Richard Attenborough Discusses Captial Punishment | The Dick Cavett Show
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- Опубликовано: 20 окт 2024
- Richard Attenborough discusses seeing rushes after filming a take and capital punishment in relationship to the real serial killer case in his film '10 Rillington Place'.
Date aired - April 28th 1971 - Richard Attenborough, Sir Ralph Richardson and Sir John Gielgud
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Dick Cavett has been nominated for eleven Emmy awards (the most recent in 2012 for the HBO special, Mel Brooks and Dick Cavett Together Again), and won three. Spanning five decades, Dick Cavett’s television career has defined excellence in the interview format. He started at ABC in 1968, and also enjoyed success on PBS, USA, and CNBC.
His most recent television successes were the September 2014 PBS special, Dick Cavett’s Watergate, followed April 2015 by Dick Cavett’s Vietnam. He has appeared in movies, tv specials, tv commercials, and several Broadway plays. He starred in an off-Broadway production ofHellman v. McCarthy in 2014 and reprised the role at Theatre 40 in LA February 2015.
Cavett has published four books beginning with Cavett (1974) and Eye on Cavett (1983), co-authored with Christopher Porterfield. His two recent books -- Talk Show: Confrontations, Pointed Commentary, and Off-Screen Secrets (2010) and Brief Encounters: Conversations, Magic moments, and Assorted Hijinks(October 2014) are both collections of his online opinion column, written for The New York Times since 2007. Additionally, he has written for The New Yorker, TV Guide, Vanity Fair, and elsewhere.
#thedickcavettshow #RichardAttenborough #JohnGielgud #RalphRichardson
Want to see more of Richard Attenborough on the Dick Cavett Show? Here he discusses his upcoming film project, later known as 'Young Winston', that focuses on the early life of Winston Churchill: ruclips.net/video/glLJE17Ov6k/видео.html
The Dick Cavett Show is very similar in style and production to our Michael Parkinson Show we had here in Britain from 1971-1982 and from 1998-2007, where the host sits in the middle with guests either side of the host, no desk, no stupid comedy routines. Just pure talk, which a talk show SHOULD be.
Please, pretty please, fix the spelling on the title. This "Captial" may take someone's eye out ^^
One of the best tv interviewers ever. His show was great.
Quality show with great actors. Brilliantly interviewed by an excellent interviewer. Richard Attenborough was a brilliant actor and excellent director. Greatly missed but not forgotten. Many thanks for uploading this.
Watch the shallowness of a talk show today & it lets you know how far we have fallen
3 of the old brigade of gentlemen, polite and well mannered....I am honoured to be British
why on earth would this get a thumbs down?
I wish we had the entire episode. Imagine three of the greatest British actors of the time on one stage. Extraordinary and Cavett was an insightful and charming interviewer.
EXCELLENT ACTOR / DIRECTOR/ PRODUCER
John Hammond, and I’m delighted to finally meet you in person Mr Cavett
*grabs his finger and shakes it*
This man made “Shadowlands” and I thank him immensely for it.
Never heard of it
Scotia.... Still makes me cry. Beautiful film. But they should of had somebody playing Tolkien in it.
Great film
The Dick Cavett Show is very similar in style and production to our Michael Parkinson Show we had here in Britain from 1971-1982 and from 1998-2007, where the host sits in the middle with guests either side of the host, no desk, no stupid comedy routines. Just pure talk, which a talk show SHOULD be.
Agreed 100percent
A really great actor...from an amazing family....for two of the three brothers to get Knighthoods is very unusual. More than their professional achievements it is their social conscience that made the Knighthoods so deserved...indeed, that is the pre requisite for the award....
Knighthood smighthood they’re just people and acting is awesome but it’s not life saving surgery or anything 🤷♂️
Riveting conversation! 10 Rillington Place is an excellent movie. Attenborough was an exemplary actor, director and producer. Long before Jurrasic Park, he had a thrilling career as an actor in many different roles.
To think this man eventually walked among animatronic and CG dinosaurs. How time flew
That movie is still haunting me. His depiction of the killer was too good.
Brilliant interview.
Some guy, somewhere, asked the question, "How come the Dick Cavett Show is not in syndication?" I would like an answer, please.
Cause us intellects watch RUclips...
Extraordinary lineup!… Where is the full episode?
More chilling than hitchcock 10 rillington place
A question for anyone that knows the answer. What's the source of the closing theme played at the end of each of the DC show? For this video it begins at 5:08 . I just like it and was wondering if it's available in a longer format. Thanks!
I see a little James Spader in him!
Four should be hanged for thumbing this down. Brilliant interview as usual by Mr. Cavett.
Tim roth played christie well
No nation can call itself civilized if it has a death penalty !
He was so creepy in 10 Rillington Place.
Totally agree- he played Christie brilliantly. He was brilliant as well as Pinkie in Brighton Rock. He had a great range as an actor and was an excellent director.
have nothing against the other celebs that were on this show but is this channel ever going to show the Dick Cavett shows where he interviews Jackie Gleason or Art Carney? How about any Honeymooners actors that were a part of the main cast?
Cool name
Intelligent, articulate, composed conversation...what gives?
Exactly!
I bet he “spared no expense” on that suit
The chance of the state executing an innocent person is repulsive enough to outlaw capital punishment.
That's why cavett says back in old England they used to hang children for pick pocketing and other stuff.
I had corperal punishment in school, age 12 1982, the cane right the arse
He is talking about CAPITAL punishment, Corporal punishment was a walk in the park.
They also had to dig up Timothy Evans from pentonville prison and bury him in a churchyard
What does 'captial' mean?
Very good
Horrible role, yet Richard played this vile killer
Incredibly, creepily v well
First 25... I'll take it...
Mrs Jurassic Park young
What's "Captial Punishment" ?🤔
the death penalty
@@anasahmadzai6480 No! "Captial punishment" is not the Death Penalty, CAPITAL PUNISHMENT Is the Death Penalty..🤔
@@ravensbrood3544 Are you mad? Or just obtuse?
@@johnking5174 Are you illiterate? Or you just don't realize that CAPITAL is not spelled "C-a-p-t-i-a-l. Refer to the original post for clarification. 🤔
@@ravensbrood3544 No I am not, and I thought you were being obtuse, I just noticed their mistake now. Sorry, a lot on my mind these days, makes me not notice a miss placed letter.
When colossi bestrode the Earth.
Dick Cavett > Johnny Carson
body language both crossed legs
The guarded female plausibly push because wolf intracellularly disarm mid a truculent skill. simple, loving base
It's not hanged, it can so be hung. Forming the past tense in English is usually created by adding the past participle "ed", however if its an irregular verb it may have two past tenses or the past tense can not be created by adding "ed". For example swim, becomes "swam", ( as swim is irregular) not swimmed. Hang, may be " hanged or hung. It has two past tenses. This is grammatically correct. The rule is simple. Americans use irregular verbs which to a Btit seem odd, but are not grammaticly wrong. A great example is the verb " dive". It's ' dived' in the UK. In the States they say ' dove'. Returning back to hung; people who argue aginst hung, offer the explanation that this only applies to things hung like meat and so forth. The suggestion is ' hung' incorporates a length of time, a long time. However appealing this sounds it has nothing to do with the simple rule used for irregular verbs in English. The BBC also follow this bizarre convention for the verb 'hang'. I have found nothing in my research as an English teacher to convince me otherwise.
The real issue is the aloof sanctimonious attitude of these English actors who invariably go to private schools and think because they speak " posh" or a refined version of English they have the monopoly on the truth. It's very subtle and quite pompous.
According to Miriam Webster, an American dictionary, it's "hanged" when referring to execution.
The wrong Attenborough is still with us...God bless Sir Dickie
What is that supposed to mean?.
@@richardharris9788 It means exactly what it says...
@@johnhalley974 It means that you are a nutcase.
Such a stupid thing to say
What sort of toxic, cynic must you be to dislike David Attenborough, basically an exclusive force for good who does no harm to anyone whatsoever