Mary Pickford documentary

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  • Опубликовано: 18 сен 2024
  • Life and Times of Mary Pickford (1998), hosted by Ann-Marie MacDonald.

Комментарии • 200

  • @judybrady860
    @judybrady860 2 года назад +51

    i loved her so much. i was a teenager in the 70's and i collected her silent films through black hawk films. i wrote her many times and when i gave her a holy card then i received a autographed photo. rest in peace miss pickford. gold bless you. we will see you in heaven.

  • @patriciahall2223
    @patriciahall2223 3 года назад +45

    I love Mary Pickford , her life story is very interesting...I often sit near her birthplace here in Toronto on University Ave and think about her....🇨🇦

    • @tonyarceneaux286
      @tonyarceneaux286 3 года назад +4

      They should do a movie on her.

    • @tameriajones593
      @tameriajones593 2 года назад

      I remember when I first saw Mary Pickford on Classic showcase on television in one of her movies were peaceful and I stayed quiet the whole day. I didn't know she was French.

    • @raptorfromthe6ix833
      @raptorfromthe6ix833 Год назад +1

      @@tonyarceneaux286 sh said she didn’t want a movie on her

  • @pattywitham8253
    @pattywitham8253 3 года назад +19

    I knew her son Ron Rogers he was a good man we were good friends my he RIP.

  • @arnepianocanada
    @arnepianocanada Год назад +11

    Very well made. No surprise about Chaplin so irresponsible to United Artists; very sad about Mary & Doug Fairbanks. She endured so much from family on - deserves our highest respect🙏

  • @judystine2783
    @judystine2783 3 года назад +22

    What a beautiful documentary about a beautiful, hardworking woman way, way ahead of her time.

  • @johnnydoughness7051
    @johnnydoughness7051 3 года назад +17

    I used to watch her in shorts (films) in between cartoons 1975 (Abbott & Costello?) as a kid, I fell totally in love with her and would anxiously wait for another chance to see her again. What a tragic tale, to be lost in obscurity after having been so seminal in the founding of Hollywood and film. Goodbye Mary, I still love you.

  • @leepadua8987
    @leepadua8987 3 года назад +22

    I love Mary! She was a great actress and a comedienne. She had good comic timing and the expressions on her face was just hilarious!

  • @monkeynumbernine
    @monkeynumbernine 3 года назад +17

    500k?!?!
    WOW!!!
    I believe all of the silent films should be saved and restored.
    I love them 💗

  • @grumpyoldwizard
    @grumpyoldwizard 4 года назад +47

    My Dad worked at a office, along time ago (he is 81) and Mary Pickford actually called his office quite often. He said she could be very sweet on the phone, but then, in another call be quite incensed. She sounds like a very interesting woman.

    • @Missditabomb
      @Missditabomb 3 года назад +10

      @Average Joe: She became a severe alcoholic in the last decades of her life, so that could explain the behaviour.

    • @sheenamcguire5225
      @sheenamcguire5225 3 года назад +1

      Can’t we all though

    • @Dynamatrix2000
      @Dynamatrix2000 3 года назад +5

      When your Dad was in his 20s and Mary Pickford was in her 80s probably.

  • @Garbeaux.
    @Garbeaux. 3 года назад +56

    It’s crazy to think she would have been one of the most famous women a century ago! The ending of her life was tragic bc she was forgotten instead of appreciated. For some reason, actors who were famous in the silent did not like the association. Especially once Sunset Boulevard came out with real silent stars in scenes that had them portrayed as out of touch & living in the past. Even those stars who did cross over, like Joan Crawford, would even omit the fact they had been in silent films. It was indeed sad that such pioneers were treated in such ways.

    • @annnee6818
      @annnee6818 Год назад +2

      What do you mean. She WAS one of the most famous women a century ago

    • @raptorfromthe6ix833
      @raptorfromthe6ix833 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@annnee6818a lot of what he’s saying is wrong I mean everyone knew that Joan Crawford started off from the silent s

  • @alexandergietzen1667
    @alexandergietzen1667 4 года назад +95

    Why hasn't a movie been made of this great pioneer of Hollywood? She is a great American icon!

    • @janethayes5941
      @janethayes5941 3 года назад +19

      Ikr? Seems like that would be a great movie! I'd buy a ticket for sure.

    • @MOTHATALKS
      @MOTHATALKS 3 года назад +12

      Shes not black

    • @bbrown333
      @bbrown333 3 года назад +16

      Because we have to live through 323423525324453156 Marilyn Monroe movies first.

    • @wilburmcbride8096
      @wilburmcbride8096 3 года назад +6

      @Private Citizen It's sad that her stepson fought so hard to not have a biopic movie made about her life. We all have ups and downs in our lives, so I think those struggles would make for a great movie.

    • @kirkreid743
      @kirkreid743 3 года назад +8

      @@MOTHATALKS Tell me you're a Trump supporter without telling me you're a Trump supporter.

  • @RianShafer
    @RianShafer Год назад +5

    I absolutely love everything about her & all she accomplished. I wonder if those that utilize the facilities for elder actors know it was she who first opened it? Like all of us that live well into retirement years, it truly is like all you did in your younger years matters not once you start out living so many dear friends & family. There's few left to remember or care. I think that hit Mary hardest because she had been so beloved & famous at one time by so many, then forgotten in time by most. I'm glad you did this documentary to keep her memory alive.

  • @melissacoelho8413
    @melissacoelho8413 2 года назад +13

    What an amazing woman. What a sad life, my heart breaks for her. What her legacy is and always will be, should have been celebrated and so many after her should thank this amazing woman.

  • @alyseolympe
    @alyseolympe Год назад +5

    George Westmore gave Mary Pickford her signature ringlets, he even added fake hair in her hair because fans were trying to cut it for a keepsake - His great granddaughter is actress McKenzie Westmore daughter of Michael Westmore makeup artist for Raging Bull, Mask, Star Trek series 🎬💄

  • @Noelle_White
    @Noelle_White 3 года назад +74

    It’s hilarious that she’s labelled “America’s Sweetheart” as she was pure Canadian born and bred!

    • @SweetNancy2704
      @SweetNancy2704 3 года назад +1

      I didn't know this thanXx

    • @MTknitter22
      @MTknitter22 3 года назад +8

      yes but she married Americans and this was her home

    • @johnfd0210
      @johnfd0210 3 года назад +23

      Canada is part of North AMERICA.

    • @Luna.3.3.3
      @Luna.3.3.3 3 года назад +4

      Yup!!! 🇨🇦 🇨🇦 🇨🇦 💯

    • @mayena
      @mayena 3 года назад +4

      Her noriety was first developed in the United States and she lived majority of her private life in the country.

  • @SweetDreams706
    @SweetDreams706 Год назад +5

    It still disgusts me that a D list actress & her husband razed Pickfair….bc they thought it was haunted 🙄. What a shame.

  • @imsocuteimsorich4952
    @imsocuteimsorich4952 3 года назад +9

    I love films about the silent movie actoress+actors,like Mary pickford lillian guish exetra ,they should start making movies on these people ,they would be worth it and enjoyed to watch, keep the memories of the silent movie people alive ,they may be gone
    but not forgotten,💙🐦🎥🎬📹🌟🌟🌈👌💟💯🌟🌟all the way 😘💟

  • @migue4793
    @migue4793 3 года назад +15

    She received the Academy Honorary Award in 1976, not 1972 like they said. It's sad she wasn't mentioned as the first woman to direct, produce, write and star in her own films, but after the 1920s Hollywood became male dominated doe the next 75 years.

  • @charismalorelye4516
    @charismalorelye4516 3 года назад +11

    Mary was a pioneer in its truest form.
    LOL. The saxophone playing in the background 🎷

    • @sallyclay1974
      @sallyclay1974 3 года назад +1

      Silent movies were so different than sound. She was able to get the point across in early Hollywood,

  • @madtwc4425
    @madtwc4425 2 года назад +12

    It’s a shame how she shut herself away. My mom did the same thing stopped going out, didn’t want to join any clubs and stopped working on a book she was working on. She developed dementia and went downhill pretty quickly leaving me at 84 last October. It’s a real shame, for both of them.

    • @raptorfromthe6ix833
      @raptorfromthe6ix833 Год назад +2

      She wasn’t as reclusive as this made out to be greto Garbo was definitely more reclusive

    • @timsteinkamp2245
      @timsteinkamp2245 14 дней назад

      So you are 64 when writing this? You may find you are the same way whether dementia or not. My parents both just died and I'm feeling as Mary they say felt. Good luck. Most people as they age are tired of the grind and don't feel like doing stuff for others. Maybe if seniors were valued in society but they aren't.

  • @michaelchristian5089
    @michaelchristian5089 3 года назад +32

    Mary descending the grand stairway in Pickfair reminds me of the final scene in Sunset Boulevard. & silent screen queen Norma Desmond's fantasy comeback.

    • @vivienbailes7009
      @vivienbailes7009 3 года назад +6

      Yes, seeing this documentary of Mary Pickforfs life I immediately thought of the movie Sunset Boulevard staring William Holden, which now is also a classic movie. I wonder if the story/script writers took their inspiration from Mary Pickforfs life. Having said that while Mary Pickfords cinematic career was during my Grandmother's time ( I myself am getting old , 60 years old ). I have always been aware and known her name to be one of the most influential female actresses at the start of cinematic movies and beyond.

    • @johnlloydgriffith3842
      @johnlloydgriffith3842 3 года назад +2

      @@vivienbailes7009 my thoughts exactly!! your spot on.

    • @dondressel452
      @dondressel452 3 года назад +1

      What a great movie

    • @BabsLongfellow
      @BabsLongfellow 3 года назад +4

      Absolutely! I thought the same thing. Except she was more than an actress, she was a brilliant business woman. Hollywood will always be a"what have you done for me lately" town, . . . it's an ugly and shallow place.

    • @m.syauqiabdurahman2798
      @m.syauqiabdurahman2798 Год назад +1

      @@BabsLongfellow Yeah
      And it's sad that hollywood didn't giver her an enormous recognition . She is the one who built that glamorous , luxurious , and grand landscape of hollywood , she might be the inventor of modern screen acting , and she is a highly skilled businesswomen . What Eileen Whitefield say about Mary getting that Honorary Oscar just because she is a symbol of nostalgia is an insult is very true .

  • @laraoneal7284
    @laraoneal7284 3 года назад +15

    Had no idea she exposed child abuse. That is huge.

  • @dianekennedy7086
    @dianekennedy7086 3 года назад +12

    Wonderful biography - thanks so much for posting.

  • @AntiMasonic93
    @AntiMasonic93 3 года назад +6

    She was an icon. Extremely popular.

  • @spicey6646
    @spicey6646 5 лет назад +23

    LOL! That is so funny when that lady thinks she dropped her own drawers and they were Mary's! Classic.

  • @suzannethorndycraft5653
    @suzannethorndycraft5653 3 года назад +16

    Would have been more enjoyable with the music being a softer background. Missed the narration because of a ! use of loud music. When will producers ever learn the value of quieter backgrounds!!!

  • @imsocuteimsorich4952
    @imsocuteimsorich4952 3 года назад +13

    MARY WAS WAY AHEAD OF TIME IN 1900 SHE BECAME THE FIRS FEMALE PRODUCER AND ACTED IN HER MOVIES THINGS THAT WE SEE AS INNOCENT THEN WERE HORRIFIC IN THOSE DAYS BUT SHE WAS A WOMAN THAT WAS NOT GOING TO LET MEN CONTROL HER SHE FINALLY GOT THE RESPECT,SHE BECAME AN ICON AND TO THIS DAY IS NOT FORGOTTEN , GOOD ON YOU MARY, YOU MAY BE GONE BUT YOUR NOT FORGOTTEN,R,I,P,🌈🌈🌈✊✊👌👌👍👍🌹🐦🐦😘😘💟💟

  • @diatribe1194
    @diatribe1194 3 года назад +4

    ON BEHALF OF MY FAMILY YOU ONCE REACHED OUT TO HELP I THANK MARY PICKFORD...GRACIAS AMIGA.

  • @MTknitter22
    @MTknitter22 3 года назад +18

    It was sad how it ended for her.

    • @raptorfromthe6ix833
      @raptorfromthe6ix833 Год назад

      How come? She received an Oscar and was thanked for her involvement in the film industry in the. 70s

    • @acdragonrider
      @acdragonrider 7 месяцев назад +2

      @@raptorfromthe6ix833But not in the right way. Didn’t you even watch this documentary??!!!😅

    • @Hihoweryew
      @Hihoweryew 5 месяцев назад

      She was a millionaire ​@@acdragonrider

  • @wvanderwahl
    @wvanderwahl 3 года назад +12

    Fascinating star . I wonder what ever happened to Pickfair?
    I wish the audio were louder. The narrator sounds like she was whispering.

    • @theresapierce3934
      @theresapierce3934 3 года назад +3

      Pickfair was bought by a talentless bimbo, Pia Zadora who has literally destroyed the place.

    • @Missditabomb
      @Missditabomb 3 года назад +3

      @@theresapierce3934 Yes, it was demolished in 1990 by Pia and her husband. They kept the pool, some guest cottages, some of the living room, and that is it. (And the original gates to the home remained.) Zadora and her husband sold the home they built for $15 million. Pia and her husband said Pickfair was haunted by a woman who had an affair with Douglas Fairbanks and died there and that "strange, eerie, things were always happening" in the home, so that is why they razed it.

    • @bbrown333
      @bbrown333 3 года назад +1

      I could barely hear anything.

    • @billgreen1861
      @billgreen1861 3 года назад +5

      @@Missditabomb here is a bit of trivia:
      Pickfair was built for $75,000.00 back in the 1920s. When Zadora and husband, bought it for $15,000,000.00 their mortgage payment was...
      ...Wait for it, $75,000.00 a month in other words the original cost of building it, now isn't that amazing. And not only they destroyed the house they subdivided the grounds and sold it to "unknown" people. Making 'Pickfair' smaller and unpleasant to admire.
      Just saying!

    • @andrewthornhill7042
      @andrewthornhill7042 3 года назад +1

      @@Missditabomb I heard Zadora complained Pickfair was infested with mice or rats. A real shame the place was totalled.

  • @garylowery6216
    @garylowery6216 3 года назад +7

    I fell in love with Mary watching her films she was a buetiful Lady.We Miss You Mary.

  • @pjchj3599
    @pjchj3599 2 года назад +6

    She made hollywood with Chaplin and Douglas furbank
    The first queen of hollywood is her not bette davis or kathurine hepburn

  • @amycarmichael2748
    @amycarmichael2748 3 года назад +17

    I love Mary Pickford !!💞💞💞
    That’s Hollywood for ya, treats their stars like shit, even today still

  • @juliannehannes11
    @juliannehannes11 3 года назад +8

    You'd think Kate Winslet or Reese Witherspoon would have starred in a biopic of her in the 00s like Leo in Aviator

    • @ahyan6681
      @ahyan6681 3 года назад +2

      Kate Winslet would be so perfect as Mary, If I go to film industry I swear to make a film on Mary Pickford from 0 to 87 years old

    • @tameriajones593
      @tameriajones593 2 года назад

      No not exactly you would need a French actress to play her.

  • @relynshook9495
    @relynshook9495 3 года назад +13

    She was an amazing woman

  • @correioanacabral
    @correioanacabral 3 года назад +9

    That pretty lady has the most soothing voice 😍😍

  • @crazymotherdance7317
    @crazymotherdance7317 2 года назад +3

    I like silenr movies & Mary Pickford

  • @lisag18
    @lisag18 4 месяца назад +1

    The term "Hollywood Royalty " was created for her.
    Her life had great highs but sadness underneath.
    Great strength.

  • @theinvoluntarybeatboxer3766
    @theinvoluntarybeatboxer3766 2 года назад +3

    i just met her great nephew today, imma be honest i dont have a clue who she is but her great nephew is a cool guy

  • @SenorZorrozzz
    @SenorZorrozzz 3 года назад +20

    Doug always fooled around. He was like that until he died. He believed his own studio publicity.
    Doug used black shoe polish on his hair. Later, Lou Costello did the same thing. Doug wore dark makeup on his face all the time. That, with his white teeth and fine clothes, made him look glamorous to people. He was the template for the movie star looking male.

    • @annnee6818
      @annnee6818 Год назад

      Oh THAT'S why he looked like a leather handbag... thanks

  • @scotnick59
    @scotnick59 3 года назад +10

    I thought Mary's voice was actually below-par for the talkies: a bit cartoonish and affected: high pitched with no depth

  • @johnchipol7716
    @johnchipol7716 3 года назад +15

    The best silent actress ever

  • @JudgeJulieLit
    @JudgeJulieLit 3 года назад +7

    Had she (in a mode of despair at the arrival of more modern cinema and actors) destroyed her films on celluloid, that would have been an artistic and art history tragedy comparable to a burning of the Louvre or Dutch Masters at the onset of their nemeses, Arte Moderne.

  • @Lottie2002
    @Lottie2002 4 года назад +29

    Wow! Incredible story! Creepy how she got type cast playing little girls. I know it's common for actors to play younger but an 11 yr old?!

    • @michelleseager9782
      @michelleseager9782 3 года назад +7

      I think she was 5 ft, maybe. She was really petite, and could play it, who knows?

  • @almeggs3247
    @almeggs3247 3 года назад +11

    She was a beautiful true traditional Catholic actress!

  • @brandyyolidio4213
    @brandyyolidio4213 3 года назад +12

    I remember her as a little girl in the Charlie Chaplain movies that I saw years later. I remember her by that small mouth and pretty innocent face of hers.
    Drew Barrynore makes me think of her

    • @Dynamatrix2000
      @Dynamatrix2000 3 года назад +4

      Mary Pickford worked with Drew Barrymore's great uncle (Lionel Barrymore) and Grandfather (John Barrymore Sr.).

    • @sliceoflife4220
      @sliceoflife4220 Год назад +1

      The math doesnt add up she was only 3 years yonger then chaplin

  • @geraldinebowbia5176
    @geraldinebowbia5176 2 года назад +1

    Absolutely beautiful 🤩🙏❤️

  • @usmcgrunt3754
    @usmcgrunt3754 4 года назад +10

    Absolutely no doubt about her greatness, talent, fame and influence. But the FIRST true Hollywood star was a different Canadian: Florence Lawrence.

    • @LucyElHawari
      @LucyElHawari 3 года назад +5

      Poor Florence Lawrence who sadly commited suicide ingesting ant poison and cough syrup after years of failed attempts to resume her career, a string of personal losses and very poor health. Her grave remained unmarked until an angel aka Roddy Mcdowall paid for her memorial marker. Her sad fate always breaks my heart.

    • @m.syauqiabdurahman2798
      @m.syauqiabdurahman2798 2 года назад

      @@LucyElHawari yeah
      I just know her thru Hollywood Graveyard channel

    • @raptorfromthe6ix833
      @raptorfromthe6ix833 Год назад

      @@LucyElHawari :( that’s what Hollywood does to people it believes to be no longer useful it is as cutthroat as they say

    • @cattycorner8
      @cattycorner8 6 месяцев назад

      Yes !

  • @sarahleach9997
    @sarahleach9997 8 месяцев назад +2

    I took care of mary pickfords private secretary. Douglas fairbanks was crazy about her. She was also elizabeth taylors sunday school teacher.after that I started to love silent film actors.

  • @oobrocks
    @oobrocks 3 года назад +5

    Lillian Gish was just as talented and famous; she even co-stared in 1955's Night / Hunter!

    • @Bloodreign1
      @Bloodreign1 Год назад +3

      Gish and Pickford also happened to be good friends, and I believe it was Pickford who got Gish her first break.

  • @pawelsawicki7003
    @pawelsawicki7003 3 года назад +4

    She is adorable 🥰

  • @imsocuteimsorich4952
    @imsocuteimsorich4952 3 года назад +3

    THIS SONG WAS DEDICATED TO MARY, CALLED LET ME CALL U SWEET HEART,MY GRANNY ALWAYS SANG IT TO ME WHEN I WAS YOUNG,THERE WAS LOADS OF SONGS SANG ,BUT THE BEST ONE WAS IN 1931?,MARY WILL ALWAYS BE MY ICON,R,I,P,💙🐦🌈🌹😘🎥🎥🎬MRS SWEET 💜😘🎥🎬

  • @lillianmcgrew217
    @lillianmcgrew217 11 месяцев назад +3

    So sad 😔

  • @kevinhealey6540
    @kevinhealey6540 11 месяцев назад +2

    Mary Pickford wrote an excellent book called, "Why not try God?" that can be found on the internet.

  • @SenorZorrozzz
    @SenorZorrozzz 3 года назад +9

    I love the Mary films. She was a really special, skilled woman. However, the first movie star was Florence Lawrence; the first film actress whose name was used to promote her films! At Biograph Studios in 1908, she was paid a $25-per-week salary! Wow! Well that was probably like hundreds a week back then: good money!
    Florence was also directed by the celebrated pioneering filmmaker, D.W. Griffith!

    • @LucyElHawari
      @LucyElHawari 3 года назад

      You just took the words out of my mouth...

    • @johnchipol7716
      @johnchipol7716 3 года назад +1

      Roddy mcdowell paid for a grave to put floence which reads this is the 1st actress of movies

    • @ahyan6681
      @ahyan6681 3 года назад +2

      Yh but Mary was more famous

    • @Dynamatrix2000
      @Dynamatrix2000 3 года назад +2

      Pickford was making hundreds of thousands of dollars around the same time. Florence was making peanuts as an silent film actress.

    • @tameriajones593
      @tameriajones593 2 года назад

      Mary Pickford was lucky she was the best.

  • @mariacardenas4665
    @mariacardenas4665 3 года назад +4

    She Was Married To Douglas Fairbanks

  • @2degucitas
    @2degucitas Год назад +1

    This documentary resembles the other one so much. A british accent film expert (the other has Roddy McDowall) , old timey and jazz music, female presenter..... it's such a copy. But, still good.

  • @chucksellers8422
    @chucksellers8422 3 года назад +5

    i watched a program yesterday that said Mary Pickford would not be friends with Clara Bow as to not remind people she wasn't born rich. I would like her more if I didn't know that.

    • @JB-ox7ib
      @JB-ox7ib 3 года назад +2

      She was a business woman ultimately 😐

    • @ahyan6681
      @ahyan6681 3 года назад +2

      I love Mary and Clara but Mary shouldn't have done that

    • @melissacoelho8413
      @melissacoelho8413 2 года назад +2

      What? You would like it better if you didn’t know she was born poor and had to support her family from a very early age? Or you would like it if she pretended to be a rich child? Or that she would have been friends with Clara Bow anyway? Sorry a little confused by your statement. Not trying to cause a argument, I’m sincerely confused. Thank you.

  • @lavalleeemily
    @lavalleeemily 4 года назад +7

    She was a good actor

    • @markmower1746
      @markmower1746 4 года назад +4

      Actress, she’s a woman.

    • @Magnetron33
      @Magnetron33 3 года назад +4

      @@markmower1746 Female actresses are ocasionally refered to as actors. You are technically correct though!

  • @Missditabomb
    @Missditabomb 3 года назад +4

    Interesting!!

  • @amyjones8114
    @amyjones8114 Год назад +2

    That was depressing af.

  • @Myplop
    @Myplop 2 года назад +2

    That so called friend of hers had nothing but nasty things to say

  • @dondressel452
    @dondressel452 3 года назад +3

    10 dollars a day back then must have been a pretty decent sum

    • @princesskayla1400
      @princesskayla1400 3 года назад +2

      Yes it about 240 dollars in today money 2021.

    • @sophisticatedmm3632
      @sophisticatedmm3632 2 года назад

      @@princesskayla1400
      I look up different dollar amount in previous years vs today's $ as well

  • @sint0xicateme
    @sint0xicateme 5 лет назад +18

    41:55 that horse is literally starving!
    :(

  • @katieusbrownius
    @katieusbrownius 3 года назад +3

    Joan Crawford's first mother in law!

  • @birddog3130
    @birddog3130 3 года назад +3

    Reminds me of Marlo Thomas @ 3:53 minutes.

  • @jonathansmith3449
    @jonathansmith3449 3 года назад +2

    The name of this channel means ‘the green room’

  • @FG-bn3qq
    @FG-bn3qq Год назад +1

    where can I find the soundtrack for this

  • @tonyarceneaux286
    @tonyarceneaux286 3 года назад +4

    Her career suffered when the talking movies started right?🇨🇦.

  • @DaughterOfChrist1997
    @DaughterOfChrist1997 Год назад +1

    ❤❤❤❤❤

  • @rossmartenak5517
    @rossmartenak5517 Год назад +2

    Why did she change her birth name?

  • @johnhummer265
    @johnhummer265 5 месяцев назад

    Very sad biography of a very talented individual, whos abilities were subjugated by the passage of time n eras n personal tragedies....just as circumstances of the time made her a reknowned star so the changes of time, equally brought her down as fast as she rose.....But as a 1st in motion pictures she will always carry the persona she had for being the 1st.

  • @nelsonx5326
    @nelsonx5326 3 года назад +4

    She is pretty.

  • @newnormal1841
    @newnormal1841 3 года назад +4

    ❎. 100 yrs
    🤺💐

  • @philipcallicoat9947
    @philipcallicoat9947 3 года назад +3

    Obviously a true legend:
    ..(according to herself)

    • @melissacoelho8413
      @melissacoelho8413 2 года назад +1

      According to many not only in the industry, but many that enjoyed and enjoy to day the incredibly talented woman she was. Not to mention starting a studio she herself had to finance as her two partners were to busy indulging themselves. So at what point do you not see this? Just a question, as you, by your post seem to have a great deal of distain for her.

  • @Wsaetre
    @Wsaetre 3 года назад +7

    Why can't these documentaries find voice-over narrators who know how to narrate and speak naturally? This one, in particular wafts between Ophelia and any 20th century actress with an affected accent. It is nothing more than distracting. LOUSY.

  • @classiclife7204
    @classiclife7204 6 месяцев назад

    Soundtrack. GOOD. GRIEF. Shhhh! It's deafening; I literally can't hear the narrator. At one point late in the doc, a screaming saxophone passes gas all over the place. Why are there scores to programs like these? Are they worried I won't know what to feel?
    ANYway. Sorry. So about the doc. It's a good little one. There's a PBS "American Experience" one that's longer and covers a little more detail, but this one more or less gets it, plus it has Kevin Brownlow, who was (is?) the world's foremost expert on silent films. I also appreciate the scornful eye to that "tribute" Oscar which no one, apparently including Pickford, cared about in the slightest; it was found in a closet somewhere in Pickfair by Jerry Buss, the owner of the place after Mary died. (Buddy Rogers didn't even bother taking it with him when he hurriedly absconded before her body was cold.)
    I'm pleased with the focus on the late-period "My Best Girl", as it was Mary's Best Movie. You can see some of her earlier stuff here on RUclips. If you can deal with "The Little Princess", more power to you. Amazingly, a movie about a poor ugly girl who sacrificed her very life so that her social betters can be happy hasn't survived the good opinion of Time.
    And we really do need to consider that Pickford must have had a detestable personality, even when sober. Fairbanks couldn't get away from her fast enough after the Talkies, Rogers appears to have BOLTED Pickfair and everything about it immediately after Mary died, and she only had a few friends while living. It becomes quite clear whom Billy Wilder and Gloria Swanson was portraying in "Sunset Blvd", with the lonely, crazed person, practically housebound, spinning wheels forever in a rotting Beverly Hills mansion. (Hint: it wasn't Swanson.)

  • @ComeAlongKay
    @ComeAlongKay 2 года назад +1

    Okay this is clearly biased towards women a good bit, of course I guess everything is. Buster Keaton and Charlie Chaplin were also around then, and Chaplin sold out like Mickey Mouse at that time.

  • @nomdeplume7537
    @nomdeplume7537 2 года назад +2

    There's so much damn hyperbole, and pomposity. The pre-eminent... Most wealthy since Cleopatra ... I'm sure Queen Vicky might have had something to say about that. How about Catherine the Great ...

  • @KathyJean
    @KathyJean 3 года назад +2

    This narration is pretty bad.

  • @jannepetersen4660
    @jannepetersen4660 3 года назад

    That was one skinny horse......but Mary was the greatest of them all......

  • @ScratchthechalkBoard
    @ScratchthechalkBoard 3 года назад +3

    Mr Pickford lol

  • @marcoscastillojaen1888
    @marcoscastillojaen1888 3 года назад

    Aquella niña.

  • @bronxbearbud272
    @bronxbearbud272 3 года назад +2

    From what I've read, she and her husband were very disrespectful to Joan Crawford, feeling that she wasn't good enough to marry their son, or even come to dinner at Pickfair. Frankly, I would have a better time sharing a can of beans with Joan in some trash-strewn alley, and who can even name a Mary Pickford picture these days, let alone have a sincere desire to see it?

    • @maryjanelewis8651
      @maryjanelewis8651 3 года назад +6

      Joan Crawford? You must not know anything about how she treated her own children...

    • @laurenmcnally1980
      @laurenmcnally1980 3 года назад

      @@maryjanelewis8651 please tell me you're joking and that you really don't believe that trashy crap book that Christina Crawford wrote basically to use her mother's name once again to make millions. all because she was mad that her mom left her out of her will because she was a devious disgusting brat. Honestly look more into this story before you call somebody basically a child abuser. Joan Crawford never abuse her children even her two twin daughters have spoken publicly many many times to state that they were never abused and Christina is a liar who just wanted to make money off her mom's

    • @laurenmcnally1980
      @laurenmcnally1980 3 года назад

      Name. if she was really abused then why did she wait for her mother to die before she went public with her so-called story of abuse? Christina Crawford is a liar and a fraud and a disgusting human being. Miss Joan Crawford was a legend they just don't make them like Joan anymore

    • @ahyan6681
      @ahyan6681 3 года назад

      That's mostly caous she isnt remebered a lot sadly

    • @Bloodreign1
      @Bloodreign1 Год назад +1

      Crawford wasn't exactly the most friendliest of people, Mary on the other hand was a more kind and caring, and giving human being.

  • @kaydavis1156
    @kaydavis1156 3 года назад +2

    13:23

  • @amyclarke41
    @amyclarke41 3 года назад +1

    charlie Chaplin worked with her

  • @sarahleach9997
    @sarahleach9997 8 месяцев назад +1

    I don't think anybody wants to be Julia Roberts.

  • @princesskayla1400
    @princesskayla1400 3 года назад +1

    No. Lillian Gish was the first American sweetheart.

    • @ahyan6681
      @ahyan6681 3 года назад +1

      no

    • @Dynamatrix2000
      @Dynamatrix2000 3 года назад +4

      You need to do some research because that's simply not true. Pickford got Gish work in her films, then she became a star herself.

  • @panizv.7416
    @panizv.7416 5 лет назад +4

    5:13

  • @sailorforlifebestti3366
    @sailorforlifebestti3366 4 года назад +4

    she never had kids?

    • @hubertblairbonds2360
      @hubertblairbonds2360 4 года назад +9

      Her adopted daughter is in this film, and there was also an adopted son. But, never any children of her own.

    • @usportraits2429
      @usportraits2429 4 года назад +2

      Too bad. The public won't know the truth until they go public.

    • @leahmayes2417
      @leahmayes2417 4 года назад +8

      She’s my great, great, great Aunt.

    • @Lottie2002
      @Lottie2002 4 года назад +9

      I always wondered. I read somewhere the studio forced her to have an abortion when she was young and this prevented her ever being able to have a child

    • @yohei72
      @yohei72 4 года назад +9

      @@Lottie2002 Jesus, I'd never heard that.
      There's a lot of nostalgia for the "good old days" of the golden age Hollywood studios, but they were pretty evil when it came to what they did to their personnel in the quest for money.

  • @pmtspmts8441
    @pmtspmts8441 3 года назад

    This is not accurate. She had a son with Fairbanks who was married to Joan Crawford

    • @kimboydstonartanddesign
      @kimboydstonartanddesign 3 года назад +6

      The son was from Doug Sr. Previous wife , not Mary Picford.

    • @Dynamatrix2000
      @Dynamatrix2000 3 года назад

      They adopted 2 kids.

    • @Bloodreign1
      @Bloodreign1 Год назад

      Mary couldn't have kids, so the only 2 she had were both adopted.