Samuel Beckett: Silence to Silence documentary (1991)
Ойын-сауық
The elusive author of Waiting for Godot cooperated in the production of this portrait, which traces Beckett’s artistic life through his prose, plays, and poetry. Billie Whitelaw, Jack McGowran, and Patrick Magee-Beckett’s great dramatic interpreters-appear in selected extracts from the plays; Beckett specialist David Warrilow narrates a variety of texts.
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Check out these GREAT Beckett books on Amazon! Samuel Beckett: A Biography: amzn.to/300Z0yt The Complete Dramatic Works of Samuel Beckett: amzn.to/2N3NK2B Damned to Fame: The Life of Samuel Beckett: amzn.to/2ZNb8XP Three Novels: Molloy, Malone Dies, The Unnamable: amzn.to/31532rh Join us on Patreon! www.patreon.com/ManufacturingIntellect Donate Crypto! commerce.coinbase.com/checkout/868d67d2-1628-44a8-b8dc-8f9616d62259 Share this video! Get Two Books FREE with a Free Audible Trial: amzn.to/313yfLe Checking out the affiliate links above helps me bring even more high quality videos by earning me a small commission! And if you have any suggestions for future content, make sure to subscribe on the Patreon page. Thank you for your support!
@michaelcollins7738
3 жыл бұрын
Wonderful voice reading from his works.
@ulisesriver4656
2 жыл бұрын
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2 жыл бұрын
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2 жыл бұрын
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2 жыл бұрын
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On late Beckett: 'The less there is to say, the better it is said. It is sumptuous minimalism.' Perfect..!
@kathleenmcgill5781
Жыл бұрын
❤️
I love those words at the beginning. "He has declined to celebrate or affirm anything in human life".
@kathleenmcgill5781
Жыл бұрын
❤️
One annoying mistake. Beckett was in the highly successfull 'Gloire' resistance group and they were betrayed by one of the most evil men imaginable. He was Father Robert Alesch who ran his parish and often gave bold anti-German sermons and cultivated a trusted place in the resistance. This human monster would serve mass by day and in the evenings sneak out to his sumptuous apartment with his two mistresses. He worked the whole time for the Gestapo who paid him a bonus for every extra name he gave them. Father Alesch would cultivate fatherly relationships with young people, draw them to the resistance and then betray them to the Nazis, getting so much per name. These were tortured and murdered. This is the man who betrayed Beckett and Suzanne and killed so many of his friends,. Alesch was captured in 1949 and shot by firing squad. HE is a human monster. You cannot understand Beckett without knowing the terror, the endless waiting the grief of betrayal of those years.
Beckett's relationship with his mother is brilliantly illustrated in Krapp's Last Tape as he relives her death, watching her bedroom shade pull down from the park across the street. How he held that ball in his hand and feeling it until his dying day. That's the phrase that made want to know everything this man wrote.
I Really Love Samuel Beckett and James Joyce. And these documentaries.
Q: What time is it? A:. Same as usual. Genius.
This Film about Samuel Beckett I find beautifully made. Sensitive voices with musical illustrations that make sense and just not a continuous background setting; the flute with its sad theme; the music by Schubert... And last but not least, the beautiful poetical English; like music to my ears.
@mushfiqshukurlu8424
5 жыл бұрын
How can I find the music in video between minutes 14:10 - 14:35?
@geoffreyroderick8349
5 жыл бұрын
@@mushfiqshukurlu8424 Hi- this isn't the exact song, but it's the correct artists/composer. You can search off of that...Schubert, Lieder - Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau & Gerald Moore. Cheers.
@lewreed1871
3 жыл бұрын
It takes an Irishman to produce English like that.
My overarching takeaway from Samuel Beckett is the futility of understanding, life's great booby prize. If one day we understand all the mysteries of the universe, so what? We will only have discovered that it all means nothing, that we have been pursuing a fool's errand. There is no meaning in an indifferent cosmos. Tis better just to enjoy the incredible richness that every moment of living offers than to chase a chimera.
@user-nb4ex5zk3w
5 ай бұрын
If there is understanding it is beyond verbal or rational or senses. It is sensed somehow and produces joy.
Beckett has a wonderful sense of humor. This makes him sound like a ghoul.
@Johnconno
3 жыл бұрын
Aye, that's true alright. It frightens people you see.
Sober, sumptuous, illuminating, Enough, not enough, all Beckett told.
For me, there's less than one minute to go before the end. The end is near. It is so close, but so far away. The end is far, far away. Faint in the distance is the end, etc. I will not bear another minute of Beckett. If I do, the end will be near.
@mickdevlin
2 жыл бұрын
Patrick? Lovely.
@johntuohy1867
2 жыл бұрын
Among the voices voiceless that throng your not so hiddeness.
oh nice one, i wasn't expecting that at the end, great stuff. Many thanks for the upload.
Thanks for sharing this video. I am interested on Samuel Beckett work and this video has helped a lot. You have a new suscriber
I told a friend of mine I had seen an excellent version of "Happy Days" on the television. She said "Ah yes! The Fonz!"
wonderful tribute!
Beautifully made Dream into melancholy.
magic and poetic!
Beautiful as a Schubert Art Song!
A joy to revisit
*"Jolly Times With Abject Depression"*
They jump over (unpublished at the time) Mercier et Camier as the key to Godot. The title characters disappear from the narrative every day for three-four hours out into the countryside. Beckett suddenly transferred them into Gogo and Didi out by their belovéd tree.
Related immediately to Beckett, felt the pain; suffering, chronic depression, a leaden fog-ridden and deserted psyche, disenchantment.
@dirtycelinefrenchman
Жыл бұрын
You’re missing the empathy, humour and formal rigour
@londoncalling151
Жыл бұрын
Have you tried being a Catholic?
"I'm assisting, helplessly, at the race toward the spiritual death of all Mankind. No gift on My behalf, no godsend, no recall, no chastisement could prevent this spontaneous capsizing, into Satan, of Humanity saved by Me." - Jesus to Maria Valtorta, 9 April 1944.
Thank you for this. I've been reading his Poems in English (the 1961 volume from Grove) and it's interesting to hear some of them quoted in these contexts. I first read Beckett's work, mostly his plays, when I was in college. That was 20 years ago and as I went on to explore other authors, I was kind of put off by Beckett's style. I just found it bogged down in apathy and self-loathing after a while. Re-reading his poems after so many years, my opinion has gone largely full-circle. It's interesting that when I first read him while in school, I found his work grotesquely funny. Now that I'm older, I usually feel sad.
He turns Schubert’s music into words...
Good documentary, despite the unnecessary horror-movie ghost-story style of reading from his works.
@roberthutchens7004
Жыл бұрын
The reader of his works got in the way of Beckett’s words. Way too self-conscious.
@henrymaguire2876
Жыл бұрын
Fuckin relaxing though
I just wanted to know if someone could tell me if there is a link to the "murphy" audiobook as read by the actor at the 23:19min. This actor´s name is unknown to me, but it seems to me that I would like to hear all of Beckett´s work read by him. If anyone has links that they could share please let me know
Gotta love the rostbif pronounciation: "He abandoned his thesis, to study daycart."
Un dramaturgo muy interesante que supo promocionarse muy bien.
"or to imagine that it ever gave a fart in its courderoys for any form of art whatsoever"
Beckett would boke at the slow, vocalic verse speaking voice
Beckett was born on Good Friday 13th April, 1906.
Which works are read inbetween the biographical narrations?
Nice
essential
❤
Cheries
Can someone recommend documentaries in a similar style? more visual and narrative based than full of talking heads/interviews? Thank you
This documentary’s footage whenever it was made shows more of that stereotypical but probably accurate dreary, sad, depressing imagery of Ireland, which seems to be just as depressing as any such place in the UK. Everything is wet, cold, grey, foggy, somber, extremely sad. On top of that people seem to have a phobia of any brighter color on their clothes. It is as if not just the individuals but the whole society is masochistically enjoying this self imposed suppression anything visually joyful.
@drbenway612
6 ай бұрын
I love that weather.
As I started listening to this, I don’t think I can take any more dispassionate realism. Was it a reaction to everything, to the richness of an affluent educated life?
The song played by the flute throughout is that a version of Das_Wandern_ist_des?
@christohr9957
4 жыл бұрын
Gonzalo Ivan Gil - Yes, it’s confirmed further down in the comments.
@JackAldisert
3 жыл бұрын
kzread.info/dash/bejne/ZGttqtmJd8-0Zrg.html
@thomasmollo3568
4 ай бұрын
Death and the Maiden (melody from)
@1:09:10 what is written on his novel prize, de destitution of the modern man....grief and silence
Patrick MaGee!
Schmalgausen
@laytiua2059
3 ай бұрын
наші
Beckett has become Godot
Well
does anyone know the music at 16:40 .?
@desmondcooper3618
4 жыл бұрын
Schubert Winterreise No. 24 Der Leiermann
@lukedevro
4 жыл бұрын
@@desmondcooper3618 legend,thank you.
Magee is (dare I say this) is an even better speaker of the words than Stephen Rea. And Rea is amazing.
Translating please???? Portuguêse 🥺🥺🥺🥺🥺🥺
I can't seem to find any conclusion???
@mandys1505
10 ай бұрын
just dismalness. total inhuman nightmare... thats what i got from it.
good photography anyway
Why the silence on Beckett driving Andre The Giant to school. Waiting For Andre...
Beckett tried to be CLEVERER THAN Existence Death Darkness Hope Humanity The Id The Ego Wrapping pointlessness around the Cornucopia of Life. 😨😨😨😨😨😨😨😨😨😨 Thank Godot He Failed! 👆👆👆👆👆👆👆👆👆👆
Traduction? 🥺🥺🥺🥺
Good gracious what a strenuous ordeal that was! Give me Walter Veith any day!
🫂🌎🫂sharing
A dirge
The Beckett hero is Michael Gambon.
How can I find the music in video between minutes 14:10 - 14:35?
@ManufacturingIntellect
5 жыл бұрын
It's an old German folk song titled, "Das Wandern ist des Müllers Lust".
@mushfiqshukurlu8424
5 жыл бұрын
Manufacturing Intellect Thank you!
@barbara13066
5 жыл бұрын
Try the schubert song cycle das shoene mullerein
@espressoschlurfendermochte3640
5 жыл бұрын
@@barbara13066 Die schöne Müllerin^^
The narration, affecting SB is nothing like SB.
This is a poet, or I should say the poet...
Ca me tue
The Narration is Painful!
All Beckett needed is to learn some Buddhism. It seems like for people with his outlook on life would benefit from it since Buddhism interprets his pessimist dark world view into something more pleasant.
@NoOne-tg9tk
8 ай бұрын
He's Zen actually.. Dialogue s in his plays are very Zen tales
@doellt4753
5 ай бұрын
“Then all as before again. So again and again. And patience till the one true end to time and grief and self and second self his own” (“Stirrings Still,” 1988). This evokes, at the end of a life of words, the word 'Zen' and what that entails. However, as the rebirth of the self is a key, perhaps 'the' key, fulcrum of Christianity, nothing's definitive. Indeed, and additionally, if we believe we here learning about 'a thing' - i.e. something neither illusory or compromised by a relationship with language, it would appear that it's singularity (merely one aspect of its 'thingness') would exclude any naunced Thervada experience. Strange how words lack charisma in the final analysis.
🙈🙉🙊😷🤡
photography good, god. text blah.
Is there really any need for the documentary narrator to speak so slowly and in such creepy way
this was by far thw most dismal thing i have ever encountered...i suppose, the outer edge of what is human
@Andrew98689
16 күн бұрын
Hi 👋
Seems to me his great epiphany was simply to write about the little people just like Joyce. Poor little rich boy:)
@cpt.hatemonger1950
4 жыл бұрын
rayturnertile Okay boomer.
The recitations are awful.Beckett loved words, no need for prosodic flourishes
Not exactly an uplifting writer. This makes it even worse.