The True Story That Inspired Mary Poppins | Absolute History

In 1934, Pamela Travers created the ‘practically perfect’ woman in Mary Poppins who bought order into the chaos of people’s homes. Decades later, the magical English nanny is still adored by children and parents alike.
Featuring interviews with Tom Hanks and Emma Thompson, The Real Mary Poppins reveals the fascinating story of her creator and the truth that lies behind the enthralling fictions. The documentary draws on an extensive archive, interviews and clips from the original Mary Poppins movie and 2013’s Saving Mr Banks, which features Emma Thompson as Pamela Travers, to tell the real story of a complex woman with many contradictions.
She could be vain, bossy, and fiercely independent. In short, she was Mary Poppins. And like her creation, Pamela saw - and gave others the ability to see - the magical in the commonplace, the extraordinary in the everyday.
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Пікірлер: 1 400

  • @6teezkid
    @6teezkid3 жыл бұрын

    Her father could have never known she'd be great friends with those he taught her about. Just amazing.

  • @gristlevonraben
    @gristlevonraben3 жыл бұрын

    Magic is not always the desire for power, sometimes it is the desire for good things in a bad world that requires more than human power to change.

  • @karencawthorn3173

    @karencawthorn3173

    3 жыл бұрын

    "Do no harm". 🙏❤

  • @mamiemonrovia7654

    @mamiemonrovia7654

    3 жыл бұрын

    2 thumbs up! well said.

  • @nerrissarichards

    @nerrissarichards

    3 жыл бұрын

    I like your statement, but also, isn’t that why we pray?!

  • @annacarter6559

    @annacarter6559

    3 жыл бұрын

    Unfortunately such a change needs power

  • @garycarpenter2980

    @garycarpenter2980

    2 жыл бұрын

    Magic is imagination to have power and a desire to have something in life plus it can give you things that you want Take Lex Luthor for instance,he wanted the power to take over the world and Superman always thwarted him from that,he wanted thing's for himself and to rule the world but Mary had power but she wanted to rule children but she wasn't evil or that dominate

  • @jayfielding1333
    @jayfielding13333 жыл бұрын

    I live on the same street as the bank building where Pamela Travers was born in, Maryborough, in Queensland. It's now an incredible museum dedicated to her and to storytelling - well worth the visit.

  • @ayliea3974
    @ayliea39743 жыл бұрын

    When I was a young child, like most young children I was trying to figure out what I wanted to be when I grew up. One dreamy, optimistic day I ran into the kitchen and proclaimed to my mom that I was going to be President when I grew up. I wanted to be helpful and that seemed like a powerful way to do it. My mother looked at me with a kind of tender pity and said, "Oh no sweetie, girls can't be the President. Girls can be nurses, teachers, secretaries or mommies. But the best thing to be is a mommy. " While certainly, being a mommy was on my to-do list, I also realized a lot of what it entailed and I saw much of it was drudgery without much appreciation. And I wasn't thrilled about the other options either. I wanted to do something that gave me more autonomy, power and allowed for fun and creativity. But maybe women couldn't have power or autonomy, I thought. But I supposed that some fun and creativity would make up for the lack of. So next I excitedly told my mom my new plan was that I wanted to be Lucy Ricardo when I grew up. Now there was a mom who knew how to have fun while being stuck in a small apartment! Well this idea was not just met with disapproval but a look of horror on my mother's face. Sadly, as I wandered in the nearby woods, an idea came to me that was inspirational. When I grew up I'd be Mary Poppins! This time I shared my intention with no one. Forty some years later, as a teacher of special needs children, I had a job assignment to provide individual education to children who were homebound. Then one day, as I carried my teacher's tote of lessons up the stairs to an student's house to teach that day's lesson, it occurred to me. I had become a kind Mary Poppins! Moral to this story: the best thing for anyone is be is true to themselves.

  • @shanchan8247

    @shanchan8247

    3 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for sharing! I've learned over the years to be careful who I share my dreams and goals with, not necessarily because of negative intentions but because many people have a hard time seeing past limitations. Being true and honest with yourself is the best way to be!

  • @jasperhorace7147

    @jasperhorace7147

    3 жыл бұрын

    @Ozymandias Nullifidian It depends where they live. So far it has proved an impossibility if they live in the USA.

  • @dominiquedoeslife

    @dominiquedoeslife

    3 жыл бұрын

    What a lovely story

  • @dominiquedoeslife

    @dominiquedoeslife

    3 жыл бұрын

    Shanchan True. Sometimes people have trouble seeing past their own limitations in considering what dreams others can accomplish.

  • @dominiquedoeslife

    @dominiquedoeslife

    3 жыл бұрын

    Ozymandias Nullifidian Hopefully not

  • @celticphoenix2579
    @celticphoenix25793 жыл бұрын

    Bowel issues could have been IBS. Pleurisy could have been asthma. Depression is depression. Saying someone with invisible conditions is a hypochondriac is mean spirited and unkind.

  • @linnymaemullins3319

    @linnymaemullins3319

    3 жыл бұрын

    And pler

  • @linnymaemullins3319

    @linnymaemullins3319

    3 жыл бұрын

    Sounds kinda like an autoimmune disease to me🤔

  • @celticphoenix2579

    @celticphoenix2579

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@linnymaemullins3319 it often forms part of an autoimmune condition, but not always.

  • @leelahollandnutritionistna6457

    @leelahollandnutritionistna6457

    3 жыл бұрын

    Digestive issues always affect mood.

  • @ryanblack3285

    @ryanblack3285

    3 жыл бұрын

    I've had pleurisy and it's extremely painful. Usually coinsides with pneumonia. It's fluid outside the lung where pneumonia is in the lung. I had both. Scary and painful! I'd be dead if it wasn't for modern medicine probably. I lost 8 pints of blood or 2/3 of my body's blood.

  • @1991LMR
    @1991LMR3 жыл бұрын

    I must have seen the movie over 1000 times as a child. I could recite it word for word. Mary Poppins has a special place in my heart ♥️

  • @pamelaadam9207
    @pamelaadam92073 жыл бұрын

    I wrote an essay in 5th year (the year before your final year and then university) at school on how the book was really about The parents. My English teacher disagreed. decades on I feel vindicated

  • @KatilinaWRaven
    @KatilinaWRaven4 жыл бұрын

    I had no idea until now that the Mary Poppins books my grandmother had in her library were originals. 💝 Thank you for making this.

  • @dross24MA

    @dross24MA

    3 жыл бұрын

    What a joy to have, as *real books* become more and more endangered! I do hope you all read them, kept them, re-read them and are passing them along as family heirlooms.

  • @SmilerORocker

    @SmilerORocker

    2 жыл бұрын

    Yeah I also hope you still have them in the family. I get called a hoarder in the family,.. but I call it,. keeper of the antiquities. Old books are so special

  • @frankboogaard88

    @frankboogaard88

    2 жыл бұрын

    Yeah, fake always wins ;)

  • @ashleelarsen5002

    @ashleelarsen5002

    2 жыл бұрын

    Damn, hold on to them, or give them to your little girl!!

  • @ashleelarsen5002

    @ashleelarsen5002

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@frankboogaard88 You watch a lot of porn, don't you?

  • @ItsJustLisa
    @ItsJustLisa3 жыл бұрын

    I like that you put these TV documentaries on KZread for those of us that didn’t have access to their original airing, but please include the credits and dates. In some cases, the date of release gives a real context to how current and accurate the information is.

  • @gigiis526

    @gigiis526

    3 жыл бұрын

    You could probably google for the info you are looking for. Be thankful for what is there and do the rest for yourself.

  • @rudolfsylvia7927

    @rudolfsylvia7927

    3 жыл бұрын

    Just Lisa )ik,

  • @gibbs9492

    @gibbs9492

    3 жыл бұрын

    You can tell this is real information just look on the edits and the people being interviewed. Stupid........

  • @shizukazenTAKAISHI

    @shizukazenTAKAISHI

    3 жыл бұрын

    ​@@gibbs9492 I don't think OP was asking whether this was real or not, I believe she was asking for the timeline. For example, it was aired in March 2015 or in the 1980s. That sort of thing.

  • @elainedodge7156

    @elainedodge7156

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@gibbs9492 There's no need to call anyone stupid. Doing so is a sign of appalling bad behaviour and arrogance.

  • @DawnOldham
    @DawnOldham3 жыл бұрын

    I never knew there were multiple books written about Mary Poppins! I also appreciate that Disney was persistent and was able to work through over twenty years of frustration in order to bring the story to the big screen!

  • @WhiteRabbitTricks
    @WhiteRabbitTricks3 жыл бұрын

    When her son cried. I’m crying. So much heart ache and words unsaid

  • @debisybesma5855

    @debisybesma5855

    3 жыл бұрын

    i ask my son every once in awhile....is there ANYTHING you want to know about what i've said, did, choices that were made....any deep seeded unresolved issues/questions YOU have about anything over the time of our lives????....i WANT him to ask me anything while i'm here so i can answer and he doesn't have to do the coulda/shoulda/woulda's after i'm gone.....

  • @l.l.4244

    @l.l.4244

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@debisybesma5855 That's a very honourable thing that you do, and it helps set the stage for a stable future for your son. Sadly, so few parents do the same, and as I know from personal experience, unresolved issues with a parent can absolutely tear a child apart. I respect you for doing what you do for your son.

  • @debisybesma5855

    @debisybesma5855

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@l.l.4244 i thank you for your kind words dear person but i think selfish was more involved than "honor..." i have 2 sons....my youngest i lost 16yrs ago coming up here in a few days. when they were little, serial killers started making themselves known and i knew that in 20yrs, i didn't want to hear about my son's on some evening news because...all the killers were men. being a single mom ----stats said my boys would never be anything past---criminals, druggies, drunks etc and i didn't like that "forecast" for THEM or me!!! so failure---was NOT an option.... my boys made me better than i would've EVER been without them so THEY set my bar pretty high. would have been easy to say "i can't" but i can't---- was always another way of saying "i don't WANT to" and they made me want to...i too know what parents CAN do to their kids....lived it....wasn't gonna live it when i didn't HAVE to anymore much less pass the DYSFUNCTION on to my boys...again---i do thank-you for your kind words but not sure they are deserved in "honor...." peace, love and blessings to you.

  • @gorymarty56

    @gorymarty56

    3 жыл бұрын

    I was so sad about that part

  • @cathyburns750

    @cathyburns750

    3 жыл бұрын

    Amazing! Thank you so very much for posting this. What a person she was!

  • @CharmEng89
    @CharmEng893 жыл бұрын

    I'm feeling rather perturbed by the comments dismissing her as being mentally unwell or simply a mean person for separating the twin brothers (awful as that is). It is undeniable that she had rather undesirable characteristics and not impossible that she struggled psychologically, but did everyone miss the bit where her beloved (albeit alcoholic) father died when she was 7, or the bit where she endured her mother's suicide attempt with two younger sisters to worry about? That is incredibly traumatic. Or how deep those scars went that she seemed to be constantly searching for a father figure and some semblance of a family life? The person she was didn't occur in a vacuum. The memory of her father was both warm and terrible, not to mention that our understanding of parenting, siblings (esp twins), and adoption is so different today than it was back then. The kind of parent she was sprung up from these experiences and expectations. I feel like she is incredibly misunderstood.

  • @Riderules73

    @Riderules73

    3 жыл бұрын

    Beautiful comment thank you

  • @silvasilvasilva

    @silvasilvasilva

    3 жыл бұрын

    Yes, people are extremely judgemental. Who knows how much pain she endured or how hard she tried to do better. It's sad this is the best she could be, but we all have our shortcomings.

  • @dlfon99

    @dlfon99

    3 жыл бұрын

    And then those same people also happen to overlook the many lies of "Saving Mr. Banks." Damn you Disney!

  • @anniikka

    @anniikka

    3 жыл бұрын

    You're right, thank you. There is one more detail as well. It was actually common practice going well into the second half of the 20th century to split up twins as relatives and/or adoptive parents were unable/unwilling to take on two children at once (in some places, twins and siblings are still being split up now and we definitely know better).

  • @CharmEng89

    @CharmEng89

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@silvasilvasilva yes exactly! We can neither idolize nor vilify her. Mary Poppins was born partly out of trauma and partly out of talent. It is impossible to label it as entirely bad or entirely good.

  • @Anya_Aprelskaya
    @Anya_Aprelskaya5 жыл бұрын

    I reread Pamela Travers' books a countless number of times and really enjoyed them when I was a child, but I never thought there's so much behind the character of Mary Poppins. Thank you for uploading the video!

  • @Demonmixer

    @Demonmixer

    4 жыл бұрын

    Did you ever see the docu on Enid Blyton? That was interesting.

  • @anneliesjoss
    @anneliesjoss3 жыл бұрын

    Watching the original movie “Mary Poppins”, I always felt like she came to rescue the father, open up his eyes. When children first discover their shadow, it’s often a frightening, later, a playful experience. I remember playing the game “keeping others from stepping on my shadow” when I was about 6.

  • @dross24MA

    @dross24MA

    3 жыл бұрын

    My Shadow -by Robert Louis Stevenson I have a little shadow that goes in and out with me, And what can be the use of him is more than I can see. He is very, very like me from the heels up to the head; And I see him jump before me, when I jump into my bed. The funniest thing about him is the way he likes to grow- Not at all like proper children, which is always very slow; For he sometimes shoots up taller like an India-rubber ball, And he sometimes gets so little that there's none of him at all. He hasn't got a notion of how children ought to play, And can only make a fool of me in every sort of way. He stays so close beside me, he's a coward you can see; I'd think shame to stick to nursie as that shadow sticks to me! One morning, very early, before the sun was up, I rose and found the shining dew on every buttercup; But my lazy little shadow, like an arrant sleepy-head, Had stayed at home behind me and was fast asleep in bed. Source: The Golden Book of Poetry (1947)

  • @monicaheijnsdijk1955

    @monicaheijnsdijk1955

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@dross24MA wonderful poem!

  • @jonienglish7065
    @jonienglish70653 жыл бұрын

    KZread comments always remind me that we see everything through our own eyes. Be kind with your eyes. You have no idea what you’re not seeing.

  • @teentraveler1790

    @teentraveler1790

    3 жыл бұрын

    Like what? Can you give an example pls.

  • @jonienglish7065

    @jonienglish7065

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@teentraveler1790 The other side of every story.

  • @teentraveler1790

    @teentraveler1790

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@jonienglish7065 Thanks

  • @kweejibodali7009

    @kweejibodali7009

    2 жыл бұрын

    great comment , thank you

  • @angelrosehedges3733
    @angelrosehedges37333 жыл бұрын

    You can see the love for her son in her eyes and smile when that picture was taken. It certainly sounds like she was very formidable. I'm glad she graced us with her work and her spunk.

  • @Tala_Masca
    @Tala_Masca3 жыл бұрын

    While Pamela Travers doesn't come across as a very loveable person, I think you must see it through the eyes of time ( the adoption of one twin and not telling him he was adopted was very normal at that time) and I think you must take her childhood in account. An alcoholic, unreliable father who died when she was young and a very unstable and unreliable mother who traumatised her with telling her she was going to commit suicide. (WTF!) Everything a child needs is safety and love. She had neither. She wanted a family of her own so much, to give her love, but I just think she was unable to. Because she never had the example of how it should've been. I feel for her. I've seen it in other reactions, and I wonder too. What happend to her sisters? Mary Poppins was very close to her heart, I think that was the reason she didn't want to 'give' it away. Others wouldn't understand how it was supposed to be, She wanted it to be how she was seeing it. Everone who has read a book, and then seen the move knows, it's not how you imagined it. People look different then how you thought them to be... It feels like it's not the same book, person, situation etc. Imagine if you wrote a book. And someone made a film about it. You too would probably say, Hey, that's not how he looks! That's not how it go's! He/she never would do that! That's not right! She was who she was because of her life made her that way. ' She was strong willed and her own woman, and in that time that was very extraordanary. So, to all judgement judy's out there, go away, look at your own life please. To everyone else, Yey! You are human!

  • @judonor

    @judonor

    3 жыл бұрын

    I agree.. I absolutely LOVED the book 'The Far Pavilions' by M.M.Kaye but could not bear to watch the series as the characters just did not look as I had imagined! Having watched Mary Poppins the movie, I can only see Julie Andrews as Mary, and ditto for the other people in the cast.

  • @flowerpower8722

    @flowerpower8722

    3 жыл бұрын

    To a point on those things. The current social rhetoric seems to be that if a person had a hard time growing up, then we should be sympathetic and understanding. Good so far. But in recent times that has expanded to, we should also let them get away with everything, and give them status and uncontrolled freedom to act out their rage on whoever is handy. My judgment starts and stops with how people treat those weaker than them. How she treated the twins, to me, is all I need to know. Intelligent, mentally ill people are so often the worst of humanity at least some of the time.

  • @isabelleb.1270

    @isabelleb.1270

    3 жыл бұрын

    « She wanted a family » ? Where did you find this ? She could not find a husband but she wanted a child, so adoption was the option. And what do you do when you see twins in a cradle ? You play the lottery! because you came for one, not two... and waiting few days to help another child would be toooooo hard for your motherhood side -Grrr... I forgot, *it’s not about them, it’s about her* ... What happened to her sisters ? I hope she helped them when she became VERY wealthy, thanks to Walt Disney. PS: *Her parents had been children once too, and I am sure it had not been easy* ... But this documentary is definitely fascinating: SO MANY subjects to think about! Thank you *Absolute History* ! ✨🧡

  • @ritaree123

    @ritaree123

    3 жыл бұрын

    Well said. Let’s lead with love

  • @cr1ing3bruh65

    @cr1ing3bruh65

    3 жыл бұрын

    btw just bc it was normal at the time doesn’t mean its ok

  • @toriladybird511
    @toriladybird5115 жыл бұрын

    The "brothers" hugging made this practically perfect.

  • @marmar929

    @marmar929

    5 жыл бұрын

    ... in every way

  • @lynnedee1

    @lynnedee1

    3 жыл бұрын

    That was my favorite part of the whole thing!

  • @nerrissarichards
    @nerrissarichards3 жыл бұрын

    “She was attracted to disasters” ...I felt that.

  • @kstormgeistgem461
    @kstormgeistgem4613 жыл бұрын

    i just sat through nearly an hour of very informative work and didn't even notice the time go by. that, my dears, is the true testament of good writing and well crafted works.

  • @LindaB651
    @LindaB6515 жыл бұрын

    I remember watching Mary Poppins at the drive-in theater as a small child; it was wonderful! This is a very nice documentary, thank you for posting it! Now I'll have to go watch Finding Mr. Banks...

  • @lillimango51
    @lillimango513 жыл бұрын

    "having a child is very different, than having an idea about it" LOUDER PLEASE

  • @jodyherr3249
    @jodyherr32493 жыл бұрын

    Disney's 'Mary Poppins' was the first theater movie I saw as a 6 year old with my grandma! I've seen 'Saving Mr Banks' also. This was a very enlightening documentary of a very special author.

  • @Kaytecando
    @Kaytecando5 жыл бұрын

    I recently watched "Saving Mr. Banks" on Netflix. A great true story and a fantastic film. Wonderful cast.

  • @chloesavannahcummings7982

    @chloesavannahcummings7982

    3 жыл бұрын

    Interesting take on it is Lindsey Ellis' review of the film.

  • @DaWhiteWolffie

    @DaWhiteWolffie

    3 жыл бұрын

    That movie was so hard to watch. I think I went through a whole box of tissues during it.

  • @stephy21685

    @stephy21685

    3 жыл бұрын

    I’ll have to watch it now!

  • @lindanasca8301

    @lindanasca8301

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@chloesavannahcummings7982 H ugg Huff hCG gfx

  • @cocoaorange1

    @cocoaorange1

    3 жыл бұрын

    I saw the film as well. It was interesting.

  • @Ash.Crow.Goddess
    @Ash.Crow.Goddess3 жыл бұрын

    I just want to say that this documentary was brilliant. I've been researching PL Travers for years. But this show, with all the elements incorporated into it, the music from the film, the extra insight gained from personal stories, it's all superb. Her story is quite moving.

  • @JackieMReacts
    @JackieMReacts4 жыл бұрын

    am I the only one who laughed at: Walt: you know what a nanny is, right? Richard: yeah, it's a female goat. walt: no it's a british nursemaid .

  • @JackieMReacts

    @JackieMReacts

    3 жыл бұрын

    @Benjamin Price why didn't more people talk about it?!

  • @JackieMReacts

    @JackieMReacts

    3 жыл бұрын

    @Benjamin Price and babysitter

  • @hilaryc3203

    @hilaryc3203

    3 жыл бұрын

    A traditional nanny was a carer and educator of the children. My father had one (much to his embarrassment). She was schooled as a teacher, so there were lessons and she filled the emotional void left by an english mother who wasn't bothered with young children. She took the kids riding (they had horses), hiking etc. A good all rounder. She also helped run the household. After he and his younger sisters aged out of having a nanny, she went to work in the school system. He was closer to her than he was to his mother, and he checked on her throughout her life, right up to the time she died in her 90s. He was lucky to have her in his life, given that his mother wasn't bothered with the kids much. I knew her and she was amazing; loads of fun and very adventurous.

  • @alexiatr

    @alexiatr

    3 жыл бұрын

    In Spanish they're called nana (it sounds like nanah), for me it was more difficult to get used to the term babysitter, it was like the one that sits the baby 🤣🤣🤣

  • @JackieMReacts

    @JackieMReacts

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@hilaryc3203 you'd think they'd come back in fashion, given how many shitty parent stories I heard

  • @CnithTheOnliestOne
    @CnithTheOnliestOne3 жыл бұрын

    As a writer, I understand what she's saying. The stories write themselves. The characters tell you what to write. Sometimes they all talk at once and that's annoying...but you do the best you can. I think you have to be a writer to understand what she means.

  • @rubenaalexander5007

    @rubenaalexander5007

    3 жыл бұрын

    Nah. For me that sounds like poor planning. If the characters just do things they normally do without and overarching higher power to control them, they wouldn't follow the story. It wouldn't have a beginning middle and end. There'd be no climax. That's why I don't get what she said. I haven't read the books so I don't get what she means I guess.

  • @aneiasl

    @aneiasl

    3 жыл бұрын

    reminds me of GRR Martin's writing style, he calls himself a gardener,

  • @caidang5198

    @caidang5198

    3 жыл бұрын

    exactly, i am writing a story about how the world ended and people had to travel to a new planet to restart civilization through a 10 year old eyes. Originally i wanted her to be traveling with her family, but she told me she only had her sister. I wanted her to land on the planet the next day, but she decided that she wanted to stay on the ship longer and make friends. She basically writes herself.

  • @adorothyinkansas4392

    @adorothyinkansas4392

    3 жыл бұрын

    I understand what you mean. We can't forget her ability for imagination and the craft that it takes to write a "fully fleshed out " character. Fortunately, if trama is handled in a healthy way? You learn how to express and deal with them; possibly leaving a wonderful peice of artistry for all to enjoy! Enjoy your differences in writing styles! Without them? We would have a dull world indeed!

  • @sandyburbach7101

    @sandyburbach7101

    3 жыл бұрын

    J.K. Rowling understands as well!

  • @revanamarie7210
    @revanamarie72103 жыл бұрын

    Mary Poppins was one show we watched as children with our dad .. who worked alot and wasn't around. I still remember how special it was to watch something on TV with our dad growing up. He's 74 now and still spends time watching things with the grandkids when he's not too busy working.

  • @nancyannirvin4507
    @nancyannirvin45073 жыл бұрын

    I don't understand how every 3rd comment (or more) is judging her on one act. She took one child and left the other. This was not the mistake. The mistake was not letting ALL of the siblings get to know each other. But there are millions of stories like that. It was not uncommon to take only one even if the child had a twin. It still happens. Even at my age I still wish someone had come along and adopted me and my siblings (i am in my late 50's) We had such a horrible upbringing. Imagine if she had not adopted the one. His life would probably have been much more miserable considering his parents.

  • @ELCinWYO

    @ELCinWYO

    3 жыл бұрын

    My Grandma's family was totally split up. Oldest sister went to one family, the twins went to the children's home and the boy twin allowed to die, and the youngest to another family. Very normal back then.

  • @i.m.7710

    @i.m.7710

    3 жыл бұрын

    I met a young man in California. He loved piling rocks up high and beautifully on the beach and pbs did a tv segment on his rock sculptures. Do-gooders were always trying to help him with full-time stressful minimum wage jobs so he could pay all the expensive "no overnight sleeping outdoor camping" tickets police gave him every night and he had no clue how to navigate government red tape and no way to travel to the big government building. That place was upsetting and impersonal even for me! He was not equipped and the do-gooders couldn't fathom that tiny nothing details for them are enormous mountains to others. He told me when he was 11 the welfare people came to his house in the midwest and took all his siblings to foster care. He got away before they could catch him. They never caught him. Since age 11 he had been totally on his own and riding on trains. It had to be hard. I'm not sure if he had ever seen his family again. I'm sure he was scrounging for food and in the company of / or avoiding the company of older alcoholic men. Never any school. Just a simple guy who fell between the cracks of society, and once he turned 18, society didn't care anyway.

  • @3773elle

    @3773elle

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@i.m.7710 In another circle he could have been Andy Goldsworthy...

  • @tordyclark

    @tordyclark

    3 жыл бұрын

    OK I'll tell you so you can understand. Because its unbearably cruel. To split up twins. To split up babies clinging to each other. The same birthday, the same one person in two. It's bad enough splitting up siblings who are still living together, but twins? It's unbearable, is why. Her further treatment, lying, cheating the one she kept, denying the truth, makes the situation worse and seems shady. This wasn't that long ago.

  • @Songshare

    @Songshare

    3 жыл бұрын

    I can’t imagine leaving a child behind unless there was a gun to my head. I don’t understand why .

  • @karenwright9123
    @karenwright91233 жыл бұрын

    An extraordinary story of an extraordinary woman,who told an extraordinary story,which became an extraordinary movie and changed other's stories and lives all over the world...extraordinary isn't it? Thanks for filling in on parts we didn't know...brought me to tears like Camillus,bless his heart and ours.

  • @modashe4698
    @modashe46983 жыл бұрын

    I can't help but keep noticing how many people make their lives out of making assumptions and conclusions about the lives of persons they never fully came to know. The moment we start to respect boundaries and recognize our own intellectual arrogance, I have a feeling we'll actually learn to see people for who they are and control the liberty with which we assume and project on others. I relate to her idea of channeling stories, respecting the unknown. I'm yet to read her books, but I wish her love and peace on the other side.

  • @bettyc.parker-young1437

    @bettyc.parker-young1437

    3 жыл бұрын

    I really want to read the series now as a 60 year old! I am in my second childhood! ☺️

  • @rabczanska
    @rabczanska3 жыл бұрын

    This discussion of how difficult her childhood and the loss of her mentor and an unstable mother...no life is perfect, but she did get on with it and made a success. She also was a very difficult women at times and battled depression. You can be both as a grown-up without constantly using her loss at 7 to explain all her moods.

  • @kathyh4804

    @kathyh4804

    2 жыл бұрын

    Everyone talks of her literary accomplishments.... I look at her son, he’s a total mess! It’s heartbreaking that all these years he’s covered his pain with alcohol, and still is. She never should have been able to adopt a child

  • @brandy2525
    @brandy25253 жыл бұрын

    I have already introduced Mary Poppins to my young son. When he is able to read well enough he will have the books to read.

  • @sandrastreifel6452

    @sandrastreifel6452

    3 жыл бұрын

    Brandy Drace: Your reading to him, is great preparation for a life-long love of books. My son taught himself to read, before he started school.

  • @CrazyDeeDee

    @CrazyDeeDee

    3 жыл бұрын

    just be sure to let your child know that magic is not real. Unfortunately Disney and all other forms of mainstream media are pushing magic and witchcraft like crazy. It's very satanic and it's being done for a reason.

  • @CrazyDeeDee

    @CrazyDeeDee

    3 жыл бұрын

    @Patricia Palmer look at what's on TV nowadays. Look at what was on TV for the past 10 years. God is out and witchcraft is in. That's a reality and I'm sorry if you can't handle it or understand it. When I've switched on the Disney channel I saw kids dancing around singing good is bad and bad is good.. you tell me that's not satanic. Maybe you've just been living with your head in a hole this whole time.

  • @CrazyDeeDee

    @CrazyDeeDee

    3 жыл бұрын

    @Patricia Palmer what profits a man if he gains the whole world but loses his own soul.

  • @sabinedunne7040

    @sabinedunne7040

    3 жыл бұрын

    @Patricia Palmer thank you for the sanity 💞

  • @mandyhanton45
    @mandyhanton454 жыл бұрын

    Love all the ads

  • @lameesahmad9166
    @lameesahmad91663 жыл бұрын

    My son at the age of 8 played one of the penguins in a school play of Mary Poppins. I thoroughly enjoyed every minute of it. Every child played a wonderful part. I myself remember at the age of 6 being absolutely entranced with a wonderful Mary Poppins pop-up book which we had in our school library. I can laugh now at the pun of a pop-up book of Mary Poppins. But it was sort of magical to me and I enjoyed every minute of the film when I eventually got to see it. It really is a wonderful story to a child when the dream world and reality ride side by side in the innocent perception of a naive little soul. And even now I will sing the rhyme of 'A spoon full of sugar'.

  • @Patriot1789
    @Patriot17892 жыл бұрын

    The similarities in life choices between Camillus Travers and his twin brother, though they appear to be fraternal and not identical twins, are more common than most people realize. Ironically, the things that Ms. Travers was deprived of when her beloved father died became the very things that she was unable to provide for her son, namely, constancy and a loving presence.

  • @cameronmoore2713

    @cameronmoore2713

    7 ай бұрын

    She was Mr. Banks

  • @katmandudawn8417
    @katmandudawn84173 жыл бұрын

    I feel sorry for the twins. It is becoming more clear that separations and loss of roots and family have lifelong effects on children. The drive and longing to find who you are and where you belong is very deep seated. Back in the day people never dreamed that things like finding out your an adopted twin could be devistating. She should have taken both or found a single. Of course she would never willingly have told them they were adopted.

  • @paulmanson253

    @paulmanson253

    3 жыл бұрын

    One thing I have noted about some people with damaged childhoods is that they see to it their own children have slightly worse childhoods than they did. She never had a balanced understanding of her father,and it affected everything she did. Talented she was,but as a parent she was clearly unpleasant. As someone raised by talented but damaged parents,there is a real resonance here.

  • @davidbrown8303

    @davidbrown8303

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@paulmanson253 or they do the same thing or worse could simply mean that they have the same DNA as the parent that did it to them and are simply a rotten person.

  • @Goldenhawk583

    @Goldenhawk583

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@paulmanson253 and some people with damaged childhoods, decide that, no way are my children to experience the hell I went through... and then do their best to be a better parent. I know this as a fact, because I am one of those, and while my 4 children ( now young adults) find me, and found me "a bit weird", love has not been missing and we are close now too.

  • @paulmanson253

    @paulmanson253

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@Goldenhawk583 Good for you. A very wise lady pointed out we have two opportunities to experience childhood in our lives. Our own,and the one we pay forward to our children. Perhaps you do not understand just how rare that is. I have seen too many times the reverse. A person can break the cycle if they wish. It takes a lifetime of awareness to avoid the lessons learned young,but it can be done. I wish you well. All the best.

  • @Goldenhawk583

    @Goldenhawk583

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@paulmanson253 thank you, and I do know what you are talking about. Lets just say that my own mom was the other version? You stay safe, and best wishes:)

  • @inesnaglic472
    @inesnaglic4723 жыл бұрын

    My nickname at work (hotel housekeeping) is Mary Poppins, I am proud of that 😆👗

  • @inesnaglic472

    @inesnaglic472

    3 жыл бұрын

    @spirals 73 thank you 😳

  • @mikehughes4969

    @mikehughes4969

    2 жыл бұрын

    As well you should be.

  • @jonathangauthier3549
    @jonathangauthier35493 жыл бұрын

    What an extraordinary woman. RIP Pamela Travers. You truly were a woman like none other

  • @graciep.6984
    @graciep.69843 жыл бұрын

    I loved the Mary Poppins books as a child. I got lost in them. That has a whole new significance now, as my childhood was not a happy one. P.L. Travers' books did exactly what they were created to do. Mary Poppins took me away from it all, the books absorbing me in a way that the movie never could. As enjoyable as the movie is, it doesn't run nearly as deep. Having watched this, I think I might have to buy them again and revisit my old escape.

  • @Tomodachi91ve
    @Tomodachi91ve3 жыл бұрын

    She was amazing. She had faults like any human, but she was an amazingly strong person that suffered a lot but overcame that and was capable of an immense love despite that. Also, s funny how her ways about protecting her character are perceived as "pain in the ass" but were admired in other documentaries when male authors did the same thing. Interesting right?

  • @frida507

    @frida507

    3 жыл бұрын

    Exactly what I thought. She had integrity and felt protective about the book and character that meant so much to her. Andpeople seem to forget that it was Disney who chased her to make the movie, ant therefore agreed to give her rights as consultant because the book was so special. Other authors may have signed all those rights away so they couldn't be "a pain in the ass". Both her and Disney were strong personalities and stubborn. She didn't know about film making and he didn't know (or care as much) about the characters as her. And all these mean and judgemental commenters thinking she should shut up and be grateful for the money (Americans?). The story and characters were her creation, and even though the film made the books more famous - without her there would be no Mary Poppins movie.

  • @spmoran4703

    @spmoran4703

    2 жыл бұрын

    Its one law for one group of people , and another for the other.

  • @markdoldon8852

    @markdoldon8852

    2 жыл бұрын

    No, a male author banning the colour red would in fact be seen as just as flakey.

  • @rickbailey7183
    @rickbailey71833 жыл бұрын

    It seems that this world is a crucible. It takes people's pains and tragedies and transforms them into something magical and fantastic. Sometimes the painful past is forgotten, other times it is rehashed and muddied with the present. It's like we can choose which colors to remember of our lives; if we remember too many, it all just turns into a grayish brown mess.

  • @ichabod1370

    @ichabod1370

    3 жыл бұрын

    @Patricia Palmer No, *I* do.

  • @vh6307

    @vh6307

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@ichabod1370 😉😅🤗

  • @vh6307

    @vh6307

    3 жыл бұрын

    True hun!🙋🏾‍♀️😊

  • @LikaLaruku
    @LikaLaruku3 жыл бұрын

    Man, the background music in the documentary is relaxing AF.

  • @dross24MA

    @dross24MA

    3 жыл бұрын

    What does "relaxing as AF" mean?

  • @ilovetoile
    @ilovetoile5 жыл бұрын

    I just watched Saving Mr. Banks two days before this was published. It was quite good.

  • @ishtar2848
    @ishtar28483 жыл бұрын

    This was very interesting! I didn't know that she had had such a sad childhood 😥 What a strong woman ❣️ This makes me love and admire her more than I already did! Thanks for sharing this video 💚👍

  • @r.catssapin191
    @r.catssapin1913 жыл бұрын

    🤗😁 in my early childhood, the very 1st time I heard of "Mary Poppins" ...... I immediately took to the rooftops with my umbrella. I want to be like Mary Poppins! Needless to say, I found out rather quickly, umbrellas don't work that way! And so, I turned to my brother's Erector set. Determined to make a Mary Poppins ☂️ umbrella. Yeah that didn't work either 😂😟😁

  • @geenal360

    @geenal360

    3 жыл бұрын

    When I was about 4 yrs old, I was crossing a street holding a huge umbrella and I had lift off- only about 4 steps before I was back down on the crosswalk -very exciting-!☔️

  • @edcpike
    @edcpike3 жыл бұрын

    One of my favorite books as a child. I still have it and read it to my granddaughter.

  • @vyranlaise8356
    @vyranlaise83563 жыл бұрын

    There is magic all around us. People are so caught up in there lives. When magic does reveals itself. No one seems to see, but young children can see all the new magic around them, It's everywhere. If only we open our minds and see the beauty in our world.

  • @denelll.bennettsurvivorwar8224

    @denelll.bennettsurvivorwar8224

    3 жыл бұрын

    Vyran Laise ....*Well Said and So True!*

  • @anamariaguadayol2335

    @anamariaguadayol2335

    3 жыл бұрын

    Some adults never lose that gift despite the constant attack upon our knowledge of the true World of magic.

  • @ymfg2673

    @ymfg2673

    3 жыл бұрын

    Yes, there is magic around us if we can just stop and feel the beauty around us. It is so that we can become like a person who offers hope and light when there's only darkness. But you have to know and recognize that person when he/she is present in your life.

  • @alisatourek9176

    @alisatourek9176

    3 жыл бұрын

    I just had to comment because you said nothing about God who created the world and all it's beauty!! Magic is only connected with evil because they who use magic draw their limited power from the devil!! Please turn to Jesus & only in Him do we find peace!! Jesus is the only hope for salvation & help the children because they are being corrupted & ruined by evil people!!

  • @ymfg2673

    @ymfg2673

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@alisatourek9176 I think you just missed Vyran Laise good meaning. It is good to become pure and beautiful like a child's mind, always be able to sense beauty around them even without knowing God first. As heaven and hell is within your own mind, you must be in this state before you can even sense the presence of God or any of the saints. Without first changing your own mindset (looking within yourself) you will never know the true God even though you have been taught to be religious or pious your whole life. Didn't in the bible, there is one verse that mentioned only when you become like a child, you can never go to heaven. Becoming pure in heart and mind is the key to finding God. That is why only certain special child can sense magic on his/her journey of finding God in the end. Basically what Vyran means is good magic, not the bad one. So do not be confused about this topic.

  • @LoriFahy
    @LoriFahy3 жыл бұрын

    her house where she grew up is not far from where I live. I have been inside, as the owners are restoring it back to how it looked back then.. her story is remarkable .. this is a great piece of history

  • @7XO7XO7XO
    @7XO7XO7XO3 жыл бұрын

    Wow Love how they put this together The ending was heart fluttering Her sons tears of love made my heart flutter with a glimpse of heart felt love that ached for his mother Made me reach for my heart as it bursted ❤

  • @Dee8Bee
    @Dee8Bee3 жыл бұрын

    She was born in a time where children worked dangerous jobs and had to be little adults. Things are still like that in some countries. So yes, just taking one child of a twin was not a big deal. They didn’t know that it could damage the child and that twins have special bonds. I’m sure she had some second thoughts later in life. So strange that they didn’t except her explanation of not creating Mary Poppins? Often when people get in a kind of meditation, certain things flow. They become a receiver for all sorts of info. From a higher source. Loads of people have said that.

  • @hideyourloveaway128

    @hideyourloveaway128

    3 жыл бұрын

    Yes, in fact there have been science experiments done where they purposely separated twins and triplets at birth and raised them differently to see how they would develop. That is what is truly horrible! That was not her intent, her intent was to raise one child because I’m sure that’s all she felt capable of at the time as a single mother at 40. And yes, it was normal to do that, people didn’t think twice about separating twins at that time. And absolutely, inspiration means “to be breathed into“ indicating that something is coming to you from an outside source, which is how she was describing it. And really, it’s more modest to say that she was channeling what came through her, rather than imagining it all for herself. It’s as if to say she was just the medium through which the story came. What’s wrong with that? It’s not hubris, it’s not arrogance, I don’t see that at all.

  • @caryulmer5405
    @caryulmer54053 жыл бұрын

    I loved the movie Saving Mr. Banks. Emma Thompson was incredible in it.

  • @kscrosby6186
    @kscrosby61863 жыл бұрын

    I believe LM Montgomery was another author who "rewrote" her life, (in her case, youth, marriage and motherhood included) as she would have preferred it.

  • @emilyhart2252

    @emilyhart2252

    3 жыл бұрын

    I loved Anne of Green Gables until she grew up and lost all her promise and became secondary to Gilbert who achieved his goal of becoming a doctor while she gives up being a writer. So disappointing!

  • @anyajohnson4099

    @anyajohnson4099

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@emilyhart2252 that's true. But at least she never lost her imagination and she reveled in her kingdom, even of it was merely a home and her kids. But she was happy. Unfortunately that's not enough nowadays. No one believes a woman can be fully happy at home. I don't myself. But she loved her home and her life. Things were different back then. The best things we can do when reading old stories is revel in the good of them, acknowledge the bad, know that the bad is only a result of society improving and thank God for those improvements. Then, after our visits with old friends (classic book characters, I know it's weird to refer to them as such, I'm a loner) we can make our own kingdoms and enjoy the freedoms we have gained over the last century.

  • @ImCarolB
    @ImCarolB3 жыл бұрын

    This was such an interesting and informative film! I read a few of the Mary Poppins books as a child and found them to be a bit dark and disturbing. The Disney movie came out when I was 12 and although everyone was raving over it, I thought they missed, ignored rather, the eerie quality of the books. Of course, this was Disney. I never re-read the books, which I should do. I may have a different view of them now. Your film made me connect the character of Pamela with Mary Poppins, and perhaps that was what I was seeing in the books as a child.

  • @1789NYSA
    @1789NYSA3 жыл бұрын

    I always think the author of Mary Poppins might be an American or British. The truth is the author is an Australian woman who had British ancestry (her father)! I watched the old Mary Poppins movie when I was still living in USA. For, I need to confess that I love Julie Andrews! I haven't watched Saving Mr Banks and Mary Poppins Return, yet. I really wanna watch both! By the way, thank you for the information about Mary Poppins's origin, history and author! Love this video!

  • @ohkaygoplay
    @ohkaygoplay3 жыл бұрын

    Her thought that ideas are out there in the world, and they choose people to pick on is an idea I've held to for many years. My current wip is like that. Some people are chosen to tell a story.

  • @daryansaunders9078
    @daryansaunders90783 жыл бұрын

    It seems she wrote about the life she thought all children should have. Funny how ironic life can be. I only see irony and lack. But her imagination made it possible. For all of us

  • @somehuman4198
    @somehuman41984 жыл бұрын

    I watched this and then I was just now watching Mary Poppins returns and I realized just how important Shamus and Clyde are to the story! An Irish Dog driver and A WHITE HORSE! And they come to the twins rescue! "That's right it's us! Let's go get your brother back!"

  • @5cloudwalker
    @5cloudwalker2 жыл бұрын

    Writers always have the need to put their writing first this is so true I watched a documentary on another well-known British author in Enyd Blyton I was appalled at her family life neglecting her children She had put up a façade to hide her family life

  • @RR-qv8uz
    @RR-qv8uz3 жыл бұрын

    As an Australian, am so grateful that this extraordinary journey has surfaced . An indelible gift left to us for generations past, present and future. 🙏 An incredible woman far far ahead of her time !!!! Thank you Absolute History! ☺️

  • @cacauldr
    @cacauldr3 жыл бұрын

    Shadows. They feel twice as much as you do. So be careful not to step on them. Or else they might not take care of you. Funny how people can say very smart things but ignore their own words nonetheless.

  • @TheCesarLorenzo
    @TheCesarLorenzo4 жыл бұрын

    What an amazing work! And what a magical journey! Beautiful!

  • @meagancobb1417
    @meagancobb14173 жыл бұрын

    I put this on to fall asleep to, and ended up watching the entire thing. Fascinating! Her son breaks my heart

  • @dumbbell1231
    @dumbbell12313 жыл бұрын

    Because of my low-self esteem, I created an imaginary person that had all the qualities I wish I had. I still think about "him" before I go to bed, imagining what "he" would do in real life. I am 30 years old. Some of us created imaginary worlds, characters or people to cope with personal issues. Just like a painter paints their idealistic world, we paint our world in our minds, not on canvas.

  • @Kaytecando
    @Kaytecando5 жыл бұрын

    Why couldn't anyone verbalize the words alcoholism or alcoholic in this great documentary? It is all over the real life characters in this. Ms. Travers (Goff) was a co-dependent and it appears she recreated a fictional life to escape. She might have also suffered from bipolar or borderline personality disorder. At any rate, she left us a wonderful gift in collaborating with Disney.

  • @sandrastreifel6452

    @sandrastreifel6452

    3 жыл бұрын

    It’s hard to diagnose anyone from the reports of others. I think they’re just trying to not draw conclusions, but report the behaviour. Mental diseases and disorders are less shameful and better understood today, even compared to the 1960’s and 70’s!!!

  • @traceruari3143

    @traceruari3143

    3 жыл бұрын

    I think it's sad alcoholics have lots of treatment choices but those they affect who develop codependency have very few if any reliable treatment options.

  • @anikashadap2800
    @anikashadap28003 жыл бұрын

    It's beautiful. I enjoyed listening to her story. Thank you for sharing 💕

  • @jerrysstories711
    @jerrysstories7113 жыл бұрын

    I was NOT expecting this to be so fascinating. I ended up glued to the screen and stayed up late to finish it!

  • @lucinda2329
    @lucinda23293 жыл бұрын

    This rolled onto my screen at the end of another video, and I decided to let it run. I'm so glad that I did. Thank you for making this and sharing it here. ❤️ ~✿~❧~✿~❧~✿~ ❤️

  • @WhitneyDahlin
    @WhitneyDahlin3 жыл бұрын

    I wanted to hear more about her life as an actress in the 1920s! That's literally the most interesting part of her life and they just glossed over it. Mentioned it once and moved on. Like wtf

  • @PhailingMath
    @PhailingMath3 жыл бұрын

    09:55 "Irish culture or whatever you want to call it" Good to know that some of the British still struggle to recognize the Irish as living human beings

  • @missimccarthy8408

    @missimccarthy8408

    3 жыл бұрын

    That comment really was gross. Says so much in such few words

  • @raleighburner1589

    @raleighburner1589

    3 жыл бұрын

    you see when James hoban from co Kilkenny Ireland desinged and built the white house in 1782 six years after the British were kicked out of America the British establishment always wanted to down play the Irish very bitter is the English elites ...in 1812 the silly bastards tried to burn the white house after all if one nation is responsible for the world's most important building and another tried to burn it down ...well you can see where some of the resentment comes from

  • @misssol1807

    @misssol1807

    3 жыл бұрын

    I see why you’d be offended, of course, but I think she added that because Pamela T was drawn to an idealised view of Ireland the way her father (who had never even been there) described it for her. To me, the lady meant that the attraction was to an ideal, a personal myth, rather than the actual culture. Note: I’m neither a Brit nor Irish so, hopefully, there’s no bias to my comment.

  • @raleighburner1589

    @raleighburner1589

    3 жыл бұрын

    Also Churchill was a coward he wanted to surrender during ww2. ...the Irish will never surrender. ..Erin go bragh

  • @misssol1807

    @misssol1807

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@raleighburner1589 Not sure what that has to do with P L Travers but, cheers.

  • @carolberwindscheffler2708
    @carolberwindscheffler27083 жыл бұрын

    So very glad Mr. Disney persisted in getting this marvelous iconic book and transform s it into a magical film that will last forever.

  • @Yarbullz
    @Yarbullz3 жыл бұрын

    Thank you so much, this was wonderful. I just watched Saving Mr Banks last night for the first time and loved it

  • @itskitty808
    @itskitty8083 жыл бұрын

    Mary Poppins was and still is my favorite Disney movie. I used want a magical, whimsical nanny like her. ("Saving Mr. Banks" was a great movie, totally reccomend it.)

  • @outdooradventures8773
    @outdooradventures87735 жыл бұрын

    Awesome video, thank you for upload

  • @ajl8198
    @ajl81983 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for putting this on KZread this was a wonderful documentary

  • @michellemains4080
    @michellemains40803 жыл бұрын

    I loved every moment of this. Thank you.

  • @avariceseven9443
    @avariceseven94435 жыл бұрын

    As entertaining this whole thing is my favorite part is when she asked how to train the penguins to dance. lol

  • @JackieMReacts

    @JackieMReacts

    4 жыл бұрын

    i know! now i wanna see that

  • @katfishkobain8809

    @katfishkobain8809

    2 жыл бұрын

    She was being sarcastic

  • @TheFiddle101
    @TheFiddle1012 жыл бұрын

    A marvellously interesting person. I think she's right, ideas do float about. It does not have to be ultimately autobiographical. But the details of her life padded her fantasies. Wonderful.

  • @pammcbride9691
    @pammcbride96913 жыл бұрын

    Whimsy, thank you for sharing your incredible insights with all of us. You have such a wise way of explaining what the cards show. I especially love when you speak of Gaia and what our relationship with her means. I literally get goosebumps when I hear the word spoken, Gaia. We are so intertwined with her. Best wishes on your trek back to beautiful Oregon...don't be gone from youtube too long, ok?

  • @violetpasztorwilson1192
    @violetpasztorwilson11923 жыл бұрын

    lovely.. thank-you for this.. I thoroughly enjoyed this documentary

  • @everynewdayisablessing8509
    @everynewdayisablessing85092 жыл бұрын

    To understand her you have to remember that she was born in 1899 and didn't have a happy childhood. Somebody once said that you can't hate a person really after you hear their life story. Everyone has events that shaped them. I lost my dad too early too and was also the oldest daughter (of 5), and our nearest neighbour was an alcoholic and a threat to his wife and we were scared of him too. On one occassion his wife run away from him and hid in our house because he was after her with a knife. Those things stay with you and shape you. I feel for her as a child who lost her beloved father. Many young girls idolize their fathers; just look at Audrey Hepburn, Enid Blyton or Lucy Maud Montgomery. It does feel a bit insensitive to adopt one twin and not both, but she was a single woman so perhaps she thought it would be too much to handle two babies and writing. I'm a children's writer too so I know how writing can take over your life and I completely understand why she wanted to rewrite her childhood via books and conceal the ugly and sad truth of it. I also understand why she claims she can't take credit for the books she wrote. Yes, stories just come to us. They almost write themselves, we are just the pencil holders. Some authors have to put a lot of work to write, but for some of us it works like that, like magic. That was the case with Enid Blyton too. She closed her eyes for a few minutes and the stories started coming. I know this sounds crazy, but I experience this too, so I know it is true, to some anyway. RIP P L Travers.

  • @tildenchild2360
    @tildenchild23603 жыл бұрын

    I read the books many times and still love them. Never thought the movie did the books justice.

  • @nadyarossi5102

    @nadyarossi5102

    3 жыл бұрын

    I had a problem with Dick Van Dyke as Bert. Stan Laurel would have been best.

  • @kuuleipedro4178
    @kuuleipedro41783 жыл бұрын

    Mahalo for sharing this story! I have been deeply impacted this morning 😎

  • @misterbum1
    @misterbum12 жыл бұрын

    I am greatly touched by this retelling of her life.

  • @NCFXSTI
    @NCFXSTI4 жыл бұрын

    I had not seen Saving Mr Banks. I made sure to watch it after watching this video. I enjoyed the movie, Thank You !

  • @karincervantes8998
    @karincervantes89985 жыл бұрын

    Wow, I never knew what kind of a life she lead. Thanks !

  • @butterflyvillainllc9412
    @butterflyvillainllc94123 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for posting

  • @tricivenola8164
    @tricivenola81643 жыл бұрын

    Excellent!! Thank you for this.

  • @heidimiller642
    @heidimiller6423 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for making this video. Mary Poppins always confused me. She did all kinds of miraculous tricks when the parents weren't around. Then she lied and said it didn't happen. She frightened me. Adults were supposed to tell the truth.

  • @Snowystardust12

    @Snowystardust12

    3 жыл бұрын

    Heidi Miller that’s really interesting. I love Mary poppins, but I only saw the movie as an adult. Your comment reminds me of how Alice in wonderland was very disturbing to me as a child, and I strongly disliked it. If I’d seen Mary poppins as a child, I too would have probably wondered how a good person could also be a liar. That’s why I loved the wizard of Oz,. As a child I needed clear pictures of good and bad. The ability for Moral complexity comes later, in adolescence.

  • @jackpayne4658
    @jackpayne46584 жыл бұрын

    It's a curious coincidence (perhaps) that Emma Thompson played PL Travers, and also Nanny McFee - whose character owed quite a lot to Mary Poppins. Travers herself reminds me of Doris Lessing, who had an equally complex relationship with her own parents, and her own son. Of course, Lessing was also a student of Idries Shah - who might be seen as a successor to Gurdjieff.

  • @tonylawless3504

    @tonylawless3504

    3 жыл бұрын

    Dear old Doris left her children in Africa, promising everything would be perfect after the Revolution. In the meantime, she went to London.

  • @vh6307

    @vh6307

    3 жыл бұрын

    Coincidental INDEED!! I was thinking the same thing when Emma was asked 2 do Mr. Banks!!😉

  • @laurahoward5426

    @laurahoward5426

    2 жыл бұрын

    Yes, that occurred to me...Emma Thompson as 2 mythical Nannies, each leave after solving the problem....

  • @bettyc.parker-young1437
    @bettyc.parker-young14373 жыл бұрын

    This one film brought so much joy to my two daughters and I in the 80's on VHS. I can't count the times we watched it and moved back the furniture to dance together! Memories are such a treasure! Please make all you can while you can! They will be the soft pillows you will fall back on in your later life. Have a happy day!☺️

  • @dorothyd.6506
    @dorothyd.65062 жыл бұрын

    Exceptionally well done; thank you!

  • @duantorruellas716
    @duantorruellas7163 жыл бұрын

    Unless you can reconcile the opposites within yourself, you can't take another step.

  • @PanzerMafia
    @PanzerMafia5 жыл бұрын

    It is indeed incredible yet shocking to hear, the very woman who made many childhoods (mine, too!) so wonderful didn't like the movie I still love to watch today! She has been perfectly complicated, like so many artistic people with troubled life, I guess. Although she made the life of the two boys so difficult, she managed to create a fantastic masterpiece.

  • @neilforbes416

    @neilforbes416

    3 жыл бұрын

    Though she may have wanted to deny any Australian connections, P.L. Travers in her dealings with Disney, showed clearly the Australian aversion to pretentious BULLSHIT that Americans seem to go on with every day of their lives.

  • @artsiecrafty4164

    @artsiecrafty4164

    3 жыл бұрын

    I never read it as a child I am an artist who had a troubled childhood with an alcoholic father. I also never liked the movie and never watched it. I did like Saving Mr. Banks!

  • @neilforbes416

    @neilforbes416

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@artsiecrafty4164 I saw the movie, I think, as a 10-year-old when it screened at a Saturday matinee session at my home suburb, Stockton's(NSW, Australia) Savoy Theatre. It was already a year or so old by the time it got to that theatre. I think it was this movie that instilled in me a hatred for musicals with all the stupid songs in this film. For me to see this documentary and learn that the two brothers responsible for the crap songs in the film are the very same two brothers who wrote Johnny Burnette's hit, "You're 16" in 1961, totally ruins their credibility as tunesmiths.

  • @linnymaemullins3319

    @linnymaemullins3319

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@neilforbes416 I don't reckon🤔😂😉

  • @ichabod1370

    @ichabod1370

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@neilforbes416 Neil -- Some of us do; and keep in mind that Barnum's "There's a sucker born every minute" goes isn't just about the US.

  • @peggyboehnlein8755
    @peggyboehnlein87553 жыл бұрын

    What a wonderful program, thank you!

  • @monicaheijnsdijk1955
    @monicaheijnsdijk19552 жыл бұрын

    Absolutely worth the time, watching this. It is extraordinary and remarkable! Never knew this.

  • @christinerahman8324
    @christinerahman83243 жыл бұрын

    Son:*crying* Me: on the verge of tears AD: BY 100% FREEEEE (by the way we’ll charge you full price and say that ad was SOOO last year)

  • @usagi18
    @usagi183 жыл бұрын

    The scene of 8:38 always made me have goosebumps when I was growing up. Now that I am an adult and lost my father recently, it makes me cry my eyes out... even just the glimpse of it

  • @MrGloryglorymanutd18

    @MrGloryglorymanutd18

    3 жыл бұрын

    Sorry for your pain.I will say a prayer for you.

  • @usagi18

    @usagi18

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@MrGloryglorymanutd18 thank you!!

  • @shirleyfreeman7101
    @shirleyfreeman71013 жыл бұрын

    Fascinating, Fabulous, the best, thank you

  • @nativeamericanfeather9948
    @nativeamericanfeather99482 жыл бұрын

    What an extraordinary author & an incredible story. I loved Mary Poppins when I was a kid,then my children,& now my grandson❤

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