Colin Firth's Celebratory Dinner in Town :) /''Celebration'' (2007)
One-act, shocking, dark play by British playwright Harold Pinter, full of sarcasm and satire, about three couples dining in the most expensive restaurant in town. TV play with Penelope Wilton, Colin Firth, Michael Gambon, Janie Dee, James Fox (2007).
Пікірлер: 103
This plays like the greatest actors’ challenge to not break character EVER.!
There is no way I could have watched this in the movies, I would have been laughing to hard.
@zeffiraananas3999
2 жыл бұрын
oh, Kevin!, you most definitely could have … and had company. Why insist on all being silent in the cinema… if you ( they ) demand silence, watch the thing at home.
@cowboynyc
2 жыл бұрын
ABSOLUTELY! In the theater, I would be laughing so hard that I would have been begging them to stop--"Please, please, stop, I can't breathe, let me breathe!" But it was KZread, so I could hit "stop." The only other similar experience would have been the parody of "Les Miz" in "Forbidden Broadway." It was right before the intermission and I couldn't stop laughing, at least halfway through the 15-minute pause. My ex-wife thought she might have to throw a pitcher of cold water on me to make me stop.
Brilliant, wonderful, great... Each second. Thank you.
This reminds me of an interview with Eric Clapton where he said that back in the 60s he and his mates used to laugh their heads off at Pinter's plays.
@forgive7449
3 жыл бұрын
....do you mind if i interject but my grandfather was the drummer with eric clapton and.....
I never fell out of love with colin firth since i was a out 12
Ya know.... the only person on Earth who can't fully appreciate the unbelievable gorgeousness of Firth, is Firth himself. For that I pity him, he's really missing out.
@livl5168
3 жыл бұрын
At least he can admire Hugh grant
@weedygarden
3 жыл бұрын
@@livl5168 LOL!
@Sapharone
3 күн бұрын
@@livl5168😂
Love Colin Firth.... such a great actor!
Absolutely brilliant .I'm just enjoying watching a wonderful dvd box set of Pinter plays called Pinter at the BBC and it jogged my memory of this play .Thanks for uploading this one.
FANTASTIC, I HADE THE GREATEST TIME LAUGHING ALONG WITH ALL THE SARCASM
@forgive7449
3 жыл бұрын
"....you're a prick...." 😃
@tomkent4656
Жыл бұрын
@@forgive7449 Prig, I think.
This was absolutely brilliant 😂
This is the funniest play I've ever read, so I had to watch it :)
Wonderful in every way, hilarious and outrageous and crazy and totally human.
This is right up there with my very favourite Pinter and it's lovely to see it again. Thank you.
@cowboynyc
2 жыл бұрын
I'm an American, but Harold Pinter always made perfect sense to me. I'm from the South, so I always "got" Tennessee Williams. I respected and admired Arthur Miller, but I didn't "get" him until I'd lived in New York for ten years. (Funny enough, I'm from Texas, but reading a Sam Shepard play is always bewildering to me--then when I see it onstage, I'm "Oh, THAT'S what it's about.")
How clever and hilarious. British writers and actors are the best. Find it difficult to watch anything else
@serenityinside1
2 жыл бұрын
They are ! 🇬🇧🇬🇧
Wow! What a great time I am having right now. Thank you. I go on...
Superb play. What a cast!
Love Colin Firth.... such a great actor
@forgive7449
3 жыл бұрын
".....do you mind if I interject but i thought you might be interested to know that my grandfather knew Colin Firth when he was a nipper and...."
Thank you so much for this piece of work! Truly!
@ColinTheFirth
5 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much!
@cowboynyc
2 жыл бұрын
@@ColinTheFirth Mr. Firth, you were terrific, but I've been in love with Penelope Wilton ever since she played Vivie to Coral Browne's Mrs. Warren, and I always want to see her do more.
That was very good. Lovely to have been able to see it here. Here with all of you. Cheers
Colin with is Hampshire accent. This is how he talked growing up. Love it.
Wonderful cast and performance.
Thank you so much for post this tv show with great actors and particularly Colin Firth, i wait for this for a long long time !!!! :-)
@ColinTheFirth
6 жыл бұрын
Thank you, you are very welcome!
thanks for uploading!!
@ColinTheFirth
5 жыл бұрын
You are very welcome.
"In that respect he was like Jesus Christ" Lol! Fkin brilliant.
@voxpopuval
4 ай бұрын
Out LOUD!
Oh my gosh, this is hilarious 😂
I believe in ya Colin. Running out for some filing cabinets...... brb...
Show me any film with Colin Firth in it, and I will enjoy it. I love Colin Firth, the actor.
@weedygarden
3 жыл бұрын
Me, too. In fact, I am on a quest to see all of his movies.
@weedygarden
3 жыл бұрын
From what I can tell, he is a wonderful human being as well.
@jarisalonen7788
10 ай бұрын
No no nou. You know! Jeremy Irons is the Greatest. As such.
@jarisalonen7788
10 ай бұрын
...more than drippings of mi nose
@iloveyoufromthedepthofmyheart
9 ай бұрын
@@weedygarden That is exactly what gets me! I can sense that too, he is such a sweetheart, such a gent.
Michael Gambon is spellbinding: perfect in Pinter as he was in Beckett. RIP Great ensemble acting, like a string quartet.
Colin Firth is excellent
What a peculiar dramatic trifle.
Pinter on fire. Pinter in flames. Pinter went out with a bang!
@forgive7449
3 жыл бұрын
....may i interject but my grandfather knew harold pinter and...
@alllowercase6277
3 жыл бұрын
@@forgive7449 ha..cool...
That's grat love this program grat thanks for that 👍 😀
The black actress is so pretty
@lawsonj39
3 жыл бұрын
Her enunciation reminds me of Diana Rigg.
@tooleyheadbang4239
3 жыл бұрын
@@lawsonj39 Very much so.
@cowboynyc
2 жыл бұрын
Miss Okunedo played Cleopatra to Ralph Fiennes' Antony later.
@nicholasalexander4743
11 ай бұрын
@@cowboynyc Is that acceptable?
They all sound like Michael Caine. :)
Masterpiece ✨✨✨
What a quaint little restaurant where its the waiters that give customers the tip.
Colina very funny in this (and in everything else)
Best ever
This production always makes me throw up laughing.
Gawd, Pinter’s hilarious
@voxpopuval
4 ай бұрын
Hilarious with saber!
Colin sounds like Michael Caine .
Gorgeous
Gambon channeling Spica here
What is the meaning of "I've got one under the table" at 4.12m?
This is how they should have done the Poseidon Adventure - except nobody would get rescued.
🎉🎉🎉
Dylan Thomas knew my father. My father knew Dylan Thomas.
Pinter at his best.
Sexy Beast came out a year later.
Gambon upstaged nearly everyone except Rea's insane waiter 🤣 cant say I was impressed by Firth at all🤔
What on earth are you people talking about? I have absolutely NO clue!
@annieh.8175
5 жыл бұрын
@K Sjodin Thanks - well what do I know all tucked away in California besides that I am absolutely crazy about Colin!!!
@anonymouspeacefulperson6199
4 жыл бұрын
ANNIE H. Is that what you do talking dirty to your husband Mark Darcy ? I have never thought about seduction of a man like that???? Too naive!!!!! Julia Mackenzie took on the role of Michaels mother, Grace Gibbons. Looks like a trip to Miss Saigon with Lucy Moore and Tom lol Colin’s conversation looks like a trip to Les Miserable when we went on a Virgin deal up to the west end for our anniversary with Mark Antony Adam Leah Su! 😂 🎭 the guy at the end, Jackson Colin looks like Ritchie Lionel pasha in 1991!
@annieh.8175
4 жыл бұрын
Yes, WHAT on earth are you people talking about? I never saw Colin’s ‘Celebratory Dinner in Town’ or remarked on it!
@cowboynyc
2 жыл бұрын
Well, darling, some people "get" Harold Pinter, some people "get" Tennessee Williams, some people "get" Arthur Miller, some people "get" Sam Shepard--and some people don't.
@tomkent4656
Жыл бұрын
In Vino Veritas.
Eck, this is a lot of drunken banter. Colin Firth looks beautifully colorless and his wife suitably tarty. The waiter is just about to say something meaningful but like the boat it slips away
@tooleyheadbang4239
3 жыл бұрын
That's Pinter summed-up to a 'T'.
@cowboynyc
2 жыл бұрын
@@tooleyheadbang4239 Well, you can both just BE THAT WAY.
@Victoria-gq8gt
8 ай бұрын
Agreed.
Overthetop
@forgive7449
3 жыл бұрын
you loved every minute 😉
Why does Colin always look so grumpy in movies? 😂😂
す
Interesting, Pinter always has one character who needs mental help.
Jesus Christ! Why do so many top actors go along with Pinter's tedious gobbledegook?
@cowboynyc
2 жыл бұрын
Because, darling, when they say Pinter's words, the audience laughs so hard they fall on the floor. In a real theater surrounded by a real audience, you might understand.
@neilinely
11 ай бұрын
Perhaps because they understand it and you don't?
Lots of profanity, vulgar shock statements and wildly implausible interactions and revelations. And nothing meaningful. Transparently straining to be clever (as is every appearing character), but it's far far from that. It's irritating, passe and boring. Reminds me of Guy Ritchie's dated faux East Ender verbiage. Cringe.
A masterpiece.
@susanbinzer3395
Жыл бұрын
I don't know pinter much and have no desire to, after this waste of my time. I'm reading all the praise here but would love if someone could xplain what's so great Abt this play?!
@charlieprice3881
Жыл бұрын
@@susanbinzer3395 Lots of people don't get Pinter, it's understandable, his way of making drama is disorientating and strange. Personally I have a soft spot for the weird, irreal, and uncanny. This play is summative of Pinter's achievement in the theatre, it's dark, it's very funny, the dialogue often contains a deliberate mix of menace, irrelevance, verbosity, surrealism, and false bon homie. It's about people out at a resteraunt, he's clearly interested in a space which concentrates men and women's relationships, and brings gender and sexuality into sharper relief (a lot of people there are going to go home and have sex after all) but the play also explores Pinter's long established notion that characters speak to uphold or guard their status within a room, while conflicts simmer underneath. Pinter is expert at threading mistreatment and betrayal into a supposed ordinary, as comic as it is menacing. This is his last play, it is itself a celebration, and a swan song, of one who believed that the essence and the flame of life is beautiful but that human beings so often betray its spirit. This is a play about how cracks show in relationships, it allows its audience to experience what arrogance, falsehood, and nastiness, feel like when they are utilised, particularly by men, there is a certain keen almost Hitchcokian sense of awe and jealousy at the powers of female sexuality. Pinter always defies analysis, it is too easy to project things onto him that are not there. He would say it's a play about people at a resteraunt, two old couples celebrating a wedding anniversary, a younger couple at their own table, they all meet right at the end, all the while they are served by three waiters. What transpires between them, what possibly can transpire between them, but the stuff of life: humour, love, lust, disappointment, anger, betrayal, sadness, joy. This play is nutritious with vitality, and its ending never fails to move me, the waiter who is both a part of life and yet somehow hopelessly removed from it (a common kind of Pinteresque character). I'll never forget when I saw it at the theatre, the Pinter Theatre Festival of One Act Plays. My advice is to try and enjoy the oddness, try and find the noise human beings make funny, their fixations and idiosyncrasies, M. Esslin is very good on this in Theatre of the Absurd, language is Pinter's way of holding the mirror up to nature, his English audience recognise the idiomatic and surreal use of language in an everyday way and feel forced to confront what they are, as his characters act. I recommend The Birthday Party, The Hothouse, A Slight Ache, and Betrayal (this last one is in particular a good start). Some of the writing in No Man's Land is sublime but that's a more difficult play I think.
@susanbinzer3395
Жыл бұрын
@@charlieprice3881 thx so much 4 taking the time! I'm gonna have to read ur notes several times to comprehend but trust me I will. Have already watched play twice not sure I ve patience for many more viewings.