9843
      @franmellor9843 4 года назад +1

      You would like the interview with Deborah the duchess of Devonshire I think

  • @gothmaze
    @gothmaze 4 года назад +13

    "Wildfire passion" meaning "out of control, destructive power." Her sentences are laced with gorgeous words.

  • @carolking6355
    @carolking6355 5 лет назад +94

    That was wonderful to watch and listen to. A great lady in every way.

  • @stevendaniel5649
    @stevendaniel5649 5 лет назад +33

    She redefines the eccentric personality but in a most delicious way! She frightens me but I can't look away. LOL.

  • @ricksteves1973
    @ricksteves1973 3 года назад +4

    When I clicked I fully expected her voice to sound like it does.

  • @anselman3156
    @anselman3156 5 лет назад +54

    A humble but unworthy love of God, and a great love of humanity. A walking fire, indeed. God bless her.

    • @388Caroline
      @388Caroline 5 лет назад +1

      anselman why did she not believe in God?

    • @anselman3156
      @anselman3156 5 лет назад +7

      @@388Caroline Why do you say she did not believe? She was a believer, and her poetry reflects that. Still Falls the Rain is one example, and at the conclusion of this interview she said the words I quoted about her humble love of God.

    •  4 года назад

      God is dead.

    • @salvador130
      @salvador130 4 года назад

      @ .Our GOD, ELOHIM, IS ALIVE. 🙋sorry about yours Mr.😙

    • @soohamdy8538
      @soohamdy8538 Год назад

      ​​@@anselman3156t doesnt matter if she belive in god or not, at tte time of jesus the jews and the romans used to belive in god, god will judge us according to our rush after our lusts and loving this world and only who took from him a covenant and didnt rush after this live will got his mercy and his forgivness.

  • @haitham5730
    @haitham5730 4 года назад +27

    What a quite extraordinary character. Here eyes turns quickly from sharpness & intelligence to a depth of warm feelings & care spontaneously. Each second is a moving paint full of a remarkable expressions & impressions.

  • @Melissab704
    @Melissab704 3 года назад +15

    So relatable when she speaks of the worry of boring people. Social anxiety apparently knows know era.

  • @janiehelms4895
    @janiehelms4895 5 лет назад +31

    Looked at this on a whim glad I did interesting

  • @billmartin2237
    @billmartin2237 Год назад +2

    She was very special and highly intelligent. Grateful for this interview. Would have loved to have had a cup of tea with Dame Edith.

  • @Ship-security
    @Ship-security 3 года назад +8

    Take notes, this is how a person can stand out and fight the power and still maintain grace and dignity.