Noel Coward on Acting

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  • @marilynhayden527
    @marilynhayden527 10 лет назад +78

    Noel coward was on the radio quite a lot when I was a high school student.
    We kids entertained each other singing the lyrics of his complicated, clever patter songs-a tour de force for kids or anybody, but noboy told us we couldn't do it. I still know every word of "Mad About the Boy." (Well, I'm 92.)

    • @bobbbxxx
      @bobbbxxx 3 года назад +2

      Mad about the Boy is a classic; good for you for having learned it and still remembering the words!!! :)

    • @davidburbage3348
      @davidburbage3348 3 года назад +2

      @@bobbbxxx And even more apropos now!

    • @annbush1826
      @annbush1826 2 года назад

      “Mad Dogs and Englishmen.” My sister and I used to spout it to each other daily. We also loved Cole Porter’s “You’re the Top”
      Coward is forever the most sophisticated man of his time in “Blithe Spirit,”
      He also wrote and produced “In which we Serve.””
      Our brilliant Irving Berlin created the loving prayer “God Bless America.”

    • @BaddaBigBoom
      @BaddaBigBoom Год назад

      I think it's a privilege for those who care to watch them that there are recordings like this for future generations to see, I will be 60 next year and I am contented that these precious pieces of film are now immortalised digitally and know that there will always be youngsters that will be interested to watch them.

  • @suebarner8364
    @suebarner8364 10 месяцев назад +3

    Really, I could listen to him for hours. Delightful.

  • @hyramesshiramess1035
    @hyramesshiramess1035 7 лет назад +36

    Brittle? Mannered? Affected? NO. This was at bottom a lovely man with a great and tender heart capable of the greatest degree of subtlety. Funny? Well, yes, but capable too of the geatest poignancy. He often had us smiling through tears with a lump in our throats. A very great artist, indeed! But I imagine he'd hate me for saying it out loud.

  • @photographingtoronto2350
    @photographingtoronto2350 4 года назад +17

    Sometimes you are disappointed when someone you loved in a film turns-out to be very different themselves. Noel Coward never disappoints! In all respects he is the equal of any character he has ever played and is more interesting than some of them.

    • @julianvanleer9042
      @julianvanleer9042 6 месяцев назад

      TIf y😅😅y😅t 😅😅ytytytyoyour ryt u😮 😮😮yryt yootuoftoo😮tyryry few yr rex yryiy ryruyruy TorTutu yrytytiytytytyty tea 😮uftiyiiiyr it rytyryri G😊thatrr😮ttyty

  • @AmericasChoice
    @AmericasChoice 4 года назад +3

    In Which We Serve is a favorite of mine, I have it on DVD. It was interesting to hear him say it was one of the most difficult projects/roles he ever did. He pulled it off with aplomb.

    • @AmericasChoice
      @AmericasChoice 4 года назад

      Having David Lean as Assistant Director and Guy Green as 1st Cameraman didn't hurt...

  • @akarpowicz
    @akarpowicz 7 лет назад +21

    Amazing interview on the art of acting. The best I've seen so far. Many thanks for uploading.

  • @vertxxgg
    @vertxxgg 10 лет назад +12

    blood sweat and tears - the greatest..Spanish theater people love mr Coward no actors like the old Brittish actors

  • @bodder777
    @bodder777 9 лет назад +15

    Given the time in history, Mr Coward had the theatre world at his feet - he was greatly revered by most of the 'great' theatre luminaries for a long time. His plays, done correctly, are great comedic and social commentaries. It can seem period, and some must be played accordingly, but many remain quite contemporary. What he says about acting is from a lifetime of experience at dizzying heights, and extraordinarily insightful. As far as 'being affected', the great Stella Adler was in England and out shopping. A clerk asked where in London he should have the packages delivered. 'New York', she replied. 'Oh!', said the clerk, 'I thought you were British!' 'No,' replied Ms Adler, 'just affected.' Those people had wit and style. And that ain't easily done...

    • @douglasmilton2805
      @douglasmilton2805 4 года назад +1

      bodder777 Lovely story about Stella Adler, thank you.

    • @wbcjr17106
      @wbcjr17106 11 месяцев назад

      Jonathan Harris (Dr. Smith of Lost In Space), himself a New Yorker of Jewish extraction, later used that story to great effect on one of his many fans.

  • @HarryDennit
    @HarryDennit 7 лет назад +12

    Pearl after pearl of wisdom. Wonderful stuff!

  • @GENNERELLO
    @GENNERELLO 3 года назад +3

    Noel was irresistibly talented actor ...a very classy witty intelligent guy ...thanks for this interview...👏👏👏👏👏👏

  • @phaidonnikolaus9841
    @phaidonnikolaus9841 9 лет назад +6

    Rupert von Trapp - I could not agree more! I met him when I was a child and too young to know that I was meeting a celebration of life and wit. The latter is dead and the former comes to all of us, but Noel made even this a celebration.

  • @erpollock
    @erpollock 7 лет назад +8

    As a child, I saw him in an obscure film called Bunny Lake is Missing, playing a character part. I had no idea I was watching a theatrical legend. I didn't know who he was. I think the film is on RUclips.

    • @gamers7800
      @gamers7800 4 года назад +2

      Ya he played a pervert with a wipp

    • @frankpiaaza5442
      @frankpiaaza5442 3 года назад +2

      My friend Keri Dullea starred in that film .

  • @lapponia77
    @lapponia77 7 лет назад +21

    He seems a much kinder and more generous man that his reputation would have you believe.

    • @credenza1
      @credenza1 4 года назад +9

      His great quality was to demand that things be given their true value. He had no patience with laziness, dishonesty or self-indulgence, so he could seem blunt and demanding. However, it is never helpful or respectful to accommodate mediocrity when people are capable of great things.

    • @lapponia77
      @lapponia77 4 года назад +2

      @@credenza1 Extremely well put. And true :-)

  • @LeChezPoulet
    @LeChezPoulet 10 лет назад +7

    What an enjoyable program! Thank you so much for posting.

  • @flossie1961
    @flossie1961 7 лет назад +11

    Reminds you how inspiring Coward was/is

  • @rupert2591
    @rupert2591 9 лет назад +107

    Oh come back, Noel...just for half an hour and put the world to rights. What a total breath of spring you remain in this hateful, lack lustre world of mediocrity we now find ourselves in.

    • @1968Neruda
      @1968Neruda 9 лет назад +12

      Well put.

    • @pix046
      @pix046 7 лет назад +1

      Camp Freddie, everyone is bent. In today's world.

    • @mckavitt13
      @mckavitt13 4 года назад +1

      rupert von trapp So damn true.

    • @citizen1163
      @citizen1163 3 года назад

      Lockdown 2020. What would Noël say?

    • @carolenewman5180
      @carolenewman5180 Год назад

      Agree. Please come back and put the world right.

  • @58christiansful
    @58christiansful 7 месяцев назад +1

    Mesmerizing to listen to and watch!

  • @elizabethdarley8646
    @elizabethdarley8646 Год назад +2

    The tapped r or the trilled r is here. I'm an elocution teacher in England and I teach it to children who were saying I'm 'alwhite' and now they can say I'm 'alright!'

    • @BaddaBigBoom
      @BaddaBigBoom Год назад +2

      Congratulations. Good luck teaching them that "dove" is a bird and rhymes with "love" and is not the past tense of dive :-)

    • @judithcressey1682
      @judithcressey1682 9 месяцев назад

      Good luck too in teaching them that 'gotten' is a three letter word.

  • @MrDewynter
    @MrDewynter 8 месяцев назад +1

    Splendid! Thanks for posting!

  • @alsoknownas875
    @alsoknownas875 10 лет назад +4

    Great upload, and a refreshing perspective on the craft of acting. Thanks!

  • @drb141719
    @drb141719 2 года назад +14

    I could listen to this man for weeks, brilliant actor, playwright, and director. The shame he would feel for todays drivel we are fed.

  • @hermajesty52
    @hermajesty52 3 года назад +24

    Wonderful interview. HOW Noël would have loathed what passes for entertainment today... 😭 and how I miss the civility of his time.

    • @Uthedudeful
      @Uthedudeful 2 года назад +1

      He also loathed what passed for entertainment in his own time - he had a real go at the Angry Young Men and the Kitchen Sink style plays of the 1950s. The backlash was so great he actually recanted and tried to repair his relationship with John Osborne, but alas to no avail.

    • @jeanash9502
      @jeanash9502 Год назад +2

      Marvelous interview 👌 grateful for utube 🍻 cheers

    • @Hutch41
      @Hutch41 Год назад

      Yeah but he was a screaming pillow biter wasn’t he … not very gentlemanly that … should have been locked up for life shouldn’t he … (cough)

  • @johnnybsteelriff
    @johnnybsteelriff 2 года назад +1

    The farewell speech in In Which We Serve kills me every time. Brilliant uplifting emotional and only serves to yell out why didn't the Master do more serious drama?

  • @Tenortalker
    @Tenortalker 9 лет назад +5

    Noel Coward always produced the best put down lines. Speaking of one of his friend Ivor Novello's earliest appearences in a play he said ' He was always very bad ...... even then!' A wicked sense of humour.

  • @Chris-wj8fz
    @Chris-wj8fz 3 месяца назад +1

    It is not politically correct to say so I am afraid but I qualified as a social worker in Australia in 1976 and at no time have I done anything but act. My study of coward even in my family upbringing and during social work training gave me incredible resilience from.roles in social activism to palliative care. Despite the naive view about feelings being necessary to work with people Noel coward demonstrates the aloof science of theatre

  • @BaddaBigBoom
    @BaddaBigBoom Год назад +1

    Damn, if only he were alive in this century, I bet he would have surfed 21st century life in the same expressive direct and honest manner as he did back then.

  • @darbyzworld
    @darbyzworld 4 года назад +3

    Born on his birthday, i was introduced to his genius at age 11. Noel changed my life in the theatre and I have never forgotten him and his edge on humanity.
    .
    .
    .

  • @lynnbosworth2594
    @lynnbosworth2594 7 лет назад +3

    FANTASTIC!

  • @58christiansful
    @58christiansful 9 месяцев назад +1

    Unique talent.

  • @pvonberg
    @pvonberg 8 лет назад +8

    Wonderful.

  • @MrDavey2010
    @MrDavey2010 5 лет назад +3

    Total professional the like of which is lacking today.

  • @lilcicero77
    @lilcicero77 11 лет назад +1

    Tis is incredible thank you! I had no idea this existed.

  • @robrienmoore
    @robrienmoore 3 месяца назад

    1966 TV Special - interviewer is English actor/director Michael Macowan.

  • @naly202
    @naly202 2 года назад +2

    When speaking about Apple cart by GB Shaw, Noel and the interviewer are in a slight disagreement, but they are handling it all so elegantly, cordially and professionally, that it's hardly noticeable.
    So unlike nowadays....

  • @puppylove422
    @puppylove422 Год назад +1

    Oh I love you Noel :D

  • @richardrosebealprestonjohn3144
    @richardrosebealprestonjohn3144 Год назад +1

    Brilliant actor!

  • @derycktrahair8108
    @derycktrahair8108 7 лет назад +3

    A lesson in acting that every actor should see. His overwhelming self importance can be off putting, but don't forget that he has been there and done it. Thanks for making it available.

    • @johnnybsteelriff
      @johnnybsteelriff 2 года назад

      I think you have to remember that Noel Coward in an interview situation is a character too. He is always acting. It is part of his make-up.

  • @douglasreid7727
    @douglasreid7727 Год назад +1

    Fascinating.

  • @johnjosmith42
    @johnjosmith42 11 лет назад +3

    for posting this, 'i can no other answer make but thanks, thanks and thanks again.'

  • @gazwillz3225
    @gazwillz3225 Год назад

    A Great Talent ,A Hreat Vvoice, A great Wit. Orson Welles of his time, Thank fully without the Tragic end.

  • @Dannycarry
    @Dannycarry 2 года назад +3

    Wonder what Noel would have made of Love Island and The Only Way is Essex

  • @lindablanthorn7787
    @lindablanthorn7787 Год назад +1

    So interesting.. thanks for sharing 💛

  • @montybaby1826
    @montybaby1826 3 года назад +4

    12:51 He's so cute in that picture, not nearly half as bad as he thinks he is.

  • @jimbow1113
    @jimbow1113 2 года назад +1

    Watching this interview I'm sure Michael Caine MUST have watched it a number of times before he did that interview with Michael Parkinson on how an actor must perform on camera.

  • @freddodirk905
    @freddodirk905 9 лет назад +3

    hey thank you for the upload. i think we have lost a lot of talent especially here in the colonies

  • @michaelhall2138
    @michaelhall2138 4 года назад +2

    Found him mannered as a young man but he improved in relation to the older I became.

  • @scotnick59
    @scotnick59 5 лет назад +4

    Nice speaking voice

  • @TheProgressiveParent
    @TheProgressiveParent 8 лет назад +4

    thank you

  • @Magnus1995
    @Magnus1995 10 лет назад +3

    Icon.

  • @circle2867
    @circle2867 4 года назад

    the actor on goodnight sweetheart nails his voice

  • @jeanash9502
    @jeanash9502 Год назад +1

    What joy to see Mr coward

  • @borderbioscope1180
    @borderbioscope1180 Год назад

    great voice

  • @sebastianmelmoth7331
    @sebastianmelmoth7331 3 года назад +2

    Did you ever wish you could meet someone…. I’d love to have a chat with Noel.

  • @markholford6051
    @markholford6051 10 лет назад +4

    1965 Interview

  • @kiltedjohn1000
    @kiltedjohn1000 7 лет назад +1

    im on 1965 of the diaries

  • @kleedhamhobby
    @kleedhamhobby 3 года назад +2

    Very interesting. Touching and very funny at times. Though I must admit, I'm hard of hearing, so I put the close captioning on, and one of my biggest laughs was when the CC in the 'In Which We Serve ' scene rendered "Come a little closer" as "I'm a little pest". Clearly the automated CC is not well in synch with Noel's accent.

  • @ninahagen1453
    @ninahagen1453 2 года назад

    When was this recorded?

  • @SublimeStuff
    @SublimeStuff 11 лет назад +4

    Gold dust

  • @franksmith2335
    @franksmith2335 7 лет назад +3

    He always did very well in Londons West End Theatre but not too well in the provinces. His musicals were not as good as Ivor Novello who was more popular.

    • @mjd4502
      @mjd4502 7 лет назад +1

      Novello was talented but did not write or compose anything as wonderful as 'Bittersweet'

    • @douglasmilton2805
      @douglasmilton2805 4 года назад +2

      Actually many of his plays had their first run in Manchester, where audiences were hard to impress but appreciated wit. Coward liked the place, for various reasons, not all theatrical. See Anthony Burgess's autobiography, Little Wilson and Big God. The main character in Burgess's great novel Earthly Powers is a blend of Somerset Maugham and Noël Coward.

  • @JohnHartNYC
    @JohnHartNYC 9 лет назад +1

    Quite nice actually.

  • @carlasimon4559
    @carlasimon4559 3 года назад

    43 Slovenly dress is a slovenly actor

  • @rosainecalmeyer4428
    @rosainecalmeyer4428 2 года назад

    What year is this?

  • @timbum1000
    @timbum1000 11 лет назад +4

    He was not what you would call a naturalistic actor. He was very affected.

  •  5 лет назад

    I wonder why so many great actors are gay: Noel Coward, Derek Jacobi, Simon Callow, Mc Kellen

    • @naly202
      @naly202 5 лет назад +3

      i've came up with a simple answer: they probably have a more developed feminine side- greater sensitivity, intuition, they can express more feeling and dedication. i think .
      being a female, i'm always amazed at how brilliantly written Noel Coward's female characters are (especially Amanda- Private Lives ), they feel and react the same way as i or any other woman would in a certain situation. Noel understood women very well, which thing -anybody knows - men usually can't.

    • @jhassett2
      @jhassett2 4 года назад

      they're all hams......Robert Mitchum is better than Robert de Niro........

    • @Lytton333
      @Lytton333 3 года назад

      Wonder why so many aren't..
      Honestly, the way some go on about it nowadays you'd think Homosexuality was some sort of transcendent existence, it's just one man putting his front pipe up another's back pipe for a sexual thrill..

    • @Lytton333
      @Lytton333 3 года назад

      @@naly202 What a load of sexist tosh.
      Only women have filigree sensibilities? Only women have more feeling and dedication? Absolute piffle .. Was Bach a toilet trader? Did Shakespeare mince around like a 17thC Quentin Crisp? No...

    •  3 года назад

      @@Lytton333 No big deal, but your sexual orientation should not be advertised in Gay parades...... As it were a BADGE OF HONOR...

  • @sebastianmelmoth7331
    @sebastianmelmoth7331 3 года назад +1

    Noel made gay - cool, sharp, classy. Not camp, rude, feminine.

    • @BaddaBigBoom
      @BaddaBigBoom Год назад

      So, with which stereotype do you identify?
      Or did you plan to switch from B to A?

  • @james8583
    @james8583 3 месяца назад

    He's an okay actor, no John Barrymore et al.. as Orson Welles said about Barrymore, there is none like him the best and had that certain thing. I think Coward is better as a raconteur.

  • @user-cp1mr3xi8p
    @user-cp1mr3xi8p 5 лет назад

    на руках,

  • @andrewwilliams9941
    @andrewwilliams9941 7 лет назад +2

    IF only contemporary actors could take on board this man's advice. He was much better at knowing how others should act than he was able to do himself. He was far TOO theatrical both on stage and in film. He was fundamentally false, probably because of the closet gay syndrome imposed upon him by the mores of his generation. Sad.

    • @alexkije
      @alexkije 6 лет назад

      HA! You are full of shit. He was not much closeted. He came onto other actors and total strangers. Arrested for public toilet solicitations.

    • @Twentythousandlps
      @Twentythousandlps 6 лет назад +4

      Coward was never arrested. And he was never in no closet, though he negotiated his public image with care. And he pushed it as far as possible. The 1935 musical Jubilee had a character modeled on him, called Eric Dare. He was always under attack for the lavender element in his work. Never bothered to wive it.

    • @douglasmilton2805
      @douglasmilton2805 4 года назад +3

      @@alexkije Coward never had any problems with the law, perhaps, paradoxically, because he never tried to hide his homosexuality. You may be thinking of John Gielguid.

  • @BlakeGildaphish76
    @BlakeGildaphish76 9 лет назад

    i can't believe Lawrence Olivier (allegedly) slept with this man.

    • @David-mg1yj
      @David-mg1yj 2 года назад +1

      They were both younger and prettier in those days.

    • @judithcressey1682
      @judithcressey1682 9 месяцев назад

      He did not. Noel Coward said not. Noel Coward said Olivier was not interested in men sexually.

  • @johnjessop6169
    @johnjessop6169 11 лет назад +4

    He couldn't act at all.

    • @alexkije
      @alexkije 6 лет назад +5

      Good song writer though.

    • @tomkent4656
      @tomkent4656 6 лет назад +1

      A touch ham.

    • @lotteweill
      @lotteweill 4 года назад +5

      watch bunny lake, he's terrific.listen to either of his cabaret performances. Watch TV's together with music. He is wonderful

    • @ninahagen1453
      @ninahagen1453 2 года назад +2

      Did yu see his naval officer piece/ No, you must have commented without watching.

    • @David-mg1yj
      @David-mg1yj 2 года назад +1

      Brilliant in The Italian Job.

  • @eamestv
    @eamestv 3 года назад +1

    Wonderful.