Marianne Faithfull Interview (Part 1 of 2)

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  • Опубликовано: 5 авг 2024
  • Marianne Faithfull interview conducted at the time she published her autobiography. Had to split in two short parts, sorry, as the conversion software I used has sound/image syncing issues for videos longer than a few minutes.
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Комментарии • 165

  • @kentucy9999
    @kentucy9999 12 лет назад +7

    Marianne was from a well to do family. She'd been married and had a son {Nicholas} prior to meeting Jagger. When Marianne met Jagger and when Anita met Keith the girls were both better connected to the world of drugs and hipness than Mick or Keith. Marianne through the art world and Anita through modeling. Marianne became an addict because she became an addict. She made her own choices. I don't see it as some tragic, dramatic story. Addiction is nothing if not boring. It is nothing glamourous.

    • @BacknMetro
      @BacknMetro 5 лет назад +2

      They hype it up like. Jagger "ruined" Marianne and Warhol "ruined" Sedgwick. Don't think so.

    • @Taryngracia
      @Taryngracia Год назад

      @@BacknMetro Marianne takes full responsibility never blamed anyone.

    • @BacknMetro
      @BacknMetro Год назад

      @@Taryngracia No, she never played the victim. Others tired to pin that on her but she never did. She's a strong woman. Quite intelligent too.

    • @angelicaquirarte
      @angelicaquirarte Год назад

      They bring, snobbery,clasism,Frivolity and pretencius bullshit that no one cares, i hate both

  • @Iamkvann11
    @Iamkvann11 9 лет назад +13

    That girl has lived and I love her strengh her book is really worth reading

  • @steph0288
    @steph0288 15 лет назад +3

    Her life is so fascinating

  • @ewanfanatic88
    @ewanfanatic88 11 лет назад +4

    This made me cry... I have so much respect for her that she went clean.

  • @gymnast2890
    @gymnast2890 8 лет назад +14

    The way she speaks reminds me of Edie Sedgwick, minus the English accent. Beautiful woman, seems very honest.

  • @Charliaeffchen
    @Charliaeffchen 15 лет назад +5

    I love her, she's very talented. Even though her voice is quite ruined, I still find it very beautiful. I'm into this rough, scratchy element in it, not only in her voice. I even like Tom Waits' voice sometimes.
    What I think is that in her case, and I hear it whenever I listen to "post-crisis" records of hers - espacially live records - this roughness gives her voice something dramatic to it, a lot of feeling. And I love it.

  • @MultiMusicalheart
    @MultiMusicalheart 11 лет назад +3

    this is amazing. thank you so much!

  • @jacobpatrickpoulsen6608
    @jacobpatrickpoulsen6608 3 года назад +1

    She´s one strong woman. She was so angelic when she was young. So beautiful and what a voice she had. I still like her and her voice now even if her voice is more hoarse today than what is was back in the 1960´s. So glad that she made it through her battle with drugs. She´s a great inspiration on how you can change your life for the better (when you become clean from drugs). Her most recent album is amazing. :)

  • @davinadavis4930
    @davinadavis4930 10 лет назад +11

    she come through the other side a strong woman !

  • @rodfromcranston
    @rodfromcranston 13 лет назад +9

    Read her book. Fascinating stuff. She's not a symapthetic character, and certainly no victim. She admits her lifestyle ruined her looks and voice.
    She was not a very nice or responsible person. Stone's record executives urged Jagger to leave her, fearing her instability would somehow impact negatively on the Stones.
    The oddest statement is, that while she slept with everyone and anyone, she said she wasn't interested in sex. Huh?

  • @MOTOPAC
    @MOTOPAC 17 лет назад +2

    She's a lot more interesting than Jagger is these days.

  • @discomadame
    @discomadame 12 лет назад +2

    that woman still looks so gooood

  • @Lilyanna298
    @Lilyanna298 16 лет назад +3

    You don't fall in love with someone based on physical appearance and I think Bianca was beautiful but actually its been said he didn't love Bianca the way he loved Marianne.

  • @WhiteCamry
    @WhiteCamry 16 лет назад +2

    She's an indirect descendant of Leopold von Sacher-Masoch. Apparently, masochism still runs in her family.

  • @GeorgeVreelandHill
    @GeorgeVreelandHill 13 лет назад +1

    I always loved her.
    She is amazing.
    Thank you for posting this.
    George Vreeland Hill

  • @bubblesyang2448
    @bubblesyang2448 8 лет назад +5

    incredibly beautiful

  • @pierdolefication
    @pierdolefication 12 лет назад +2

    look at her beautifull eyes, she may get older and older but her eyes will still be beautifull and charming

  • @chuckfinn
    @chuckfinn  17 лет назад +2

    I think she explains that a bit in her autobiography. It was very hard for her to get drugs (having no money) so it was mainly through other addicts like herself, who who sympathetic and sensitive to her plight. One of the main ones was Alex Trocchi who she describes as a 'great drug guru'. Back then you could also get prescribed heroin through the NHS programme. She stayed on her wall until her old producer found her and helped her get back on her feet.

  • @caravaggio31
    @caravaggio31 14 лет назад +2

    Marianne was gorgeous and elegant coming down the plane.

  • @arielleaubert2107
    @arielleaubert2107 9 лет назад +3

    So wonderful woman....

  • @wintergreen88
    @wintergreen88 17 лет назад +2

    I think I figured out how she managed to get drugs without having money. She either became really good friends with the dealers or became their girlfriend. She was with Tony Sanchez (dealer) and Jean deBretuil (dealer) before she was on the streets.
    Also, in an interview I read she admitted that she borrowed money from her mother when she was on the streets. So she probably wasn't entirely penniless during that time as she sometimes claims.

  • @chuckfinn
    @chuckfinn  16 лет назад

    found the article, very interesting, thank you very much!!!

  • @klaritydawn
    @klaritydawn 14 лет назад +4

    What a stunning woman who's been through hell and back, seemingly over men? It's never that simple though is it, I mean there's always more to the story. It Is her story to tell however she likes. I'm so glad I've found her though as I'm truly mesmerized over her beauty and her talent.

  • @dragonflysdiscoveries7567
    @dragonflysdiscoveries7567 8 лет назад +1

    You are so enlightened to be given another chance Marianne

  • @katevielle4263
    @katevielle4263 6 лет назад +1

    I absolutely love Marianne, was she the healthiest or the greatest person in her past? Not at all, but she came out of it, a healthier better person. And that within itself, makes me admire her music and just her in general, even more.

  • @chuckfinn
    @chuckfinn  16 лет назад +2

    not sure...it would seem these could be lyrics from her 'This Little Bird', however that line is not in the song.
    The band Hellfire also has a song called 'Little Bird', which has the line 'Don't fly so high little bird'.

  • @fkthelefties
    @fkthelefties 11 лет назад +3

    you wouldnt find much better looking than her in her youth..

  • @Xtubelis
    @Xtubelis 14 лет назад +6

    A girl to die for.
    I'm sad that beauty is a double-edged sword. Men f*ck up beautiful women with their lust and desire - I'm not judging, it's human instinct - but many have no self-control. No wonder so many attractive women run away spiritually and mentally. Being an object of unrelenting desire is a killer.

    • @angelicaquirarte
      @angelicaquirarte Год назад

      Depend the Man you find, not all Man are bad, marianne choices were horrible, so we just couldn't blame guys

  • @intergalaxy
    @intergalaxy 15 лет назад

    Its very good that Marianne its alive and so powerfull yeat.
    Life teach much things to her.
    Now she´s so well.
    A survivor from a crazy and glorious time that change the word.

  • @chuckfinn
    @chuckfinn  17 лет назад +1

    I like her earlier stuff too though love the stuff she started putting out from the mid-70s onwards, where her songs became just a little more aggressive, and her years of smoking, drinking and drug use changed her voice to the deeper raucous voice she has today.

  • @Finglesham
    @Finglesham 15 лет назад

    I think it a miracle that she is still alive, the whole genre were living for the 'moment', as some do now of course.
    I think her singing is great. I am sure that the it is easy to slip into that lifestyle if you ever give up.
    Must be strong to have survived all that abuse!

  • @wintergreen88
    @wintergreen88 15 лет назад +2

    His infedilities is one of the reasons. Also, she lived in Jagger's shadow. Jagger didn't want her to spend too much time on her career when she with him. She explains why she left Jagger in her autobiography. Also, after she left him, she had gained weight (about 50 pounds) because she was drinking . Jagger tried to win her back but was appalled by her appearance. That's when she realized that Jagger valued the women he took as his girlfriend for superficial reasons.

    • @Taryngracia
      @Taryngracia Год назад

      They were kids

    • @angelicaquirarte
      @angelicaquirarte Год назад

      Well jagger is pretty ugly herself i never like her in inside and outside ,ugly and shallow,actually everybody in that circle after faithfull and pallenberg arrive became snobs and pretencius with his art galleries and bullshit

  • @wintergreen88
    @wintergreen88 16 лет назад

    You can get the movie on DVD and also its soundtrack on Amazon. I'm noy sure if it can be shipped outside of North America. The UK has its own version of Amazon. I haven't checked the UK Amazon website yet for the film's availability.

  • @timquinn66
    @timquinn66 17 лет назад +1

    Actually she did stay with friends from time to time, and the guy that got her to record "Rich Kids Blues " literally found her on the street, and gave her a place to live. I hope that helps some. I read her biography and watched her dvd. Really interesting stuff.

  • @wintergreen88
    @wintergreen88 16 лет назад

    I think that's the name of the song - "Don't fly too high my little bird". I don't know if it was ever sung by Marianne Faithfull. One of the songs she's singing in this video is called "This Little Bird". She's singing it in the very beginning of the video.

  • @wintergreen88
    @wintergreen88 16 лет назад

    The article in which Marianne says she borrowed money from her mother when she was on the streets is called "The Curse of the Multiplying Mariannes (David Dalton Talks to Marianne Faithfull Part 1: The Scattered Selves)".

  • @AnitaSympathy
    @AnitaSympathy 11 лет назад +1

    1:12 - 1:15 That simple sigh shows the agony and pain she was feeling for about 20 years, messing around with the Stones, without the Stones, with sex,drugs and rock n' roll. Just the memories of these, hurt her.
    God, love her ravaged voice, her accent and her views mostly.

  • @Lilyanna298
    @Lilyanna298 16 лет назад +1

    Marianne Faithfull was descended from aristocracy but she actually came from a comfortable middle class home she didn't grow up in wealth.

  • @wintergreen88
    @wintergreen88 17 лет назад +1

    I think a lot of people would agree that she had a very beautiful voice. However, folk music doesn't appeal to everybody. I think most of her early songs are very well written and a hundred times better than the songs you hear nowadays. I have one of her greatest hits compilations with her songs from the mid to late '60s. It's quite a good collection of songs.

  • @chuckfinn
    @chuckfinn  14 лет назад

    'This Little Bird' from 1965. That question gets asked a lot so have now put the song title in the video.

  • @donnahilton471
    @donnahilton471 4 года назад +1

    Brian was murdered by Frank Thorogood, who confessed on his deathbed.

  • @timquinn66
    @timquinn66 16 лет назад

    You're probably right. Thank you.

  • @wintergreen88
    @wintergreen88 16 лет назад

    These are the sources for the interviews with Marianne Faithfull. 1. "Faithfully Marianne Convent girl, Mick's chick, junkie, but Marianne Faithfull isn't an if-only person" (6/22/07) which is in the Entertainment section on The (London) Times site. 2. "The Curse of the Multiplying Mariannes (David Dalton Talks to Marianne Faithfull - Part 1: The Scattered Selves)" which is on the gladyflyonline site. David Dalton helped her write her autobiography.

  • @nickybadboy50
    @nickybadboy50 16 лет назад +1

    Hey, she got through it & shes alive & well.

  • @giancarlomolteni2596
    @giancarlomolteni2596 11 лет назад +1

    go for ever maryanne

  • @wintergreen88
    @wintergreen88 17 лет назад

    I'm looking for it too. I never recorded it. There are some episodes of Behind the Music that you can actually buy from VH1. I'm trying to look into whether you can purchase the episode.

  • @chuckfinn
    @chuckfinn  17 лет назад +1

    I tend to agree she wasn't entirely penniless the whole time. She also had 1/3 of the royalties of 'Sister Morphine' to help her through some of those lean years!

  • @lucyfaiella7220
    @lucyfaiella7220 Год назад

    I ALWAYS LOVE YOU MARYANNE 💞💞💞🇨🇦🌹

  • @nothinghumanlovesfor
    @nothinghumanlovesfor 13 лет назад +2

    i fucking love this women. she british like me and i love her she real and this women have laid out her burden and gone on with her life. shes true blue. she's real. i wish more people were real like her. so the jack and coke is getting to me. but this women is true rock and roll and she dont fake it. i wish we had more stars like marianne faithful. i met the rolling stones but to meet marianne faithful would be so mucb better

  • @chuckfinn
    @chuckfinn  17 лет назад +1

    It's 'This Little Bird', from 1965.

  • @SUNMAYDEN518
    @SUNMAYDEN518 12 лет назад +2

    oh pleez she left her husband child for mick; dont blame him. we all have choices in our lives

  • @wintergreen88
    @wintergreen88 17 лет назад

    1/3 of the royalties for Sister Morphine per year is probably a lot more than what I earn per year right now!! She also said that people took pity on her when she was on the streets. I don't remember where I read it. I may have read it in her autobiography. I can imagine that it was so because she was so young at the time.

  • @tilesetter1953
    @tilesetter1953 5 лет назад +1

    Yes people were kind to you on the street because you were young and pretty and famous. A normal so and so may not have fared as well as you.

  • @wintergreen88
    @wintergreen88 17 лет назад

    Producer Mike Leander found her on the streets and helped her record "Rich Kid Blues" in 1971. That album was shelved until 1985. Her voice had changed a lot during the time the album was made because of cocaine abuse and smoking (according to Wikipedia site). With her album "Broken English" in 1979, she found success again. She could have been a major recording artist/actress but she lost so many years because she was either playing housewife w/Jagger or heavily into drugs.

  • @clairounette67
    @clairounette67 12 лет назад

    From where come the sequence in the bath?

  • @kolbpilot
    @kolbpilot 13 лет назад +1

    Marianne doesn't look bad at all here. People age, differently, genetically. It's all about weather one finds her attractive or not. But, men, on average, age a little better so even the prettiest gal in her youth gets old before her time, in, my, humble, opinion.

  • @wintergreen88
    @wintergreen88 16 лет назад

    In the article "Faithfully Marianne Convent girl, Mick's chick, junkie, but Marianne Faithfull isn't an if-only person" (6/22/07) (in the Entertainment section on The (London) Times site), Marianne explains why her friends couldn't find her when she was on the streets. She also explains why she was living on the streets. You can put main part of the title of the articles in the search engine & the article will be listed. In this case, search for "Faithfully Marianne".

  • @stripedsockscat
    @stripedsockscat 16 лет назад

    Does anyone know what the footage from 3:03-3:15 is from?

  • @joeyrider
    @joeyrider 12 лет назад +1

    @clairounette67 Performance by Donald Cammel the 3 in the bath are Mick Jagger Anita Pallenberg and little Michelle Breton

  • @rhpositive2002
    @rhpositive2002 16 лет назад +1

    Taking acid never made any sense unless your name was Timothy Leary or Richard Alpert (Baba Ram Dass now). These guys were scientists. The rest of us were innocents.

  • @timquinn66
    @timquinn66 17 лет назад

    Yep , all that is true. Also, one guy found her and recorded "Rich Kid Blues" and got her kind of back on track. I agree , reading about her is fascinating !

  • @f.l.9419
    @f.l.9419 4 года назад

    From where is the interview , the interviewer and the differents sequences ( the sequence in the bath is from a movie or from Mariane private life) ?

    • @glitter-lk5dz
      @glitter-lk5dz 3 года назад

      The bathtub scene shows
      Anita Pallenberg, not Marianne.
      It's part of a film called Performance.

  • @kissmekate59
    @kissmekate59 14 лет назад

    i loved her in "Irina Palm" - I admire her very much

  • @demonsbutterfly
    @demonsbutterfly 17 лет назад

    A fantastic read-Marianne is the real thing. Read it. One of the best autobiographies i have read

  • @fangpili
    @fangpili 2 года назад

    I adore this magnificent, humane woman

  • @MrRonnieG
    @MrRonnieG 12 лет назад

    @TheWerewolf64 ~ That's exactly how I feel. Marianne Faithfull, Mick Jaggar, Keith Richards, etc. They were all part of the history of rock n' roll in the 1960's. It's common for younger generations to suggest that the 60's had no more relevance than any other era but nothing could be farther from the truth. The struggle for social consciousness, for peace in Vietnam, the assassinations of the Kennedy's and King, the Moon landing, the music, the politics, the war ~ it was all life changing.

    • @angelicaquirarte
      @angelicaquirarte Год назад

      Don't forget mexico and latín América, not everything was america

  • @wintergreen88
    @wintergreen88 17 лет назад

    I read her autobiography too. Didn't she say that when she was on the streets, she would go to stay with her mother from time to time? In an interview, Marianne said that her friends wouldn't be able to find her when she on the streets.I guess they didn't hang out in the part of town. Also, in another interview Marianne said she borrowed money from her mother during that time. I'd really like to see the "Dreaming My Dreams" dvd. Her life is quite fascinating!

  • @wintergreen88
    @wintergreen88 16 лет назад

    I justed wanted to clarify what I wrote earlier. I had written that I couldn't remember where I had read about how people reacted to her being on the streets. In her autobiography, it's stated "I threw myself on the mercy of the street people and did they ever come through." (p. 211, Faithfull) Also, it's stated "A friend of Pamela Mayall's took pity on me and introduced me to the writer Alexander Trocchi...Alex was just what I needed at that moment-a great drug guru" (p.212, Faithfull).

  • @freakshowing88
    @freakshowing88 15 лет назад

    wats the song at 0.52?

  • @angelicasin
    @angelicasin 16 лет назад

    marianne, love, to that degree is poison for some of us. thank god you came thru it

  • @luvsilly60
    @luvsilly60 6 месяцев назад

    I understand the song Wild Horses now.

  • @Iamkvann11
    @Iamkvann11 8 лет назад +1

    Mariam Abdullah the book is called FAITHFULL pleaase read it

  • @jitterbug121
    @jitterbug121 17 лет назад

    She was a pretty girl.I want to read her biography.She was an artist in her own right. :)

  • @PopeOfTheUniverse
    @PopeOfTheUniverse 14 лет назад +1

    AND, everyone is going on about how her voice went to pot, but her speaking voice in this friggin' interview isn't much different from miley cyrus' singing voice, and the world can't get enough of THAT little poptart!

  • @chuckfinn
    @chuckfinn  16 лет назад

    any luck finding the song?

  • @CuteCatFaith
    @CuteCatFaith 12 лет назад

    @xCowsCanFly She came from a troubled and essentially broken home, and was terribly mistreated by her first husband, a drug person, and was worked like crazy.

  • @wintergreen88
    @wintergreen88 16 лет назад

    I haven't seen the movie "Factory Girl" yet. I have to see it. It sounds like it's quite interesting. I think there is a film on Warhol and his gang too. I can't think of the name of it right now.

  • @RMS1103
    @RMS1103 17 лет назад

    She did everything that was available at the time..heroin,cocaine, pot, LSD & alcohol..she was so fragile, but turned it around & became an Iron Butterfly..She's Great.

  • @wintergreen88
    @wintergreen88 17 лет назад

    I'm trying to answer my own as why to Marianne's friends may not have been looking for her when she on the streets. In show business, you can be famous at one moment and a has-been the next day. I used to sing at a small club and when I was younger and I had a lot of fans at that time. When I stopped singing at the club, my fans completely disappeared. Unfortunately, it's a line of work in which you have very few real friends.

  • @chuckfinn
    @chuckfinn  13 лет назад

    @xCowsCanFly That's such a genuine thing to say :) I visited London recently and made a point of visiting the same alley in which she lived and was thinking the exact same thing.

    • @AlikaLi357
      @AlikaLi357 2 года назад

      Please add automatic subtitles to the second part, as in the first part.

  • @joesphx19
    @joesphx19 13 лет назад +1

    Curse those that bring the drugs to those among us, the weakest, the young, and the needy.

  • @pito1957
    @pito1957 14 лет назад

    belle personne...

  • @itsallhappeningtoday
    @itsallhappeningtoday 16 лет назад

    i read in a magazine that when they were in australia filming ned kelly and she went into hospital mick was by her side when she woke up and the first thing she said was "wild horses couldn't drag me away" and then he wrote the song, i guess it makes sense "i watched you suffer" like he watched her suffer, i dont know how true it is though, i mean its a good story and why not make up and awesome story for a beautiful song? its better if you believe it i think

  • @clairounette67
    @clairounette67 12 лет назад

    @joeyrider thank you :)

  • @wintergreen88
    @wintergreen88 15 лет назад

    It's not that medical advice about drugs wasn't available. That's somewhat true. My father is a Chemist. The hazards of working with certain carcinogenic chemicals in the laboratory were not known until the 1980's. But I was alive in the late sixties. I was only 6 or 7 years old then. By the time I was 10, I knew about the dangers of taking drugs like marijuana. I think so many people took drugs back then that it became the "in" thing to do.

  • @wintergreen88
    @wintergreen88 17 лет назад

    Oh, thanks. I guess I didn't read the autobiography carefully enough. Also, in England I guess it's a little bit different than in the States. I lived in England when I was child and people there are a lot less impersonal than in the U.S. People over there are more likely to help each like that.

  • @mariaennovy2748
    @mariaennovy2748 11 лет назад

    personally, this interview gave me more respect for A voice, than any other star did.. One who Survived being a STAR.. and stayed an authentic person, WHO can say this? most woman of HER Capacity did commit Suicide! = life not worth 4 all 2 live?
    when all stars would survive like she did.. there would have been less arrogance, supression and more true & sincere kindness among showbiz stars

  • @chuckfinn
    @chuckfinn  16 лет назад

    lol, that's putting it nicely.

  • @joesphx19
    @joesphx19 13 лет назад +1

    @PrinzEugenMCMLXXXIII
    That is true, the ultimate responsibility belongs to those that take them.

  • @brotherhood302
    @brotherhood302 14 лет назад +1

    @kissmekate59 I just saw that movie tonight...she's a great actress and looks good for her age!!

  • @wintergreen88
    @wintergreen88 17 лет назад

    I'm glad she didn't end up in a really bad way during that time, although she did say in her autobiography
    that she had two front teeth knocked out by a worker at a drug rehabilation clinic (I think that's what it was). It's awful what goes on in places like that. I'm surprised that there weren't friends looking for her during the time she was on the streets. I guess it's hard to find a street person though.

  • @angelicasin
    @angelicasin 16 лет назад

    its the most dangerous psychogical experience.

  • @chuckfinn
    @chuckfinn  16 лет назад

    Dont know...the only reason I think it could be true is because she also went into a bit of detail about how surprised she was when he said it...who knows (though I've kinda cringed at the thought of Keith knowing that bit was in the book!)

  • @fannybenanny9133
    @fannybenanny9133 17 лет назад

    I know the movie you are talking about.... I found it at video ezy about 10 years ago here in Australia NSW (should have kept it)sorry I am no help

  • @kissmekate59
    @kissmekate59 14 лет назад

    @Asternix AMEN

  • @unicorn1221
    @unicorn1221 15 лет назад +1

    5:35 I thought that was Anita!?

  • @Lilyanna298
    @Lilyanna298 16 лет назад

    I got the impression from Marianne's autobiography that it was her drug problems that ended their relationship.

  • @Fasistoktonos_
    @Fasistoktonos_ 13 лет назад +1

    @joesphx19 No one forces you to take them, though.

  • @kiely
    @kiely 15 лет назад

    ah Michlimania, it isn't like she is dead or unemployed or something. i believe she is doing quite well these days ... singing and acting.

  • @wintergreen88
    @wintergreen88 17 лет назад

    If she was penniless and living on a wall, how did she get money to buy drugs? She never explains that, not in this interview or in her autobiography.