Orson Welles Sketchbook - Episode 1: The Early Days

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  • čas přidán 31. 01. 2013
  • This is the first episode of "Orson Welles' Sketchbook" in which he discusses his trips abroad and how he came to be an actor. Originally Aired: April 24, 1955.

Komentáře • 102

  • @elvisleeboy
    @elvisleeboy Před 10 lety +141

    "Every year I learn how much I've yet to learn". Thank God that he was alive in the era of recorded sound and vision and that that voice and presence are not lost forever.

  • @TheRantMaster53
    @TheRantMaster53 Před 8 lety +71

    There's something very therapeutic about watching Orson Welles sketch.

  • @ronaldperrin9583
    @ronaldperrin9583 Před 4 lety +23

    Masterful storyteller.
    I never grow tired of listening to this wonderfully talented man.

  • @fredbazoo
    @fredbazoo Před 10 lety +54

    The most recognizable voice in entertainment history.....The man sounds like maple syrup on velvet :)

    • @vastwasteland77
      @vastwasteland77 Před 3 lety

      .....which, I gotta say--and I know from experience--is darn near IMPOSSIBLE!

  • @KrystalLake
    @KrystalLake Před 8 lety +46

    Brilliant. Simply brilliant. Thank you for sharing this, Citizen Welles! Gems like this make the Internet worth while.

  • @raysbagels
    @raysbagels Před 8 lety +22

    I just discovered this by TOTAL accident. I've so far watched 5 of his Sketchbooks and am totally enthralled by them, but then again I've always been enthralled by his works.

  • @cinexeon
    @cinexeon Před 10 lety +16

    How could the Divine bestow upon this mortal all that is sought for? Presence, talent, sense of humor, artistry, and that proverbial WIT. I'll marry you a billion times, Mr. Welles.

  • @sweetcurmudgeon
    @sweetcurmudgeon Před 11 lety +24

    Who wouldn't have wanted to sit down to dinner with this guy and just listen to him holding court?

  • @octo.lina69
    @octo.lina69 Před 5 lety +14

    He's so gorgeous😢

  • @jayham____fromgeorgia
    @jayham____fromgeorgia Před 8 lety +29

    We're traveling through time with Orson, isn't it great

  • @glenbencivengo4242
    @glenbencivengo4242 Před rokem +3

    What a voice. A joy to listen to. Thank you

  • @paulbaran549
    @paulbaran549 Před 10 lety +30

    The Greatest film director of all time. Shame on Hollywood.

    • @maxmartin9762
      @maxmartin9762 Před 2 lety

      What do you mean by that shame on holluwold

  • @bgustinjr
    @bgustinjr Před 4 lety +14

    God, this is invaluable. Thank you for uploading this for the world to enjoy once again!

  • @oldchicken2
    @oldchicken2 Před 8 lety +19

    God, I love Orson Welles.

  • @dalebaker9109
    @dalebaker9109 Před 7 lety +15

    he could read, the telephone book, and it would be the greatest epic, his Shakespeare movies, were pure class, unbelievable brilliance.

  • @voicegirl555
    @voicegirl555 Před 4 lety +10

    Happy Happy 115th Birthday! You were so talented! I will always be greatful for KANE and all the other films you did, but wish that you had been born later and came along during the 70s. You would have been the leader of the pack and made all the films you wanted. Anyway, I hope you are happy where you are and making lots of films your way.

    • @joelz1516
      @joelz1516 Před 4 lety +1

      Didn't know his birthday was yesterday ... technically 50 minutes ago. :) Yes, imagine if he'd been around for the digital revolution? The things he'd have accomplish with today's technology. These episodes of "Orson Welles' Sketchbooks" are pretty amazing and makes me want to do these things myself during quarantine.

  • @ameliawagus6248
    @ameliawagus6248 Před 10 měsíci +1

    This must be my 100th viewing by now, thank you Mr Welles for being a constant source of inspiration 🖤

  • @clifforddriver9434
    @clifforddriver9434 Před 11 měsíci +1

    He was basically a selfmade man, with very little outside intervention. I simply never get tired of watching or listening to him, my God bless your soul.

  • @MikeMcD2112
    @MikeMcD2112 Před 3 lety +5

    What a masterpiece! Appreciate the upload!

  • @p_nk7279
    @p_nk7279 Před 3 lety +3

    Going through these, wow they are as good as his films! What an addition to an overall career. Not to be missed.

  • @bluetoad2001
    @bluetoad2001 Před 6 lety +11

    this is far more entertaining than any of the crap on T. V. November 30,2017

  • @charleshonig7080
    @charleshonig7080 Před 5 lety +4

    This is fabulous and one of the most intimate presentations given by Mr Welles, with all His Talent and Genious He comes across as self effacing.

  • @baxter5431
    @baxter5431 Před 5 lety +5

    The man was a genius, in the truest definition of that title & like all true geniuses remained humble & not pretentious. Only the true great talents have that quality.

  • @diogenesSTL
    @diogenesSTL Před 7 lety +14

    Hard to believe he is a mere 39 years old here.

  • @yvbstudios9547
    @yvbstudios9547 Před 7 lety +6

    pure joy.

  • @soundout1073
    @soundout1073 Před 4 lety +6

    A voice you could pour on a waffle...

  • @richardburt9812
    @richardburt9812 Před 26 dny

    Thank you.

  • @wilmetteentwistle9242
    @wilmetteentwistle9242 Před 2 lety +2

    I bet that sketch book is worth a fortune.

  • @VIRGONOMICS
    @VIRGONOMICS Před 2 lety +1

    Imagine just being in the same room with this fellow. Perhaps the mold for The Worlds Most Interesting Man .

  • @LLV1915
    @LLV1915 Před 5 lety +7

    A classy,Intellectual and a royalty of a man but still gives that Joe blow type of person that he can and would talk to anyone with no arrogance or ego very few men in this world like Orson Welles

  • @mvies77
    @mvies77 Před 3 lety +1

    Orson could read the phone book and sound eloquent. Wonderful voice, wonderful man.

  • @2367J
    @2367J Před 10 lety +49

    The first vlog?

  • @Johnconno
    @Johnconno Před rokem +1

    Welles, The Early Days.
    At the age of 2 I made my way by steamship to the west coast of Ireland.
    Then discovered a farmer prepared to sell me an old roan which took me to Dublin.
    Luckily my voice broke when I was 3.

  • @billharris1847
    @billharris1847 Před 5 lety +2

    Thank you for these, so glad you found them

  • @pjminer
    @pjminer Před 5 lety +6

    ORSON WELLES | Draw My Life

  • @dougwillis1936
    @dougwillis1936 Před 9 lety +4

    GENIUS!

  • @devoidbmx1
    @devoidbmx1 Před 2 lety +6

    I find his accent interesting. There is no hint of Wisconsin or Illinois (where he grew up) in his vocalizations, instead he seems to have more of a Transatlantic accent. I'm guessing this is a product of his upper class education and time in cultured institutions.

  • @dermotoc9594
    @dermotoc9594 Před 6 lety +6

    Years ago the Irish State broadcaster RTE aired a show by John Bowman, in which he raids the archives. Bowman played this clip, but intercut it with the account by Micheál Mac Liammóir, the Gate theater's director. Welles' story of the Broadway experience is mentioned by MM, who says "He told us he worked on Broadway. Total nonsense of course, but I could see he had great talent". Rest = history, etc etc etc.

  • @wadesaleeby2172
    @wadesaleeby2172 Před 4 lety +2

    Excellent!😉

  • @saramurphy345
    @saramurphy345 Před 9 měsíci

    EXCELLENT

  • @ljw2909
    @ljw2909 Před rokem

    Thank you so much for these!

  • @ShahyarGhanbari
    @ShahyarGhanbari Před 9 lety +26

    Thanks MAESTRO.... SHAME on HOLLYWOOD !

  • @psychoticmortacarn
    @psychoticmortacarn Před 10 lety +5

    He was one of a kind. That's what you can blame.

  • @MrFree2nest
    @MrFree2nest Před rokem +1

    Orson Wells was probably the first person ever in the world who shot a vlog.

  • @eviiliadou1753
    @eviiliadou1753 Před 9 lety +18

    " I' ve been falling ever since."

    • @sargondp69
      @sargondp69 Před 5 lety +4

      I scrolled down and read this very comment the very moment Mr. Wells uttered the phrase. Astonishing the connections we find as time bears us onward into the ignorant oblivion--the future. And look, here I am writing as though I were Orson speaking. And to whom? or to what? 4 years hence and still falling no doubt.

  • @mrmiagi5007
    @mrmiagi5007 Před 10 lety +5

    Certainly the most intelligent and well-spoken entertainer of the last century. Too bad there is no room for his type in Hollywood today... today I suppose a man like Orson would be a lawyer or something.

    • @zallesproductions
      @zallesproductions Před 9 lety +6

      In Hollywood, there was never room for Welles's type. RKO offered him a contract because they wanted something new, but it is clear that Welles was a bit too knew.

    • @bitwize
      @bitwize Před 7 lety +1

      The thing is, today Hollywood has embraced auteur theory and routinely gives carte-blanche contracts of the sort Welles would have leaped at -- to second- and third-string directors like Tarantino.

    • @johnhardman3
      @johnhardman3 Před 5 lety

      Welles in 1955 was still good-looking despite his increasing bulk: he had one of those voices that made you want to listen in, regardless of what he was saying.

  • @sneezepal
    @sneezepal Před 10 lety +13

    Orson was cool. One of a kind. Shame on Beatrice for sitting on all his unreleased films.

  • @mackdmara
    @mackdmara Před 7 lety +5

    What he is talking about is like following God. You are a tiny
    Dingy adrift on a tumultuous sea. The swell of each wave showing great distances & them swallowing them whole in an instant. You have a rudder, but what is that tiny control against such a force?
    When your at home, safe, & still in planning, all is a dream. You can chase away the clouds of worry with a thought. Once your knee deep in the endeavor bailing furiously to keep the ship a float, no amount of high hopes will carry you to safe harbors. That is the moment you truly pray. Your desire is honed like a well oiled sword & your ready to pull it out. Then you fall on your head & find God was leading you there the entire time. And in so doing, are lucky just to be alive & the applause is as loud as a gale. At that moment you realize your success, although reliant on your brashness & skill, is truly not your own.
    Great things happen in my life, none of which I can claim to be made from my own power.
    God Bless

  • @villll
    @villll Před rokem

    such poetry in the man

  • @jamescatneyarbuckle5390
    @jamescatneyarbuckle5390 Před 8 lety +3

    Damn good stuff

  • @Mazurka1001
    @Mazurka1001 Před 11 lety +3

    ...spellbound...

  • @stoictraveler1
    @stoictraveler1 Před 5 lety +2

    FEARLESS

  • @mjm5081
    @mjm5081 Před 3 lety

  • @viracocha
    @viracocha Před rokem

    In every video of him ever, he scratches something when he’s lying 😂

  • @octo.lina69
    @octo.lina69 Před 5 lety +2

    Where did the person of this channel go to? They haven't posted in 5yrs??💔

  • @garyweaver5398
    @garyweaver5398 Před 5 lety +2

    Drama 👑

  • @charleshonig7080
    @charleshonig7080 Před 5 lety +2

    He could read the phone book and make it sound interesting.

  • @wynnpiercewheldon2971
    @wynnpiercewheldon2971 Před 9 lety +1

    Produced by Huw Wheldon, who later interviewed Welles at length for Monitor. Welles invited Wheldon to be his European producer. Wisely Wheldon declined. New biography of Wheldon here: unbound.co.uk/books/kicking-the-bar PLEASE PLEDGE!

  • @gage992112
    @gage992112 Před 10 lety +8

    Good Lord! Why don't we have a contempory to Mr. Wells?
    Have we wrung sophistication out of the general population?
    Can we blame public education? Or the over prescribing of psychotropic medication (Mr Wells would have been given Ritilin or something)... Why are there no people like him left.....Can I blame high fructose corn syrup, or GMO's or SOMETHING?

    • @victoriawittelsbach5808
      @victoriawittelsbach5808 Před rokem

      Strength of personality

    • @bobtaylor170
      @bobtaylor170 Před rokem

      Lack of parental attention in infancy, especially educational attention. Even so, when young people of great ability, who have been given those advantages from birth, reach their teens, they tend to want to conform to the general idiocy of their peers. In a Facebook group an hour ago, somebody was writing about his son's college roommate, who had never heard of The Beatles.

  • @dantebond8124
    @dantebond8124 Před 2 lety

    "A nice break in the horrid monotony." I could use one of those.

  • @raginald7mars408
    @raginald7mars408 Před rokem +1

    Super Human

  • @michaelboylan5308
    @michaelboylan5308 Před 5 lety +2

    The only American voice I have never tired of, Where did the tone intonation and timbre of that voice come from? He wasnt just born with it, Was he raised in a part of America or a household where American English wasnt spoken ?

    • @jaojao1768
      @jaojao1768 Před 4 lety +2

      I think he was mostly raised in America but acquired a transatlantic accent, as many actors and upper class people did in the '30s, for example Franklin D Roosevelt had a similar dialect

    • @bobtaylor170
      @bobtaylor170 Před rokem

      You hear that accent, which is often called a Mid - Atlantic accent, in movies after sound came in in 1927. It gradually faded away as the performers who spoke with that accent aged, retired, died.

  • @NxDoyle
    @NxDoyle Před 6 lety +6

    Too often I will ill-advisedly scroll down to the comments, where nostalgia fondly, warmly aches, the ache being some oddly bathetic comparison between Orson Welles and no modern day equivalent. It is so marked as a bitter condemnation of the modern day. And it is unfair, much of the time. In terms of acting and actors, for example, the fondness for some long gone golden age is unnecessarily counterpointed with a cri de cœur complaining of a paucity or even total absence of modern day equivalents, as if that were somehow necessary in lauding and lionizing a singular artist and auteur in Orson Welles.
    I cannot in good conscience, so far as good conscience is required in summation of the artistry of the modern day, say that today's great writers and performers are of lower calibre. There are those who are artisans of their chosen pursuits every bit as great as their forebears.
    The one concession that I will make is that, while I acknowledge the virtuosity of a performer like Meryl Streep, for example, there is nobody quite like the undeniably great Orson Welles.

  • @rolandmarty7228
    @rolandmarty7228 Před 2 lety

    If some might call him a failure, it's because he dared to attempt the impossible.

  • @coloradoslims4471
    @coloradoslims4471 Před 5 lety +2

    How on earth did he conjure up the modesty to proclaim he wasn’t a genius. That is a feat rivalling all his work.

  • @johnclark4593
    @johnclark4593 Před 2 lety

    Looks like D'Onofrio, sounds like Kelsey Grammer.

  • @lynnturman8157
    @lynnturman8157 Před 8 lety +1

    what year is this? and what's the occasion?

    • @robertpetrie6847
      @robertpetrie6847 Před 6 lety

      Lynn Turman check the description

    • @jennifersman7990
      @jennifersman7990 Před 6 lety +1

      Lynn Turman Orson had just finished playing Othello onstage in London and so impressed some producers at the BBC when he appeared on an interview show there they invited him to do a series of lecture-type shows, completely improvised.

    • @jennifersman7990
      @jennifersman7990 Před 6 lety +1

      Forgot to add this was from 1955

  • @arnie8604
    @arnie8604 Před 3 lety +1

    Shame how his brilliant mind was treated in what we now know and always suspected as cesspit hollywood.

  • @CliffBronson1212
    @CliffBronson1212 Před 2 měsíci

    New prose:
    Running 🏃‍♂️ out of time
    How does one, run out of time?
    When Time is on your side?
    Do you know your on the side of Time?
    Or on the side, of just about anything else out there?
    Or do you care?
    Do you know that Jesus Christ is Time?
    Or would you rather have someone tell you the time of day?
    Do you pray, and meditate on God's holy book? 📖
    Or would you rather go fishing 🎣 in that there moving brook?
    It took a lot of human courage for God's Son, to go to the Cross ✝️ and literally be nailed there
    Or are you at a loss, about this?
    Or do you care?
    He went down to the depths of hell, for you
    So you, wouldn't have to go there
    God chose mercy, instead of Judgment
    Although Judgment Day is coming
    Can you feel the Last Days drumming?
    Your life is like hell
    I understand your plight - so much fear, you don't know whether to run, or fight
    So, why don't you let go, and let God
    And get yourself into the zone, of the Miracle Man
    Who walked upon water 💧
    Just because He can
    And you can't
    Running out of time
    How does one run out of time?
    When Time is on your side

  • @ferabra8939
    @ferabra8939 Před 6 lety

    Rita Hayworth, the sex symbol of the day said Orson was the man of his life. Imagine Scarlett Johansson saying the same about Jack Black? 😂

  • @kassidylingenfelter9665

    God...? Is that you?

  • @girllady6939
    @girllady6939 Před 5 měsíci

    Soleman had over a 1,000 wives. it is documented in the bible. Whether you are Catholic or Protestant. 1Kings 11:3. I don't really differentiate between wives and concubines. They were his and no one elses' as spouses.