Salvador Dali on Anteaters and Moustaches | The Dick Cavett Show

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  • Опубликовано: 1 мар 2020
  • Artist, Salvador Dali brings an Anteater onto the set of the show and discusses his famous upright moustache!
    Date aired - February 11th, 1971 - Salvador Dali
    #SalvadorDali #DickCavett #Artist #Art
    For clip licensing opportunities please visit www.globalimageworks.com/the-...
    Dick Cavett has been nominated for eleven Emmy awards (the most recent in 2012 for the HBO special, Mel Brooks and Dick Cavett Together Again), and won three. Spanning five decades, Dick Cavett’s television career has defined excellence in the interview format. He started at ABC in 1968, and also enjoyed success on PBS, USA, and CNBC.
    His most recent television successes were the September 2014 PBS special, Dick Cavett’s Watergate, followed April 2015 by Dick Cavett’s Vietnam. He has appeared in movies, tv specials, tv commercials, and several Broadway plays. He starred in an off-Broadway production ofHellman v. McCarthy in 2014 and reprised the role at Theatre 40 in LA February 2015.
    Cavett has published four books beginning with Cavett (1974) and Eye on Cavett (1983), co-authored with Christopher Porterfield. His two recent books -- Talk Show: Confrontations, Pointed Commentary, and Off-Screen Secrets (2010) and Brief Encounters: Conversations, Magic moments, and Assorted Hijinks(October 2014) are both collections of his online opinion column, written for The New York Times since 2007. Additionally, he has written for The New Yorker, TV Guide, Vanity Fair, and elsewhere.
    #thedickcavettshow
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Комментарии • 1,4 тыс.

  • @Whoknowsuknow
    @Whoknowsuknow 4 года назад +4645

    I always think of Dali as a historical figure, it's so weird to see him on a TV show.

    • @TheIndependentLens
      @TheIndependentLens 4 года назад +164

      Yeah, but he was definitely in the current world of his time. He loved Alice Cooper concerts back then. He even did a complete 360 degree, 3D hologram of Alice.

    • @no-handit-bandit
      @no-handit-bandit 4 года назад +24

      Absolutely same here!

    • @Sam-qc6sz
      @Sam-qc6sz 4 года назад +14

      Yeah exactly, in fact I didn't even know he did interviews or at least talk shows (though the Dick Cavett Show is effectively such high quality that it is an interview)
      And also because "Dalì" and "Cavett" aren't two names that I associate very much ahah

    • @bleee.t
      @bleee.t 4 года назад +19

      Whoknowsuknow I agree it was strange finding out that he only passed in 89’ when I constantly learn about him in my art class. Very interesting..

    • @HarrietThugman
      @HarrietThugman 4 года назад +8

      I know me too bro, that's crazy.. I really thought this was a personal experience of mine.

  • @lionheart6176
    @lionheart6176 4 года назад +1190

    the man was a shitposter ahead of his time

    • @kinyamadege__6235
      @kinyamadege__6235 4 года назад

      Hey, thats from that old man channel

    • @mightytaiger3000
      @mightytaiger3000 4 года назад +5

      Seth Harper that wasn’t funny or accurate the first 400 times other people said it.

    • @tedlugano
      @tedlugano 4 года назад +7

      He may not have been well understood in this...pitifully, but I thought he made quite a bit of sense- I interpreted the way he perceives the world to be vastly different; It appeared as if he perceived his surroundings as totemic symbols relative to fundamental truths and archetypes.

    • @nensikalahan
      @nensikalahan 4 года назад +8

      Exept that he's a genius

    • @krowaswieta7944
      @krowaswieta7944 4 года назад +1

      @@tedlugano I mean what kind of a sense? If he perceived surroundings as 'totemic symbols' it only says that would be even harder to understand him if you dont know what are representations of these symbols and what fundamental truths did he recognize. Your statement seems to be even more foggy than the babble Dali presented in this interview.

  • @timjung640
    @timjung640 4 года назад +2426

    I like how he immediately tosses the anteater onto the lady's lap.

    • @blockaderunner
      @blockaderunner 4 года назад +125

      he was fvckin crazy I like it

    • @daveteves
      @daveteves 4 года назад +109

      That lady was Lilian Gish! The First Lady of American Cinema

    • @danielg.s.8811
      @danielg.s.8811 4 года назад +79

      and she didi't flinch at all!

    • @Patrick96322
      @Patrick96322 4 года назад +23

      A most Dalinian move !

    • @txux77
      @txux77 4 года назад +83

      He was very rude in my opinion!!!

  • @t.z2359
    @t.z2359 4 года назад +952

    I feel like I’m watching the Eric Andrea show, but in reverse.

    • @marcogaray-chavez6512
      @marcogaray-chavez6512 4 года назад +18

      this couldn’t have been said any better lol

    • @josephchristoffel
      @josephchristoffel 4 года назад +12

      Pink Alien wow, it must be very edgy to say Andre is not edgy at all

    • @josephchristoffel
      @josephchristoffel 4 года назад +1

      Pink Alien so tell me the reason you said that

    • @cesarmadero05
      @cesarmadero05 4 года назад +6

      @Pink Alien how can you say something controversial yet so brave?

    • @obamastrollaccount4359
      @obamastrollaccount4359 4 года назад +6

      Andre takes a lot from the bizarre spirit of surrealism and Dadaism: he may not be “edgy” as you say, but he sure is fucking entertaining and unlike most acts around today. He’s not entirely unoriginal, sort of originally unoriginal and irreverently reverent.

  • @ehfdup9460
    @ehfdup9460 4 года назад +1493

    i think the ant eater was the most comfortable thing in the room

  • @TomRNZ
    @TomRNZ 4 года назад +1309

    This interview was as surreal as one of his paintings.

    • @candicegerman9793
      @candicegerman9793 4 года назад +8

      I visited Salvador Dali museum , which was very interesting

    • @blockaderunner
      @blockaderunner 4 года назад +5

      @@candicegerman9793 I have a painting of "Burning Giraffe" in my bedroom. Didn't even know who Salvadore Dahli was, but acquired the idea for purchasing it while reading "Ringworld" by Larry Niven. At the birthday party for the main character, the painting was on the wall, just before the main character was to go with a two-necked hoofed maned alien and a cat-man alien and a 19 yr old "new" human woman, a couple million light years away in a ship called "Long Pass."

    • @chvsanchez
      @chvsanchez 4 года назад +3

      That's the point.

    • @gerardosalas9477
      @gerardosalas9477 4 года назад +1

      PacificRimNZ it was garbage like his paintings

    • @TomRNZ
      @TomRNZ 4 года назад +3

      @@gerardosalas9477 That's your opinion, and you're entitled to it, but I disagree. He's one of my favourite artists.

  • @darioh9661
    @darioh9661 4 года назад +1320

    he speaks like my greek uncle doing a Shakespeare impression

  • @YourLocalCatboy
    @YourLocalCatboy 3 года назад +290

    An early-1900s actress, a ground breaking baseball player, Salvador Dali, and an anteater walk into a bar...

    • @dickon728
      @dickon728 Год назад +8

      The Barman says "I'm not serving that here!" Then says to the anteater, "What'll you have, Buddy?"

    • @dickon728
      @dickon728 Год назад +4

      Thank god somebody has a sense of humour.

    • @benlange7124
      @benlange7124 Год назад +5

      Dick Cavett's wife: I've never heard that joke
      Dick Cavett: it's not a joke, I'm telling you about my day

    • @melissasalasblair5273
      @melissasalasblair5273 11 месяцев назад

      Yes lol ❤‍🔥😆

    • @cherylmeyer9857
      @cherylmeyer9857 6 месяцев назад

      Hahaha

  • @silverdragon710
    @silverdragon710 4 года назад +1409

    what a weird moment in tv history. the baseball guy looks fairly modern, the host very 70’s, that lady like victorian times and dali, well like dali, almost mythical. the interaction is like the one between those times where generational gap is an understatement, more like what would happen if you could time travel and how would people from different periods react to one another. and dali is the time traveler who brings about all that commotion. very precious footage indeed.

    • @PetStuBa
      @PetStuBa 4 года назад +47

      and then there is an anteater ;-) lol

    • @84beatles
      @84beatles 4 года назад +4

      Silver Dragon - Absolutely ! Totally agree.

    • @Benjizosi
      @Benjizosi 4 года назад +4

      in point!

    • @ranaminavi8345
      @ranaminavi8345 4 года назад +4

      u could have never explained it better.

    • @ytcdi
      @ytcdi 4 года назад +29

      Yes and no: Dick Cavett is certainly a man of his time: a north american (as it happens to be, but that's not the point) clueless about the personality in front of him. But Dalí plays in another league, he is a universal figure (like Picasso). He represents the human being in a raw form; what a human being can (and probably should) aim to achieve: expressing himself, without the restraints of the current society. He would always feel out of place no matter when or where you would put him. A person who doesn't bend to the conventions of any current time, not letting others interfere with his expression of the self, with a sense of originality, and very rare talent. A person whose life and works trascend space and time: any human being, any time, and any place could (if sensible enough) and maybe should (if brave enough) be able to appreciate it, so its timeless and universal.

  • @MacIntoshMann
    @MacIntoshMann 4 года назад +1402

    i never thought the day would come when i could say with full sincerity, “i’ve seen salvador dali throw an anteater at lillian gish”, but there you go.

    • @mckinleymorton
      @mckinleymorton 4 года назад +22

      Yeah, the whole schtick seemed really pretentious to me. But, who am i?

    • @deanrane1961
      @deanrane1961 4 года назад +2

      Hahaa! Ikr, I kept replaying that part.

    • @mckinleymorton
      @mckinleymorton 4 года назад +25

      @TheJimmy yeah, I was very dissapointed by Dali as a human being. That is the first time that I ever saw him interviewed. Maybe this was an off day, but it seems like this cultivated absurdity had no limits. Also, he had a pet ocelot. I can only imagine how neglected it was.

    • @QuimBeelivingstone
      @QuimBeelivingstone 4 года назад +15

      @TheJimmy yes, right after she said that and the camera zoomed in, you could see the poor anteater almost shivering from fright. The lady kept extremely calm about having the animal thrown at her. She barely flinched. I would have been so startled, jumped and swore lol

    • @oOoteethoOo
      @oOoteethoOo 4 года назад +12

      omg can y’all shut TF up about judging this man over ONE interview. Y’all seem pathetic to me instead imo

  • @liamarunbennett8282
    @liamarunbennett8282 4 года назад +899

    "the tongue represents exactly the moleclar structure of deoxyribonucleic acid" 2:05

    • @nicholasdove5109
      @nicholasdove5109 4 года назад +90

      THANK YOU!!! I had no idea what he said there so I came to find this comment

    • @TheEeshan
      @TheEeshan 4 года назад +214

      Also he's saying the rhinoceros's horn resembles a logarithmic spiral

    • @marius9372
      @marius9372 4 года назад +125

      Yeah, his accent is hugely influenced by French and Spanish, luckily Italian pronounciation is quite similar to the Spanish one, so I could get quite easily what he was saying. It amazes me that Dali knew about the golden spiral in rhyno's horn, and I simply didn't know about the tongue of the anteater representing DNA. That man is just ahead of his time

    • @devi3350
      @devi3350 4 года назад +39

      almost everything in nature is a logarithmic spiral,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,not just the rhino horn,,,,,,,,,,,,,,even the moostache if you look closely,,,,,,,,,,

    • @juliaeyrie9750
      @juliaeyrie9750 4 года назад +5

      Well either this or Catalan, which by the looks of it you are not educated about

  • @baptistewxpolpodcast3339
    @baptistewxpolpodcast3339 4 года назад +234

    Next time someone criticizes my accent, I'll just cite Dali and say that I'm trying to inject reality in this otherwise foggy and imprecise language ... hahahaha

  • @miquels3146
    @miquels3146 4 года назад +306

    whenever Dali makes a sudden movement you can see the fear in Gavett's eyes

  • @Omnywrench
    @Omnywrench 3 года назад +50

    This is the first time I've ever heard Salvador Dali's voice, and I have to say- he sounds EXACTLY how he looks

  • @Barsay
    @Barsay 4 года назад +274

    Dalì: talks about the logaritmic structure of the rhynoceros horn
    evervryone in the room: HAHAHAHAHAHAHA

  • @thejoeisawesome
    @thejoeisawesome 4 года назад +422

    Dali comparing the anteater's tongue to a DNA double helix was pretty dope - some high guy 2020

    • @MrShanester117
      @MrShanester117 4 года назад +9

      thejoeisawesome
      I didn’t hear any of that. I caught that the rhinos horn was mathematically perfect. But that’s it

    • @thejoeisawesome
      @thejoeisawesome 4 года назад +5

      @@MrShanester117 @2:07- 2:20ish

    • @MrShanester117
      @MrShanester117 4 года назад +4

      thejoeisawesome
      I’m just surprised you could understand him

    • @thejoeisawesome
      @thejoeisawesome 4 года назад +5

      @@MrShanester117 I'm sure the herb helps 😉

    • @TheBlashMusic
      @TheBlashMusic 4 года назад +2

      Weed lmao

  • @LucasNauan
    @LucasNauan 4 года назад +676

    Almost all of the biggest personalities of the 20th century went on The Dick Cavett Show.

    • @RadioMarycha
      @RadioMarycha 4 года назад +26

      Lucas Nauan - Almost is correct, for I never appeared on that show...

    • @silverdragon710
      @silverdragon710 4 года назад +11

      To me, to this day, he is the best host ever and had had the best talk show ever.

    • @RadioMarycha
      @RadioMarycha 4 года назад +3

      Silver Dragon - Nope, Johny Carson was and still is the unchallenged Talk Show King of the Universe!

    • @silverdragon710
      @silverdragon710 4 года назад +7

      Juan Perez WHAT did he do that is of great importance other than make himself rich and appear in a cameo role in several movies?

    • @silverdragon710
      @silverdragon710 4 года назад +4

      RadioMarycha Not to me. Too much like letterman, cavett had genuine conversations with people of which footage today is invaluable

  • @powderpuffarpeggio3968
    @powderpuffarpeggio3968 4 года назад +589

    BOOT-ER-FLYEEEEEEEE

    • @romans8024
      @romans8024 4 года назад +3

      Look who's also an artist!

    • @chvsanchez
      @chvsanchez 4 года назад +13

      He is comparing the misty English vowels with the strong Spanish ones.

    • @diamond_gypsy7452
      @diamond_gypsy7452 4 года назад +2

      Watch yourself... *that guy w a s scared*

    • @llavesantioquia
      @llavesantioquia 4 года назад +2

      Reebonucleikkk Aseeet!

    • @swapnilsingh3379
      @swapnilsingh3379 4 года назад +2

      Cavett didn't saw that coming 😂😂

  • @nottavictim5
    @nottavictim5 4 года назад +676

    That “black guy” just happens to be Satchell Paige, arguably the greatest pitcher in baseball history

  • @LaGuerre19
    @LaGuerre19 4 года назад +115

    and this is titled, "Study in how 3 strangers react when I throw an anteater at a lady in a hat on national television"

  • @MisterGuitarItalia
    @MisterGuitarItalia 4 года назад +50

    This is like watching three shows at the same time...

  • @bepper9474
    @bepper9474 3 года назад +24

    Most people troll his english accent, but he had an amazing english vocabulary

  • @papalaz4444244
    @papalaz4444244 3 года назад +32

    Dali is a proper, old school mentalist and I respect that utterly. I also love how he makes the others unsettled immediately. That's an art :)

    • @KingCrimson82
      @KingCrimson82 10 месяцев назад

      absolutely love the beginning.. but you have to notiuce a .ladies first, then the host, and then the guest and then the audience, the animal is tossed around in the same time leaving it to the woman organically leaving the handle to her control.

  • @Spectrumpicture
    @Spectrumpicture 4 года назад +293

    In college i took an Art History course and was told that Dali's parents thought he was a God, and he had no rules to live by.

    • @Bootrosgali
      @Bootrosgali 4 года назад +22

      And what would that suggest then , go on finish your thought

    • @Chinaski1
      @Chinaski1 4 года назад +20

      Nah, he had a really difficult relationship to his father.

    • @Spectrumpicture
      @Spectrumpicture 4 года назад +39

      @@Bootrosgali i believe that plays into his eccentricities. Imagine what you would be doing today if you were never told "no."

    • @robbanks5023
      @robbanks5023 4 года назад +27

      I love Dali's paintings, but he is an idiot according to this interview.

    • @susiefairfield7218
      @susiefairfield7218 4 года назад +75

      He had an older brother named Salvador Dali, who died before he was born, and his parents referred to him as his dead Brother. Definitely a strange family

  • @larsybarz
    @larsybarz 4 года назад +61

    2:08 “the tongue is exactly representative of the molecular structure of deoxyribose nucleic acid”

  • @carbon1479
    @carbon1479 4 года назад +40

    First time I've seen him interviewed. Very intense human.

  • @ahambrahmasmi108
    @ahambrahmasmi108 4 года назад +358

    Dali was painfully self aware and a complete introvert. His outward "strangeness" is his defense mechanism. The creation of the public Dali allows him to communicate on his terms, and provides a vehicle for his surrealist tendencies to manifest as a person. The genius of his painting and art speak for itself. The rest is a wonderful expression of an artist mocking the inability of the everyday person to grasp the unfathomable focus and spontaneity required to create at such a high level.

    • @Jarkore
      @Jarkore 4 года назад +31

      No. It is very well known among those with even the most negligible interest in the arts, especially in Spain, that Dali was nothing but pure show, orchestrated as he himself points out in this interview by none other than his own wife, Gala. She did the same with a now unknown poet which she was married to prior to Dali, so one should have expected that turn of events when they started seeing each other. This can be seen in Dali's trajectory, how he acted when the cameras weren't rolling, and how he even had some predetermined performances to roll out for journalists that wanted to interview him, visitors, etc.
      The creation of the public Dali is nothing but a massive PR movement to create a mythology around an otherwise pretty mediocre artist. This of course ended up in Dali flip-flopping ideologically, dependent on what state was to sponsor him at the time. You can also see the disdain for his own works, as near to the death of his life, he signed massive amounts of papers, canvases and such in order for his studio to keep manufacturing artistic commodities even after his death, which nowadays makes the identification of newly discovered Dali works almost impossible.
      It's about time we start meeting our supposed idols, I think.

    • @TheAngryArab
      @TheAngryArab 4 года назад +47

      @@Jarkore Dali, mediocre? His works are widely admired.

    • @Jarkore
      @Jarkore 4 года назад +4

      @@TheAngryArab The amount of people you've managed to convince through your PR campaign doesn't determine the actual quality of your work.

    • @bazkervillerouge750
      @bazkervillerouge750 4 года назад +1

      @@TheAngryArab By npc's like you.

    • @bazkervillerouge750
      @bazkervillerouge750 4 года назад +4

      @@Jarkore Yeah.
      He was pretty much a poser.

  • @pieroduharterondon7377
    @pieroduharterondon7377 2 года назад +20

    His whole public life was an art happening. Unrepeatable genius.

  • @-Princesse-
    @-Princesse- 4 года назад +29

    @5:33 Cavett: "Has anyone ever been injured by your mustache in any way?"
    Dali: "Most everybody in modern times."
    🤣🤣

    • @EstraNiato
      @EstraNiato 3 года назад +1

      Yep he buried him right there and Cavett never really got out :)

  • @stjjames
    @stjjames 4 года назад +193

    ‘English, is foggy & imprecise’

    • @ebrelus7687
      @ebrelus7687 4 года назад +5

      Quality of any langauge can be easily measured by level of beaurocratisation and prostitutisation in the country. In this comparison English is still much better off but getting closer. Famfarafamfamfamsasasasam.
      Most of english vacabulary considered the prettiest comes from french Bretonian.
      Most of pretty french comes from french theaters fakery and brothels - but you could consider both these categories really close to each other and reduce it to simply brothels.

    • @Manudyne
      @Manudyne 3 года назад

      He's right. English is a dumb language.

  • @himanshusharma1531
    @himanshusharma1531 4 года назад +68

    The Surrealist Genius Himself 🙌

  • @ARIZJOE
    @ARIZJOE 3 года назад +21

    Genius. Had been to the Dali museum many times in Cleveland.
    Made me think about art. Met a neighbor of Dali's in Spain, a member of
    the U.K. House of Lords. Dali was Dali in private also. Cavett was going
    for some laughs here. Maybe a little too much. However, we should
    thank Dick for producing this show with Dali as guest. It is a
    historical record.

  • @mosswurm
    @mosswurm 9 месяцев назад +5

    I've never heard Dali speak. He may be THE most confident man who ever lived. That level of conviction with everything he says and does is wild.

  • @goldstar9174
    @goldstar9174 3 года назад +9

    "The most violent phenomenon in one's face... This artful capilar explosion of personality" YEAH!!!

  • @lexchantel
    @lexchantel 4 года назад +339

    They definitely should’ve had a translator for Dali here

    • @unclestarwarssatchmo9848
      @unclestarwarssatchmo9848 4 года назад +62

      I don't know if this surreal man could be translated...

    • @vrilmaxxed
      @vrilmaxxed 4 года назад +2

      Bin one can translate him no way, because he had a glimpse of the unspeakable and indescribable that why he’s „crazy“

    • @oitnotnA
      @oitnotnA 4 года назад +2

      Definitely not

    • @ProlificThreadworm
      @ProlificThreadworm 4 года назад +2

      Speaking what language?

    • @user-74652
      @user-74652 3 года назад +5

      As if that would have helped.

  • @Mister8Music
    @Mister8Music Год назад +20

    I've been an artist for almost 15 years, and a huge fan of him. I've never seen this until today. I honestly believe that the vast majority of his in-person Vibe was merely theatrics. He knew how to work someone who was paying him attention, with or without a paintbrush

    • @bennyhillschineseblokechar3689
      @bennyhillschineseblokechar3689 Год назад

      |}∆|_í's eccentric public pers⭕na was as much an ev⚪lved w⭕rk of ∆rt as his paintings and b⚪⚪ks.

    • @LannieLord
      @LannieLord 9 месяцев назад +1

      I saw an exhibit of his in NYC about 15 years ago. It was the only time that seeing artwork made me cry (because it was so over whelming and beautiful).

    • @Mister8Music
      @Mister8Music 9 месяцев назад

      @@LannieLord I'm jealous!

  • @kokkinikautichilipipperia9242
    @kokkinikautichilipipperia9242 4 года назад +10

    holy SHIT his sense of humor and creativity is driving me crazy

  • @TheVanillatech
    @TheVanillatech 4 года назад +21

    I met Dali once and I was actually painting at the time (yeah I know ... I was devastated when he walked in). He told me I'd got the green on the slate tiles on the roof of the church perfect. I told him it'd taken me almost an hour to get the right mix of green, yellow and blue. He seemed impressed.

  • @liamarunbennett8282
    @liamarunbennett8282 4 года назад +61

    "the logarithmic spiral shape of the rhinocerous horn" 2:52

  • @billmcdonald4045
    @billmcdonald4045 4 года назад +15

    Salvador's art now makes perfect sense

    • @adamfirst3772
      @adamfirst3772 4 года назад +1

      lol... exactly.....
      crazy is as crazy does!!

  • @ottocarson
    @ottocarson 3 года назад +45

    Dalí is maybe the most intelligent person I’ve watched on tv. It’s easy laughing at him when he speaks in English. I saw recently an interview in Spanish and the coherence and clarity how he talked surprised me much.

  • @Czechbound
    @Czechbound 4 года назад +134

    Poor Cavett looks terrified ha ha

    • @fulanichild3138
      @fulanichild3138 4 года назад +4

      I think he and Lillian Gish were appalled by the treatment of the anteater.

    • @jadenhernandez5109
      @jadenhernandez5109 4 года назад

      Fulani Child no, they weren't

    • @fulanichild3138
      @fulanichild3138 4 года назад +5

      @@jadenhernandez5109 Liilian Gish said, "The poor thing is terrified." She was not amused and neither was Cavett.

    • @jadenhernandez5109
      @jadenhernandez5109 4 года назад +1

      Fulani Child well dali is dali, not a zookeeper

    • @rsuriyop
      @rsuriyop 3 года назад +2

      Cavett clearly did not know what he'd be dealing with prior to inviting Dali on to the show. However, he would've been a _perfect_ guest on the Howard Stern Show.

  • @O0Salmon0O
    @O0Salmon0O 4 года назад +23

    "Surrealism" is as much imagery in 2D as it can be in behavior. It is a concept represented in many forms. If you comprehend the concept you will recognize how deliberate and calculated Dali's behavior is. He is expressing surrealism in a performance. He staged many events. He understood the concept so well he could depict it during his public appearances.

  • @avishkamariosenewiratne8031
    @avishkamariosenewiratne8031 4 года назад +53

    Wow Cavette got some great people in his show back in the day

  • @opinionday0079
    @opinionday0079 4 года назад +78

    He never did an interview where he genuinely is "normal" and gives some understandable insight into his creative process .....I think he was genuinely "mad" and always unfathomable but I guess that gave him the edge when it came to Art.... He was a sublime artist, I visited his hometown and museum once and I could have spent a week in the museum looking at all the different and wonderful things he created, it was spell binding.

    • @cardguy2000
      @cardguy2000 4 года назад +14

      He was the biggest Troll of his time.

    • @johnnytocino9313
      @johnnytocino9313 4 года назад +2

      "The only difference between me and a mad man is that i am not mad." -Dali

    • @griffit5a
      @griffit5a 4 года назад +2

      the stones on the beach
      and the ants.
      what does it tell us???

    • @ripme6616
      @ripme6616 4 года назад

      @@griffit5a it doesn't tell anything it just is

    • @aleixvallejo7976
      @aleixvallejo7976 3 года назад +8

      Not to say he wasn't a monumental weirdo and wonderfully imaginative, but this whole public persona was, well, an act. I remember once I heard a radio interview he'd done about the 70s, in Catalan, and he sounded "normal", regular voice, not even talking all that crazy. People who knew him well say he was a different man when standing in front of a camera.
      Still, in this "interview" with Cavett he's cranking the madness up to eleven. ruclips.net/video/pMbncc0h8bk/видео.html Here he's still eccentric and all, but conversational and reasonable. And he has terrific insights too.

  • @jennic.548
    @jennic.548 4 года назад +58

    Dali, and an anteater... wonderful.. I wonder what kind of show it would have been if he had brought a rhinoceros as well.

    • @spectralv709
      @spectralv709 4 года назад +1

      J. C. The rhino probably would’ve charged and killed Lilian Gish

  • @heardofjohn6854
    @heardofjohn6854 6 месяцев назад +2

    I actually ran into Dali on a winter day in 1966, while on my lunch hour. I recognized him from a distance from his moustache, and as we passed each other, he handed me a card advertising his latest exhibit. My touch with greatness.

  • @lilwater7358
    @lilwater7358 4 года назад +164

    Dick Cavett doesnt even understand how far away he is from dalis mind.

    • @gonzofernandez
      @gonzofernandez 3 года назад +4

      Sometimes dali was bombastic for the sake of being bombastic

    • @dimebag6996
      @dimebag6996 3 года назад

      @@gonzofernandez such a tryhard lol

    •  3 года назад +7

      True, and why people from the U.S. can't talk in another language, only their Native?! Why they do not learn another language?! Like Spanish... to talk better with Dali! Such a provincial people!... And pretending to be the center of the world only because they stole other people with war.

    • @barflytom3273
      @barflytom3273 Год назад

      @ your English is not bad by the way.

  • @normanmacfarlane2867
    @normanmacfarlane2867 4 года назад +5

    My God , is there no one that Dick Cavett has not interviewed ?
    Brando , Dali , Mohammed Ali , Norman Mailer , George Harrison , John and Yoko . . . Just incredible. On and on , backstage at Stones concerts , everywhere, everyone , just astounding.

  • @MrTotalluck
    @MrTotalluck 4 года назад +30

    2:44 When Dalí starts talking about the horn of the rinhoceros he's referring to the way It complies with the laws of the golden ratio or the divine proportion. A master of his craft Who Saw Life through the eyes of the artist. Its also surprising how art was so clóse to regular people through a popular TV show.

  • @MASK69
    @MASK69 2 года назад +30

    Im from Catalonia and I'm so proud of Salvador Dalí.

  • @oliverholmes-gunning5372
    @oliverholmes-gunning5372 4 года назад +84

    6:59 that is the face of an interviewer who has seriously reached the end of his rope hahaha

    • @oliverholmes-gunning5372
      @oliverholmes-gunning5372 4 года назад +9

      @Andrec S Can you imagine the poor translator though? Dali spoke in the same way when he was speaking Spanish, Catalan or French. I get the feeling that if they'd gone through a third party everyone would've been even more confused😂

  • @yourdudekarl
    @yourdudekarl 11 месяцев назад +6

    Dali has an animated personality and definitely a great artist. One of a kind!

  • @Jbkoyi
    @Jbkoyi 4 года назад +10

    The fact that he threw the ant eater in an unconventional manner deserves a meme😆😆😆

  • @kelf114
    @kelf114 2 года назад +5

    I loved Dali since I was a wee tiny lass.
    I cried and cried when he died.
    A Master of the Surreal. He could take any mundane object you thought you knew, and make you see it completely differently.
    I'm glad to have been in the same lifetime as him.
    Thank you for posting this video.

  • @rybb6420
    @rybb6420 4 года назад +6

    Watch him taking over the whole energy of the room when walking in... impressive

  • @isaac2560
    @isaac2560 4 года назад +12

    “BOOTTË3ĘRR-FLAH-YAÆEYYYY” 😌🦋

  • @yorganyog
    @yorganyog 4 года назад +8

    2 A.M. Im laughing like crazy. Love this man. I really don't what to say. There are no words. Amazing.

  • @buckleysdead
    @buckleysdead 4 года назад +9

    This is my first time seeing Dali on film/video and it’s given me full appreciation for Adrien Brody’s portrayal in Midnight in Paris 🤣😃😃. 🦏 🦏🦏🦏🦏

  • @D.AGE.
    @D.AGE. 2 года назад +7

    He is incredibly coherent in Spanish interviews. They should of had a translater for him. Super intelligent

    • @cor0n4
      @cor0n4 Год назад +2

      Art is imperfection; his English is understandable, he sounds fluent, his vocabulary is enriched, it’s all about his accent… he preserved his identity on purpose, since he was a very unruled human being. American television (Hollywood) has always been tough on foreign language speakers to reduce their accents and making it American Standard Accent. Dali gave them a lesson in the 1970s. And He spoke more than 4 languages.

  • @QyounesSS
    @QyounesSS 4 года назад +4

    a surrealist man who reflects his work by his attitude !!! Impressive !

  • @ReverseLBlock
    @ReverseLBlock 3 года назад +7

    I love how he only calls it an "eat ants"

  • @boaventurarindoatoa
    @boaventurarindoatoa 4 года назад +15

    Dali é excentrico, incentrico e concêntrico. Dali é gênio. Obrigado por disponibilizarem o vídeo.

  • @halkingb
    @halkingb 3 года назад +6

    I love how Dalí refers to himself in the 3rd person!

  • @AdamFerrari64
    @AdamFerrari64 4 года назад +62

    I always thought Dali lived back in the 1800s with Van Gogh. So weird to see him on tv

    • @zigulimiguli
      @zigulimiguli 3 года назад +6

      o,o,o...you missed some art history lessons :-) :-)

    • @Hiarren
      @Hiarren 3 года назад +10

      To be fair, he probably thought that, too.

  • @ennuied
    @ennuied 4 года назад +4

    Wow I never been so entranced by a character, can't believe he's not acting.

  • @petergedd9330
    @petergedd9330 Месяц назад

    The way he viewed everything was startling, no such thing as an ordinary object. I like the way he is not even phased by sarcastic remarks showing that he in fact was very humble in spite of his obvious extreme eccentricity.

  • @BG-ph8hp
    @BG-ph8hp 3 года назад +6

    The fine line between “cuckoo” and “art”.

  • @willminkorea2010
    @willminkorea2010 4 года назад +77

    With actress Lillian Gish and baseball's Satchel Paige

    • @boothammer5756
      @boothammer5756 4 года назад +7

      Satchel Paige!!!

    • @luissegovia8205
      @luissegovia8205 4 года назад +2

      Lilian gish.. Is pure history!!!.. For all. Cinema lovers

  • @curtbrooks7495
    @curtbrooks7495 4 года назад +518

    The black guy is thinking I wish I was scheduled for tomorrow

    • @capoislamort100
      @capoislamort100 4 года назад +7

      Curt Brooks what black guy?

    • @moussetache1815
      @moussetache1815 4 года назад +6

      Looks like his name is Mr Page or something like this.

    • @Czechbound
      @Czechbound 4 года назад +4

      Also "The other guy is thinking I wish I was scheduled for tomorrow"

    • @999666703
      @999666703 4 года назад +16

      Looks like you triggered some SJWs in the comment section.

    • @alondathomas293
      @alondathomas293 4 года назад +8

      Brooks:
      He was probably thinking, "Yep, I just had to come here on Crazy White People day," lol.

  • @dr.brianjudedelimaphd743
    @dr.brianjudedelimaphd743 4 года назад +7

    He’s not “unusual” or a circus clown, he is an artistic genius

  • @stormowl2856
    @stormowl2856 4 года назад +4

    What an entrance!

  • @crunkalac
    @crunkalac 4 года назад +5

    The way he just throws it face first on the floor

  • @OpEditorial
    @OpEditorial 4 года назад +4

    The melting clock guy with the wacky moustache you learned about in Art History class was at one point was just a local eccentric

  • @mybugmy64bug31
    @mybugmy64bug31 Год назад +2

    long time Dali fan...I always loved this interview. Rarely did you see Dick Cavett 'thrown out of sorts' and into a state where he was somewhat disoriented, off-kilter and he didnt know how to deal with Dali. Incredibly heavy accent, manic statements, an anteater, one-sided conversation driven by a genius artist. One side of the stage completely out of control & surreal balanced only by an incredibly composed wonderful baseball player and early 1900's movie star. The entire scene was a living Dali work of art.

  • @mr_elyte
    @mr_elyte 4 года назад +9

    I'm Catalan (so I speak Catalan and Spanish), and I we understand french if is speaked slowly, I could understand everything Salvador was saying xD just glorious.

    • @Jeraaz
      @Jeraaz 7 месяцев назад

      What did he say about the tongue of the anteater

  • @infinitelotus-navelled1029
    @infinitelotus-navelled1029 4 года назад +27

    "I don't do drugs, I'm drugs"! PROVED!!! 💯

  • @thomasjackson2223
    @thomasjackson2223 4 года назад +25

    Talking to Dali is like tripping on LSD 😂

  • @imperor76
    @imperor76 Год назад +2

    A panel of legends in all their fields. Fascinating.

  • @PoletBally
    @PoletBally 4 года назад +137

    Not weird enough. Should've brought a pangolin.

    • @fairweatherfriends.
      @fairweatherfriends. 4 года назад +3

      With the rona

    • @fairweatherfriends.
      @fairweatherfriends. 4 года назад

      dino macioci you’ve lost people to the virus? I guess your name is Italian after all. Sorry man. It’s just so different than here cause I don’t even know anyone who’s had the virus. Such a strange illness.

    • @ChupeTTe
      @ChupeTTe 3 года назад +1

      @@endzm05
      Dali is responsible for COVID 19

  • @petiewheat82
    @petiewheat82 4 года назад +17

    He said the mustache is the tragic element of the human face, but to him, the mustache represents the hands of a clock ticking, so he is saying something about the nature of mortality and the human condition being inherently tragic, in an absurd way. I wish he were a bit more fluent in English to hear more of his musings.

  • @brendaluna173
    @brendaluna173 4 года назад +49

    I think very few people are allowed to be this crazy without being seen as an actual mad, is like you get it, you can't paint like Dali and not be like that.

    • @adamfirst3772
      @adamfirst3772 4 года назад +8

      now that ive seen Dali.. i understand his paintings better...
      ...and believe ALL Lunatics should be allowed to paint...
      maybe we'll get more crazy genres.. probably some will be even funnier than Dali's surrealism and Picasso's cubism..

    • @alfredodistefanolaulhe2212
      @alfredodistefanolaulhe2212 4 года назад +1

      @@adamfirst3772 People think he was mad because he didn't know him in personal terms only his public image, but you do't get to that fame if you're actually mad.

    • @adamfirst3772
      @adamfirst3772 4 года назад

      Alfredo Di Stéfano Laulhé
      rich, famous, popular, powerful..... cant get mental disorders?? really? didnt know that!!
      as for Dali's Public vs. Personal image... ruclips.net/video/UOIaKa0ffhQ/видео.html

  • @romans8024
    @romans8024 4 года назад +44

    I wonder why Adrien Brody kept saying «rhinoceros» in much eccentric manner as such, in that Woody Allen "Midnight in Paris". I hope he's not just copied he's childhood memories of this episode )

    • @zahraanatiq3111
      @zahraanatiq3111 4 года назад +1

      same thought

    • @idioume1
      @idioume1 4 года назад +5

      It was a regerence... and the script was written by Woody Allen. It's a typical thing to have a reference in writing... allusions...

  • @fulanichild3138
    @fulanichild3138 4 года назад +33

    I hope the Bronx Zoo learned its lesson about lending out animals for publicity stunts.

  • @casacapuselor9248
    @casacapuselor9248 4 года назад +25

    When he said about his wife that she's his BEATRICE,who knows what's up ?
    I believe he's referring to Dante Alighieri's Beatrice from the Divina Commedia( the divine comedy....or dante's inferno does ring any bell ?)

    • @lubbertdas3797
      @lubbertdas3797 4 года назад +4

      He means exactly what you understood.

    • @Manudyne
      @Manudyne 3 года назад

      Yep. I wonder who was his Vergil then.

    • @ChupeTTe
      @ChupeTTe 2 года назад

      @@Manudyne
      Maybe the anteater

  • @alistairmaleficent8776
    @alistairmaleficent8776 4 года назад +8

    This is the greatest thing that has ever happened.

  • @dominguezander8523
    @dominguezander8523 4 года назад +2

    Dalí is was not only a surrealist painter, he was the personifaction of surrealism. Very funny!!!!😀😀😀

  • @Overton_Windows
    @Overton_Windows 4 года назад +2

    Man, I’m glad they’ve been posting these. I’ve really been enjoying seeing various artists I’ve loved throughout my life that are no longer with us.
    I went through his hometown on the train in Spain. Got to see a few of his pieces. Those were in Italy and France though.
    *he’s not easy to follow. You have to pay enormous attention.

  • @iamrybes
    @iamrybes 4 года назад +5

    This interview gets me everytime 🤣

  • @itssanti
    @itssanti 4 года назад +11

    Translation 6:50:
    "The only intellingent animals are Rhinoceros and Anteaters, dogs and cats are the most vulgar and catastrophic animals that exist"

  • @AnaisGiulia
    @AnaisGiulia Месяц назад

    Dali is a gentleman a genius and a talented artist, a great personality and human being.

  • @m3talentagency680
    @m3talentagency680 4 года назад

    Amazing historical archive! Dali was one of a kind.

  • @diegomoreno5927
    @diegomoreno5927 3 года назад +23

    I want to see Johnny Depp playing Dali in some film!

    • @lorenzsanjuan
      @lorenzsanjuan 2 года назад

      Robert Pattinson played him back in 2010

    • @barflytom3273
      @barflytom3273 Год назад +1

      Diego Moreno. ı don't want to see Johnny Depp playing anything frankly. ı had enough of him.

  • @UpTheAnte1987
    @UpTheAnte1987 4 года назад +139

    Something about a rhinoceros I think

  • @istudiyantipriatmi
    @istudiyantipriatmi 3 года назад +1

    I admire Dali all the times!. Thank you for this video. He is such a genius people and humorist... xoxo.

  • @3SIDEGOOF
    @3SIDEGOOF 23 дня назад

    8:14 “oh thats nice” sounded so much like a “bless his heart” 🤣

  • @ernestoleitao8684
    @ernestoleitao8684 4 года назад +7

    pure, man,pure 70s tv was the best!!!!!

  • @GuilainMusic
    @GuilainMusic 3 года назад +3

    when you mix genius ideas with hilarious non sense ahah. I think Dick Cavett does a great job trying to follow Dali and not let everything fall into chaos at the same time.

  • @AnaisGiulia
    @AnaisGiulia Месяц назад

    Absolutely amazing Dali ❤ what a legend

  • @tharunjayaprasad1739
    @tharunjayaprasad1739 4 года назад +5

    So basically Brody just watched this interview for preparing for midnight in Paris 😂