Jeremy☆Brett An Ideal Husband 1969 (Eng.Sub) 6/6
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- Опубликовано: 1 июн 2011
- Wonderful and unforgettable interpretation of the great Jeremy Brett television for the work of Oscar Wilde.
Arthur is a wealthy man who is proudly lazy and uses his knowledge and wit for no profitable purpose, other than verbally sparring with Mabel Chiltern, Sir Robert's sister and a woman of no small beauty and charm. Robert is a member of Parliament who is well-known for his firmly held principles and his devotion to his loving wife, Lady Gertrude. When a proposal is placed before Parliament to build a British canal through Argentina, Robert makes it clear he regards the project as a huge mistake and will speak out against it. However, one Laura Cheveley soon arrives on the scene, telling Robert it is in his best interest to support the canal plan -- and if he does not, Laura has incriminating information that could ruin his career in politics.
Margaret Leighton ... Mrs. Cheveley
Keith Michell ... Sir Robert Chiltern
Jeremy Brett ... Vizconde Goering
Dinah Sheridan ... Lady Chiltern
Susan Hampshire ... Mabel Chiltern
Charles Carson ... El conde de Caversham
Zena Dare ... Señora Markby
Magda Miller ... Señora Basildon
Penélope Lee ... La Sra. Marchmont
Michel Fauré ... Vizconde de NANJAC
Erik Chitty ... Phipps
Raymond Graham ... Mason - Кино
Jeremy Brett light up the screen whenever he appeared. RIP Sherlock.
Oscar Wilde & Jeremy Brett is a perfect combination!
Mabel and Arthur are both mad as hatters and perfectly matched
I am one of Jeremy Brett most ardent fans I come from the United States from North Carolina. I just now for the first time saw my Fair Lady and all I can say is for my most favorite talented actor that when he was a young man he was absolutely gorgeous and beautiful and talented. He was very young when he played Freddy in my Fair Lady, but I have to tell you he was just beautiful then as a Young Man as he was when he was playing Sherlock Holmes. To me anyway. He was a wonderful actor he was also talented in the music area and I only wish to God I had seen him in public in person.I have written comments after a lot of his Sherlock Holmes movies, after Rebecca, and I think he was wonderful if anybody that knew him personally or that worked with him ever reads this I just think you was wonderful and I want to see every single thing he's ever done and I'm getting their slow but sure. You folks probably think I'm crazy but I have been smitten with that man.
I have heard all the rumors, all the stories, and I don't care about any of them. He was a wonderful actor one of Britain's greatest and I will always enjoy anything and everything he's ever done. Thank you for letting me run my mouth like this I just had to say it.
It's good to know that in these
most difficult times there are still
things that bind our two countries
together . We go back a long way !
Believe me, we understand.
I am a fan myself of this incredible man. And I agree with everything you say. (Btw love from Italy). But there is one thing which I cannot find anywhere and that is the documentary he did (or something of the sort) where he shows Audrey Hepburn sing "wouldn't it be luverly" herself. I've been going mad trying to find it whole because I can only find bits and pieces of it. If you have any idea as to where it is I can find it, I would be eternally grateful❤
@@ludovicafanelli1790 ruclips.net/video/yGPXvoxzYWA/видео.html
I very much enjoyed this, but what’s not to love about watching an Oscar Wilde play. It’s great to see Jeremy Brett in something else than his masterful portrayal of Sherlock Holmes and his limited role in _My Fair Lady_ .
he was in many other different things.
He's my favorite actor!
Jeremy Brett was so handsome when he was young.
...AND UNTIL HE DIED.
Yes, indeed he was. I so sad he has passed
What an actor!!
He was stunning and I heard a very good human being.
I cannot praise this enough! such a delight to watch again
Very nice intrigue and brillant interpretation of Jeremy Brett. Many thanks for sharing.
thank you for uploaded this. wonderful story and of course jermemy is wonderful to watch as well :D
0:12 LOL!!! My favorite part.
To love a person; flaws and all and at the same time be truthful to that person. its what a marriage should be built upon. Oh well. I still have a number of yrs to look for the right one. in th meantime, il b gorgeous and love myself as lord goring did. lol.
Thanks for posting this up...
Thank your for uploading! You saved my life (& marriage)!
When as charcters we fall, only love will provide us with a soft landing.
I had no idea what was going to happen, and I was on pins and needles the whole time!! Such a fun play! :)
Too bad that this version truncates the additional drama in the script. Chiltern receives an offer of a Cabinet post, and feels that he must turn it down because he fears that Gertrude would cease to love him. Lord Goring advises Lady Chiltern to not insist on his refusing the appointment, because he feels that this would kill Robert's love for her, and "do the wrong to him that Mrs. Cheveley tried to do and failed". She takes Goring's advice and tears up the refusal letter that her husband has drafted. Then Lord Goring asks for Mabel's hand in marriage and Robert refuses. The night before Lord Goring referred to the woman in his drawing room as a stainless spotless paragon of virtue, imagining incorrectly that his visitor is Gertrude Chiltern (virtue personified) rather than Mrs. Cheveley, (boo - hiss) who was in fact listening at the keyhole. Robert Chiltern incorrectly concludes that Goring is still in love or at least infatuated with Mrs. Cheveley and that this remnant of an earlier relationship would be an insuperable barrier to a happy marriage with Mabel. As a gentleman, Lord Goring cannot reveal Mrs. Chiltern's plan to come and confer with him. However, Gertrude Chiltern quickly tells her husband that she had written to Lord Goring and that the letter Robert thought was addressed to him had actually been addressed to Goring. She now writes her husband's name at the top as an expression of her love and trust of him. Lord Goring - presumably jokingly - asks for his letter back. Robert Chiltern says that he may marry Mabel instead. Lord Cavesham and Mabel enter from the conservatory and Lord Goring kisses her publicly - precipitating congratulations from his father and the Chilterns, and an affirmation of love between Robert and Gertrude. It is a rich and balanced conclusion that requires Gertrude to take a risk as serious as her husband's. This version is lovely in spite of what it leaves out.
Most amusing. I enjoyed this.
I am so glad I have found your channel. Thanks RUclips, thanks to you!
There is a remake 1999 or so, but this one has JB!
the remake doesn't come close to this version!
oh this is great
who disliked this?... jeez
5stars. These type is age less
Loved it and enjoyed it throughly.
this was a very good adaptation til very near the end. so its a pity they removed the original ending of the play. this shows that, nowadays, rigid puritan/'politically correct' public morality ( now widespread in modern west ) cannot be attacked, and tolerance of pragmatic semi corrupt reality advocated, even in great art, as this play originally did .
sitting nut I think the point was more to shorten the ending do it would fit in a single hour. The play runs almost two hours otherwise.
All the same, I don't think it was the right way to shorten it. Perhaps lines could have been cut elsewhere. As it is, it completely changes Wilde's intent for the resolution of the play. Whether or not we think Wilde was right to have Chiltern "get away with it" and continue in public life, is doubtless a subject for debate. But surely one ought not to impose an ending different from the one Wilde wrote?
@@DavidBoycePiano The original ending made the whole point of the play, as I see it
@@pojamapeopleluvUA Yes, I agree. The journey was OK, but they changed the destination....
@@DavidBoycePiano Right. The 1999 movie was not my favorite cast (everyone was trying too hard for the snappy banter that eludes that generation ime), but they at least made it a point to make THE POINT. You said other lines cd have been dropped so the end made it in but...producers can be dumb.lol
My favorite Oscar Wilde
Hooray!
Well, the play is longer than the film. They cut out the whole part about Lord Goring's talking to Gertrude about convincing Robert to change his mind about his decision not to take the post. And lady Chiltern had to come out and say that the note was written to Lord Goring. I wonder why they skipped this part
Susan Hampshire got to act with two of the most handsome Brits; Jeremy Brett snd Cliff Richard.
Reminds me of "The Importance of Being Earnest". Y
❤❤💖💖👍
What has the first part gone?
ruclips.net/video/5XbNkmk9_ko/видео.html
This alternate ending for the Chilterns is weak. They should have taken the time to do the original.
Susan Hampshire's so gorgeous! I wish my future GF has such a beautiful voice!
Anyone else note that when Jeremy said Ass that it almost sounded like an American pronunciation rather than British?
TenderHeartSarah In British English there are two ways to pronounce 'ass' - there's 'ass', which does sound like the American pronunciation, and which means 'donkey' (essentially, stubborn/stupid/thick as two short planks...etc :P). That's the way that Jeremy uses it here - it's a little scandalous to say in front of a lady, but not half as appalling as the other meaning would have been! If he had meant 'backside', then he would have pronounced it 'arse', which is the one that sounds different from the American pronunciation.
Very good