Oscar Wilde documentary

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  • Опубликовано: 29 сен 2024
  • Oscar Fingal O'Flahertie Wills Wilde (16 October 1854 - 30 November 1900) was an Irish poet and playwright. After writing in different forms throughout the 1880s, he became one of the most popular playwrights in London in the early 1890s. He is best remembered for his epigrams and plays, his novel The Picture of Dorian Gray, and the circumstances of his criminal conviction for gross indecency for consensual homosexual acts in "one of the first celebrity trials", imprisonment, and early death from meningitis at age 46.
    Oscar Wilde documentary
    1991

Комментарии • 1 тыс.

  • @JohnTLyon
    @JohnTLyon 2 года назад +432

    " Be yourself, everyone else is taken." --- Oscar Wilde.

    • @MegaSickcat
      @MegaSickcat 2 года назад +35

      My father used to say that to me...and then he said: 'Be yourself because no one else is qualified'...

    • @JohnTLyon
      @JohnTLyon 2 года назад +19

      @@MegaSickcat Your Dad was a wise man!

    • @MegaSickcat
      @MegaSickcat 2 года назад +10

      @@JohnTLyon Thank you he really was!

    • @flavius3896
      @flavius3896 Год назад +7

      My father used to say to me, "Kid, no one likes a wiseguy." My father is gone, and I am wiser.

    • @VictorLewis-nd4ld
      @VictorLewis-nd4ld Год назад +7

      I have that quote, with Wilde's picture, on my refrigerator. One sustains my heart and the other sustains my belly. 😉

  • @lynnetopping4554
    @lynnetopping4554 Год назад +15

    No mention of Wilde's meeting Andre Gide in Paris, whose life he turned around and launched his literary career.
    Andre Gide was awarded the Nobel prize for literature in 1947.

  • @JCPJCPJCP
    @JCPJCPJCP 2 года назад +198

    "Only the shallow know
    themselves."
    --Oscar Wilde

  • @DulceN
    @DulceN 2 месяца назад +2

    It is sad that Oscar Wilde lived at the wrong time. I wished he was alive today so he could live his life being true to himself without fear of shame or jail, and we could enjoy his writings and incredible personality and wit.

  • @nancypietrzykowski5221
    @nancypietrzykowski5221 Год назад +8

    Hugh Grant would make a great Oscar Wilde in a biopic!

    • @vivalaleta
      @vivalaleta Год назад +2

      Stephen Fry was Wilde's doppelganger. I'm sure he must have played him at some point.

    • @lindamcgarrigle2577
      @lindamcgarrigle2577 Год назад +3

      @@vivalaleta He played him in 'Wilde', alongside Jude Law who played Lord Alfred Douglas.

    • @vivalaleta
      @vivalaleta Год назад

      @@lindamcgarrigle2577 I was hoping someone would tell me the source of the faint idea in my mind. Thanks.

    • @kimberlymurray5293
      @kimberlymurray5293 11 месяцев назад +2

      Yes! What a brilliant suggestion!

    • @lervish1966
      @lervish1966 11 месяцев назад

      Too old

  • @carmenmontenegro229
    @carmenmontenegro229 6 месяцев назад +2

    How painful must have been for a soft, delicate soul like Oscar’s after so much humiliation. He should have been remembered as a martyr 😢

  • @theresabraddock9310
    @theresabraddock9310 2 года назад +6

    he died of a broken heart! thats the saddest part of all from someone who shined so brightly

  • @lorenzonotarianni1667
    @lorenzonotarianni1667 2 года назад +10

    This was an outstanding documentary.
    Hello from Italy.

  • @jamesbradshaw3389
    @jamesbradshaw3389 2 года назад +5

    Oscar Wilde, I knew him well. As the very great Phil Lynott wrote and sang, And Oscar, he's going wild. The great Oscar will be talked about, written about, and read about and his genius will be referred to forevermore, God blessed Oscar Wilde as Oscar shared his many gifts with the world

  • @Bricameron
    @Bricameron Год назад +3

    Curious this should show up on my feed since not three days ago I happened to listen to a podcast about Oscar Wilde.

  • @lilianeroy9039
    @lilianeroy9039 2 года назад +5

    Great documentary! Thank you.

  • @biancalawrence3178
    @biancalawrence3178 Год назад +2

    Very good, well put together professional documentary. Very informative and interesting. Did I detect a touch of Stephen Fry at one point? When I imagine Oscar Wilde, I find it difficult to dissociate him from Fry because Fry has done so much Wilde stuff. Brough home to me how cruel society was in those days (not even that long ago).

  • @margaretzoheir7905
    @margaretzoheir7905 2 года назад +3

    He thought he was forever damned here, but the opposite is true. I hope his spirit can look down and see how he is revered as an artist now.

  • @carolcamp4828
    @carolcamp4828 11 месяцев назад +1

    Amazingly well done & thoughtful documentary. I learned new things about him.

  • @gayleholmes9081
    @gayleholmes9081 Год назад +2

    I have to admit, he's a new discovery for me, although I've heard of his books my whole life, especially Dorian Gray and I have to admit, I find his life and his story more compelling and interesting than his plays and books. I tried after discovering Mr. Wilde to engage in his novels and found them uninteresting and rather boring.....however, Oscar himself, OMG, what a interesting, delightful character this guy was and to review movies made of his life, another pleasure of which I indulged and thoroughly enjoyed. He was the overrated Madonna/ flamboyant Elton John and the doomed O.J of our generation...May he continue to rest in peace.

  • @JaneFrieman
    @JaneFrieman Год назад +2

    The illustrations in Salome were drawn by Artist Aubrey Beardsley.

  • @KF-cx8bm
    @KF-cx8bm Год назад +4

    Love the man, was able to put flowers on his grave at Pere La Chaise

  • @adeleassouline529
    @adeleassouline529 11 месяцев назад

    wonderful documentary 🖤Yes , and we can hear his voice !!!

  • @meenalgautam1465
    @meenalgautam1465 2 года назад +13

    Similar to Freddie Mercury

  • @shahjhanhaider26
    @shahjhanhaider26 15 дней назад

    It's emotional video,the picture of Dorian gray was a masterpiece but he went to other way.He was humorist, sensational and very good writer,fate had it he wouldn't get popularity but for his crime.He was a literary figure who ended up poor

  • @jeraldbaxter3532
    @jeraldbaxter3532 Год назад +2

    What is truly unjust is that the one who should have been imprisoned was the vile Lord Alfred. I only have what has been recorded by others, but by all accounts, he was manipulative, vain, greedy, and shallow. It is this last that makes one wonder what Wilde saw in him; there is the cliche "Opposites attract," but still...If I remember correctly, Douglas lived to the late 1940's and was thoroughly repellant to the end.

    • @MaraMorrigan
      @MaraMorrigan 11 месяцев назад

      He also wrote an autobiography that claimed he didn't have homosexual relationships.

  • @quelizabeth2
    @quelizabeth2 2 года назад +134

    I’ve been a reader and fan of brilliant Oscar Wilde, since I started to read at age 5. I’m grateful for having parents that gave the privilege of accessing his unforgettable books.

  • @francie2915
    @francie2915 2 года назад +644

    As a very young girl my brother brought home a library record of Wilde’s fairy tales. I cried every time I heard the one about the nightingale but loved it. In high school I discovered on my own his other writings and he was a hero to me. In my thirties I read The Happy Prince to the older kids and asked them to talk about Christian values. I was never invited again to take a Sunday School class. Oscar Wilde remains a hero to me in my old age for his genius, true Christian values expressed in his fairy tales , his eloquence ,and refusal to pretend being who he was not.

    • @georgew2014
      @georgew2014 2 года назад +57

      That's a beautiful story. Thank you, Francie.

    • @karmakat8016
      @karmakat8016 2 года назад +53

      I have to echo the same words of the other commentator. What a beautiful story beautifully told. I'm sorry you weren't invited back to the Sunday School xx

    • @axiomist4488
      @axiomist4488 2 года назад +30

      I admire you and respect you .

    • @karmakat8016
      @karmakat8016 2 года назад

      @John Smith but it is for Catholics who are a huge make up of the Christian population you cannot dismiss this. They were/are the first few factions of Christian sects historically, pity they chose to ignore women 🙄

    • @MermaidAXA
      @MermaidAXA 2 года назад +36

      There is a lovely dignity to your own storytelling. I couldn’t agree with you more about Mr. Wilde. How very unfortunate that the children of the Sunday School were deprived of your grace and grasp of humanity. Blessings.

  • @randilevson9547
    @randilevson9547 Год назад +51

    I believe Oscar Wilde stood for the values of kindness, empathy, and love. These values are not unique to Christianity, but Wilde did include religious themes in some of his works. He had a very sharp wit, and a great facility for language. He is one of my author-heroes.

    • @Davidfooterman
      @Davidfooterman Год назад +7

      Kindness, empathy and love are uniquely claimed by Christians as being quintessentially their values. Somehow Christians have been able to make their very title an adjective indicative of pious rectitude when, in reality, the mission of Christianity has followed a path marked by very brutal behavior. To be fair, the brutalities largely reflected the norms of those times; they were typical of most religions in recorded history, but it is the hypocrisy of denial along with claims of such piety that set Christianity apart from other religions; the pretensions and the absence of self-awareness are problems; and yet, in its stories about Jesus, and other great people that followed him, Christianity paints a good way forward. There are great Christian sects, such as the Quakers, who set an example that mainstream Christianity would do well to follow. On the other hand, the Catholic legacy of mythology and hyperbole that is still so dominant in Christianity, is long overdue for replacement by a better set of values based on self-awareness, humanity, honesty, tolerance, respect and understanding for other belief systems and moral codes, the sort of behavior that makes Quakers and others like them examples to be followed. It is amazing how broad a spectrum of behavior from saintly to questionable exists among Christian sects. Deo volente, saintly behavior will eventually find favor within the mainstreams of Christianity, but there’s an awfully long and tough road ahead.

    • @marissashantez6051
      @marissashantez6051 9 дней назад

      In what way? Whom besides himself and his lover did he feel all this empathy and love for? And he basicly wrote one book and a handful of plays. He is more famous for being gay, and starting ups lawsuit that ended him up in jail. Dont forget, all Bosies dad did was insult Wilde. Wilde basicly put himself in jail. And people were likely happier back then than they are now. Not difficult, as people are comply miserable now.

  • @Tsudkyk
    @Tsudkyk 2 года назад +100

    While on my honeymoon in Paris, I forced my wife to walk 2 miles to visit Oscars tomb. It is surrounded by plexiglass because people kiss his tomb with red lipstick and apparently the oils damage the stone.
    Oscar was one of the most courageous and brilliant minds to ever exist, visiting his final resting place to pay my respects was on my bucket list.

    • @BOLLOCKS1968
      @BOLLOCKS1968 10 месяцев назад +2

      I'm just a bit jealous. Would have been amazing to see! Cheers ✌

    • @grandcrowdadforde6127
      @grandcrowdadforde6127 2 месяца назад +1

      >> FORCED yr wife ? Really??

    • @paulmoore6175
      @paulmoore6175 2 месяца назад

      Doubt your still married of mansplaining that one

  • @VanessaV1111
    @VanessaV1111 Год назад +116

    “Some Bring Happiness Wherever they Go.
    Others Whenever they Go” O.Wilde
    My Love for the Irish & Irish authors began when discovering The Picture of Dorian Grey.
    Fools were those to turn their backs on this genius, kind & witty man.

    • @marissashantez6051
      @marissashantez6051 9 дней назад

      Other, even better writers ended up badly. HP Lovecraft. He was genius. Everyone uses him for inspiration, yet he died broke and hungry and I hate it.

  • @sandeesimons6045
    @sandeesimons6045 Год назад +92

    He's my favorite author, play write and his quips and quotes are timeless. He would be so much more appreciated in our time!😊

    • @nickgov66
      @nickgov66 Год назад +6

      Playwright.

    • @jimhen459
      @jimhen459 11 месяцев назад +2

      i don't agree, to them and us he was a pedo.

    • @Topmember
      @Topmember 11 месяцев назад

      ​@jimhen459 Oh, go suck oranges! You're buying in to the not-so-widespread any more, thankfully, notion that paedophilia is directly linked to male homosexuality. It is not. Paedophiles are a breed unto themselves and cannot help themselves but are in need of help to protect innocent children from being groomed and harmed.

    • @motorcop505
      @motorcop505 11 месяцев назад

      @@jimhen459Nobody accused him of pedophilia, only homosexuality, which was illegal in England at the time.

  • @felixthecat3n2
    @felixthecat3n2 2 года назад +62

    There is an amazing audiobook of The Picture of Dorian Gray, narrated by David Brown (in 1965) and it the most perfect production I have ever heard. Wilde’s brilliance comes to life in this most remarkable story, and all life is to be found within the poetry of every chapter.

  • @jeanmyers1787
    @jeanmyers1787 2 года назад +115

    I loved his final words, turning towards wallpaper & saying “one of us must go”, many years later Spike Milligan would have on his gravestone “I told you I was ill “

    • @jamesmiller4184
      @jamesmiller4184 2 года назад +15

      And, to this very day, that wallpaper has not forgotten.

    • @jamesbradshaw3389
      @jamesbradshaw3389 2 года назад +7

      Yes 2 very great Irish men, loved by the world

    • @johnllewlyndavies222
      @johnllewlyndavies222 2 года назад +4

      Flock wallpaper

    • @TheStockwell
      @TheStockwell 2 года назад +9

      @@jamesmiller4184 Wallpaper update: "Some 100 years later after he died, the hotel replaced that cursed wallpaper with by red, blue, green and gold frescos based on designs by his friend Aubrey Beardsley."

    • @TheStockwell
      @TheStockwell 2 года назад +11

      Milligan's requested epitaph presented a problem in a Catholic cemetery - for obvious reasons. Two years after his death, a wonderful compromise was reached by having the inscription in Gaelic.
      "Duirt me leat go raibh me breoite." 😸

  • @momv2pa
    @momv2pa 2 года назад +164

    How terribly sad. He was appreciated and under-appreciated at the same time. I’ve always felt he got such a raw deal. Brilliant, funny, an incredible wit. RIP.

    • @ShowalterdontlikeME
      @ShowalterdontlikeME 2 года назад

      If you actually listen to Oscar Wilde you will discover he was a prating knave - he was exceptionally trite - He was a pederastic voyeur - and ''Boysie' - remembering that Wilde had a south eastern English accent, not an Irish one - was a suspected murderer, and a proven rapist - that's way he stayed out of England until the statue of limitations ran out - Due to the crimes of Wilde and Douglas, homosexuality was recriminalised in England to protect young working class men, from ''gentlemen'' of their class. I commend the proper history ''The Trials of Oscar Wilde'' to you - and forgo Urban Myths.

    • @JuliaKapp
      @JuliaKapp Год назад +5

      Absolutely spot on. I feel the same way. Brilliant man, notorious, but underrated as a writer.
      I think he went prison more for being an Irish smart-ass rather than being gay.😢

    • @mohannair1964
      @mohannair1964 11 месяцев назад +1

      Aa q

  • @clickbaitcabaret8208
    @clickbaitcabaret8208 2 года назад +368

    I like to think Oscar's spirit is smiling knowing his legacy has been restored for the brilliant mind & man he was.

    • @michellelovespink2660
      @michellelovespink2660 2 года назад

      Wilde, a homosexual, was put on trial for gross indecency in 1895 after the details of his affair with a British aristocrat were made public. Homosexuality was a criminal offense at this time in England.
      I think he left his family wife children for homosexual life.
      I dont respect that.

    • @ABCDuwachui
      @ABCDuwachui 2 года назад +1

      HE WAS A SINFUL PERV

    • @CastelliMoni
      @CastelliMoni 2 года назад +16

      Stupid morality ruin the life of a brave man!

    • @Goodkidjr43
      @Goodkidjr43 2 года назад +12

      @Hereandthere andnowinyourface It is to be noted that Wilde accepted the Catholic Faith on his death bed. Something this documentary fails to mention. I wonder why? This is a rhetorical question, of course.
      God bless.

    • @andrewtramble5805
      @andrewtramble5805 2 года назад +4

      I completely agree.

  • @carolking6355
    @carolking6355 2 года назад +263

    The cruelest treatment to a man whose genius is still quoted 120 years after his death. A great documentary with the most beautiful music

    • @stconstable
      @stconstable 2 года назад +10

      Music which sets the tone and reflects his era and is far from intrusive.

    • @pipfox7834
      @pipfox7834 2 года назад +3

      although it seems they only had access to two compositions! played over and over.... oh dear. Disappointing lack of effort made there.

    • @stconstable
      @stconstable 2 года назад +4

      @@pipfox7834 there's incidental music. There's also Gilbert and Sullivan and the Monte Carlo track. More would've been good it's true.

    • @ABCDuwachui
      @ABCDuwachui 2 года назад +4

      I love your music!!!

    • @ladylaois8184
      @ladylaois8184 2 года назад +1

      yes well said .

  • @pennyburns4425
    @pennyburns4425 2 года назад +23

    A great documentary. Yes, he was a genius, his plays, stories, his wit. Of course, it was a tragedy. However.......doesn't anyone have any compassion for his wife, Constance? He was conducting affairs with Ross, Bosie, et al, whilst married to her. Hope it was 'safe sex' then, she could have been affected. And then....she has to change her name and that of the two boys, forced to start a new life. She was cruelly betrayed.

    • @gailmiller6333
      @gailmiller6333 2 года назад +10

      Penny Burns
      I agree, I didn’t think she was portrayed fairly at all.

    • @johnkelly1027
      @johnkelly1027 Год назад +5

      I totally agree… and dare it be said.. how young were some of the boys!

  • @gabrielefilosofi9228
    @gabrielefilosofi9228 Год назад +58

    And the child smiled on the Giant, and said to him, 'You let me play once in your garden, to-day you shall come with me to my garden, which is Paradise.' How simple is this tale, that a 5 years child can understand, though how powerful it is, making me crying every time I read it. I think that giant is Oscar Wilde

  • @jackiepaper6464
    @jackiepaper6464 2 года назад +38

    I choose my friends for their good looks, my acquaintances for their good characters, and my enemies for their intellects. Oscar Wilde

    • @BlueskyDenver
      @BlueskyDenver Месяц назад +3

      If Oscar Wilde chose his friends entirely for their “good looks”; he most certainly had a lot of shallow and superficial companions .! Many good looking people are very unstable and very difficult to deal with , solely because they believe their looks compensate for their lack of character, honesty and integrity. And by the end of Oscar Wilde’s life that’s exactly what happened his closest confidant and friends betrayed him, abandoned him and he end up alone.

  • @nickwyatt9498
    @nickwyatt9498 2 года назад +110

    Wonderful documentary, many thanks. When I was at Oxford (Magdalen) I was lucky enough to be assigned his room - or one of them, students had 'rooms' in those days. I can't express just how strange and wonderful it felt to be sleeping in Oscar's student bedroom...even as a straight bloke! God bless that brilliant man, who can still make us laugh - and think - over a century later.

    • @vincentvanwyk5522
      @vincentvanwyk5522 2 года назад

      You do realise that by today's standards he was a pedophile right. Those renters were all under 18.

    • @theoriginalsuzycat
      @theoriginalsuzycat 2 года назад +9

      WHAT WAS IT LIKE did it have a nice view, was it comfy? I visited his school a few years ago and wished I could ask him how he felt about the lake view from the otherwise very grey and forbidding school.

    • @AuthorDocumentaries
      @AuthorDocumentaries  2 года назад +12

      That's amazing! Not everyone can say that.

    • @Johnconno
      @Johnconno 2 года назад +5

      Is that what they told you at Oxford? 😂

    • @luiscuixara4622
      @luiscuixara4622 2 года назад +9

      @@Johnconno
      When language fails, the sure and rapier wit of the emoji always raises the failure ~ Touche', sir!

  • @Ryannaut_g
    @Ryannaut_g 2 года назад +83

    Oscar Wilde kicks ass. This internet age will die & everyone believing in it. But Oscar Wilde is forever.

    • @andrewtramble5805
      @andrewtramble5805 2 года назад +2

      YES YES YES

    • @ShowalterdontlikeME
      @ShowalterdontlikeME 2 года назад +2

      Oscar Wilde never actually "Kicked Ass" - That was Lord Alfred Douglas's job - Oscar sat in an armchair and watched - His trouser pockets had no linings.

    • @petecernan2568
      @petecernan2568 2 года назад +2

      Licked it not kicked it

  • @martinmcdonald4207
    @martinmcdonald4207 2 года назад +88

    The Oscar Wilde voice is brilliantly done by Irish theatre actor Alan Stanford, who also happens to be the director of The Gate Theatre, Dublin.

    • @lervish1966
      @lervish1966 11 месяцев назад

      Clover hat

    • @AndyJonson-m1q
      @AndyJonson-m1q 2 месяца назад

      So it was not a real recording of Oscar. It was a performance of A Stanford. Ok.

    • @martinmcdonald4207
      @martinmcdonald4207 2 месяца назад

      @@AndyJonson-m1q That old scratchy recording at the end was Oscar, mot long before his death.

  • @Paolablanton
    @Paolablanton 2 года назад +184

    Is it silly to say that I love him? Not just his work, but him as a person? This documentary brought me to tears.

    • @GradKat
      @GradKat 2 года назад +6

      It is pretty silly, yes.

    • @JillShaw
      @JillShaw 2 года назад +24

      Not at all silly 💙 I love him too 💜💙✌️

    • @richardcassidy9536
      @richardcassidy9536 Год назад +20

      There is no law (yet anyway) to prosecute silly. So enjoy your silliness Sophia while it's still legal and shameless.

    • @sophia9467
      @sophia9467 Год назад +14

      No not silly at all
      I feel the same

    • @katebemb8900
      @katebemb8900 Год назад +10

      @@sophia9467 So do I

  • @artmoss6889
    @artmoss6889 Год назад +23

    As a young drama student, I heard many more experienced actors and directors tell me that Wilde's "The Importance of Being Earnest" was the funniest play in English. I saw several mediocre productions over the years and did not think much of the play. Then, about 25 years ago, I finally saw a production that did justice to the script. Truly. I have never laughed so much. so loudly, or so long. I had to agree with my old mentors that the play was superior.

  • @KUSAK100
    @KUSAK100 2 года назад +189

    This is a wonderful documentary. The jewel I was not expecting was to hear Oscar Wilde’s voice. He’s immortal ♥️

    • @MsLeenite
      @MsLeenite 2 года назад +19

      Yes! I had no idea that any recordings of Oscar Wilde's voice exist today.

    • @rainmanjr2007
      @rainmanjr2007 2 года назад +13

      Yet his name was not in the credits. Not even under "Other voices," which is where I would have put it. I will call it one of Oscar's more minor slights but still sad.

    • @tracymorgan5386
      @tracymorgan5386 2 года назад +8

      Kinda like Dorian Gray.😉

    • @rainmanjr2007
      @rainmanjr2007 2 года назад +12

      @@tracymorgan5386 Very much like Dorian. I think Oscar felt his "dirty" secret was deforming and killing his talent. That was his inspiration (though even he might not have realized the extent of it).

    • @sheilaperrone7654
      @sheilaperrone7654 Год назад +4

      Why I wonder didn't they give him credit for his voice? I don't understand that

  • @mariaroncara2132
    @mariaroncara2132 11 месяцев назад +17

    Oscar Wilde never fails to touch one's heart in his writing I still cry hot tears when I re read the 'Happy Prince" and love all his books and poems. Thank YOU Oscar wherever you are in Heaven!

  • @flavius3896
    @flavius3896 Год назад +14

    I read "Oscar Wilde" the book written by Richard Ellmann who wrote the script for this documentary. I picked up the book knowing little of Wilde, but being in a period of reading biographies. Wilde's thinking and writing had an interesting effect on my thinking which was devoid of philosophy of art. Ellmann's book wore out my fingers turning pages in my dictionary searching words I had never seen. Each page was dense with language and new words to explore. The problem with reading biographies is making new acquaintances and watching them pass.

  • @kennyglesga
    @kennyglesga Год назад +19

    Oscar Wilde and D.H. Lawrence were the two pillars of my youthful library of great authors. Wilde portrayed London high society in his plays and Lawrence chronicled Nottingham working-class life. Wilde's fairytales will live forever (The Selfish Giant still has me pondering the meaning of loneliness and the loveliness of spring!), and Bert Lawrence's stories of provincial English life are pure Nottingham lace and the odour of Chrysanthemums. Sons and Lovers and De Profundis, two landmarks of British literature. Thank you, gentlemen, and do keep writing on the other side of the lace curtains!

  • @ArtHistoryProfessor
    @ArtHistoryProfessor Год назад +36

    "The truth is rarely pure and never simple."
    Oscar Wilde

    • @TonyGalla-kw4hw
      @TonyGalla-kw4hw Месяц назад

      Oh, how wrong is this comment. The purity of truth is in Jesus our Beloved Lord.

  • @anncarrier9404
    @anncarrier9404 Год назад +16

    What a wonderful documentary about Oscar Wilde. I read all his beautiful children's stories to my children. They are nearly 50 now. I think he is really one of our greatest poets and writers

  • @lauriewarner4848
    @lauriewarner4848 Год назад +24

    Can you imagine being one of his children, moving on with live, and your dependents never knowing they came from such greatness.

    • @pollywaffledoodah3057
      @pollywaffledoodah3057 4 дня назад

      He became cruelly indifferent to his wife and children, rarely going home to them - he preferred to spend his time with the depraved Bosie at the Savoy hotel. Not an ideal husband, or father - far from it.

  • @nope5445
    @nope5445 Год назад +20

    Morrissey inspired me, in 1981 to read everything that Oscar Wilde had ever written. I thank him for that. The Selfish Giant is one of my favorite short stories. I read it to my daughter when she was 8-9.

  • @royaltyreclaimed8027
    @royaltyreclaimed8027 3 месяца назад +3

    The world: "Oscar Wilde, famous gay icon known for being gay"
    The real Oscar Wilde: *converted to Catholicism on his deathbed, thereby renouncing his lifestyle and turning away from it*

    • @AL_THOMAS_777
      @AL_THOMAS_777 2 месяца назад +1

      . . . but under PRESSURE only ! And yes, that MAKES a difference ! ! ! So don´t make any mistake . . . a l l religions may be VERY EVIL . . .

  • @TheStockwell
    @TheStockwell 2 года назад +28

    I'm watching a BBC collection of his plays. Among the heartbreaking aspects of his work as a playwright is that he was growing into a formidable talent with a handful of great works created in five years. Then, it was all over when he reached the age of forty.

  • @gooberzmom
    @gooberzmom Год назад +11

    One of the most under-appreciated and talented artists to have come from that era. He's always been a favorite of mine, his poems, plays, etc. An amazing genius, even when persecuted RE: The Ballad of Redding Jail. A man ahead of his time. Thank you for this video. May it introduce some who have never heard of him to that genius, that even he truly, knew he possessed. That we are still enjoying his works 120+ yrs after his death says a lot.

  • @missatrebor
    @missatrebor 2 года назад +53

    Excellent documentary, I must take some time to let it all sink in again, such a sad ending, so undeserved. Thank you for uploading it.

  • @im1sickpup269
    @im1sickpup269 2 года назад +173

    Outstand documentary. Thank you for posting this.
    Edit - just the mere fact that we discuss him 120yrs after his death is a great indication of what kind of man he was. I can only hope that as time goes on, more and more people learn about him, andh he doesn't slip into obscurity again.

    • @AuthorDocumentaries
      @AuthorDocumentaries  2 года назад +14

      You're welcome. I feel the same

    • @Oakleaf700
      @Oakleaf700 2 года назад +7

      @@AuthorDocumentaries I love Oscar's Wit.. It's almost as if he was sending himself up. Great mind.

    • @goodun2974
      @goodun2974 2 года назад +14

      @@Oakleaf700 , One of my favorite all time quotes is Oscar Wilde's description of the landed gentry participating in a fox hunt: "the unspeakable in pursuit of the inedible". Which is pretty much how I feel about golf.

    • @Oakleaf700
      @Oakleaf700 2 года назад +4

      @@goodun2974 Very good!

    • @doreekaplan2589
      @doreekaplan2589 Год назад +1

      Most people have no interest in i.q. In life, meaningless in spades

  • @janetphillips2875
    @janetphillips2875 Год назад +12

    The Happy Prince movie starring and produced Rupert Everett is fantastic! I have watched it several times! There weresome critics, but the best movies are not liked by snobbery! The Robbie Ross character was superb, and Reggie, played by Colin Firth, wonderful as well!

  • @gailjarvis2592
    @gailjarvis2592 2 года назад +19

    An incomparable genius. Such tragedy that he refused to resist the forces that corrupted him. Like beautiful Dorian, his true face was the image in the mirror.

  • @giaatta9303
    @giaatta9303 2 года назад +58

    Now this documentary is a masterpiece. Well done. Music, narrator/reader are fantastic! Many Thanks. I admire Oscar Wilde. A legend!!

    • @RiaLake
      @RiaLake 2 года назад

      Not my idea of a masterpiece, so many things missed out.

    • @sholape
      @sholape 2 года назад

      The music is from The Godfather soundtrack.

    • @gunterangel
      @gunterangel Год назад +3

      Music used in this documentary:
      Titles, in between and Endtitles:
      Pietro Mascagni,
      Intermezzo from
      "Cavalleria rusticana "
      At 43:10 :
      Richard Wagner,
      Vorspiel from Tristan & Isolde"
      At 46:47:
      Jules Massenet,
      "Méditation" from "Thais"
      At 52:12:
      Erik Satie, "Gymnopédies Nr.1"
      Version for Orchestra
      ( Gabriel Fauré ? )

  • @janethayes5941
    @janethayes5941 2 года назад +24

    Omg I'm so excited that I found this channel. Can't wait to binge, binge, and binge!!!👏👏👏👏

  • @peterreston6478
    @peterreston6478 Год назад +15

    A fitting tribute to a very special artist. Thank you.

  • @sheilaperrone7654
    @sheilaperrone7654 Год назад +56

    I have always been heartbroken for this man. A terrible shame. But he is loved still to this day. It is amazing

    • @thatismattjohnsonjohnson3146
      @thatismattjohnsonjohnson3146 Год назад +11

      I feel heartbroken for his Wife. She got the short end of the stick.

    • @susanross1651
      @susanross1651 Год назад +4

      @@thatismattjohnsonjohnson3146she did get treat badly, but if Oscar had been born at a later time, he may not have felt the need to get married in the first place, unfortunately it would have been expected of him, especially in hopes to cover any rumour of his sexuality.

    • @heathermarsh3425
      @heathermarsh3425 Год назад +4

      Me too , I think he came across as a gentle soul , and loved everyone wether rich or poor , his amazing body of work is as relevant today as it was then , forever loved ❤

  • @josebenito15
    @josebenito15 2 года назад +23

    I've always been fascinated by this man and his work. He was able to say and write the most profound thoughts in a scintillating manner. At the end of the his life He was almost a Religious Martyr. Wilde great and human.. Forever➕

  • @mytwocents848
    @mytwocents848 11 месяцев назад +9

    What a poignant documentary. He was a man larger than life. When I was a child, my favorite book was the fairy tales written by Oscar Wilde. They were gently, sweet tales and so much better than the other fairy tale books at the time. Thank you for uploading this honest documentary of his life. Amazing person!

  • @jamescrowley8637
    @jamescrowley8637 7 месяцев назад +4

    We are all in the gutter. But some of us are looking at the stars.

  • @ddivincenzo1194
    @ddivincenzo1194 2 года назад +14

    "I find it harder and harder to live up to my blue china"; if that is not gay, I don't know what is. Oscar was a genius and he gave little thought to what others thought of him.

    • @ddivincenzo1194
      @ddivincenzo1194 2 года назад +2

      @@kitlewis6748 He didn't let it bring him down though. He lived life as he wished.

  • @roisinmcginley2009
    @roisinmcginley2009 2 года назад +21

    Amazing documentary about the most admiral Irishman.

  • @marjoriegarner5369
    @marjoriegarner5369 2 года назад +10

    the music in this video is wonderful.

  • @francoisedandre3644
    @francoisedandre3644 2 года назад +33

    Ses écrits poignardent le coeur, tant il va loin dans la vérité de la nature humaine. On en repousse presque le livre, tant c'est fort et intrigant.

    • @carolmanning8367
      @carolmanning8367 2 года назад +1

      I have long been an admirer of Oscars work. A brilliant mind but he went to jail for paying rent boys as young as 15.

    • @goodun2974
      @goodun2974 2 года назад +2

      @@carolmanning8367 , one wonders if, in that era, patronizing 15 year old "rent *girls*" was similarly prosecuted. Probably not.

    • @maecarpenter6735
      @maecarpenter6735 Год назад

      @@carolmanning8367 Now he would be prosecuted as a pedophile. So hard to separate the artist from the evil deeds they do.

  • @delportnadine043
    @delportnadine043 Год назад +7

    Thank you for this master piece!
    I adore O.W,
    He understood that literature deals with the finer feelings of man.
    🙏🙏

  • @effel11
    @effel11 Год назад +8

    Thank you for sharing this well made documentary of Oscar Wilde. The character voices and soundtrack do elevate it so ....it makes for great listening....it will be nice to include details of these in the video description.

  • @jamespotts8197
    @jamespotts8197 Год назад +12

    Oscar's gift was writing Literature, great Literature as well plays, novels and such, he's a well versed commentator, "a spin thrift of my own genius". We need artistic writers such as Oscar Wilde, that took the theater along with his plays that were amazingly formidable to a far greater height, as well, so that Wilde's amazing influence will be passed down from generation to other generations, he lived his life as he saw fit with passion and extremeness.

  • @Eurafrican
    @Eurafrican 2 года назад +92

    What a brilliantly done documentary. Shame that Oscar suffered through a self destructive love for narcissistic Bosie. I hope Oscar has found deserved peace and acceptance in the afterllife. I'm5 sure he has everybody in stitches.

    • @Eurafrican
      @Eurafrican 2 года назад

      @Elliot Rosewater what are your sources for these allegations?

    • @SM-si6nl
      @SM-si6nl 2 года назад +3

      Dear oscar was most surely the narc

    • @patriciajrs46
      @patriciajrs46 2 года назад +1

      Why is it that many of these authors that have documenteries about their affiliations, always turn out to be gay?

    • @johntechwriter
      @johntechwriter 2 года назад

      Which afterlife is this, exactly? Since the 18th Century, references to supreme beings, bearded deities who watch our every deed, and based on our obeisance to their whims consign us upon death to paradise or everlasting torment, have been the laughing stock of educated people of all classes. Take your afterlife to some swindler's evangelical channel, where it belongs.

    • @monmothma3358
      @monmothma3358 2 года назад +6

      Why do you brand someone you've never met with a diagnosis? I swear, "narcissistic" is quickly becoming as overused as "toxic"

  • @artandminisbyvilma8116
    @artandminisbyvilma8116 2 года назад +24

    What a great documentary! Thank you!

  • @stconstable
    @stconstable 2 года назад +15

    I requested, and was bought for Christmas, Ellman's superb and weighty Wilde bio., when it was first published in the Eighties. Reading it as a teen. was a formative experience. This can only be good if he scripted it.

  • @xyzllii
    @xyzllii 2 года назад +25

    Very well done docu. Bravo.You hit the spot of who Wilde really was. Perhaps a little at the price of what Constance and the sons felt and thought though?

    • @AuthorDocumentaries
      @AuthorDocumentaries  2 года назад +8

      I can take credit for the upload, but not the doc. The creators could have rounded out Wilde more with the wife and son's perceptions, etc., but I still think it encapsulates him nicely. If a biography failed to dive in, then we'd have a problem.

    • @cathyhamlin3611
      @cathyhamlin3611 2 года назад +2

      I'm sure it affected them deeply

    • @pipfox7834
      @pipfox7834 2 года назад +2

      @xyzllii see Drawn from Life, an autobiography of a woman artist from slightly later than Oscar Wilde's era. Her husband ( a well known writer of the Edwardian and interwar years) was a serial marrier of young women with money. When he had spent it all on promoting the arts, he would simply leave his little family to marry yet another young woman with an inheritance. Several times. Its a very interesting insight into artistic and literary circles of Paris at that time, and the way many men simply tossed their families away rather than try to support them financially *themselves*!

    • @rainmanjr2007
      @rainmanjr2007 2 года назад +3

      It wasn't about them. She deserted him so it was about Oscar. I thought it handled her just fine. She dictated what the kids thought.

  • @anjalisharma461
    @anjalisharma461 2 года назад +15

    Such a moving documentary. Beautifully narrated.

  • @pointsofsue2487
    @pointsofsue2487 Год назад +11

    I loved reading Oscar Wilde as a child and then to my children. A literary genius.

  • @johnnybsteelriff
    @johnnybsteelriff 2 года назад +16

    Clearly Oscar should have been a young man in the 1960s....he would have survived and lived longer and would be considered to be a great comic and satirical voice in the manner of a Peter Cook/Joe Orton/Pythons in the same era...

    • @pipfox7834
      @pipfox7834 2 года назад +2

      Joe Orton's life trajectory is not one to emulate (aside from some slight creative output)

    • @waynej2608
      @waynej2608 2 года назад +3

      I could also see him digging the music scene of that era. Maybe some Velvet Underground, for starters.

    • @sharksport01
      @sharksport01 2 года назад +2

      @@waynej2608
      More Tiny Tim.

    • @topcat9852
      @topcat9852 2 месяца назад +1

      Penicillin would have been just the thing as well

  • @deeprollingriver52
    @deeprollingriver52 Год назад +12

    I’ve always been drawn to this man and his writings.

  • @mickeyray3793
    @mickeyray3793 Год назад +5

    Why do they keep calling Wilde "homosexual?" He loved Constance and fathered two children, in addition to gay sex. It seems the proper term would be "bisexual."

    • @MichaelTurner856
      @MichaelTurner856 Год назад

      I know, it's weird that people think a person must be one or the other

  • @snapjackal
    @snapjackal 2 месяца назад +2

    My only aim is to write with which color he orchestrated symphonies of liveliness. Just a fraction of his brilliance is all I require.

  • @maureenrhysjones4643
    @maureenrhysjones4643 Год назад +6

    Thank you for this sensitive documentary. I enjoyed every moment and it moved me to tears several times. Such lovely voice overs too, which makes an absolute world of difference, to me at least. Thank you again.

  • @margaretreid6924
    @margaretreid6924 2 года назад +16

    I was in tears at the end, I so loved his writings

  • @justinludeman8424
    @justinludeman8424 Год назад +9

    This was enjoyable; so richly informative. Wilde has always fascinated me and his writings including short stories, poems, plays and maxims were required reading according to my Pa. The picture of Dorian Gray is a timeless novel. Thank you producers 👌🏼
    The biopic film starring Stephen Fry, Jude Law, Martin Sheen etc was a fabulous tribute to the man, his variegated life, and tragic end.

  • @traceydaizy
    @traceydaizy 2 года назад +33

    What a beautiful documentary that was and very sad. All that music and sound affects made me feel like I was there.
    Loved it.

    • @annfisher3316
      @annfisher3316 2 года назад +1

      Especially th hoofbeats of carriages, clip clopping in the background...

    • @gunterangel
      @gunterangel Год назад +1

      Titles, in between and Endtitles:
      Pietro Mascagni,
      Intermezzo from
      "Cavalleria rusticana "
      At 43:10 :
      Richard Wagner,
      Vorspiel from Tristan & Isolde"
      At 46:47:
      Jules Massenet,
      "Méditation" from "Thais"
      At 52:12:
      Erik Satie, "Gymnopédies Nr.1"
      Version for Orchestra
      ( Gabriel Fauré ? )

  • @f.drachenfels4503
    @f.drachenfels4503 2 года назад +15

    This wonderful writer has been giving me so much joy.

  • @AG-ni8jm
    @AG-ni8jm 2 года назад +30

    Oscar and Alfred's relationship is a good example of a toxic relationship. Oscar was so foolish to have gone back to him after jail, and he admitted as such

  • @Deepbluecat
    @Deepbluecat Год назад +6

    Excellent Documentary! I really enjoyed this

  • @josemorgan1450
    @josemorgan1450 2 года назад +4

    Checkout my newest novel of Fiction inspired by Oscar Wilde's, "The Picture of Dorian Gray". I call it, "Between Heaven & Hell Is Gray" and I write under the name of, J.R. Masterson. It was a true labor of love. Available for viewing and purchase at amazon and many online book sites. And hope you will like it!!

  • @jeanneratterman4174
    @jeanneratterman4174 2 года назад +26

    When you find out who your true and honest friends are is when you are at your lowest. 😪
    Wilde has fascinated me for his wonderful works.
    He is and always will be one of my favorite of authors who ever lived. ❤️

    • @goodun2974
      @goodun2974 2 года назад +4

      Like an old blues song, " Nobody knows you when you're down-and-out...
      "

  • @JudeNance
    @JudeNance 2 года назад +15

    I would love to have known him. He was brilliant 👏

  • @deanadiedrich9304
    @deanadiedrich9304 Год назад +3

    I need help! Does anyone know the music by the ocean when Oscar Wilde was released...
    it beautiful ... thank you.

    • @stephanymurdy3165
      @stephanymurdy3165 Год назад +2

      All the music in this documentary was hauntingly beautiful! I wish I had a list of all the music and the composers!

    • @davedoogan6650
      @davedoogan6650 Год назад +1

      Interrmezzo from "Cavalleria rusticana" , by Pietro Mascagni .

  • @andreebesseau6995
    @andreebesseau6995 2 года назад +12

    He certainly was too much ahead of his time.what a shame....😓💖

  • @milosnajdr9984
    @milosnajdr9984 Год назад +5

    I played Algernon in The Importance of being Earnest and was able to channel Wilde through the performance...so fun to inhabit such a witty persona.

    • @jemmajemma7130
      @jemmajemma7130 2 месяца назад

      I played Cecily Cardew and I enjoyed being looked at.

  • @bradchew7937
    @bradchew7937 2 года назад +11

    Very nicely produced, what a terrible demise ! an Absolute tragedy

  • @sexobscura
    @sexobscura 2 года назад +35

    *De Profundus was one of the first things of Wilde that I was blessed to read. The sheer poetry and historical elegance used to write such a piece of prose was both remarkable and staggering. The man was a simple master of the English language. His plays are rightly praised as examples of significant virtue; the irony, farce, sympathy, understanding and humour used are unequalled (as they will no doubt remain). That it was a letter of rebuke to his erstwhile companion makes it all the more stinging, abrupt and worthwhile. I can understand why its target tore it up. It is a shining jewel of English and Emotion*

  • @7349yt
    @7349yt Год назад +2

    A sad and complex man beneath the superficial mask of a gay and witty one. He probably knew himself well enough to have penned: "Only the shallow know themselves."

  • @johntechwriter
    @johntechwriter 2 года назад +20

    So many of the commentators are so sorry for Oscar Wilde, as if any of them in their wildest fantasies have experienced an hour of the richness of his life. Portraying this self-made literary giant of his time with pity would be the most ignominious of the many slurs the ignorant hurtled at him. Instead he should be celebrated, honored for his contribution not just to literature but to a more humane attitude toward the less fortunate than was being displayed by the newly rich patrons of his plays. He should be remembered as a loving father and despite his apparent cynicism, a humanist to the core whose deep caring for those shut out from his closed society's privileges will be his true legacy.

    • @kathybutterfield
      @kathybutterfield Год назад +1

      He was a victim of antique morality. Think what more he might have produced. Thankful for what he gave us.

    • @kiryuchan860
      @kiryuchan860 Год назад +2

      He's an old school queer icon who did not deserve to see hard labour for being gay. Does turning his biography into a story of grief as opposed to a celebration detract from his memory? Probably. There was still tragedy.

  • @mrsbluesky8415
    @mrsbluesky8415 2 года назад +10

    He could be a rock star from the 60s, he has the look.

  • @liverpooloman
    @liverpooloman 2 года назад +6

    Hello . I am from oman and i have
    an omani friend who has the same looking of oscar wilde . He is really seems like his face , eyes , skin and every thing when they
    have a medium haircut .

  • @mikeletaurus4728
    @mikeletaurus4728 2 года назад +5

    In the credits, why isn't Mascagni's "Cavalleria Rusticana" listed under "music in this video?" It plays throughout the upload.

    • @mikeletaurus4728
      @mikeletaurus4728 2 года назад +4

      Ditto Massenet's "Thais" and Satie's "Gymnopedie."

  • @mikeluke7417
    @mikeluke7417 Год назад +3

    A giant among pygmies 😂❤ brilliant mind 🧠