a delicate balance

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  • čas přidán 12. 05. 2021
  • by edward albee
    directed by tony richardson
    with katherine hepburn, paul scofield, kate reid, lee remick, joseph cotton, betsy blair
  • Krátké a kreslené filmy

Komentáře • 116

  • @soniavadnjal7553
    @soniavadnjal7553 Před rokem +26

    With these actors, every footstep, every stir of the spoon in the teacup, seems heavy with meaning, is a creative act.

    • @nonenoneonenonenone
      @nonenoneonenonenone Před rokem

      From the start, I am feeling it's Much Ado About Nothing. Who talks like this? On and on about one single tiny thought.

  • @chrisnickerson262
    @chrisnickerson262 Před 7 měsíci +8

    Such an amazing production. The performances are top notch. I thought Paul Scofield was brilliant.

  • @jeromesullivan4015
    @jeromesullivan4015 Před rokem +13

    I feel privileged to have been alive to witness great actors ply their craft..on occasion with my very eyes..

    • @jeromesullivan4015
      @jeromesullivan4015 Před rokem +4

      I should also point out that the Plays the thing..excellent writing..

  • @davidwise9487
    @davidwise9487 Před 10 měsíci +6

    Stunning tour/ de- force!
    Superb acting.
    Powerful play about life!
    Is everything a balancing act?
    Does marriage mean anything?
    The night brings uncertainty and terror,
    Daybreak brings light.
    New possibilities!
    Albee probed the recesses of our souls!
    Unquestionably he was one of great writers of our time!

  • @paolazuffinetti
    @paolazuffinetti Před rokem +7

    I never thought I would have the chance to see Katharine Hepburn acting in a play without having to go to Broadway! A treasure. All the rest of the cast is exceptional too. Thank You!

    • @user-nl9lf5bu2x
      @user-nl9lf5bu2x Před 3 měsíci +1

      Check her out in Sidney Lumet's production of Long Day's Journey into Night.

    • @paolazuffinetti
      @paolazuffinetti Před 3 měsíci

      Thanks a LOT!

  • @DSmith-mg6ui
    @DSmith-mg6ui Před 3 měsíci +1

    Great movie. Read the play returning from a class trip in high school, bought the film on Ebay, loaned it to a friend who forgot to give it back when she moved out of town and then died. Great to be able to see it again!

  • @grai
    @grai Před rokem +4

    Thanks for this
    The scene in the early morning between Schofield and Hepburn is performed in one take **fifteen minutes long**
    I've always loved Schofield and Hepburn has always been my favourite actress all my life and I'm 65
    She never disappoints ♥️

  • @susanmarie2231
    @susanmarie2231 Před 2 lety +18

    Paul Scofield. What a find! That great voice.

    • @abbatrouble
      @abbatrouble Před rokem +5

      I love his voice but it is paired with the most irritating voice in the theater. I can't to two minutes of Katherine's nauseating noises!

    • @susanmarie2231
      @susanmarie2231 Před rokem +5

      @@abbatrouble I do not care for Hepburn opposite Scofield either. However, Hepburn can’t help her voice as she has an essential tremor. I have it too, but it is mild, and so far not affecting my voice. There is no cure and it will get worse as I age.

    • @springsogourne
      @springsogourne Před rokem +3

      His voice is so similar to Cottons.

    • @johnlawrence2757
      @johnlawrence2757 Před rokem +1

      @@tomkent4656 er… underrated by who?

    • @user-bc9mn7gq2c
      @user-bc9mn7gq2c Před rokem +3

      @@tomkent4656 You mean one of Britain's most under-hyped actors.

  • @AdamKarmona
    @AdamKarmona Před rokem +5

    I like the whirling talkiness. It creates an ambiance of mania. The whole thing is domestic suffocation ASMR.

  • @christinemartin63
    @christinemartin63 Před 2 lety +7

    Holy Toledo ... another master class in ensemble acting ... bra-vo !

  • @reginaldbrady6800
    @reginaldbrady6800 Před 2 lety +17

    A wonderful play! A star studded cast. I had never seen it and I enjoyed it immensely. I'm very familiar with "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?", and I think both are sensational for what they are. Both are different, and I appreciate both.

  • @paolazuffinetti
    @paolazuffinetti Před rokem +3

    Precious play, to be kept, watched, admired, treasured. Thank you!

  • @kenlove1472
    @kenlove1472 Před 2 lety +23

    I love Albee's "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?" Yet I must admit that "A Delicate Balance" is a better written play. Not a hint of cleverness anywhere. A much more deeply felt work (in my opinion)

    • @noelephantitis
      @noelephantitis Před 2 lety +6

      It’s head-and-shoulders above WAoVW, and frankly above the rest of his output (in my opinion). It’s almost like Virginia Woolf 20 years later in a slightly different reality. You really need actors of this caliber, though, to untangle the linguistic and emotional density. Thank god we have this film.

  • @spiritofsalt6780
    @spiritofsalt6780 Před rokem +7

    Thank you for this upload.

  • @DavidN369
    @DavidN369 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Astounding. Can only imagine what would have transpired had Ingmar been able to direct, as Edward wanted, or if Kim Stanley hadn't butted up against Katharine Hepburn, yet then we wouldn't have Kate Reid, and the two Kates, Paul Scofield, Lee Remick, Joseph Cotten and Betsy Blair under Tony Richardson's direction are not exactly less than. One For The Ages.

  • @jayneswhirled2
    @jayneswhirled2 Před rokem +10

    Ive watched Claires monologue ( 11:30 ) about her alcoholism maybe a dozen times, always riveting.

  • @lizday8140
    @lizday8140 Před rokem +5

    I see bits of myself in both Agnes and Edna. Perhaps that is why I live alone. I recognize that no one likes the proverbial morality-policing wet blanket. I recognize that no one wants a judge to come and pass judgement in their private inner sanctum. I also recognize that living as such a one as that, within a world gone mad...could be the thing that sends one over the edge in terms of their own sanity.
    I hear that recognition is the first step to the solution. Perhaps there is still hope for me to change.
    "...knowing is half the battle.", so said the GI Joe cartoons my younger siblings watched as children.

  • @matthewhall1062
    @matthewhall1062 Před 2 lety +16

    Katherine captures the narcissistic mother very believably.

    • @brankastupar7101
      @brankastupar7101 Před rokem

      She played herself!

    • @user-py1pm3dq6r
      @user-py1pm3dq6r Před rokem +1

      ​@@brankastupar7101 Did you really know her? Amazing really

    • @grai
      @grai Před rokem

      @@brankastupar7101
      There's a saying actors have "if it looks like hard work you're not working hard enough"
      Katharine Hepburn makes it look easy
      So you're paying her a massive compliment

  • @monnie1027
    @monnie1027 Před 2 lety +5

    Awesome !👍

  • @mysticmouse7261
    @mysticmouse7261 Před měsícem

    Ritualistic absurdist facing the existential void of the American bourgeoisie

  • @JimBarry-nr2pj
    @JimBarry-nr2pj Před rokem +1

    It's like being home with Mom and Dad

  • @genepope7498
    @genepope7498 Před 2 lety +4

    This movie directly speaks to my recollections from my youth, as I watched my parents live according to the "code of decency" they learned from their parents, while the younger sister and daughter in this movie break away from those rules to hopefully live a fuller and less empty older life. Did Albee look forward and see the future of younger generations, each one rejecting rules put upon them in order to also seek happiness in their later lives?

    • @elstongunn4277
      @elstongunn4277 Před rokem +3

      But it hardly seems that the sister and daughter have or are living fuller, less empty lives. They, in fact, appear less happy and have achieved very little in terms of independence, self-actualization, and deep relationships. Their lives are a pattern of self-defeating sabotage.

    • @SuntoSet77
      @SuntoSet77 Před rokem +2

      Possibly a few of us here saw the shift. When womens lib opened our minds n world but we had been raised by the code. Some friends n I raced toward a new way , others chose the code of early marriage and kids. Having a child, a daughter I have seen the messy world and push n pull of choice and society pressure be a big negative at time. I often feel Ive lived to long and like Agnes I have no granchildren to live longer for. The actors phenomenal. Kate Reid superb in everything she did. Ill probably need to watch it again after I recover.

  • @michaeloleary1867
    @michaeloleary1867 Před 2 lety +1

    Love it!

  • @postmodernrecycler
    @postmodernrecycler Před 2 lety +3

    It's really lovely you're bringing this to us in the proper aspect ratio and watchable quality. I do miss Lee's opening "@#!&" In the first few seconds, but I understand. A quietly noisy movie/play that makes us dread the quiet.

  • @soniavadnjal7553
    @soniavadnjal7553 Před rokem +6

    Do the characters talk a lot, to fill up their empty lives?

  • @Butlinsgvn6
    @Butlinsgvn6 Před 2 lety +2

    Thank you x

  • @matthewhall1062
    @matthewhall1062 Před 2 lety +8

    Bring back the kaftan!

    • @postmodernrecycler
      @postmodernrecycler Před 2 lety +1

      Each time I watch this I dream up a new line of caftans for the modern--but not too--woman, man, and all

    • @margaretmaguire3329
      @margaretmaguire3329 Před rokem +2

      They never left

    • @user-py1pm3dq6r
      @user-py1pm3dq6r Před rokem +1

      Bring back KH! To be more precise

    • @lornahuddleston1453
      @lornahuddleston1453 Před 5 měsíci +1

      I have faithfully brought back the kaftan! Hurrah! And the pinafore Apron!🎉

  • @user-py1pm3dq6r
    @user-py1pm3dq6r Před rokem +1

    ,Thank you so much

  • @jonsmum5552
    @jonsmum5552 Před rokem

    I just know this will be excellent.

  • @hanschristianbrando5588
    @hanschristianbrando5588 Před 4 měsíci +1

    And they're all wearing their own clothes.

  • @Autostade67
    @Autostade67 Před rokem +5

    Though I disagree the 'tedious' themes of alcoholism and repressed homosexuality are the bones of this piece (and are subjects, not themes), rather the skeleton and musculature is existential terror - not the nauseating nothingness of the French socialist, but the hollowness of American bourgeois life, of the very class (and its attendant moralities and philosophies) which is the superstructure of American being (which alcoholism and historically suppressed homosexuality offered counterpoint).

  • @briannumme9337
    @briannumme9337 Před 2 lety +4

    And I thought my family had issues…

  • @ms.laterholmes2890
    @ms.laterholmes2890 Před rokem +4

    OK what were they spooning into their coffee? more coffee, really brown sugar anyone?

  • @marciacrosby6170
    @marciacrosby6170 Před rokem +2

    WOW-it was long, but profound

  • @DiamondLil
    @DiamondLil Před rokem

    I think at the end he's telling you YOU'RE the bad one.

  • @ms.laterholmes2890
    @ms.laterholmes2890 Před rokem +2

    I am thoroughly confused

  • @kimsherlock8969
    @kimsherlock8969 Před rokem +1

    Watching @ 1.44 pm
    Its slowwwwwww

  • @mckavitt13
    @mckavitt13 Před rokem

    The off key bell is such a bother too. :-)))))

  • @Vera-kh8zj
    @Vera-kh8zj Před rokem +1

    so I tried to watch this twice. Never made it farther than 5 minutes each. There are some people who appreciate this, I know this, and I do not understand. If the point is to reach into a realm of despise for the human being there are other ways

    • @Vera-kh8zj
      @Vera-kh8zj Před rokem +3

      @@sd67b thank you. So I will try this again then.

    • @frankpeter6851
      @frankpeter6851 Před 7 měsíci

      I'm with you... I don't really understand this movie.

  • @user-me8kr6mv5l
    @user-me8kr6mv5l Před rokem +3

    Rare and beautiful ❤️😍 thanks a lot* utube smile by john bavas

  • @renzo6490
    @renzo6490 Před rokem +1

    Do you think the interiors are intentionally ugly?
    Did you notice how Julia's pants nearly matched the hideous wallpaper?
    All the dreary browns?
    Like tobacco stains.
    Drapes like iron bars.

  • @melmingin8445
    @melmingin8445 Před 5 měsíci

    I'm so confused! These people have terrors and they show up at their door?

  • @paulhunter6742
    @paulhunter6742 Před rokem

    Oh, hell the Sister in law knows where all the bodies are buried. She knows about her Brother in laws affairs.

  • @Autostade67
    @Autostade67 Před rokem +6

    The comment below about Albee's characters talking too much is apt - but I don't think Ed would ever have claimed to dramatic naturalism, indeed would have embraced a descriptor such as 'hysterical intellectualism' (his characters are rabidly intelligent and possess a preternatural knack fro self-reflection and a kind of self-conscious staging of their narratives) - for a long time I really liked Albee, and 'Balance' which I read about thirty+ years ago, remained a favourite, now, watching this, there is - and I HATE saying such things - a 'datedness' to the piece, not so much in the material but in the very aura set by the language and situation - it is a work, historically lodged in the mid twentieth century, and by that, fascinating, but I doubt a contemporary remounting would be taken as reflective of present sensibility...the pity is there doesn't seem to be a major playwright in english who IS writing in the sensibility of our present.

  • @leapinglaura7343
    @leapinglaura7343 Před rokem

    Fascinating how ugly and threatening they manage to make the plants look. Almost a vision of hell.

  • @judithhopes151
    @judithhopes151 Před rokem +1

    Joseph cotten and Betty Blair, , lovely unmannered acting. Once you learned of the repeated mannerisms of Hepburn and Scholfield it could come a little expected. One of the most difficulties of theatre,is the craft of movement across the set, only much schooling and rehearsing can make it seem natural. We will never know first hand of the greatness of the likes of Irving, or Bernhart, yet future actors will have a catalogue of great actors to learn from, or reference to , .

    • @user-bc9mn7gq2c
      @user-bc9mn7gq2c Před rokem +2

      ?? What are Scofield's mannerisms?

    • @user-py1pm3dq6r
      @user-py1pm3dq6r Před rokem

      Please!!!

    • @grai
      @grai Před rokem +1

      Katharine Hepburn is a strong personality so she makes an indelible impression but in no way is she just repeating mannerisms
      She understands the material probably better than Edward Albee
      When you've watched a lot of her films you start to realise she's actually totally different in every one
      But framed like you say within the Hepburn style
      She's at her best in the small intense scenes you really get to see her soul - and her genius ♥️

  • @johntlew
    @johntlew Před 2 lety +2

    Instant coffee?

  • @ljcaines
    @ljcaines Před rokem +2

    1:22:29 She yodels! 😂

  • @peterjeffery8495
    @peterjeffery8495 Před rokem +2

    I think an honest conversation about this Albee work and the bulk of Tennessee Williams output would reveal that this stuff just doesn't/didn't age well. So much of the angst is unrelatable these days. Sorry but its past its sell by date.

    • @brutusalwaysminded
      @brutusalwaysminded  Před rokem +4

      I'm sorry for you.

    • @user-py1pm3dq6r
      @user-py1pm3dq6r Před rokem

      ​@@sd67b Do you realize that you try to explain literature, that is art, by an average middle class way of life? Separate these two or stick to other forms of entertainment

    • @grai
      @grai Před rokem +2

      @@sd67b do yourself a favour and watch the scene in the morning between Schofield and Hepburn *performed in one take*
      You see why Hepburn was considered the greatest actress of her time

    • @lornahuddleston1453
      @lornahuddleston1453 Před 5 měsíci

      🤨🧐🙄 Take 2 aspirin and call us in 40 years.

    • @rosemaryallen2128
      @rosemaryallen2128 Před měsícem

      It's not the angst, all periods suffer angst in some form, it's the heavy literary contrivance, inaccurate psychology and ultimately pedestrian impact. Of course, these plays are put on because the acting roles are delicious, but when you see a truly great work from the past, comparative relief is remarkable.

  • @tomkent4656
    @tomkent4656 Před rokem +5

    The problem was that Albee wanted to be Tennessee Williams.

    • @williamhasselbach1037
      @williamhasselbach1037 Před rokem +2

      Tennessee wrote a play once. Then he spent the rest of his life writing it over and over.

    • @67Parsifal
      @67Parsifal Před rokem +3

      He didn’t. Williams was one of the few playwrights Albee admired, but I don’t see how he ever even tried to emulate him. Albee’s career was much more successful than TW’s, taken as a whole.

    • @tomkent4656
      @tomkent4656 Před rokem +1

      @@67Parsifal Sorry, It was meant as a light-hearted comment.

    • @lornahuddleston1453
      @lornahuddleston1453 Před 5 měsíci

      That is not a problem.

  • @user-py1pm3dq6r
    @user-py1pm3dq6r Před rokem +2

    Why all the untalented always criticising the talented?

  • @dbeans63
    @dbeans63 Před rokem

    I love Paul scofield and Hepburn, but this play does nothing for me.

  • @amosmoscrip2799
    @amosmoscrip2799 Před 2 lety +1

    Sure it's trying and disappointing but we're stuck with it, existence, and so muddle through. Point of play but not very revolutionary. Still, well-done.

  • @elstongunn4277
    @elstongunn4277 Před rokem +5

    I love the actors, and I generally love Edward Albee’s stories. But I find this dialogue too heavy with attempts at profundity and witticisms. People really don’t talk this way; either then or now. It begins to sound stiff and stilted when each and every sentence is masterly crafted of careful irony, wit, or regret. It bogs itself down and drowns out the truly impactful statements.
    Hepburn’s movements became repetitious, and do she and her sister really have nothing other than caftans or silk, flowing garments to wear?

    • @paulhunter6742
      @paulhunter6742 Před rokem

      High quality clothing of the idle rich. Nothing to do except shopping at Newman Marcus.

    • @user-py1pm3dq6r
      @user-py1pm3dq6r Před rokem

      Heavens dear!

  • @E-Kat
    @E-Kat Před rokem +4

    I find Katherine Hepburn's voice a bit annoying!

    • @williamhasselbach1037
      @williamhasselbach1037 Před rokem

      If only she has made a film with Bette Davis.

    • @user-py1pm3dq6r
      @user-py1pm3dq6r Před rokem

      ???

    • @E-Kat
      @E-Kat Před rokem

      @@user-py1pm3dq6r her voice was very masculine, sometimes extremely masculine and too harsh for my ears.🤗

    • @JMichaelHaithcock
      @JMichaelHaithcock Před 4 měsíci

      I have to use subtitles to understand what she’s saying.

    • @E-Kat
      @E-Kat Před 4 měsíci +1

      @@JMichaelHaithcock oh, I'm so sorry but I too, use subtitles as I need to turn her down a bit. 🤣

  • @sandrapicton6349
    @sandrapicton6349 Před 7 měsíci

    I am watching because of Paul Schofield but have discovered this is poor Albee trying to knock your socks off with his intellect, but not true to life, all the actors overacting to try and showcase their inteect too, as well as some of the commentators here. Oh dear, all of them so pretentious, and the arts world outdoing each other with fulsome praise. Sorry Albee, you really don't have any idea of how to add to the world's treasures.

  • @vesnahill444
    @vesnahill444 Před rokem +1

    I find "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? " a much better play. Emotions were more realistic in it. Besides, this is too long and only gets interesting in the last 45 minutes.

    • @67Parsifal
      @67Parsifal Před rokem

      It’s a better play than VW, which is excessively long and required a ridiculous amount of rehearsal time.

  • @Ron239
    @Ron239 Před rokem +3

    Pretentious twaddle, like most of Albee's work.

    • @Ihatetherockheisstupid
      @Ihatetherockheisstupid Před rokem +3

      Lennon and RJ here to let you know that merely the use of the word "twaddle" could be interpreted to be pretentious.

    • @c.a.savage5689
      @c.a.savage5689 Před rokem +3

      You forgot Interminable Twaddle. People actually sat through 2 hours of this?

    • @user-py1pm3dq6r
      @user-py1pm3dq6r Před rokem +1

      This sentence is extremely pretentious actually